Mullen Catches ‘Lightning in a Bottle’ for Acura

Mullen has launched a new campaign for Acura entitled “Catch It If You Can” with the new spot “Bottle.”

The 60-second “Bottle” is set to that most over-used (and overrated) of Pixies songs, “Where Is My Mind,” and features a scientist capturing lighting in a bottle (yes, literally) to power the Acura ILX. To be fair, Mullen and Acura got Pixies lead guitarist Joey Santiago to rework the song, and it actually fits the mood and action of the ad pretty well. The spot, directed by Johnny Green, who recently helmed Under Armour’s “I Will What I Want” ad from Droga5, is well shot and does a pretty good job of setting a mood. Unfortunately, it never really goes anywhere, feeling disjointed, held up by a flimsy premise and, as Adweek put it “less than the sum of its parts.”

Credits:

Brand: Acura
Client: Mike Accavitti, Senior Vice President, General Manager
Client: Ed Beadle, Senior Marketing Manager
Client: Leila Cesario, National Advertising Manager
Car Model: 2016 ILX
Spot Title: “Bottle”

Agency:  Mullen
Chief Creative Officer: Mark Wenneker
Executive Creative Director: Margaret Keene
Creative Director, Art: Paul Foulkes
Creative Director, Writer: Adam Calvert
Senior Art Director: Sean Stell
Writer: Natasha Hugeback
Senior Vice President, Director of Integrated Production: Jon Drawbaugh
Senior Broadcast Producer: Meagen Moore
Content Producer: Elaine Russell
Business Affairs, Music Supervisor: Danica Bates
Managing Director: Cameron McNaughton
Vice President, Account Director: Nicole Neopolitan
Account Supervisor: Courtney Calvert
Account Executive: Kylie Mugg
Product Specialist: Curtis Milward

Production Company: Reset
Director: Johnny Green
Managing Director: Dave Morrison
Executive Producer: Jeff McDougall
Producer: Betsy Oliver
Director of Photography: Paul Cameron

Editorial: RPS
Editor: Damion Clayton
Assistant Editor: Benjamin Cline
Producer: Rebecca Baker

Color Correction, Visual Effects: A52
Colorist: Paul Yacono
Visual Effects Supervisor, Lead Flame Artist: Andy McKenna
Head of Production: Kim Christensen
Executive Producer: Jennifer Sofio Hall

Audio Post: Lime Studio; 740 Sound Design
Mixer: Joel Waters
Original Music: The Pixies, Joey Santiago
Name of Track: “Where Is My Mind”

Acura Catches Lightning in a Bottle, Quite Literally, in Mullen's New ILX Spot

An engineer ventures out during a thunderstorm and literally catches lightning in a bottle to power the Acura ILX in this cinematic spot from Mullen.

Johnny Green of Reset Productions—much lauded for his Under Armour ad last year with ballerina Misty Copeland—directed the automaker’s 60-second clip, which also features an orchestral reworking of the Pixies’ 1988 track “Where Is My Mind” (which pops up quite a bit in ads). In fact, Joey Santiago of the Pixies recorded this version with Acura.

“Innovative performance is a core quality of the Acura brand, and the spot captures that essence in a visually compelling and emotional way,” says Acura general manager Mike Accavitti.

Indeed, the music and images are well matched, and Green’s storytelling is top notch. Even so, the effect is somewhat less than the sum of its parts. We’ve got lightning blots, a zippy car, a stirring soundtrack … yet the spot feels restrained—bottled up, if you will—when it could have been dazzling.

Ah well, this is just the first strike in a broader Acura campaign themed “Catch It If You Can.” Perhaps subsequent ads will pack more of a charge.

CREDITS
Brand: Acura
Client: Mike Accavitti, Senior Vice President, General Manager
Client: Ed Beadle, Senior Marketing Manager
Client: Leila Cesario, National Advertising Manager
Car Model:  2016 ILX
Spot Title: Bottle

Agency:  Mullen LA
Chief Creative Officer: Mark Wenneker
Executive Creative Director: Margaret Keene
Creative Director/Art: Paul Foulkes
Creative Director/Writer: Adam Calvert
Sr. Art Director: Sean Stell
Writer: Natasha Hugeback
SVP, Director of Integrated Production: Jon Drawbaugh
Senior Broadcast Producer: Meagen Moore
Content Producer: Elaine Russell
Business Affairs/Music Supervisor: Danica Bates
Managing Director: Cameron McNaughton
VP, Account Director: Nicole Neopolitan
Account Supervisor: Courtney Calvert
Account Executive: Kylie Mugg
Product Specialist: Curtis Milward

Production Company: Reset
Director: Johnny Green
Managing Director: Dave Morrison
Executive Producer: Jeff McDougall
Producer: Betsy Oliver
DP: Paul Cameron

Editorial: RPS
Editor: Damion Clayton
Assistant Editor: Benjamin Cline
Producer: Rebecca Baker

Color Correct: A52
Colorist: Paul Yacono

Animation/Graphics:
VFX Supervisor/Lead Flame Artist: Andy McKenna

VFX: A52
Head of Production: Kim Christensen
Executive Producer: Jennifer Sofio Hall

Audio Post: Lime Studio
Mixer: Joel Waters

Audio Post: 740 Sound Design
Original Music: The Pixies, Joey Santiago
Name of Track: Where is My Mind

Q&A: How Jerry Seinfeld Wrote His Ideal Salesman Into Acura's New Ads

Jerry Seinfeld’s last set of Acura ads took the automaker to some truly odd places, like an emergency room plagued by putrid potato salad and a 1960s-era rocket launchpad. Now he’s taking the brand somewhere quite a bit different: a car dealership.

Seinfeld has once again written the Acura ads that will bookened his hit video series, Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee, on Crackle. Last time around, he told AdFreak he was trying to channel his inner drunken ’60s copywriter with breathless retro enthusiasm for even the most minor amenities.

The new ads move back into the modern era and dial back the weirdness. Instead, we get a fast-talking, confident car salesman who dispenses a constant string of seemingly unrelated words of wisdom while showing off the new TLX.

We caught up with Seinfeld and Acura svp and general manager Michael Accavitti to get the story behind the new campaign and learn why this is the kind of guy Jerry wants selling him a car.

AdFreak: So these ads are obviously a bit of a departure from the last campaign. Who is this guy? Is he a car salesman? Life coach? Stand-up comedian?
Jerry Seinfeld: He’s a car salesman life coach. He’s the guy who is the antidote to the usual car commercial, which is all about what this is going to do for your lifestyle, how this car is going to change your social standing, and I thought it worked for Acura and for my personal perspective.

To me, what you want when you buy a car is a great car, and it’s not about what the neighbors think, or how you’ll look at yourself because you have it. So, that was kind of the idea of making this guy a guy who says, “Let me tell you what’s really important. Don’t block the sidewalk with your extendo dog leash.”

Is he a likable guy? I mean, he drives this kind of hard sale, and he’s not even a dog person. 
Seinfeld: To me, he is. If you like no BS, he’s likable. 

The line, “I sell cars, you sell you”—did that exist before the character?
Seinfeld: The whole thing kind of came together with that line. We thought, that’s the kind of guy I would like to sell me a car.

Really the only other recurring line through the ads is this phrase: “Tight, quick, comes in seven colors.” That’s not your usual luxury-car tagline.
Seinfeld: Well, this car’s a little sportier. We’re not really going for a luxury thing, I would say, as much as responsiveness.

Michael Accavitti: Performance is one of the areas that we feel the TLX really delivers on. You know, it’s a luxury sports car in its own right, but the performance message is the one we want consumers to take away, and that was why we focused on that.

So, why focus so much on the colors, too? “Comes in seven colors” just seemed to me like a funny thing to call out each time. 
Seinfeld: (Laughing) Yeah. I don’t know. It’s just, like, let’s get to the colors. I mean, that’s the biggest thing to me with a car is, what color do I want? If the car’s great, then the color’s the only difficult decision. We’re saying, you don’t have to worry about the car; the car is great. Just figure out what color you like. 

After the fun, retro storytelling in the last campaign, I was a little surprised to see you move these ads into the dealership. Did you worry you’d be limiting yourself by moving it into this very traditional space? 
Seinfeld: No. This one was really more about this character, about this salesman who kind of explains to you that you need to worry about your life, we’ll take care of the car.

Did either of you have any concerns that, other than being tied to your show, these ads wouldn’t be quite Jerry Seinfeld enough? Last time, even the voiceover sounded like you.
Seinfeld: I’ve never gotten that question before. It’s a very flattering question. I actually put in a piece of my standup from the ’80s in one of the commercials, which has nothing to do with anything except that we just thought it was funny. 

The line about how Alans need to settle on a way to spell their names?
Seinfeld: No, it was the thing about the post office. The wanted posters in the post office: Why don’t they hold on to this guy when they’re taking his picture? So, it’s definitely me. I was really surprised last time that people thought it was me doing voiceover, but I did hear that from a few people. But that was never intended.

Is this something that you see being an annual part of bringing the show back each season—crafting the ads? Are you excited about doing that each year? 
Seinfeld: I love advertising, and especially when you have a client like this, who’s bold and creative and wants you to be the same way. That’s a really fun thing for me; otherwise I can’t do it. I wouldn’t be able to do it.

But the whole thing kind of works because it’s the Internet, and it’s a comedy show, and if you can get the viewer and the consumer to see all of this as entertaining, that’s a really fun puzzle to solve. I like a Rubik’s Cube like that. Can I make the commercials as much fun as the show and make them kind of feel like part of the show? That’s a cool, new puzzle.

Accavitti: We’re hoping the viewers will look forward to the new commercials as they do the show.

What reaction have you gotten from other comedians or celebrities? Do they want to be more hands-on with the advertising around their Internet shows, too? 
Seinfeld: It’s frankly a completely different skill set, even though it’s still being funny. I mean, I did commercials for American Express in the ’90s when I was doing the TV series. Those two things were unrelated, but I learned a lot about making commercials, and that was really good training. I think the average celebrity, and Mike could probably speak to this, really just wants to know, “How much are you going to pay me, and when can I leave?” And my attitude was always the opposite, which was, “Let me do this whole thing, because I like to do it.”

Accavitti: This is the attraction of the partnership with Jerry. When we did the Super Bowl ad a couple of years ago, he demonstrated that he really wanted to be a partner and really be a part of it, and we thought, Hey, this is fantastic, right? You have one of the greatest minds in comedy that wants to help you make your advertisement, or your message, even more appealing or funnier. And so, it’s just something that we’ve really enjoyed, and something we want to continue to do.

Jerry, do you feel like some of the stigma around celebrities in advertising is starting to go away? It used to be everyone had to go to Japan to be in any kind of ad. 
Seinfeld: No, I don’t think that goes away. That stigma remains if the ad stinks. If it looks like the guy or woman showed up for a payday, I think it’s a bad ad, and it’s bad for the celebrity in the ad. It doesn’t work for anybody. But if the ad’s good, it works. It’s always about the ad, to me. 

If you were talking to a young comedian or performer coming up, and they were asking you about getting involved in advertising, what kind of advice would you give them?
Seinfeld: I would say if you’re not interested in really being part of the process, it’s a big gamble, image-wise, for a performer. It could be quite a turn-off. You can like somebody, and you see them in a really lame ad, and all of a sudden, you don’t like them so much.

Are there any campaigns or ads out right now that you think are also doing it right?
Seinfeld: No, I don’t think so. Only us. 



Epic Acura Ad Presents the World’s Most Brutal Mechanical-Horse Race

You probably didn't know your Acura isn't really a car. It's actually a real live dark horse. In a world full of creepy and brutish mechanical horses.

It will catapult from the back of the pack to win, and wrench an existential scream from the depths of your soul. Because in this tortured journey down the racetrack of life, feelings can be so real—especially when you are driving an Acura horse. Also, because you are a three-piece-wearing fop, says a new commercial from ad agency Mullen and director Adam Berg.

It's painfully literal and beautifully produced, an unusual blend of posh emo dystopian leisure car porn. It's got horsepower! Up next, a Shia LeBeouf lookalike rides Acura Seabiscuit to defeat the evil horse Transformers in a game of Polo Tron.

Credits below.

CREDITS
Client: Acura
Senior Vice President, Automotive Operations, American Honda Motor Co.: Michael Accavitti
Assistant Vice President, Advertising, Marketing, American Honda Motor Co.: Tom Peyton
Manager, Acura Advertising, Brand: Gary Robinson
Spot: "Let the Race Begin"
Agency: Mullen, Los Angeles
Chief Creative Officer: Mark Wenneker
Executive Creative Director: Peter Rosch
Art Director: Sean Stell
Copywriter: Amir Farhang
Executive Director of Integrated Production: Liza Near
Director of Broadcast Production: Zeke Bowman
Senior Producer: Trish Dowley
Co-Director of Strategy: Kelsey Hodgkin
Account Service: Jeff Prince, Alison Kaplan
Product Information Manager: Scott King
Product Specialist: Curtis Millward
Associate Director of Business Affairs: Stephen Duncan
Production Company: Smuggler
Director: Adam Berg
Founding Partners: Patrick Milling Smith, Brian Carmody
Bidding Producer: Shannon Jones
Line Producer: Karen O’Brien
Director of Photography: Mattias Montero
Production Supervisor: Pete Slowey
Production Designer: Tino Schaedler
Editorial: Cosmo Street
Editor: Paul Hardcastle
Assistant Editor: Hugo Jordan
Producer: Jaclyn Paris
Executive Producer: Yvette Cobarrubias-Sears
Color Correction: MPC
Colorist: Mark Gethin
Visual Effects: MPC
Executive Producer: Elexis Stearn
Producer: Mike Wigart
Visual Effects Supervisors: Andy Boyd (3-D), Benoit Mannequin (2-D)
Graphics: Artjail
Audio Post: Phase UK
Sound Supervisor, Designer: Matthew Collinge
Audio Post: Eleven Sound
Mixer: Scott Burns
Original Music: Bobby Tahouri
Track Title: "I Was Set Up!"
Casting Agency: Sonnenberg Casting
Casting Agent: Jodi Sonnenberg


    



Q&A: Jerry Seinfeld on His Intentionally Bad, New-Old Acura Ads

Jerry Seinfeld has written eight new Acura commercials in collaboration with Boston ad agency Mullen as part of the brand's title sponsorship of his Web series Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee. The faux-vintage spots—all eight are posted below—will bookend new episodes of the show, coming Jan. 2. They were directed by Barry Sonnenfeld and inspired by actual old car commercials from the '60s.

But while those old spots sound a bit ridiculous these days (Seinfeld ran actual vintage Acura ads as pre-roll on Comedians in Cars last season), these new ads are intentionally silly—playing off the old style but taking it in absurd directions.

Seinfeld spoke with AdFreak on Tuesday about the creative process behind the ads, his experience with Super Bowl spots and what he thought of Will Ferrell's Dodge work.

So, these are fun spots. This must have been an exciting project for you.
You know, I have done a bit of advertising over the years. But I have never been given the creative freedom that I was given on these by Acura. They're gutsier than any other company I've ever worked with. Not that I've worked with that many, but I've worked with a few. Because this work, as you can see, is not like any other work that they've done. And usually—as you well know, being in the ad game—the clients tend to get nervous, especially when they're spending a lot of money. But [Acura marketing chief] Mike Accavitti, I've never seen a guy like this guy. Nerves of steel. It's pretty rare. But I think that's why they came out so good. I would give him all the credit.

Tell me about the creative process—how you worked with Mullen on these.
Mullen and I sat in a room together. Now, we ran vintage Honda and Acura stuff from the '60s and '70s last season on Comedians in Cars. And everybody kind of enjoyed that. And I said, Yeah, I've looked at everything that exists of the old advertising, and I picked out all the good ones. And I don't have any more. And I thought, Why don't we make new old advertising … that's bad. Because that's what's fun. A lot of the lines are stuff we actually found. We would put our little spin on it.

A lot of the advertising in the old days focused on the size of the car. People felt that you were really getting your money's worth if the car had a big trunk. Which of course is something that no one cares about now. No one buys an SUV and goes, "Well, how big is the trunk?" Because they're all big.

So, it's about taking the old tropes and pushing them a little bit.
Yes. And you know, to me, a lot of things have gotten worse that you could point to in our culture. A lot of advertising has gotten worse. I think it's kind of lost its nerve, to be honest with you. I feel like the advertising of the '60s, they were nervier. You know why? Because there was less at stake. It always worked. There were three networks. Everyone's going to see this. They're going to buy the car. And now, everyone's more nervous. Eyeballs are harder to get. And everyone's less inclined to take a risk.

You've seen those high stakes firsthand, having done Super Bowl ads for American Express and, of course, Acura.
Yeah. I've done a number of Super Bowl ads. And that is the best advertising of the year. That is when people realize they're going to be compared directly against other ads.

What did you think of Will Ferrell's ads for Dodge?
I like anything Will Ferrell does, so I was a fan of those. But it didn't seem to be a different type of car advertising. It seemed to be a different type of movie advertising. But different is always good.

So, you wrote a lot of the jokes for these Acura ads?
I did. We just wanted to get that feeling of "Hot, handsome and a honey to handle." Nobody says things like that anymore. Or "The perfect car for the big-car man." And the "Yesterday, today and tomorrow" thing. I like the little tension between the spokesman and the spokeswoman, that we can see that they aren't quite getting along.

My favorite thing is: "MDX. Three letters that stand for 'Earth, style and you.' " That's just like, nobody read that over and went, "What do you mean? Why does it stand for that? The letters don't even match up to that. Why are we saying that?" So, it's also part of the drunken, lazy ad culture of the '60s.


    

Os 20 anúncios mais vistos de todos os tempos no YouTube

AdWeek publicou um ranking mostrando quais são os 20 anúncios mais vistos de todos os tempos no YouTube. Entre muitas novidades, chama a atenção um clássico de quase 30 anos estrelado por Michael Jackson. Vale lembrar que a qualidade de alguns vídeos não é das melhores, já que são bem antigos.

1. Angry Birds: Trailer – 74 milhões de views

2. Evian: Roller Babies – 58 milhões de views

3. Volkswagen: The Force – 54 milhões de views

4. Pepsi: Pepsi Generation – 44 milhões de views

5. Old Spice: The Man Your Man Could Smell Like – 42 milhões de views

6. Pepsi: Kung-Fu – 37 milhões de views

7. T-Mobile: Dance – 35 milhões de views

8. Axe: Billions – 35 milhões de views

9. World of Warcraft: Chuck Norris – 31 milhões de views

10. T-Mobile: Royal Wedding – 26 milhões de views

11. DC Shoes: Ken Block’s Gymkhana Five – 24 milhões de views

12. Modern Warfare 3: The Vet & the Noob – 22 milhões de views

13. M&Ms: Just My Shell – 21 milhões de views

14. Nike: My Time Is Now – 20 milhões de views

15. Acura: Transactions – 18 milhões de views

16. Kia: Dancing Hamsters – 18 milhões de views

17. Samsung: Extreme Sheep Art – 17 milhões de views

18. Honda: Matthew’s Day Off – 16 milhões de views

19.  Chrysler: Born of Fire – 15 milhões de views

20. Dove: Evolution – 15 milhões de views

Brainstorm9Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
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Super Bowl 46: Seinfeld resgata até o Soup Nazi para comprar um carro


Jerry Seinfeld tentou vender Windows e PC’s em 2008, sem muito sucesso, como você deve se lembrar. Agora, em 2012, ele virou vendedor de carros.

Bem, na verdade ele quer comprar um. Gosta tanto do carro conceito Acura NSX que quer ser o primeiro a ter um, quando ele for lançado daqui três anos. Porém, já tem um cliente na frente e ele fará de tudo para convencê-lo a mudar de ideia.

Com várias referencias a série de TV, Seinfeld traz de volta até o Soup Nazi, contanto também com participação especial de Jay Leno.

É uma bem humorada tentativa de promover um produto que ainda nem está a venda, e sempre uma satisfação ver o Seinfeld na tela.

Brainstorm9Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
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Acura NSX Concept Car

Voici ce nouveau modèle du constructeur automobile japonais Honda avec la présentation de la nouvelle Acura NSX Concept Car. Possédant un moteur V6 VTEC, cette voiture au design très intéressant est à découvrir dans une série de visuels et sera normalement disponible d’ici 3 ans.



Acura NSX Concept

Acura NSX Concept

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Previously on Fubiz

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Acura TSX: Howl

Acura TSX: Howl

Advertising Agency: RPA, Santa Monica, CA, USA
Creative Directors: Mark Erwin, Pat Mendelson
Art Director: Mark Erwin
Copywriter: Pat Mendelson
Illustrator: none
Photographers: Olaf Hauschulz, Roxanne Lowit
Aired: May 2008

Acura TSX: IV Tech

Acura TSX: IV Tech

Advertising Agency: RPA, Santa Monica, CA, USA
Creative Directors: Mark Erwin, Pat Mendelson
Art Director: Mark Erwin
Copywriter: Pat Mendelson
Illustrator: none
Photographers: Olaf Hauschulz, Roxanne Lowit
Aired: May 2008

Acura TSX: City life

Acura TSX: City life

Advertising Agency: RPA, Santa Monica, CA, USA
Creative Directors: Mark Erwin, Pat Mendelson
Art Director: Mark Erwin
Copywriter: Pat Mendelson
Illustrator: none
Photographers: Olaf Hauschulz, Roxanne Lowit
Aired: May 2008

Acura TSX: Arrival

Acura TSX: Arrival

Advertising Agency: RPA, Santa Monica, CA, USA
Creative Directors: Mark Erwin, Pat Mendelson
Art Director: Mark Erwin
Copywriter: Pat Mendelson
Illustrator: none
Photographers: Olaf Hauschulz, Roxanne Lowit
Aired: May 2008