Donald Trump Will Probably Love This Insane Ad Where He Rules (and Destroys) the World

The U.S. presidency is fine and all, but would Donald J. Trump stop there? Surely he would realize there’s a whole yuuuge world out there waiting to be dominated.

read more

This Do-It-Yourself Store's Ads Scoff at Those of Us Who No Longer Work With Our Hands

When my son was about 5, and was asked what he thought I did for work, he replied: “Pushing letters.” That was pretty painfully accurate—and describes so many modern middle-class jobs, where working with your hands is a thing of the past. 

Jung von Matt/Limmat taps into the nostalgia for good, honest work in these amusing ads for OBI, Switzerland’s biggest do-it-yourself store. 

read more

This Pitch-Perfect Parody of an Entire New Yorker Issue Features Wonderful Fake Ads

If you’re the kind of person who has time to read The New Yorker cover to cover, then you’ll appreciate this delightfully meta, magazine-length satire. 

The Neu Jorker, a passion project from co-editors James Folta and Andrew Lipstein, not only lampoons the magazine’s poetry, reviews and sections like Goings On About Town and Shouts & Murmurs, but also the kind of ads you find in a publication like The New Yorker. 

read more

Why Are There Errors in the White House Logo, and How Did They Get There?

The White House doesn’t publicize changes to its brand identity. But something fishy has been going on with its logo over the past decade, according to a design agency that worked on refresh ideas for the famous mark several years ago.

read more

These Clever Hyundai Print Ads About Your Blind Spot Make Vehicles Totally Disappear

Everyone has a blind spot while they’re driving, when vehicles are in between your field of vision and what the mirrors show. These Hyundai ads from Ukrainian agency Tabasco cleverly address this by demonstrating a different kind of blind spot—the one on your retina.

read more

The Woman in This PSA Is Free but Still Trapped in a Prison and Can't Just Leave

Lori, an abused wife and mom in Michigan, spent two years squirreling away money—hiding bills in a tampon box—until she had the means to escape her violent partner. 

Her story is the basis of a new campaign, #FreeToWalk, from the Allstate Foundation and ad agency Leo Burnett, with a stark and chilling video as its centerpiece. 

read more

This Agency Says It Just Invented the World's Perfect Beer Glass

Coors Light may have its double-vented wide-mouth cans and its two-stage activation bottles, but it doesn’t have a monopoly on beer technology. Another Molson Coors brand, Cobra, is out with a notable invention—not with its own packaging, but with a special glass it claims is revolutionary.

read more

Carnivores and Herbivores Throw Down in Columbus Zoo's Ridiculously Epic Rap Battle

No animals were harmed in the making of this ad. Well, maybe the polar bear ate a fish, but that’s about it. 

Ron Foth Advertising stages an epic rap battle between carnivores and herbivores for the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium. Thankfully, the animals don’t bust any rhymes or moves—but dozens of zoo staffers do, in a throwdown that gets pretty intense. 

read more

Keira Knightley Is Extremely Blunt in Urging Young Brits to Vote in Brexit Referendum

Keira Knightley might seem dainty, but she has no problem dropping an F-bomb when the occasion calls for it—like when chastising the young British citizens who plan to skip the country’s upcoming referendum on European Union membership.

read more

Alberta Tells Youth to Keep Their Vajayjays Yay-Yay in Slang-Filled STD Campaign

With sexual transmitted diseade rates ascendant in Alberta, Canafa, how can a provincial health department reach young people who clearly aren’t practicing safe sex? 

The answer, it turns out, is an ad campaign by the Trigger agency that combines disquieting frankness with cringe-inducing, Tom Wolfe-esque use of modern sex slang. 

read more

This Company Is Giving Free Bikes to Londoners Who Don't Mind Being Rolling Ads

If you’re based in London and want a free bike, a new company called Buzzbike—whose name explains its entire business model—can make that happen for you. 

In partnership with Cooper (creator of the Mini Cooper), which is providing the actual bicycles, Buzzbike offers Londoners not only a free bike but a Hiplok DC lock, lights, insurance and servicing—all for a £100 deposit (about $145). In exchange, users must commit to biking to work a minimum of 12 days a month and park their bikes on the street. 

Why the weird requirements? The bikes are branded by whoever wants to be seen streetside, adding a democratic twang to the city bike model—Nike recently created its own city bikes for Portland, Ore., and Citi, of course, sponsors the New York program. The difference here, of course, is that no single brand has to carry the slack for the people’s transport. 

read more

Here's a Creative Director's Worst Possible Reaction When Critiquing Your Portfolio

Here’s a fun little promo for the Miami Ad School’s Toronto location, showing a portfolio critique that seems like good news at first for our young hero being interviewed—but soon the truth becomes more painfully obvious.

read more

This Crazy Supermarket Ad, Full of Cats, Will Give You a Big Cheshire Grin

Forget about next week’s Cannes Lions. Check out all the crazy cats in this commercial for Netto, a German supermarket chain. 

These 75 seconds of epic kitty cuteness take place in an incredibly detailed miniature version of a Netto store and feature clones of Maru, Keyboard Cat and other stars of famous feline memes. Is the No No No Cat among them? Yes yes yes! 

read more

Kids Try to Solve Climate Change in PSA Campaign, Because Grownups Certainly Aren't

Climate change isn’t your problem—it’s your children’s problem. At least, it will be if the world’s current crop of adults fail to act. 

A new campaign from the government of Ontario, brought to you by Grey Canada, makes that very argument with help from pop environmentalist David Suzuki. In the first ad, Suzuki lectures an auditorium full of kids on the failure of grownups to sufficiently address global warming: 

read more

Droga5's First Work for HBO Is This Byzantine Instagram Contest for Hard-Core Fans

Exactly how obsessed are you with Game of Thrones, Silicon Valley and Last Week Tonight with John Oliver? HBO tests the depths of your nerd knowledge in a new campaign from Droga5—the agency’s first work for the paid cable network—that sends you down a rabbit hole on Instagram, where you answer trivia to solve clues leading to fun prizes.

read more

Why Electrolux Made This Dry Cleaning Business Look Exactly Like One Woman's Home

Branded prank videos are still hanging around, as we saw earlier this week with Publicis’ great Heineken stunt from Brazil. And here’s a fun new one from Sweden, where Electrolux touted its UltraCare range of washing machines by turning the dry cleaning store that one Swedish woman uses into a replica of her own apartment.

read more

Carl's Jr. Is Getting Mocked for Having Todd Gurley Bite Into a Blatantly CGI Burger

Is Todd Gurley actually vegetarian?

You have to wonder after watching this Carl’s Jr. commercial starring the Los Angeles Rams running back. The spot shows Gurley supposedly biting into the California Classic Double Cheeseburger, but it’s blatantly obvious that the burger isn’t real—it’s a digitally inserted photo that isn’t fooling anyone.

read more

NYC Launches U.S.'s First Public-Funded Ads Supporting Gender Identity Bathroom Use

New York City finds no shortage of reasons to pat itself on the back, but the city’s groundbreaking ad campaign for transgender bathroom rights actually justifies it.

read more

This Unskippable PSA Illustrates How Getting Stoned Affects a Driver's Reaction Time

Concerns about “drugged driving” have prompted the Colorado Department of Transportation and Amélie Company to create an ad campaign, “Dangerous Combinations,” about the dangers of driving under the influence of marijuana. 

A quick look at this data makes clear why there’s a need for this kind of campaign. Drugged driving incidents have increased since Colorado decriminalized weed in 2012. 

read more

Intriguing or Insulting? Some Russians Object to This Penguin Ad Quoting Turgenev

Penguin is running a series of posters in the London Underground featuring quotes from classic literature. But the quote it’s pulled from Ivan Turgenev’s Fathers and Sons has led to accusations that the publishing house is provoking “anger and ethnic hatred.” 

There are also questions about the specific translation that was used, which makes this whole thing even more awkward. 

read more