Thursday Morning Stir

-Full-service agency Red Fuse and dog food brand Hill’s celebrated diversity (and dog parks) with this “#WeFeedDiversity” Fourth of July spot (video above).

-Publicis Milan launched a campaign for Heineken’s new alcohol-free beer brand Heineken 0.0.

-British agency Catch Digital launched a Game of Thrones chatbot ahead of the show’s new season, because you know nothing.

-Emotional Intelligence Agency co-founder Brian Millar explains “How to do bad advertising well.”

-Adweek looks at “The Story Behind Lego’s Brilliant Print Ads From the Cannes Festival.”

-Havas Group acquired U.K.-based agency SO What Global. 

-Experts advise that brands shouldn’t “co-opt Pride without authenticity.”

-Coty launched a review for social media and community management responsibilities for its Rimmel brand in the U.K.

BBH London Celebrates ‘Equal Love’ for Absolut

Absolut Vodka appointed BBH London as its lead global creative agency last October, following a review. Sid Lee had formerly handled the account for some four years.

This week, BBH London launched a “Create a better tomorrow, tonight” global campaign for the brand with the spot “Equal Love.”

Directed by Somesuch’s Aoife McArdle, “Equal Love” opens in a bar as a couple exchange a passionate kiss. An onlooker approaches from nearby and soon the kiss is passed on from one person to the next, spanning a diverse array of ages, races and genders, all set to The Crystals‘ 1962 hit, “There’s No Other (Like My Baby).”

The online spot concludes with the line “In support of equal love since 1879,” celebrating the brand’s history of progressive values, followed by the new tagline. “Equal Love” launches a global campaign which aims to underscore the brand’s identity.

“We wanted to bring to life one of our core values and beliefs, which is that everyone should be free to love who they choose,” Absolut global communications director Gaia Gilardini told Campaign. “It uses a kiss as a metaphor for this expression of acceptance. But it’s a broader idea of acceptance – it’s not just tied to sexuality. Freedom to love who you choose goes further than just sexual preference.”

The spot also coincides with the Pride in London celebrations which run from June 24 through July 9. As part of the effort, Absolut is also an OOH installation on an escalator which is on the route of this Saturday’s London Pride parade.

Absolut isn’t the only vodka brand launching an effort around Pride in Lonon. Rival Smirnoff is actually a sponsor and also launched a series of “Love Wins” bottles back in May.

“Having more brands joining this conversation is definitely good, because it allows people to discuss this topic,” Gilardini told Campaign, adding, “Through our marketing campaigns, we’ve always supported diversity – the right for people to express their true selves. We’ve done this through the artistic collaborations we’ve done.”

Absolut’s track record seems to lend support to the statement. As Campaign notes, the brand began running ads in U.S. gay publications The Advocate and After Dark in 1981, just two years after expanding globally, at a time when most brands avoided such media completely.

The brand plans to reveal the next initiatives in the campaign in the coming weeks and will partner with U.K. LGBT+ charity organization Stonewall later this year to celebrate the 50th anniversary  of the Sexual Offences Act 1967.

 

WPP Folding Possible Worldwide into Wunderman

WPP is combining its Wunderman and Possible properties, with the latter continuing to operate as its own brand under Wundeman moving forward, Adweek reported earlier today.

The combined agencies will constitute 200 offices and some 9,200 employees around the world, including 2,600 tech experts.

“Combining our deep and diverse capabilities is exactly the kind of forward-thinking move that will allow us to deliver business results for our clients,” Possible global CEO Shane Atchison said in a statement.

Wunderman global CEO Mark Read added that he is “most excited about what we can do together for Microsoft,” already a client of both agencies which will now enjoy greater global access to Wunderman and Possible’s capabilities.

Amazon will be another key focus of both agencies going forward, following Possible’s acquisition of Amazon consulting specialist Marketplace Ignition this past May.

“It’s early days but we’re going to keep going independently and start in three areas—Microsoft as our common client, helping clients develop their Amazon strategy, and mobile,” Read added.

Possible expanded its creative leadership team in Los Angeles back in February with the arrivals of executive creative director Carl Rogers and group creative director Amy Boe. Last October, the agency welcomed Zach Gallagher from Deutsch as chief strategy officer, Americas.

Wunderman added group creative directors Kat Gates and Jeffrey Castellano to its flagship New York office in February. Chief creative officer Sami Thessman joined the agency from Havas last April and Caspar Schlickum joined the agency as CEO for the Asia-Pacific region last July. 

Taco Bueno Selects TM Advertising as its Creative Agency of Record

Regional Tex-Mex chain Taco Bueno appointed TM Advertising, which bought itself back from IPG in May, as its creative agency of record, following a review.

The Dallas-based agency will be tasked with handling broadcast and digital creative, brand strategy, consumer engagement, integrated media planning, packaging and in-store experience for the brand.

TM Advertising’s appointment follows the arrival of Sarah Beddoe as Taco Bueno’s new chief marketing officer in February, as well as the chain’s recent endorsement deal with newly-drafted Dallas Cowboys defensive end Taco Charlton.

“After a very competitive search, TM emerged as the right integrated partner for Taco Bueno,
Beddoe said in a statement. “Together, we will build on the passionate brand affinity for Taco Bueno and create even more brand advocacy with a breakthrough creative campaign.”

“Taco Bueno has an incredibly unique story to tell filled with history and the fiercest of loyal ‘buenoheads,’” added TM Advertising CEO Becca Weigman. “We are thrilled to be working for such an incredible brand and client. They are smart, relentlessly hardworking and fun. We connected immediately. Like us, they are passionate, have a unique approach and are perfectly positioned for growth.”

TM Advertising first work for Taco Bueno is expected sometime this fall. Taco Bueno has 175 locations in Texas, Colorado,  Missouri, Kansas, Arkansas, Louisiana and Oklahoma and generates an annual revenue of around $187 million. Last year it was named best Mexican chain in by Market Force Information’s quick service restaurant study.

Heineken 0.0’s First Ads Prove You Can Have Fun Without Alcohol

Who’s up for a non-alcoholic barrel of fun? Publicis Milan rolls out the self-consciously silly humor with zippy spots introducing Heineken 0.0, the brand’s first zero-alcohol beer, aimed mainly at markets in Europe plus Russia and Israel. A 60-second TV manifesto that dropped a few weeks ago introduces the tagline “Open to all.” A cheeky…

Kissing Is Contagious in Absolut’s Lovely First Ad From BBH Celebrating ‘Equal Love’

Absolut is a brand with one of the longest, proudest histories of supporting LGBTQ rights. And its first work from BBH, which was named lead global creative agency last fall, celebrates that heritage in style–with a provocative, beautifully choreographed two-minute spot featuring a kissing relay among a variety of diverse people. The spot, directed by…

Wieden + Kennedy Made 100 Ass-Shaped Vases for London Pride Week

The years have given us many campaigns for both HIV awareness and Pride. But this is the first time we’ve seen both subjects served with a ceramic casting. For London Pride week, and to raise money for Positive East, a charity that supports HIV sufferers, Wieden + Kennedy London created a limited-edition set of 100…

Watch the Newest Ads on TV From T-Mobile, Ram Trucks, Ace Hardware and More


Every weekday, we bring you the Ad Age/iSpot Hot Spots, new and trending TV commercials tracked by iSpot.tv, the real-time TV ad measurement company with attention and conversion analytics from 10 million smart TVs. The New Releases here ran on TV for the first time yesterday. The Most Engaging ads are ranked by digital activity (including online views and social shares) over the past week.

Among the new releases, a (lousy) babysitter reveals all kinds of hidden fees to a blindsided couple in a T-Mobile ad. An announcer in a Ram Trucks commercial says “Long live the fearless” as paragliders (being towed by Ram Trucks, of course) slice through desert air. And a PSA from an organization called Stop the Texts, Stop the Wrecks points out that the average text takes your eyes off the road for five seconds — which is, tragically, just long enough for a Bigfoot hunter to miss the beast.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

SoundCloud Faces the Music; Cuts 40% of Staff


SoundCloud is cutting about 40% of its staff in a cost-cutting move the digital music service says will give it a better financial footing to compete against larger rivals Spotify and Apple.

SoundCloud, which in January said it was at risk of running out of money, informed staff on Thursday that 173 jobs would be eliminated. It had 420 employees. The company’s operations will be consolidated at its headquarters in Berlin and another office in New York. Offices in San Francisco and London will be shut.

“We need to ensure our path to long-term, independent success,” Alex Ljung, the company’s co-founder and chief executive officer, said in a blog post published on SoundCloud’s website. He said the company has doubled its revenue over the past 12 months — without providing specifics — and that the cuts put it on a path to profitability.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

MOMENTUM 9: A case for user-alienating design


Tuomas Kortteinen and Heikki Lotvonen, webpage of MOMENTUM 9


Tuomas Kortteinen and Heikki Lotvonen, visual identity for MOMENTUM 9


Tuomas Kortteinen and Heikki Lotvonen, visual identity for MOMENTUM 9. Image courtesy of the artists

I don’t often mention the website of biennial, festivals and exhibitions. They are usually designed to look edgy, efficient and user-friendly. They are also remarkably easy to forget. The website of the Momentum 9 biennial website is a bit different. First of all, it is an art destination in itself where you can listen to podcasts from Third Ear that explore the Alienation theme of the biennial (i listened to one about space travel) and read Ylva Westerlund‘s graphic novel The New Hird.

But the reason why i wanted to write about the website of MOMENTUM 9 the Nordic Biennial of Contemporary Art is that it doesn’t look like anything i have experienced before. First of all, it doesn’t seem to pride itself in being user-friendly. I remember cursing my way through the website when i first opened it. Where was the list of artists? And what’s with that barely decipherable typeface?! At the same time, the design of the website was so intriguing and appealing i really wanted to master it. It’s actually not difficult at all, just a bit disconcerting. Later, when i arrived in Moss for the press view of the biennial, i kept being drawn to the posters advertising the biennial in the city. They were fluoro green with enigmatic white doodles on it, the information texts had been printed on the duct tape used to hold the poster on walls. The more i saw of the visual identity of the biennial, the more i loved it and the more i wanted to talk to the designers responsible for it.

Their names are Tuomas Kortteinen and Heikki Lotvonen. They are listed, and rightly so, among the biennial participating artists. Their work for MOMENTUM 9 involved designing a cacographic -yet strangely elegant- typeface, playing with subtitles and filling your retina with blazing green. Here’s our little Q&A:


Tuomas Kortteinen and Heikki Lotvonen, logo for MOMENTUM 9


Tuomas Kortteinen and Heikki Lotvonen, logo for MOMENTUM 9

Hi Heikki and Tuomas! What was the influence for the visual look of the biennial? i’m guessing sci-fi and old movies with green aliens but would you mind explaining if you were inspired by specific movies, books, ideas, atmospheres, artworks?

Tuomas: I think the conscious influences we tried to take cues from were all more historical than sci-fi. The sci-fi thing is always there I guess though, as we both enjoy our bit of anime and/or cheeky sci-fi novel. But for this I think we consciously departed from the notion that an alienating distance can be found from the past as well as from the future. In this case, it was specifically the weird form the Latin alphabet took in Medieval times after the breakdown of the Roman empire, and especially the forms of a script called Merovingian cursive from the 6th and 7th centuries (the image is a scan from Nicolete Gray’s book Lettering as Drawing):

Further than that, in terms of the theme of “translation”, we were inspired by Jean-Luc Godard’s use of subtitles in his Film Socialisme. There the subtitles only translate a few keywords of the dialogue into English — thus forming a ‘Brechtian’ alienating effect — and force upon the English speaking viewer that, for them, rare condition of not completely understanding what is going (and not having thing always translated to your native language).

The green colour was a bit of an afterthought maybe? At least I don’t think we had a clear, rational reason for suggesting it. In the end the high-vis fluoro works quite well (when it is actually fluorescent), and I think the pairing of the colour and the weird type makes it feel way less historical — which is good and what were after I guess.


Tuomas Kortteinen and Heikki Lotvonen, visual identity for MOMENTUM 9. Photo: Istvan Virag © PunktØ/Momentum 9


Tuomas Kortteinen and Heikki Lotvonen, visual identity for MOMENTUM 9. Photo: Istvan Virag © PunktØ/Momentum 9


Tuomas Kortteinen and Heikki Lotvonen, visual identity for MOMENTUM 9. Photo: Istvan Virag © PunktØ/Momentum 9

You are both listed among the participating artists. That’s quite unusual for an art event to do so. Was it an idea that the curators had right from the start? And did it influence the way you approached the commission?

Tuomas: Yes, it was something they approached us with straight from the beginning, but it is something Heikki and I have done before. We’re both part of this Finnish design collective GRMMXI, where, in 2015 and 2016, we designed the visual identity and all other relevant material for Baltic Circle, a festival of theatre and performance art in Helsinki. Like the Baltic Circle people, the curators of Momentum asked for an identity that would 1) fulfill the necessary communicative requirements of a visual identity, and 2) have something (expressive, conceptual, alienating) to say of its own. This naturally affected the way we approached the project — we didn’t really need to hold back — but then the things the identity ended up “saying” as a whole had, in the end, travelled quite a distance from the original ideas that we begun from. And that’s not a bad thing — I think we both hate the kind of graphic design that first lists out its conceptual premises and then goes on simply to fulfill them. That way can easily get quite cold, austere and humourless.


Tuomas Kortteinen and Heikki Lotvonen, visual identity for MOMENTUM 9. Photo: Istvan Virag © PunktØ/Momentum 9


Tuomas Kortteinen and Heikki Lotvonen, visual identity for MOMENTUM 9. Photo: Istvan Virag © PunktØ/Momentum 9

Was the visual identity of the biennial the result of a conversation with the curators? Or were you given free wheel?

Heikki: Both actually. While we were given completely free wheel on everything, we worked closely together with Ilari Laamanen, one of the curators. During the design process, we would skype almost every Saturday, bouncing ideas back and forth about the concept and execution of the designs and he would encourage us to experiment with even crazier ideas than what we sometimes proposed. This combination provided to be very fruitful. It was a fresh break from typical service provision or client-centric problem solving that graphic designers usually face into a more collaborative but still very autonomous work that felt meaningful.

Now i’m going to confess that i found the website a bit disconcerting at first. I wasn’t sure where to click (yet, once i started clicking everything felt into place), the logo on the left upper corner was very unusual and there was this puzzling typography. Were you hoping that the website visitor would feel a sense of alienation when the page opened? Could you explain the choice of typography, symbols, etc?

Heikki: Yes, definitely! The website (and the whole identity) tries to challenge the often narrow confines of established (web) design practices, and the contemporary human conditions in digital environments by disrupting the experience users are expecting and accustomed to. This is something that goes hand in hand with the theme of alienation, and because the site is partly made as an “art piece” we didn’t want to present it in the form of slick, start-up style web design or follow the template of other exhibition sites. We wanted to make the user stop, get maybe a bit perplexed or annoyed, but curious, and to explore the many materials on the site, while still getting the necessary information.

Tuomas: About the typefaces:

The weird, almost unreadable, uncial-inspired typeface was based on old Merovingian models. In addition to the peculiar looks and to the stuff stated earlier, we found it interesting because, while it still is a model of the Latin alphabet, it really did not fit into existing categories of lettering or type (such as humanist sans serif, slab serif, transitional serif, etc.). As such, it can be said to exist within a queer space — a space that challenges the legitimacy and semblance of natural order conveyed by taxonomic systems (I’m super grateful to Sheena Calvert, my RCA tutor, for informing of the notion of ‘queer type’).

The other typefaces are attempts to place something else in that space, although while making them a bit more readable. So the basic typeface is a slightly inverted contrast, semi-serif, calligraphic monospaced, with a duospaced alternative. This means that in the basic form of the typeface, each letter, number and punctuation mark is of equal width, but then that in the duospaced version there is a corresponding symbol for everything, only twice as wide. (One could here state that the fact that the typeface can actually be described this way, with taxonomic descriptors, makes it actually way less queer than it could be if it went completely beyond, but then again, I cannot think of another existing typeface that would combine all these features, and in the end one can only do so much.)


Tuomas Kortteinen and Heikki Lotvonen, visual identity for MOMENTUM 9. Photo: Istvan Virag © PunktØ/Momentum 9


Tuomas Kortteinen and Heikki Lotvonen, logo for MOMENTUM 9

How did you translate that visual identity into physical objects (I particularly loved the posters and the video) and communicate this sense of alienation into the ‘physical world’?

Tuomas: We wanted to stay away from compositions as much as we could. Often, graphic design is so much about picking a nice, unobtrusive typeface and then making strong compositions, where positive and negative space counteract to create something larger than the sum of their parts. And I think we didn’t want to do that here. So instead of compositions, we thought of the physical applications of the identity in terms of their texture. So some stuff is full of type, while something else might just have the logo or a bunch of lines. But almost everything is either quite empty or then full of stuff — there’s no golden ratios or grid systems at play really. For us, texture is a much more malleable, vague and ambiguous term than anything along the point, line, plane -axis, and it was something really interesting and rewarding to explore.

Furthermore, the Momentum typefaces themselves were a fruitful starting point for this exploration. Usually what type designers and typographers aspire towards is an even typographic texture — that when you squint your eyes, a block of text transforms into a uniform block of grey, without any lighter or darker bits and pieces. This means is supposed to mean that a page is easy to read and easy on the eyes — that nothing pops out in an obtrusive way. For Momentum, we wanted to see what happens when you have a typeface that does produce an even colour, but where the lettershapes themselves are barely legible (the Uncial), and another typeface, where the individual characters are easily readable, but the overall texture of a page is super jumpy and uneven because of differences in letter widths.


Tuomas Kortteinen and Heikki Lotvonen, webpage of MOMENTUM 9

Trailer for MOMENTUM 9: BerlinARTlink Productions. Monica Salazar and Peter Cairns. Overness animation by Heikki Lotvonen and Tuomas Kortteinen. Music by Victoria Trunova

Finally, Momentum is “The Nordic Biennial of Contemporary Art”. Do you think that your work (this one in particular but also other projects you’ve made) have some particularly Nordic characteristics?

Tuomas: I don’t know really. I never thought of my own identity as specifically Nordic or even Finnish, but then I moved to London, where both have suddenly become easy ways to explain things. I do think many UK graphic designers have an aversion to formal expression — they want to make things nice and tidy so that the content is ‘framed’ in appropriately conceptual, but still very inconspicuous ways. And I don’t think an aversion like that exists within Finnish graphic design, at least not one quite so prevalent anyway.

While we worked on the project primarily in Finnish with Heikki and Ilari, none of us were actually in the same place (I was in London, Heikki in Amsterdam, Ilari in New York), and everything happened through skype and gmail. So we were submerged in quite different physical environments, which then leads to the question of how much of Nordic design project this was. Usually the way old school Finnish designers talk about their inspirations is not in terms of language or community, but specifically in terms of the natural landscape: the forest, the archipelago, the northern tundra. If you take that away, what is left of the ‘Finnishness’? For us, I guess one could say it was a question of straddling borders, of having one foot out and the other one in.

Thanks Tuomas and Heikki!

Momentum 9, The Nordic Biennial of Contemporary Art curated by Ulrika Flink, Ilari Laamanen, Jacob Lillemose, Gunhild Moe and Jón B.K Ransu remains open in various location in Moss, Norway, until 11 October 2017.

Previously: MOMENTUM9 – “Alienation is our contemporary condition”, MOMENTUM9. Maybe none of this is science fiction and The Museum of NonHumanity.

Source

'We're Not Dumb': Brands Worry Twitter Underestimates Its Bot Problem


Credit: Illustration by Tam Nguyen/ Ad Age

Earlier this year, a brand started seeing unusual levels of engagement on Twitter. The account was generating more followers and more retweets. This would have been a welcome development — if only it weren’t mostly bots and fake accounts prompting the sudden popularity.

“We thought we were on to something. Like maybe we hit the sweet spot,” said an agency exec, who worked on the account and spoke on condition of anonymity. “This brand that organically wasn’t doing well, all of a sudden starts promoting content, and we noticed it was getting a ton of engagement.”

Continue reading at AdAge.com

How Much Did Cyberattack Cost Reckitt Benckiser? Try $117 Million


Reckitt Benckiser Group cut its full-year sales forecast after a global cyberattack last month disrupted manufacturing and distribution, in the first detailed indication of the financial toll by a major company.

The maker of Air Wick fresheners and Dettol cleaners expects sales to rise about 2% on a like-for-like basis, Reckitt Benckiser said in a statement Thursday. Previously it forecast 3% growth.

“This is more than we were expecting,” RBC Capital Markets analyst James Edwardes Jones said in a note. The shares fell as much as 3.2% in early London trading.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Here's the Scoop on How Baskin-Robbins Plans Home Delivery


It sounds messy, but Baskin-Robbins says it can do it — deliver ice cream in the heat of summer to customers’ front doors.

More than 600 Baskin-Robbins U.S. stores are now delivering scoops of ice cream, milkshakes, sundaes and cakes through DoorDash. The chain, owned by Dunkin’ Brands Group Inc., had previously tested the service in about 60 locations in Los Angeles and Chicago. Now, stores are on board in 22 cities, including New York, Dallas, San Francisco and Seattle.

“Convenience and immediate gratification — they are huge customer needs,” said Carol Austin, VP-marketing at Baskin-Robbins. “Customers today want what they want, when they want it.”

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Reselling Trump: The Peculiar Optics of POTUS in Poland


Ad Age “Media Guy” columnist Simon Dumenco’s media roundup for the morning of Thursday, July 6:

President Trump’s handlers clearly see his current overseas trip as a chance for a do-over, following all the not-exactly-rave reviews of his foreign adventure in May. So how’s it going so far? Depends, more than ever, on whom you ask. Anyway, let’s get started …

1. There are, let’s just say, competing narratives surrounding the president’s visit to Poland today. For instance, here are a couple tweets from “Citizens for Trump” author Jack Posobiec:

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Facebook, Twitter Said to Seek World Cup Clips From Fox


Facebook, Twitter and Snap are seeking online rights to video highlights from next year’s World Cup, soccer’s most popular tournament, according to two people familiar with the matter.

The companies have offered 21st Century Fox tens of millions of dollars for rights to highlights from the Russia-hosted games that air in the U.S., according to the people, who declined to provide more specific terms and asked not to be identified because the talks are private. Fox hasn’t decided whether to sell exclusive rights to one buyer or to spread them around.

Social media’s growing interest in video, including sports, gives Fox a potentially significant new revenue source for the games as well as a tool to promote its coverage. Fox holds U.S. rights to the quadrennial event, and will air games on broadcast and cable TV. The company paid a reported $400 million for multiyear World Cup rights.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Ikea "Perfect" (2017) :30 (USA)

A mom narrates this cute spot about Ikea and a daughter, the perfect student, who believes she should have a perfect room no matter how far away she is. But uh-oh, she’s not putting away her stuffed animal to be clean and tidy. She’s cleaning up because, gasp! a BOY is coming over to study. And it better be study and not “study,” because that’s going to be an issue, and “get the flag out of the way,” is a great moment. Making the mom the voice over really saves this execution from being yet another overly familiar, overly concerned parent spot. Nice job.
Commercials: 
Country: 

Peet's cold brew coffee has no preservatives. Except cold.

Peet’s has done something amazing here, which is to actually differentiate its cold brew coffee from other cold brew coffees. Unlike the other stuff which has shelf stabilizers, the only processing Peet’s goes through to make its cold brew coffee is to use cold. Smart. Simple. And something I can remember. Check out their spot, too.

Commercials: 
Ad type: 

Public Mobile "Audition Tape 25: Paragliding" (2017) :45 (Canada)

Public Mobile is cheap.

Audience: HOW CHEAP IS IT

So cheap they run their audition tapes instead of making actual commercials. Because commercials are too expensive.

Delightfully silly. I actually think it’s funnier they’re pretending to hang glide on a dirty carpet.

Commercials: 
Country: 

Public Mobile "Audition Tape 7: Dance Club" (2017) :45 (Canada)

Public Mobile is having a bunch of fun whilst saving some money by running their audition tapes. This highlights the already absurd scenario of talking about your mobile phone company in a dance club by making it even more absurd. Ridiculous? Yes. Hilarious? Also, yes.
Commercials: 
Country: 

Public Mobile "Audition Tape 16: Rock climbing" (2017) :56 (Canada)

Public Mobile thinks commercials are too expensive, so they’re saving money by running the audition tapes instead. Everything about this is fun, from the casting to the intentionally horrible lighting. Not sure if the acting is intentional or not either, but I’ll be generous and say it is. Either way, funny stuff. And also, good on Public Mobile for being a good sport. It’s not every day you have a client that is cool with actors delivering their selling points in such a crude fashion.
Commercials: 
Country: