Bleak Billboards in London Tell Sad Stories of People Priced Out of the City

Bleak black-and-white digital billboards in London (one in Holborn and one in Aldgate) are telling the sad stories of people priced out of London as the city continues to change. If you’re headed to or moving out of London, LondonIsChanging.org wants to know why.

The project was created by Rebecca Ross, a communication design and urbanism teacher at University of the Arts London. It’s about the housing crisis, but it’s more than that, too. Ross’ intent is to hold politicians accountable for the planning changes that are changing the face of London. But most of the responses she’s received in her call for a open dialogue at LondonIsChanging.org have been socioeconomic in nature.

While select quotes are being pulled for display on the billboards, all of the data collected by the project will be made available to the public in 2016—at which point, hopefully, somebody somewhere will do something with it. Of course, the fact that there’s no guarantee that will happen is probably what makes it qualify as public art.

Either way, this is officially the classier British way to scream, “The rent is too damn high!”



Netflix Uses One Brilliant Tweet to Show Why You Should Be Afraid of Comcast

Netflix and Comcast have been sparring for a while. But on Wednesday, Netflix delivered a quietly epic uppercut to the cable giant and its interests—thanks to a single creative tweet.

It concerns net neutrality, on which the FCC is set to vote Thursday. Netflix is heavily invested in the issue, fearing that without an open Internet, Comcast and other cable companies would create Internet slow lanes for companies that refuse to pay broadband providers for access.

That fear is communicated brilliantly in the tweet below, which stretches on forever. (The tweet has been making the rounds in the net neutrality debate, and was picked up by Netflix today. It was not created by Netflix.)

“What if the Internet was so slow it loaded one word at a time? Don’t let Comcast win,” it says—with a link to the Battleforthenet.com, which argues for net neutrality.

The tweet is particularly impressive because it eats up a giant piece of a user’s real estate when it appears in the feed, making it all but impossible to miss.

Thursday’s vote is actually expected to be a foregone conclusion, with Republicans already conceding defeat on the issue and Netflix and its allies expected to be victorious.
 



Sonic's Weird Drink Flavors Come to Life as Strangely Riveting Mouth Cartoons

Sonic is pretty serious about playing with its food.

A new campaign from Goodby, Silverstein & Partners transforms actors’ mouths into zany little characters using face paint, à la makeup artist Lauren Jenkinson‘s renditions of classic cartoon characters.

The illustrations are great more or less across the board, even if some of the writing and delivery—the self-destructive robot, the melodramatic doctor, the angst-ridden teenager—might try a little too hard to be funny.

The better monologues turn the corner on relatable bits of truth—like a Southern belle who scrambles to save face after it turns out she’s not so refined after all—or on straight-up charming silliness—like a hammy yeti, idiotic octopus or behind-the-times groundhog.

The best moments, though, come from the more subtle facial cues, like when a chin twitch becomes a boxer pumping his pecs, or a soul patch finds new life as chest hair (in what might be the most perfect equivalence ever).

Then again, that all might just be a matter of taste—promoting the fast-food chain’s various drink flavors is, after all, kind of the point. But seriously, just try to keep your brain from imploding when Abraham Lincoln cracks a pun about a Leonardo DiCaprio movie.

CREDITS
Client: Sonic
Campaign “Sipsters”
Agency: Goodby Silverstein & Partners

Creative
Executive Creative Director/Partner: Margaret Johnson
ACD/Writer: Jon Wolanske
ACD/Art Director/Designer: Kevin Koller
Copywriter: Justin Ralph

Account Services & Strategy
Group Account Director: Leslie Barrett
Account Director: Jenna Duboe
Assistant Account Manager: Olivia Mullen
Business Affairs Managers: Chrissy Shearer, Jane Regan
Senior Communication Strategist: John-James Richardson

Production
Director of Broadcast Production: Tod Puckett
Broadcast Producer: Melissa Nagy
Production Company: eLevel Films (Goodby Silverstein & Partners)
Director: Claude Shade/Jon Wolanske
Director of Photography: Brett Simms
Executive Producer: PJ Koll
Line Producer: Genevieve Giraudo
Production Manager: Haley Klarfield
Make-up Artists: Sarah Coy, Victor Cembelin, Sophie Smith and Monica Bishop

Postproduction
eLevel Films (Goodby Silverstein & Partners)
Editor: Quinn Motika
Executive Producer: PJ Koll
Post Producer: Samantha Liss
Telecine: Nathan Shipley
Online: Kyle Westbrook
Audio Mix/Sound Design: Nic DeMatteo, Jody Scott, Jon Shamieh
Music: APM Music
End Title Design: Kevin Koller

 



Twerking Butt Cheeks Slap Out Phat Beats in Seriously Jiggly Ad for Headphones


My late grandfather once told me, “There’s an ass for every seat.” Not until today did I truly know what he meant.

Just when you thought Miley had ruined twerking for everyone, the folks at AIAIAI headphones raise the bar for rump awareness with their latest project, “Real Booty Music.” Music producer Branko (from Buraka Som Sistema) attached sensors to Twerk Queen Louise’s derrière and harnessed the movement of—well, butt cheeks—to create new music. 

It really is something to behold.

The company says: “The overall idea behind the project was to provide AIAIAI headphone users and other music lovers with new music. Moreover, we wanted to do this in an unusual way, which brought about music made by the booty—for the booty. The project explores the rich heritage of bass-driven club culture, where dancing and booty shaking are integral elements. We want to see if it’s possible to change the perception of twerking through placing it in a technology-driven, creative context and letting the dance ‘do the talking.’ “

In the event that the video simply whetted your appetite for the track, check it out:

Via Ads of the World.

CREDITS
Client: AIAIAI
Creative Director / Art Director: Peter Michael Willer
Copywriter: Ulrik Nørgaard
Artist: Branko
Dancer: Twerk Queen Louise
Creative Technology Design: Pieter-Jan Pieters / Owow
Engineers: Joep le Blanc, Alex Tsamakos
Film Director: Mike Nybroe
Webdesigner: Andy Borglind
Published: February 2015



Tiffany's Gorgeous New Ad Tells Many Love Stories but Asks Only One Question

The real-life gay couple from Tiffany & Co.’s recent print ad return in this spot from Ogilvy & Mather featuring various duos on the brink—or in the process—of getting engaged.

Part of the jeweler’s “Will You?” campaign, it’s a sweet spot, in tune with the times, celebrating diversity and true love as simple facts life. (The 75-second ad shows an interracial couple, too.) According to the client, the campaign acknowledges the “variety of forms” found in modern romance, and positions its rings as “the first sentence of the story that a couple will write together.”

The progressive campaign has generated lots of mostly positive media play—Miley Cyrus called it “badass”—though some critics say it doesn’t push the envelope enough, while others take Tiffany to task for casting only attractive couples.

Societal issues aside, the spot shines in its attention to the daily details of affection: sharing a quiet drink or private joke, making gentle fun of a parter’s foibles, fixing the buttons on a lover’s shirt. Such scenes remind us of the priceless commitment a Tiffany ring represents.



Bill Lumbergh of Office Space Is Back, and Still a Clueless Prick, in Ads for HipChat Software

Given how much advertising loves office humor, it’s a bit surprising that characters from Office Space haven’t been revived more often for commercials. Bill Lumbergh, in particular—the 1999 film’s most broadly drawn corporate caricature—is great for a laugh. Yet the character, played by Gary Cole, has shown up only once in an ad—for State Farm, a few years ago—and didn’t even deliver much of his signature drawling babble.

Now, Atlassian corrects that with this campaign for HipChat—software that facilitates internal communication at the workplace, including live chat.In the 90-second spot below, Lumbergh has brought in his employees on Labor Day to discuss how they can work better. Instead of using HipChat, he wants more meetings and more emails—and for the latter, “more bulk on your threads.” Mmm-kay?

The onscreen tagline at the end is: “Don’t work in the past.”

The campaign, by San Francisco creative agency Brass Ideas, will also include :15s and :30s, banner ads and out-of-home, though not TPS reports.



Whoa, This Weird Retro Ad Imagines Birdman as a Real Action Figure

Last fall, Fox Searchlight gave away limited-edition Birdman action figures as part of its marketing for the movie. Now, the Best Picture Oscar winner is reopening in cinemas—and getting a dose of new marketing, including a commercial for those toys.

It’s a fun little morsel of ’90s nostalgia—a parody of old Saturday morning toy ads. And like the film it’s promoting, it’s a multi-layered gem. It has more cuts than the entire movie, though, and also has young children (certainly not the target demo of the R-rated film itself). This is surely a nod to the original Birdman cartoon from the ’60s and the subsequent Adult Swim reboot.

“Hey kids! You too can now defeat Birdman’s arch-nemesis The Condor with this spiffy Birdman Action Figure! Batteries not included,” says the YouTube page, which goes on to mention that Birdman reopens in theaters this weekend.

Check out the ad, but don’t get too close—it “smells like balls.”

And for more Birdman action figure goodness, check out BirdmanSpeaks.com—and click on the speech bubbles. But make sure you have headphones. This isn’t G-rated stuff.



Snickers Turned Marcia Brady Into Danny Trejo on 'Hungerlapse' Billboard, Too

BBDO New York’s “Brady Bunch” Super Bowl campaign for Snickers had a great out-of-home teaser element that not too people saw—but now you can, as video of it was posted Tuesday to the brand’s YouTube page.

The teaser video with Danny Trejo brushing his hair in the mirror rolled out online on Jan. 21. But the billboard campaign began way earlier—back in the first week of the year. By Jan. 9, people were already taking photos of the hand-painted New York City board (originally just showing Marcia Brady) and posting them online, tagged #WhatsUpWithMarcia.
 

 
Over a period of a few weeks, painters slowly transformed sweet Marcia into surly Danny. Check out that process in the new video here:

The video isn’t just a recap of the creative, either. Rather, it kicks off a new U.S. promotion. A spokesperson with Mars Chocolate North America tells us that fans can visit EatA.Snickers.com and show the brand (in photos or videos) who they are when they’re hungry—for a chance to win cash prizes and a YouTube takeover for a day.



Stars Trace Their Path to Success in Ogilvy's Grand New American Express Campaign

American Express tells four heartfelt stories of celebrity struggle, and ultimate success, in these spots from Oglivy & Mather. The ads—featuring queen of soul Aretha Franklin, sitcom star Mindy Kaling, GoPro founder Nick Woodman and restauranteur Natalie Young—aired in edited form during Sunday’s Academy Awards on ABC.

The stars, all AmEx customers, recall how they battled adversity. Franklin vanquished youthful shyness and insecurity to become a dynamic stage performer. Kaling overcame typecasting, refusing to play second-banana roles—”best friends” and such—as she climbed the ladder in Hollywood. Woodman reinvented himself from scratch, even moving in with his parents, after his first business failed and he lost $4 million of investors’ money.

Young’s tale of addiction is the most intense. “Everything that was good, was gone,” she says in a sobering voiceover. “I lost my family. I lost friends, lovers, jobs. … I took any job I could get. I trimmed trees. I washed cars. I just felt like a number. I didn’t feel like I was important, and that I was irreplaceable. And they made sure I knew that, that I felt like that. I know, today, that I don’t want anybody that works with me to feel that way.”

At the end of each spot, AmEx tries to forge a connection between endorsers, viewers and the company’s offerings. For example, during Young’s story, text flashes on screen: “To the next generation of late bloomers, welcome.” Kaling’s ad mentions “the next generation of unlikely leading ladies.” Ultimately, AmEx reminds us that “The journey never stops,” positioning its products and services as helpful tools to have along the way.

“People think we’re just a brand of when you quote, unquote ‘arrive,’ ” Marie Devlin, AmEx’s svp of global advertising, tells The Wall Street Journal. “We very much want to be with people along their journey through life. It’s not about a final destination.”

That strategy is fairly well implemented here. The spots look great, and the storytelling is first rate. It’s compelling, inspirational stuff, perhaps even refreshing and unexpected for the brand and the category.

Still, there’s a disconnect. There’s no evidence, nor even a suggestion, that AmEx helped them achieve stardom—or anything, actually, so the value proposition remains elusive. OK, they carry AmEx cards in their wallets. With all due respect: So what? (At least the campaign’s main social component—asking users to tweet in return for AmEx’s financial support of a documentary about ballerina Misty Copeland—displays some cause and effect.)

The whole initiative would be stronger if it focused on famous folks who scored major life victories precisely because, at pivotal points in their development, they used AmEx, and the company’s services pulled them through. That would give the campaign an extra layer of integrity, and perhaps deter those who would point out that charge cards—often misused in times of desperation—can bring people’s journeys to a crashing halt.



Cottonelle Wants You to Go Commando and Not Throw Your Panties at New Kids on the Block

Cottonelle wants you to “go commando.” That’s right, the toilet paper brand says you should walk around without underwear because its CleanRipple texture imparts a superior clean.

In fact, they’ve hired documentary filmmaker and British accent possessor Cherry Healey to intercept random people who’ve just used the toilet and ask them to go commando.  Whereupon they hide in a little popup tent, take off their underpants and receive an undies storage baggie and some Cottonelle—in stunts that are both bizarre and amusing.

I can only surmise that part of the reason they picked Healey is because Poo-Pourri’s success taught marketers that Americans like it when potty humor is delivered via a British accent. In fact, Time Out recently found that British accents are considered the most sexy.

Speaking of sexy, Cottonelle isn’t just doing this commando stuff to hawk its product. It’s doing it for the good of musicians everywhere. Musicians who have been much maligned by the odious habit women have of throwing our undergarments on stage. Musicians like New Kids on the Block, who kicked off the Cottonelle campaign on Feb. 15 with an intimate concert that didn’t get intimate enough for underwear throwing.

The Kimberly-Clark brand will be joining the first leg of the NKOTB summer tour to offer “an elevated bathroom experience,” and surprise meets and greets with the boys—which presumably only happen if you agree to remove your underwear ahead of time. Meow.

So, if you want to trust your butt to clean ripple, challenge a friend with a free sample, or just want to browse a lot of pictures of people showing side-hip to prove their not wearing underwear, head over to Cottonelle’s website. And take a moment to wonder about this new trend in bathroom humor that’s sweeping marketing.

CREDITS
—TV
Director: Fred Goss
Production Company: Company Films
Editor: Matt Walsh
Editorial Company: Cutters
Sound: John Binder
Sound Studio: Another Country
Agency: Trisect
CCO: Chris Cancel
CSO: Gabe Misarti
ECD: Kevin Hughes
GCD: Mel Routhier
Sr. CW: Dan Lewis
Sr. AD: Garrett Fleming
CW: Aaron Vick
Group Acct Director: Soraya Faber
Acct Director: Meg Graeff
Strategic Planning Director: Danielle Simon
Producer: Corrine Serritella

—Print
Photographer: Liz Von Hoene
Studio: Stockland Martel
Retoucher: Kellie Kulton
Agency: Trisect
CCO: Chris Cancilla
CSO: Gabe Misarti
ECD: Kevin Hughes
GCD: Mel Routhier
Sr. CW: Dan Lewis
Sr. AD: Garrett Fleming
CW: Aaron Vick
Group Acct Director: Soraya Faber
Account Director: Meg Graeff
Strategic Planning Director: Danielle Simon
Producer: Corrine Serritella



When the Escalators Died in Stockholm's Subway, Reebok Was There to Give People a Lift

If you’re looking for an unconventional workout, Reebok might suggest carrying a stranger up a flight of stairs, just so he or she doesn’t have to walk.

Last week, when the escalators in Stockholm’s subway stations were out of order, the sportswear brand, along with agency The Viral Company, recruited a bunch of athletes from Fit 4 Life, a local CrossFit gym, to give commuters a lift.

Despite the reasonable odds that the women panting at the top of the stairs—as well as some of the people who don’t seem to mind getting slung over some rando’s shoulder—are agency employees, the idea is cute, and a nice, down-to-earth extension of Reebok’s lofty new “Be More Human” strategy. (While there’s nothing special about Good Samaritans helping solo parents carry strollers up stairs, helping a pregnant woman by actually carrying her is a little more unusual—she was, according to the agency, late for a meeting.)

Nonetheless, the ad’s everyman heroes aren’t really doing anything impressive until they’re carrying their passengers raised overhead with one arm, like this guy. And they’re obviously not truly hardcore unless they have a giant tattoo of Reebok’s logo, like this woman—though she is just one of some 28 Reebok-branded humans currently known to reside in Sweden, according to a recent headcount from the company.



This Agency's Weekly 'Clean the Fridge' Emails Are a Thing of Beauty

No workplace email gets trashed faster than a mass reminder to clean out the company refrigerator. Heck, I wouldn’t even bother to open one. (Such an email, I mean. The fridge—I’d open that, sure. I’ve got to stow my Limburger-onion hoagies someplace.)

At Boston agency Allen & Gerritsen, however, the weekly “Clean the fridge” emails are savored like delicacies thanks to facilities associate Mike Boston, who also happens to be a local hip-hop artist. Each Friday, Boston (yes, it’s his name and where he lives, deal with it) cooks up a sweet confection of pop-culture references, employee/client riffs and in-jokes designed to remind staff to remove their leftovers from the premises.

His couplets blow the doors off the fridge:
“Chickens go from so sad to so mad, it’s so bad
Clucking ’round the ham like a nomad with no dad.”

And they expose moldy (nay, “fuzzy”) dregs to the masses:
“Those cuddly-wuddly eyes! How could I deny you?
Spoon-fed with hummus love.
Where in the fridge’d they hide you?”

Tasty puns are on the menu:
“Clean your spoon wisely.
Fork you and have a knife day!”

As are some appetizing free verse reminders:
“Please claim your food in the refrigerators or label it.
This is the one time it’s ok to put a label on things.”

Lest anyone think Boston is just a bard of the break room, he’s begun to put his stamp on the agency’s creative product, writing and recording a track for the Boston Celtics’ “Green Runs Deep” campaign.

Check out a few of his full emails below. Dude’s rhymes are fresh. Even if the food isn’t.

Photo: Indi Samarajiva/Flickr



Honda Teaches You to Speed Read in Three Ads That Go Faster and Faster

Honda teaches you to speed read in a series of ads which—in a nice nod to its vehicles—keep accelerating if you’re up for a challenge.

Apps have revolutionized speed read lately by displaying a single word on the screen at a time, one right after another in rapid succession. Partly because this reduces eye movement, these apps help readers not just beat but destroy the average reading pace of 220 words per minute. (Most of the apps default to 250 words a minute to start.)

The Honda campaign, from Wieden + Kennedy in London, uses the same technique—with the on-screen copy that flashes by in a trim, minimalist 40-second spot. A second ad lasts 30 seconds, with the text moving that much quicker. A third and final ad lasts just 20 seconds. (It’s kind of a shame there aren’t more. I was prepared to see how fast I could really go.)

The three spots combined have more than half a million YouTube views in a couple of days. That’s some speedy likes for some speedy reading.



Cannes Lions Says to Bring Your Worst Employees to the Festival Instead of Firing Them

Baffled about what to do with your worst-performing employees? Reward them with a trip to the Cannes Lions festival in the south of France this summer!

That’s the tongue-in-cheek message of the festival’s official ad campaign, which launches Monday. Don’t think of it as a reward. Think of it as an investment in creativity. After all, as the tagline points out, sending underperforming staff to Cannes as delegates is “cheaper than severance.”

Photographer Dan Burn-Forti shot both the print ads and the online videos, created by McCann London.

“Although our campaign is humorous, it makes a very sensible point. Why should being a Cannes Lions delegate be the preserve of the already excellent?” says Rob Doubal, co-president and chief creative officer of McCann London. “If we really want a more creative world, as we all profess, we should also be encouraging the not-so-excellent performers to be inspired by Cannes Lions.”

So, if your boss hasn’t penciled you in for a Cannes trip, now’s the time to evolve your approach from sucking up to just plain sucking.

 
The print ads:

 
The videos:



So, How Did Brands Do With Their Oscar Tweets on Sunday?

Everyone and their personal brand logged on to social media on Sunday night to let their followers know how much better they are than movie stars. Meanwhile, actual brands spent the night unabashedly making it all about themselves—instead of throwing shade on celebs.

Some tried to have a real-time-marketing-moment, but among the flurry of thematic entries, most seemed pre-planned. Check out some of their efforts below.

 
—From the red carpet:

 

 

 
—Lots of brands paid homage to Ellen’s epic group selfie from last year:

 

 

 
—Farmers Insurance and M&M’s were both thrilled by J.K. Simmons’ win, as he endorses both brands (he’s the voice of the Yellow M&M):

 

 
—PetSmart scored with this real-time tweet, after Birdman won Best Original Screenplay and one of the winners thanked his dog Larry:

 
—So many versions of the Oscar trophy, too:

 

 

 

 

 
—One brand even paid homage to the Emmy trophy, for some reason:

 
—Among the best of the rest:

 

 



Christopher Guest Channels Best in Show for Brilliantly Bizarre PetSmart Ads

If you were a fan of Christopher Guest’s classic movie Best in Show, PetSmart has the perfect campaign for you.

The brand, with agency GDS&M, hired the writer, actor and filmmaker to direct a set of commercials in his signature mockumentary style, under the tagline “Partners in Pethood.” The results are, unsurprisingly, great. 

Like the movie, which Guest co-wrote and directed, the campaign features a parade of awkward, pet-obsessed nutjobs—including two played by Anna Faris and Jennifer Coolidge—who deliver their various quirks in perfect deadpan.

Faris plays a ditzy, catty dog owner throwing a birthday party for her terrier. In a second ad, Coolidge, a veteran Guest talent, nails the overbearing mother-in-law act in the campaign’s best, and riskiest, clip—the interplay with her character’s son is pretty spectacular.

Both ads broke during the Oscars on Sunday night—in 30-second versions—and three more spots are worth watching for more ridiculous, doting pet lovers.

There are even some good extra tidbits in the behind-the-scenes video, which goes out of its way to strengthen the somewhat odd “Pethood” positioning.

“When I hear the term ‘Pethood,’ it makes me want to give my child up—I have a human child—and just be the mommy to a bunch of animal,” says Faris. Adds Coolidge, “I never really liked my children, but I sure love my animals.”

In other words, it’s is a wonky portmanteau, but pokes fun at its target consumers in just the right spirit. And while Big Lots took a swing at treating pets like people in its focus-group themed spots last fall, the talent, pacing, and heritage here blow any competition out of the water.

CREDITS
Client: PetSmart
EVP Customer Experience: Phil Bowman
VP Marketing Communications: Shane McCall
Sr. Creative, Content Developer: Valerie Lederer
Assoc. Creative Manager, TV & Video: Tara Niederhaus
Agency: GSD&M
Group Creative Director/Art Director: Scott Brewer
Group Creative Director/Writer: Ryan Carroll
Assoc. Creative Director/Art Director: Ross Aboud
Assoc. Creative Director/Writer: Kevin Dunleavy
Account Director: Scott Moore
Account Supervisor: Brittany Hammer
Account Manager: Lauren Bradshaw
SVP, Director of Production: Jack Epsteen
Agency Producer: Monique Veillette
Associate Agency Producer: Adrian Weist
Production Company: GO
Director: Christopher Guest
Managing Director: Gary Rose
Executive Producer: Adam Bloom
Executive Producer: Catherine Finkenstaedt
Producer: Mark Hyatt
DP: Kristian Kachikis
Editorial: Mackenzie Cutler
Editor: Gavin Cutler



Is This the Cutest Interactive Website Ever, or the Creepiest?

Bonpoint, the luxury French fashion house for children, wants you to play peekaboo with its child models.

Fred & Farid Shanghai produced an interactive website for the brand, which asks for access to your webcam and microphone. Adorable children in expensive clothing stare at you while you cover your eyes, uncover them, and shout peekaboo. The adorable children then laugh.

The agency calls it “maybe the cutest interactive website ever,” but I found it super uncomfortable. I took one for the team, tried it out, and had to adjust my screen so the children were “staring” at my ceiling and not at my face. On the plus side, you get to admire their clothing and then click on a link to buy the whole outfit (for $200).

The kids are adorable, and the clothing is beautiful, but something about it—maybe it’s the green light suggesting that you’re being recorded—feels a little bit like I’m starring in an M. Night Shyamalan film.



Brands Turn Back the Clock and Show Us the World #IfThe80sNeverStopped

The 1980s were a special decade. Disco was experiencing its death rattle; Ronald Reagan was the president for almost the entire span; cellphones were as big as bricks; and fashion, oh the fashion was just—tubular.

Earlier this week, in honor of Molly Ringwald and John Hughes’s birthday, Comedy Central’s late-night game show/Internetgasm @midnight challenged its viewers to play a fun hashtag game, imagining if that totally awesome decade never stopped. 
 

Of course, brands caught wind—and showed us their take on how things might not have changed. And actually, they turned in some totally rad tweets.

Check some of them out below.
 

 



Alan Cumming Shows You Suggestive Things to Do Besides Sex in Ad Targeting the FDA

Saatchi & Saatchi uses suggestive visual humor, and deadpan delivery from actor Alan Cumming, to skewer the U.S. Food and Drug Adminstration’s rules around donating blood.

At issue is a recent revision in the FDA’s regulations that allows gay and bisexual men to give blood, but only if they have haven’t had sex for a year. (They were previously barred entirely, based on concerns about exposure to HIV.)

With tongue firmly in cheek, Cumming introduces a series of eight non-sexual activities that that are “guaranted to make your year without sex fly by.”

Among them: Apply your manual dexterity to packing powder into a Civil War musket; thrust your hips into yoga; and polish your trophies. The logo “Celibacy Challenge” logo also is a riot—a pair of red briefs with a white lock over them.

The ad points to celibacychallenge.com, where you can sign a petition.

Saatchi and Bullit director Ari Sandel created the mock PSA for GLAAD and the Gay Men’s Health Crisis, which want the FDA rules to be based on risk factors, not sexual orientation, and are petitioning the federal agency to make that change. The pro-bono ad, which is being distributed online via the hashtag #CelibacyChallenge, went up Thursday on YouTube.

CREDITS
Clients: GLAAD, Gay Men’s Health Crisis
Agency: Saatchi & Saatchi, New York
Chief Creative Officer: Jay Benjamin
Creative Director, Art: Johnnie Ingram
Creative Director, Copy: Chris Skurat
Design Director: Juan Saucedo
Art Directors: Mete Erdogan, Matilda Kahl
Copywriters: Callum Spencer, Viktor Angwald                                                 
Chief Production Officer: Tanya LeSieur
Director of Content Production: John Doris
Executive Producer: Dani Stoller
Integrated Producer: Matt Micioni
Lead Creative Technologist: Steve Nowicki
Digital Strategist: Shae Carroll
Information Architects: Robert Moon, Kelly Redzack           
Head of Art Buying: Maggie Sumner
Lead Retoucher: Yan Apostolides
Proofreader: Ed Stein
Chief Marketing Officer: Christine Prins 
Talent Director: Akash Sen
Account Director: Rebecca Robertson
Associate Director, Business Development: Jamie Daigle
Account Supervisor: Carly Wallace
Project Manager: Bridget Auerbach
Production Company: Bullitt 
Director: Ari Sandel
Directors of Photography: Warren Kommers (Alan Cumming)
Benjamin Kitchens (vignettes)
Executive Producer, CEO: Todd Makurath
Line Producer: Nathaniel Greene
Editing House: Arcade Edit
Editor: Jeff Ferruzzo
Assistant Editor: Mark Popham
Producer: Fanny Cruz
Executive Producer: Sila Soyer
Music House: Nylon
Producer: Christina Carlo
Audio: Sound Lounge
Mixer: Glen Landrum
Post House/Telecine: Company 3
Colorist: Tom Poole



What Is Branding? This Thought-Provoking Video Tells You in Just 2 Minutes

What is branding? You could spent a thousand years reading a million books on the subject. Or you could watch the two-minute video below, which tries to capture its fundamental essence—with snazzy little motion graphics to help you along.

“Entrepreneurs, innovators, disruptors, CEOs and CMOs have enough landlines to sidestep when tackling the branding beast,” says the video’s creator, David Brier of DBD International. “Written plainly with equally minimalistic motion graphics, this video unveils the magic, the spark and the simplicity that is branding in its most fundamental form.”

What do you think? Useful, or overly simplistic?