Sensacionalismo domina todos os lados da história de “Eu, Tonya”

Tonya Harding é um destes grandes símbolos das deficiências do american way que ora ou outra surgem no curso histórico estadunidense. Nascida no Oregon, a ex-patinadora artística foi a primeira norte-americana e a segunda mulher na História da competição a conseguir realizar um salto axel triplo – difícil movimento que consiste basicamente de durante a …

> LEIA MAIS: Sensacionalismo domina todos os lados da história de “Eu, Tonya”

Twitter passa a transmitir ao vivo eventos de última hora

Novo formato começou durante a cobertura do tiroteio em uma escola de Miami

> LEIA MAIS: Twitter passa a transmitir ao vivo eventos de última hora

We Hear: BBDO Will Try to Repair Wells Fargo’s Reputation in Wake of Account Fraud Scandal

In case you missed it, banking brand Wells Fargo has taken something of a beating in the arena of public opinion due to a scandal involving millions of fake savings and checking accounts created by employees in response to alleged performance pressures.

Earlier this month, the Federal Reserve also punished the company by effectively restricting its ability to grow until it makes changes to its board of directors.

And just this week, Senator Elizabeth Warren chided the company’s relatively new CEO Tim Sloan for admitting that the company had “charged nearly 600,000 customers for auto insurance they didn’t need,” “improperly charged 110,000 customers fees to extend their mortgage rate locks,” and “bungled its reimbursements to the auto loan and mortgage rate lock customers.”

This was all after the fake account issue had seemingly been resolved.

Now, we hear that the company is turning to a familiar party for help: its ad agency of record, BBDO San Francisco.

According to our sources, the shop plans to launch a new campaign with “a multi-million dollar budget” that is specifically designed to improve the bank’s reputation after more than a years’ worth of bad headlines.

Since winning the account in early 2014 (it had been with DDB for nearly 20 years), BBDO has indeed produced some surprising efforts. Its first campaign, for example, starred a real-life lesbian couple learning sign language before a touching last-minute reveal about their plans to adopt a deaf girl also played by a real-life deaf girl.

Regarding this post, a BBDO spokesperson referred us back to the client for comment. Wells Fargo representatives wrote, “We typically launch a new brand campaign every year in the Spring.  Currently, we are working through the details of our 2018 plans.”

So it’s unclear exactly how the agency will attempt to address the issues that its client has faced over the past year-plus. How would you do it?

I Didn’t Name My Agency ‘Something Massive’ So You Could Make a D*ck Joke

This is a guest post by Rebecca Coleman, founder and managing partner of L.A. agency Something Massive.

It’s not lost on me that the name of my agency, Something Massive, sounds like the punchline to an after-hours joke.

After almost ten years in this business, I thought I’d pretty much heard it all … until a couple weeks ago. A few of my female colleagues recently attended an industry awards show to present a nomination, and the very first man they encountered thought it was appropriate to compare the name of our company to the size of his own genitalia.

Let’s reiterate that this was a formal industry event.

My team, with client in tow, had only just met this man. To deflect the offense, they politely pointed out that the joke was inappropriate.

Nevertheless, he persisted—and not in a way that would make Elizabeth Warren proud.

As the night progressed, the joke-maker’s table mate suggested that the act of “making out” with our client might make her feel “wined and dined.” (On the contrary, it made her feel nauseous.) Not the type to just smile and nod, the women from my agency pointed out the idiocy of such an assumption, while the jokester’s male friend, who happens to be the CEO of another nominated agency, said nothing. He neither interjected nor apologized for his friend’s blatant display of misogynist disrespect. In fact, he laughed in comradery.

It was only when my tweet on the subject received a modest degree of attention online that this CEO felt compelled to speak up, arguing that the person in question was merely a “guest.” He proudly stated that his agency does not tolerate this kind of behavior.

But it sure seems like he tolerated it while it was going on. And when did the universal rule of “you are the company you keep” become so subjective?

If there’s one thing we’ve learned from the recent wave of voices speaking out against any type of harassment, complicity can be just as detrimental, if not more so.

I want to be clear about one thing: I am not humorless. I can appreciate a good d*ck joke. Given the right context and delivery, they can be very funny and entertaining. There is room in this world for feminism and d*ck jokes to coexist. That said, let me stress context and delivery. I am absolutely not OK with a d*ck joke when it creates an uncomfortable environment, be that professional or personal.

In the aforementioned incident, it happened to be professional—which is why I’m focusing my attention there.

As much as I loved Mad Men, the year is currently 2018, not 1968 … yet the advertising industry doesn’t appear to have moved the needle as much as we’d like to believe. Even though there is considerably less day-drinking, the anonymous Instagrammers at Diet Madison Avenue have correctly noted that advertising is still very much a boys’ club. Two women couldn’t even make it through an industry event without enduring a verbal assault, and this type of tone-deaf behavior endures because it is so often overlooked and brushed off as par for the course.

Aside from common decency and respect for your peers regardless of gender, this was a fundamental case of misreading the room. Aren’t all of us advertising and marketing executives supposed to be experts in audience? Disrespect and poor comedic timing do not make for an effective combination.

There are simple, courteous ways to engage with your industry peers just as you would your clients’ would-be customers. They are, in essence, the basics of advertising.

  1. Know your audience.

No important message will be heard, received, and acted upon if not delivered to the right person at the right time.

  1. Build a positive brand image.

Online or offline, you have a brand image to cultivate and uphold. Don’t you want it to be a positive one?

  1. Stand for something.

Our cultural climate increasingly demands that brands and people draw lines in the sand. Silence is a position, too–– and it’s not a good one.

  1. Don’t make a d*ck joke to someone you’ve just met.

This isn’t one of the building blocks of marketing, but maybe it should be.

I’m not sharing this story for the shock value because, honestly, no one is shocked. Instead, it’s a call for an industry I love to be better. A lot better. Moving mountains better. I know that we can do that because we are the experts in this stuff … if only we could all follow our own recommendations.

For the record, the event organizers have banned the jokester in question from all future events. It’s a small step in the right direction.

Red Stripe Offers to Buy a New Bobsled for Jamaican Olympians

The Jamaican bobsled team has been a world-famous underdog since first appearing on the Olympic scene in 1988. The team’s unlikely path to the global stage was made famous in the 1993 movie Cool Runnings, but returning to the Olympics has been a challenge ever since, with financial support often in short supply. This year,…

Lotto 649: Joy for All

Video of LOTTO 6/49 – Joy for All :30 sec TV commercial

Enza Home: The Greatest Love

The White Angle TVC
Love does not count for time or place… And the first love… the one that is not forgotten for ever and ever! Wherever you go, wherever you live… it appears in a clear sky to say hello to you… it suddenly fills in any spaces in your life and it becomes your source of inspiration…

Made by Enza Home especially for the St. Valentine’s Day, the White Angle is a movie that presents the power of love and tells about how two people come together years after from their childhood when their small hearts bit with passion and love. The film displays the simplest and the most powerful form of romance, innocence and the first love. Forced to separate their paths, our characters cherish their fidelity and keep their love to each other in their hearts for years until they unexpectedly and miraculously meet one day.

The thing that brings the two lovers together years after is the White Angle that was the symbol of their love and passion years ago.

Video of Enza Home #EnGüzelA?klara 2018 Yeni Reklam Filmi

ADA: Availables

A simple idea for ADA Foundation that got together the billboards in Colombia with the abandoned animals of the foundation, to find brands to advertise and new homes for all of the animals.

Video of ADA – Availables

Mercedes: There's No Love Like the First

Mercedes Digital Ad - There's No Love Like the First

For their 2018 Valentine’s Day creative, Online Circle Digital created an ad for Mercedes-Benz Australia & New Zealand that was simple, sharp and paid homage to the brand’s legacy.

Part of Collection

Audi: The Backseat Driver Experience

All research shows that women are better drivers than men. They cause less traffic accidents and less traffic offenses. Despite the fact, there’s an image that women are bad drivers and a majority are therefore forced to listen to men acting like backseat drivers. They are giving annoying and irritating comments on how to drive. To help out, Audi Sweden created The Backseat Driver Experience – a GPS that women could use to let all men have a taste of their own medicine. By activating the app, the GPS analyzed the drivers’ actions and played all kind of annoying comments connected to them. Just like a typical male backseat driver.

Video of Audi – Backseat Driver

Futuristic Executive Fashions – The Alexander Wang Fall 2018 Collection Serves 'Executive Realness' (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) His last presentation at New York Fashion Week, the Alexander Wang Fall 2018 show offered a glimpse into the designer’s view of “executive realness” with a cyber punk punk influence….

MUH-TAY-ZIK | HOF-FER Vet Rachel Gold Joins Huge’s Elephant as VP of Strategy

Elephant, the still-kind-of-mysterious design agency launched by IPG’s Huge network a couple of years ago to serve a single client called Apple, is now in expansion mode.

Just check out the website, which has evolved to read, “Elephant was originally created to work with Apple. Today, our mission is to create value for companies by creating value for people.” At one point, it was a single page whose only copy read “by appointment only.”

The agency is on something of a hiring spree, most recently bringing MUH-TAY-ZIK | HOF-FER director of brand strategy Rachel Gold aboard to serve as VP of strategy in its San Francisco office.

“At Elephant, we keep our clients, new business wins, ongoing projects and talent hires strictly confidential,” said CEO Eric Moore, who was president of client services at Huge’s Brooklyn headquarters before taking over Elephant in late 2016. “Yet, we are happy to confirm that Elephant is experiencing unprecedented growth across all of our offices, and that a new leader will join our strategy teams led by Auro Trini Castelli, MD Strategy.”

He continued: “We’ve been adding to our leadership team over the past several months with new hires Benjamin White, MD SF; David Chang, MD LA; Cara DiNorcia, GM; Kevin Kearney, Executive Experience Director LA; Brian Cronk, VP Strategy NY; Jessica Walker, VP Client Services NY; and Erica Garvey, VP Client Services SF. This amazing new talent will partner with Elephant’s executive leadership team, which includes Charles Fulford, ECD; Castelli, MD Strategy; and Gregoire Assemat-Tessandier, MD.”

As noted above, Elephant is hesitant to discuss its clients—which is not particularly surprising to anyone who has ever tried to get Apple to comment on anything.

But we do hear that the agency has added additional accounts in the tech and telecoms sectors to its roster. How else would it be able to open locations in New York and San Francisco, not to mention taking over Huge’s Los Angeles office a couple of months ago?

Gold joined MUH-TAY-ZIK in 2015 after holding leadership roles at various tech-focused design and branding firms in the Bay Area in addition to working in-house at companies like Adobe. Her last day with the agency was today.

In other news, we have yet to receive any updates on new leadership in the New York office following the departures of its president, ECD and director of strategy last November.

McKinney New York Welcomes New Director of Strategy

McKinney hired Jasmine Dadlani as director of strategy in its New York office, joining a leadership team that includes New York CEO Joe Maglio, executive creative director Mike Pierantozzi and director, experiential marketing Michelle Son.

“Jasmine is a tremendous addition to our team by every count,” Pierantozzi said in a statement. “She innovates, inspires and mentors, all in the service of making the work better. In no time, I could tell she has an innate understanding of culture and trends that allows her to arrive at how brands can emotionally connect with people. I am truly excited to partner with her.”

Dadlani joins the agency from Cramer-Krasselt, where she spent over eleven years, most recently serving as senior vice president, director of brand planning. Prior to joining Cramer-Krasselt spent a little over a year as a brand panning director for Arnold Worldwide’s Washington, D.C. office and nearly two and a half years as senior vice president, brand director with Deutsch New York.

“Jasmine is rare,” McKinney chief strategy officer Walt Barron said in a statement. “She’s unusually passionate for someone so experienced. Unusually endearing for someone so relentless and tough. Unusually humble for someone so accomplished. Unusually down to earth for someone so smart. We’re lucky to have her join our team, and I know she’ll help make our work even stronger and more effective.”

“I found a rare combination at McKinney,” added Dadlani. “Outstanding creative work that drives business results, a growing roster of diverse, world-class clients, and a culture that is amazingly collaborative within and across offices. I’m thrilled to partner strategically with the top-tier talent that McKinney attracts.”

Schafer Condon Carter Wins Fresh Thyme Farmers Market Review

Fresh Thyme Farmers Market, an Illinois-based specialty retailer once described as “a Whole Foods-Trader Joe’s hybrid,” picked nearby indie Schafer Condon Carter after a review. The agency will handle creative, PR, influencer marketing, social media and planning/buying.

The chain focuses on natural, organic and fresh food at less-than-premium prices, and it has grown since launching in 2014 to include 66 locations across 10 states.

“We knew we were ready to bring on a partner who could help us achieve the brand’s great potential, and SCC demonstrated not only a deep understanding of our brand and the consumer we serve, but also the creativity, broad integrated capabilities and passion that we were looking for,” said Fresh Thyme CMO Mark Doiron.

The chain has been in expansion mode in recent months thanks, in large part, to an investment from supermarket brand Meijer, though its plans seem to have slowed a bit since January.

In recent months, it has also named several food and retail industry veterans to its C-suite including chief financial officer Carol Okamoto, chief merchandising officer Mark Doiron and chief operations officer Dean Little.

So far, Fresh Thyme does not appear to have launched any major campaigns, growing via word of mouth and a presence in new markets. It’s not clear how much the company plans to spend on forthcoming marketing efforts.

iProspect Shakes Up Leadership With New U.S. CMO and First Chief Tech Officer

iProspect has named Belle Lenz its U.S. chief marketing officer and Joel Grossman its first-ever chief technology officer. Lenz was formerly communications director of the Americas for the global digital marketing agency’s parent, Dentsu Aegis Network. Grossman hails from Leapfrog Online, the performance shop iProspect acquired last year, where he served in the same role….

McDonald's Makes Happy Meals (Slightly) Healthier


Others were also pleased. McDonald’s nutritional changes are “a welcome next step,” Margo Wootan, VP for nutrition at the Center for Science in the Public Interest, said in a statement, adding that other chains should follow its lead.

But Alexa Kaczmarski, national campaign organizer for the group Corporate Accountability, lashed out at the announcement.

“This is more of the same. Old tricks from an old dog,” Kaczmarski said in a statement, calling Happy Meals “vehicles for hooking kids on junk food and building brand affinity for life.”

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Salon Aims to Start a Publishing Revolution by Spinning Ad Blocking Into Cryptocurrency


Jordan Hoffner, CEO of Salon Media Group, is not surprised at the attention his site is suddenly getting.

Salon is likely the first publisher to ask users running ad blockers to either turn them off or make up for it by letting Salon use their computers’ processing power to mine cryptocurrency in the background. The Financial Times (which has itself gotten creative with readers who run ad blockers) reported the news on Monday. The media world turned its head.

“Being a journalist, I knew it was going to be a big story,” Hoffner says. “But that’s not why we did it. We have a profound problem in the industryad blockingand this was one way to bring light to it.”

Continue reading at AdAge.com

New York Lottery: Small Town

In the latest take on New York Lottery’s “How Would You Spend It?” campaign, “Small Town” builds off of the original concept of showing how one New Yorker would spend his time if he won Cash4Life’s top prize of $1000 a week for life.

Shot by legendary director Noam Murro, “Small Town” features actual miniature buildings and props to tell the story of how one lucky winner uses his newly afforded time to revisit an old childhood hobby.

Cash4Life is the only draw game from the New York Lottery that offers players a chance to win $1,000 a day for life, giving players an opportunity to dream about how they’d spend their days, not just their dollars, if they won.

“Small Town” will run from 2/15/2018 to 3/31/2018, and is being supported by Cash4Life-specific radio, OOH, print and point of sale materials. The TV spot will be featured across New York State broadcast TV, as well as in cinemas and social media.

Video of New York Lottery – Small Town

Absolut: The Vodka With Nothing To Hide

The film, featuring employees from The Absolut Company, humorously pays homage to classic employee induction videos and highlights its sustainable, progressive approach to creating the highest quality vodka. The nudity is used as a metaphor for their transparent production process, so rest assured, employees at the distillery are normally found fully clothed.

Video of ABSOLUT – The Vodka With Nothing To Hide

Save the Children: Migrant Children, 1

Save the Children Print Ad - Migrant Children, 1

In Mexico each year more than 40,000 children are forced to emigrate in search of a better life.

Child exploitation, sexual abuse, delinquency are some of dangers they have to deal with in order to reach the EEUU Border.

However, these are not the only danger they have to tackle. They must cross the border without being discover. It costs them $4000 USD to take the risk. They have to pay this amount to children traffickers “coyotes.”