In the ‘Age of Cynicism,’ Your Marketing Must Be Meaningful and Authentic

Editor’s note: This piece is part of our Columnist Network series, which explores the tactical thoughts and actions from Adweek’s community of high-level experts. Today, Stephanie Nerlich, CEO of Havas Creative, takes a moment to reflect on consumer outlooks and ideologies. Below, in her own words, she advises businesses and brands to authentically drive the…

MC Hammer Runs Away With Creative Strategy Top Honors

Advocacy, inclusion and MC Hammer (also known professionally as simply “Hammer”) helped agencies take home Creative Strategy Lions during the Cannes Festival. In the second day of honors announced at Cannes, Cheetos and San Francisco agency Goodby, Silverstein & Partners took home the Grand Prix Lions for the Creative Strategy category. Top honors: the Grand…

Reddit, Burger King Win Cannes Social and Influencer Grand Prix

Two campaigns that, in their moment, were unlikely heroes have received top honors at Cannes Lions today. Burger King’s “Stevenage Challenge” and Reddit’s “Superb Owl”–the website’s 5-second regional Super Bowl ad–emerged as the Grand Prix winners in the Social and Influencer category. For the “Stevenage Challenge,” that’s the second Grand Prix win today, with the…

City of Chicago and Telenor Pakistan Win Cannes Lions Media Grand Prix

Beating a shortlist of over 200, two campaigns took home the Grand Prix for the media category on the second day of Cannes Lions Festival of Creativity this week: the City of Chicago and Pakistan’s second-largest mobile carrier, Telenor Pakistan. Top honors: the Grand Prix winner The jurors for the media category, chaired by Philippa…

AB inBev’s ‘Contract for Change’ and Spinneys’ ‘The Bread Exam’ Win Cannes PR Grand Prix

Cannes’ PR Lions category yielded two very different winners on Tuesday–both of which are aiming for serious change. During day 2 of Cannes, AB inBev and Michelob Ultra Pure Gold’s “Contract For Change” and Spinneys’ collaboration with the Lebanese Breast Cancer Foundation, “The Bread Exam,” won the PR Grand Prix. Top honors: the Grand Prix…

Rothco and Warner Music Win Cannes Creative Data Grand Prix

The words “creative” and “data” never used to be used in the same breath, but a lot has changed in the last few years; now data is inextricably tied to how creative conducts itself. Thus, the creation of the Creative Data category in the Cannes Lions awards, which were presented Tuesday in the south of…

Warner Music and Accenture Interactive's Rothco win Creative Data Grand Prix

‘Saylists’ turned speech therapy into singable playlists on Apple Music.

Amp spotlight: 2021 Agency A-List & Creativity Awards

This past year many agencies pushed beyond adversity to create great work. A breakdown of how Ad Age Amp members did at the 2021 A-List & Creativity Awards.

Procter & Gamble sends Tide to space in NASA test

International Space Stations crew will use a formula possibly suitable for deep space and the fact that astronauts have to drink the wash water.

Cannes Lions 2021: H&M vence GP de Design com loja integrada a sistema de reciclagem

Looop area 4

A exemplo da categoria Outdoor, o Grand Prix de Design também se dividiu entre dois vencedores no Cannes Lions 2021. Ambos, vale ressaltar, com foco na sustentabilidade. A primeira delas é o “Looop”, projeto que a H&M introduziu em outubro em uma de suas lojas em Estocolmo e que é descrito pela própria companhia como …

Leia Cannes Lions 2021: H&M vence GP de Design com loja integrada a sistema de reciclagem na íntegra no B9.

Burger King’s Obscure Football Sponsorship Wins Cannes Direct Grand Prix

Burger King has added to its Cannes Lions awards haul by scoring the top prize in Direct, which celebrates targeted and response-driven creativity. The fast-food brand’s “Stevenage Challenge,” created by David Miami, won the Direct Grand Prix. It also won a gold Lion in the category. Launched in 2019, the campaign saw Burger King sponsor…

Art in the Age of Anxiety

Art in the Age of Anxiety, edited by writer, curator and cultural historian Omar Kholeif.

Publisher MIT Press describes the book: Every day we are bombarded by information, misinformation, emotion, deception, and secrecy in our online and offline lives. How does the never-ending flow of data affect our powers of perception and decision making? This richly illustrated and boldly designed collection of essays and artworks investigates visual culture in the post-digital age..


Wafaa Bilal, Domestic Tension, 2007


Trevor Paglen, They Took the Faces from the Accused and the Dead… (SD18), (detail), 2020.

The global pandemic and strict lockdowns have left us free to contemplate our anxieties. It’s in this context that I received the catalogue of an exhibition that was prevented from opening precisely because of said pandemic.

The publication confronts head-on the state of perpetual anxiety we find ourselves in and the role that technology plays in amplifying our apprehensions and in fashioning new ones. Information technology has given us greater access to knowledge, greater ease in voicing our opinions, in protesting and resisting injustices (positive impacts that the book also explores.) That same IT has also turbo boosted the spread of misinformation, hate speech, conspiracy theories, polarised views, provided intelligence agencies with new ammunition to spy on us and multiplied the ways private companies can turn us into mere commodities. Even content we should welcome, like information or entertainment, often feels overwhelming. How many free online panels with a stellar line-up can one fit into one day? What does this overload of intellectual stimulation and blue light do to our brains? And should we try and learn to switch off when we’re already self-flagellating for not being productive enough?

Not all essays in Art in the Age of Anxiety are gripping but there are some real gems: Simon Denny writes about how he turned his collection of Margaret Thatcher’s scarves into politically-loaded Patagonia Nano Puff Power Vests. Aruba Khalid explores how digital technology is disrupting money and how this could alter not only the global monetary system but society at large. Marc Tuters and Omar Kholeif have an engaging conversation about online subcultures. Saira Ansari has an essay on grieving online, virtual funerals on WoW and the digital trail we leave behind. Douglas Coupland contributed with both a photo essay featuring spray cans for global warming and a text dissecting the comfort of silliness and other human “superpowers”. As for Cory Arcangel, he wrote about Warhol’s experiments with Amiga software and hardware and about the pop artist’s vision of the straight line between graffiti art and digital art.

Many of the essays are haunted by the pandemic. Or rather by the early days of the pandemic. When all wasn’t jolly Pfizer, projects of antiviral oral drugs and a possible end of the tunnel. Because of that precise timestamp, it will be interesting to see how some of the essays age over time. The initial concept of the exhibition, however, will probably remain relevant and poignant for years to come.

Still, there’s something strangely assuaging in holding in your hands a book that confirms that you might be freaking out but at least you’re in good company.

A couple of works that were part of the Art in the Age of Anxiety exhibition:


Lawrence Abu Hamdan, A Convention of Tiny Movements, 2015-Ongoing


Lawrence Abu Hamdan, A Convention of Tiny Movements, 2015-Ongoing

A Convention of Tiny Movements responds to MIT’s research around visual microphones – devices that can record and then recreate your voice based on micro-vibrations reflected off everyday objects. The extraction of these frequencies has led to a new method of sound recovery, which allows objects to become listening devices.

Although this technology is not yet implemented by spying agencies, the photograph of a supermarket in Beirut suggests all the objects (shown in colour) that can, to date, be successfully used as sound recording devices. The black and white sections of this photo indicate the objects that cannot yet be used as microphones and therefore show the blind or silent spots of this technology.


Aleksandra Domanovi?, Kalbträgerin (detail), 2017. From ‘Votive’, 2016–ongoing. Installation view: Art in the Age of Anxiety, Sharjah Art Foundation, 2020. Photo: Danko Stjepanovic

Aleksandra Domanovi?’s sculpture Kalbträgerin translates scientific research in breeding certain traits in cattle (such as hornless bulls) into 3D printed sculptures. The calf on the votive stela is a biotech version of the 6th century BC Moschophoros (Calf Bearer), found on the Acropolis of Athens.


Lynn Hershman Leeson, Shadow Stalker (still), 2019

Lynn Hershman Leeson’s Shadow Stalker draws attention to internet systems used by law enforcement that promote racial profiling (Predictive Policing) and to the erosion of individual rights in a time of excessive surveillance and misuse of data.

Jenna Sutela, Nimiia Cétïï, 2018


Simon Denny, Document Relief 16, 2019


Electronic Disturbance Theater, Transborder Immigrant Tool, 2007–ongoing


Eva & Franco Mattes, What Has Been Seen, 2017


Eva & Franco Mattes, What Has Been Seen, 2017


Thomson & Craighead, More Songs of Innocence and of Experience (video still), 2013. Installation view: Art in the Age of Anxiety, Sharjah Art Foundation, 2020. Photo: Danko Stjepanovic


Aura Satz, The Wail That Was Warning, 2018

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10 Sustainable Period Products – From Reusable Period Liners to Zero-Waste Menstrual Cups (TOPLIST)

(TrendHunter.com) In order to maintain a plant-friendly lifestyle, many individuals are looking to ditch single-use products, especially ones that they have to use recurringly—this list of sustainable period…

UK Telecom Brand O2 Is Staging a Show in Fortnite for People Who Miss Live Gigs

U.K. telecom provider O2 is the latest brand to break into Fortnite by creating an interactive music experience within the video game. Created by VCCP, the campaign marks the first time that The O2-an entertainment venue in London-will appear in a video game. It is also the first time that a U.K. music act, the…

Call for entries: Ad Age Best Places to Work 2022 is open for business

Is your company a contender for Ad Age Best Places to Work 2022? Register for the awards competition now.

A Beautiful Window Unit Air Conditioner? Windmill Has You Covered

We’ve seen disruption in mattresses, razors, alcohol, toothpaste and, now, window unit air conditioners. Mike Mayer is the co-founder of Windmill, a startup that’s setting out to breathe new life into the air care category–starting with their window unit AC. On this episode of I’m With the Brand, we hear about Windmill’s relentless focus on…

To Combat Piracy, VIZ Media Made Its Content Available to Fans for Free

It’s quite possible that alumni of stellar brands such as Lexus, Mattel, Warner and DreamWorks have seen Brad Woods’ work up close. Always looking for more innovative challenges, the now-executive vice president and CMO of VIZ Media has taken on the world of Japanese manga to push him even further. But with very passionate fan…

Coors joins boozy ice cream bandwagon with alcohol-infused dessert

Orange Cream Pop ice cream is the latest entrant in a crowded field.

Opinion: What today’s marketers can learn from the direct mail era

Continuous testing should be part of any brand’s growth culture.   

Dell: #APEX | Breaking Barriers

Video of Dell Technologies #APEX | Breaking Barriers