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Cheerios: Right On Tracks – It’s All Family

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Your Turn

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Dobrolov: The Last Vermin's Dance

Dobrolov Print Ad - The Last Vermin's Dance

We made a POS print campaign for Dobrolov company. They kill any type of pests. And they are greatest in it in Moscow, Russia.

Moscow Zoo: Not All Animals Sleep in Winter

Moscow Zoo Print Ad - Not All Animals Sleep in Winter

We made a print for Moscow Zoo’s SMM. This print invites guests to the Zoo to animals, who don’t sleep in winter.

IKEA: This is our IKEA Greenwich

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International Committee of the Red Cross: Choose

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Highlighted Valentine's Day Ads

Image: 
Highlighted Valentine's Day Ads
Collection Items: 
Galaxy: The Chase
Blush: Fuck this Valentine’s Day
Burger King: Valentine’s cup
Droga5: Valentine’s cards
Cochlear: Does love last forever?
Nescafe: Valentine’s Day
McDonald’s: Valentine’s Day
Spotify: Valentine’s Day
Dreams: Bed
Kmart: Valentine’s Day dinner
IKEA: Happy Valentine’s Day
Snickers: Petty Bickerings
McKinney: Inseparable
Expedia: Valentine’s Day
Scope: Kiss awkward goodbye
Max Burger: Valentine’s Day dinner
Match.com: Happy Valentine’s Day
Tesco: Valentine’s Day Basket Dating
NetFlorist: Valentine’s Day
Flower Town: The Proof of Love
Heart Research UK: InstaHeart Auction
Coca-Cola: Two Way Straw
Mr. Delivery: It’s scary out there, 1
Carphone Warehouse: Scrimper’s Valentine’s Day bouquet
Gun Oil: Happy Valentine’s Day
Sicredi: Valentine’s Day
Church End Brewery: Belly
Coca-Cola: Valentine’s Day, Love is in the air
Salvation Army: Ex-Valentine’s Day
Schneider: The Valentine’s Cover
Wilkinson: Smooth Valentine’s Day
Wilkinson: Smooth Valentine’s Day
Hovis: Valentine’s Day
TMN: St Valentine’s Day
Schick: Would you kiss you?, 3
Puma: Love Run Position #1
KISS FM: Valentine’s Day
Dylon: Valentine’s day – Anniversary
Valentine’s day
Valentine’s Day
Pole Dancer
Valentine’s Burlesque
Meetic: Valentine’s Day
Adria: Valentine’s Day
Zoo Cologne: Knight of the Roses, Camel
Wilkinson: Smooth Valentine’s Day
Google: Valentine’s Day
WURST: Valentine’s Day
Wise Up English School: Valentine’s Day,3
Heineken: Valentine’s Day
Snuggle: Serenades
Old Spice: Marco Love-O
Old Spice: Mask
Renault: The Postman
Pro Flowers / Shari’s Berries: Valentine’s Day
Pizza Hut: Hut Date
Grand Cinema & More: Grand Valentine’s Day Stories
Chloe: Chloe Love Story – Valentine’s Day
beIN SPORTS: Saint Valentin
Dr Oetker: Ristorante Cioccolato
Hypo: Check
Hypo: Flap
Hypo: Spread
Hypo: Wring
Land Rover: Flowers
Mercedes: There’s No Love Like the First
Land O’Lakes: Spread the Love
One Love Foundation: #LoveBetter
Wizo: There Are Some Flowers That No Woman Should Receive
Teleflora: Love Out Loud, A Silent Film
Moonpig: Love Bigger
Description: 

Love can be shown in many different ways, but raises the question: should love be commercialized? In today’s day and age many believe love should be. The collection of Valentine’s Day ads below show how various agencies struggle to find the right balance that’s appealing to its audience, therefore, sparking conversation.

Can blood ever be a material like any other?

Some 500 million animals are slaughtered every year for consumption in the Netherlands. The figures are even more horrifying if you look at the number of animals slaughtered for food every second. But while parts of these animals end up on your plate, they also generate a lot of ‘waste material’. Only 30 percent of the cow blood for example will be dried and used in fertilizers. The remaining 70 percent will be sterilised and discharged into the sewer system.


Basse Stittgen, Blood Related, 2017-ongoing


Basse Stittgen, Blood Related, 2017-ongoing

Designer Basse Stittgen transforms these leftover of the meat industry into a dark, organic and versatile bioplastic. He uses the discarded body fluid as a biomaterial that he dries, heat-presses and then turns into a protein-based biopolymer from which he crafts small objects. Various pieces of dinnerware are direct reminders of the consumption of animals. Small egg holders that can be stacked into a totem that evokes the mystical sides of blood. A jewellery box invites us to question the value of blood, and perhaps also the value of animals after their death. The designer even created a record playing the heartbeat of a pig.


Basse Stittgen, Blood Related, 2017-ongoing


Basse Stittgen, Blood Related, 2017-ongoing

Most of us will have some kind of visceral reaction to the project. Smooth consumer goods made of solid blood feel a bit revolting and upsetting. The use of blood to create domestic goods forces us to confront the symbolic as well as the material dimension of a liquid we associate with both life and death. Furthermore, these Blood Related objects highlight the contradictions at the core of our relationship to animals. In theory, we all love animals. But not enough to stop buying the products of their exploitation. We know we need slaughterhouses but we prefer them to function far away from our sight and thoughts. Facilities where animals are butchered used to be located in urban centers but are now located outside city limits for “environmental and hygiene” concerns. The building of the ex-slaughterhouses have since been cleaned up to house swanky cultural centers.

The most interesting question this project asks is thus: Can this biomaterial ever become ‘just an object’, without any further associations?

Basse Stittgen‘s objects made with blood are currently part of ReShape. Mutating Systems, Bodies and Perspectives, an exhibition at MU in Eindhoven that explores theme of mutation and transformation. I took the show as an excuse to get in touch with the designer and ask him a few question about a project i found both curious and disturbing:

Hi Basse! How did you get the idea to create this rather surprising material? Is there in it any political or ethical comment on the meat industry? Or is it a more pragmatic solution to reduce industrial waste?

The project started as a broad research into bio materials and their history, at one moment I came across a french bio material created in 1855 called bois durci – it consisted of 80% sawdust and 20% oxblood. The possibility to make a solid material from blood sparked my fascination and I started doing first experiments.

There is no intention of a direct political comment on the meat industry, the objects are supposed to physicalize an invisible waste and connect the consumer again to the production of meat and asks to be aware of where meat comes from and what that takes. The project is not meant to be developed into an industrial scale waste reduction solution, especially because industrial slaughterhouse have facilities to collect and process the cow blood into for example fertilizer, which also means not all blood is waste, but all of it is invisible.


Basse Stittgen, Blood Related, 2017-ongoing

From what i know, it is now very difficult to have contact with slaughterhouses and be granted an authorisation to visit their premises? How did you manage to source the blood? And how was your own experience of dealing with that industry?

It is indeed very difficult to find access to slaughterhouses since they are quite suspicious towards the motives of outsiders that want to gain access and on the other hand many of the ones I contacted saw no value in my research. It is about finding the right person to work with and now since over a year I’m working with one slaughterman that lets me collect the blood which for him is waste he pays for to have it picked up usually.

I remember the first time going to the slaughterhouse I was afraid of what I might see, especially since all the footage and news from slaughterhouses painted a very dark picture in my head. The moment I could talk to the slaughterman in person a lot of that fear and prejudice disappeared, which doesn’t change that the killing of a cow was one of the most violent images I experienced in my life.

While doing some online research to prepare this interview i found this page that describes the properties of the material. Where there characteristic of the materials that you found surprising, that you were not expecting?

And is it possible just by smelling or touching it to guess the origin of this biomaterial?

On first glance the material resembles bakelite, the surface is very hard and smooth due to the pressure and due to the heat the objects are completely black. During the process of creating them, especially drying the blood you can smell the origin, once the blood is dry it becomes odourless which makes it almost impossible to guess its origin. What surprised me most is the simplicity of the process


Basse Stittgen, Blood Related, 2017-ongoing

Could you tell us about the transformation process? How did you get from ‘industrial waste product’ to this set of objects?

All the objects relate to certain aspects of my research around blood. For the show at MU I decided to create a tiled table filled with dining ware made from blood. The setting calls in mind a slaughterhouse and the objects are directly linked to the consumption of animals.
For me to understand the meaning of the material and see the transformation process it is necessary to go one step before the industrial waste product. The first and more drastic transformation goes from blood as the ‘substance of life’ to ‘industrial waste product’ and only then into the blood objects. I try to embody this transformation for example in the record from blood which plays the hearbeat of a cow.


Basse Stittgen in collaboration with Anais Borie, Blood Related, 2017-ongoing


Basse Stittgen in collaboration with Anais Borie , Blood Related, 2017-ongoing

Together with Anais Borie you created a set of alchemistic drawings that echo the mystical dimension of blood. Could you tell us the role that blood played in alchemy?

While blood has its real attributes and composition of different proteins glucose and hormones that are all measurable and can refer to the visible, it has another layer which is its metaphorical meaning, the meaning humans give it based on nothing but belief and fantasy, the invisible. It is the interplay of those two sides is what makes it such a fascinating material to work with. By creating this visual layer based on alchemistic drawings I wanted to play on the irrationality connect to blood.

Has the project altered in any way your relationship to animal products?

I’m still eating meat, but the project made me more aware and choose much more carefully when and how I do so, I think for consumers its very easy and convenient to look the other way when it comes to the process of how things are made. Especially in the slaughter industry, one of the biggest in the world, yet one of the most invisible simultaneously.

Thanks Basse!

Basse Stittgen’s work is part of the exhibition ReShape. Mutating Systems, Bodies and Perspectives at MU in Eindhoven until 10 March 2019.

Related stories: Vampires, crucifixion and transfusion. BLOOD is not for the faint-hearted, Bodily Matters: Human Biomatter in Art (part 1. The blood session), “Dangerous Art”: the latest issue of the (free) Experimental Emerging Art Magazine, The Meat Licence Proposal, interview with John O’Shea, etc.

Bob Costas Accuses NBC of Retaliating for His Remarks on Concussions in N.F.L.

NBC Sports contradicted Mr. Costas’s account, saying he had not been removed from Super Bowl coverage as punishment and that the decision had been mutual.

Grammy Awards Show Stops Its Ratings Bleed

Nearly 20 million tuned in to see Alicia Keys, Cardi B. and a Michelle Obama cameo.

The new game that just overtook 'Fortnite' on Twitch


If you haven’t heard of “Apex Legends,” there’s a reason for that.

Despite being a big-budget title from well-known gamemaker EA (“Madden,” “FIFA,” “Battlefield”), “Apex Legends,” which this weekend dethroned video-game phenomenon “Fortnite” in a number of areas, launched without advertising.

Released about a week ago, “Apex Legends” is similar to “Fortnite” in that it is a free, online multiplayer video game in which players go head-to-head in a battle royale style (think last man standing). The game captured 2.5 million players within the first day of its release and, two days later, that number climbed to a record-breaking 10 million playersa milestone that took previous record-holder “Fortnite” two weeks to achieve. And “Apex Legends” became the most watched stream on Twitch this past weekend, garnering some 300,000 active viewers, or about three-times that of “Fortnite,” according to Twitch data.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

IHOP's Pancizza aims to 'Blow Your Mouth's Mind'


Passersby walking through New York’s SoHo neighborhood on International Pizza Day last weekend might have been surprised to hear a one man polka band making a lot of noise at Bleecker Street Pizza.

But IHOP had taken over the neighborhood staple for the day to give out free slices of “Pancizza” — a pizza-sized pancake only available over the weekend at select IHOP locations.

Created in collaboration with Droga5, the Pancizza (pronounced pan-keet-za) menu featured flavors such as Strawberr-oni (strawberry jam, coconut shavings and sliced strawberries), Mallo-rita (raspberry jam, marshmallows and mint), and PancizzAloha (maple marscapone, cheddar cheese, bacon and, yes, pineapple) all made to look like real pizza. (Pineapple on pizza might be up for debate, but it most certainly belongs on a pancake.) After being warmed up in a pizza oven, pancake slices were given out in custom Pancizza boxes brandishing IHOP’s take on the classic winking pizza chef.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Edelman taps #LikeAGirl creator Judy John as its first global chief creative officer


As PR shop Edelman continues to sharpen its creative chops, it’s hiring decorated creative Judy John known as a driving force behind Always’ #LikeAGirl campaign as its first global chief creative officer.

John comes from Leo Burnett, where she served as chief creative officer for North America and CEO for the agency in Canada. She will lead Edelman’s team of more than 600 creatives and planners globally. The new role is effective April 29.

In recent years, Edelman has evolved from its roots in public relations to bulk up its creative, paid media and consulting expertise. The firm’s president and CEO Richard Edelman calls it “earned creative,” or campaigns that don’t require paid support to gain momentum (though paid media could be used to augment that momentum). The work is also designed to be something people like to share with their social media networks and can move “at the pace of news,” he says, meaning the creative can take many forms and react to things happening in real time.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Top 100 Tech Trends in February – From Vintage Electric Bikes to Net-Gen Shopping Showcases (TOPLIST)

(TrendHunter.com) The February 2019 tech trends offer an eclectic look into the world of evolving technology and there are some noteworthy examples that are edging toward substantial breakthroughs. One is linked to…

Top 65 Sports Trends in February – From High-Tech Gym Equipment to Electric Hydrofoil Surfboards (TOPLIST)

(TrendHunter.com) The list of February 2019 sports trends features a broad scope of ideas that challenge athletic movement and technological efficiency. The range of this month’s sports trends experiments with…

The Family Coppola Brand Hosted an Interactive Activation at Sundance in Honor of Francis Ford’s Birthday

Ahead of Francis Ford Coppola’s 80th birthday this coming April, The Family Coppola wine brand used the 2019 Sundance Film Festival to give fans the opportunity to send well wishes to the filmmaking giant. The brand, which is now in its third year as the exclusive wine sponsor at Sundance, wanted to celebrate Coppola’s independent,…

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Fashion

Jim Beam – "Celebration" – (2019) :60 (USA)

Drinks & Alcohol

When Prohibition fell, the Beam family rose to rebuild a legacy that lives on to this day.

Universal Pictures – Us – March 22 – (2019) :60 (USA)

Entertainment

After sending shockwaves across contemporary culture and setting a new standard for provocative, socially-conscious horror films with his directorial debut, Get Out, Academy Award®-winning visionary J