Netflix's Fun Outdoor Ads Use 100 Awesome GIFs From Shows and Movies

GIFs have left the nest!

The digital video files first made a jump to TV a while back, thanks to Fiat. And now they’ve ventured all the way outside in a fascinating Netflix campaign from Ogilvy Paris.

For the streaming service’s launch in France, the agency created 100 different GIFs, some of which “reacted” to current events and even things like the weather (for example, a rainy scene from a film when it’s actually raining at a bus stop).

People who hate GIFs will surely be appalled at this. And yes, it’s a little jarring to see the hypnotic looping videos running on large formats outside. But they’re undeniably eye-catching in ways that other digital video just isn’t.

Check out the case study below.



20 Years Before It Was Cool to Cast Gay Couples, Ikea Made This Pioneering Ad

The mini-wave of brands casting gay couples in TV ads this year continues to rise, with the likes of Honey Maid, Cheerios, and DirecTV all diving in. More power to them. But Ikea was the first marketer to feature a gay couple in a mainstream commercial. Twenty years ago.

The 1994 spot below, from Deutsch, ran after 10 p.m. in three markets where Ikea then had a significant presence: New York, Philadelphia and Washington, D.C. The late-night airing ensured that the ad wouldn’t be seen during “family hour” programming. That concession, however, did little to quell the objections of the American Family Association and its leader, the Rev. Donald Wildmon.

Wildmon called for boycotts of Ikea stores, one of which, on Long Island, was the target of a bomb threat, which turned out to be unfounded. The retailer, however, continued to air the ad, which was part of a lifestyle campaign featuring different types of consumers (a divorced mom, adopting parents, empty nesters, etc.) that began in 1993.

The creative team behind “Dining Room,” including creative director Greg DiNoto, associate cd Kathy Delaney, copywriter Dallas Itzen and art director Patrick O’Neill, are no longer at Deutsch. But O’Neill, who later worked at TBWAChiatDay and now is chief creative officer at blood testing company Theranos, shared his memories of helping to create something that didn’t win awards but was truly groundbreaking.

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AdFreak: Where did the idea for “Dining Room” come from?
Patrick O’Neill: We would base a lot of our stories on the real people we would see. We’d go to the New Jersey store—in Elizabeth—and because [the ads] were based on real people, we would watch, observe and see how people use the product, who they were, what kinds of things they were buying. And we’d figure which stores were the best ones. And there were a lot of gay couples there. We thought, Why don’t we do one? Donny [Deutsch] thought it was a great idea and felt like it was a true representation of Ikea’s values, which is they’re always accepting of everyone.

So, that store was like your focus group or idea center?
It was. And we figured out where life intersected with furniture. … You had to understand what was going on in the culture at that time, I thought, versus just doing [ads] in a sort of timeless manner. Divorcees still go there, that kid still gets adopted, and gay couples still go there, you know [laughs]. It just wasn’t a typical depiction in media.

What was the shoot like?
A lot of the grips and all the people that were working on the set—you could feel that there was a lot of tension in the air because it was so unusual to see.

Did you shoot it at the store?
Yes.

Who was the director?
Paul Goldman. He had just started directing. [At Deutsch] he worked on the original “It’s a big country. Someone’s got to furnish it” campaign that was the year before.

How nervous was Ikea going into this?
They believed in it from the beginning. They were never nervous about it.

Did you have to test it?
No.

Did you think at the time that more people would follow in the footsteps of that ad?
I did.

Why didn’t that happen?
It’s interesting. I think the reason why people remember the ad was because it was done in a way where it was, “Wow, they really did it.” We weren’t mucking around. It was clear what was going on. And there were bomb threats. There was backlash. There were New York op-eds written about it. I mean, there were all kinds of things happening. In the years that followed—not too long after—Ellen [DeGeneres], she came out. Melissa Etheridge came out. A lot of women came out at the time. So, I think the culture started doing it without it being commercials. But as far as brands, I think they were nervous about it.

Does the groundswell we’re seeing now reflect what’s going on with state marriage laws?
Yeah. I think it’s also that the millennials and younger are very accepting of [gay] marriage. When that is legitimized by a large core of consumers, you can have that in communications because the approval rating for that is much, much higher once you get to a certain age group.

Would a different creative team have done the same thing?
No. … Look, the way we cast, and had them speak about their relationship, and the premise—it was all based on real stuff. I think the reason it turned out the way it did was all those people working together on it. We knew gay people, and I felt like the lone representative [laughs]. I felt a lot of responsibility making sure I didn’t let my people down.

How proud are you of this, ultimately, and is it still up there in your top three ads?
Well, I’m proud of it because it was the first one. It was scary in some ways. Everyone was true to the period, but there was no precedent. And it wasn’t a welcoming environment. So, that part of it makes me proud and happy to be part of.



And Here Is Nike's Grand, Gritty Salute to LeBron James and His Return to Cleveland

LeBron James can go home again. And again. And again.

The NBA star’s return to Cleveland from Miami was always going to be fodder for numerous ad campaigns. And indeed, we’ve already seen spots from Beats by Dre and Sprite this week. Now it’s Nike’s turn to get epic—timed to Thursday night’s Cavaliers home-opener against the New York Knicks.

It’s suitably goosebump-inducing, as LeBron leads not just his teammates but all of Cleveland in a massive pre-game huddle—the ultimate come-to-Jesus moment for the city’s once-and-again favorite son.

Nike Basketball partnered with Wieden + Kennedy for the spot, which was directed by the Malloy Brothers. LeBron’s mom, Gloria Marie James, makes a cameo, as do Coach Dru Joyce and teammates Kyrie Irving, Dion Waters, Anderson Varejao, Shawn Marion, Tristan Thompson, Matthew Dellavedova and Joe Harris.

Nike is also introducing the LeBron 12 Hrt of a Lion shoe today, and is currently working on the nine-hour process of unveiling a 10-story, 25,000-square-foot banner on Ontario Street welcoming James back to Cleveland.



Honda's Double-Sided Story on YouTube Is Mind-Bendingly Brilliant

Well, this might just blow your damn mind.

Honda and Wieden + Kennedy London have created a rather incredible “double-sided story” on YouTube to promote the Civic and its sportier sibling, the Civic Type R. While watching “The Other Side,” you can press and hold the “R” button on your keyboard to switch between parallel storylines. 

Watch it here: Honda’s “The Other Side.”

“We wanted people to feel Honda’s other side as well as see it,” W+K notes today on its blog, “so we dreamt up a technique that brings together both narratives through a simple interaction.” (The technique is a bit reminiscent of Interlude’s famous interactive music video for Bob Dylan’s “Like a Rolling Stone.”)

Without revealing too much, I’ll just say the dual film directed by Daniel Wolfe follows the travels of a seemingly mild-mannered dad who leads a rather interesting double life. 

You can watch a few teasers below, but you really need to go see the full experience for yourself on YouTube.



'Dumb Ways to Die' Returns With a Trick-or-Treat Halloween Special

“Dumb Ways to Die,” the famed Australian train-safety campaign from 2012, has done a couple of encores for special occasions. First it did a Valentine’s Day ad. And now it’s done a little choose-your-own-adventure Halloween special.

Should you trick or treat those who come to your door on Friday? Well, both approaches have their risks, it seems—for candy giver and candy seeker alike. “Be safe around Halloween … and trains,” says the copy.

Agency: McCann Melbourne.



Lena Dunham Gets Her Famous Friends to Model Her Planned Parenthood T-Shirt

If you’re one of the nearly 1.2 million people who follow Lena Dunham on Instagram, you might have noticed her posts flooding your feed this morning—shot after shot of her celebrity pals wearing a new T-shirt she designed for the Planned Parenthood Action Fund. 

Dunham partnered with Planned Parenthood as part of her book tour for Not That Kind of Girl earlier this month. Proceeds from the $25 shirt will go directly to funding the Planned Parenthood Action Fund, the electoral and political arm of Planned Parenthood. Oh, and if you haven’t put it together just yet, the shirt seems to be part of a push to remind fans to vote on Election Day.

Check out the posts below:

 

The inimitable @mindykaling, a beloved voice for women and an angel in pink #iamwatching2014 #weheartplannedparenthood

A photo posted by Lena Dunham (@lenadunham) on Oct 10, 2014 at 5:07pm PDT

 

More bold brave models tomorrow… But dream of Ellen Page tonight:

A photo posted by Lena Dunham (@lenadunham) on Oct 10, 2014 at 5:12pm PDT

 

Oh lord it’s Sara Bareilles… #womenarewatching #weheartplannedparenthood

A photo posted by Lena Dunham (@lenadunham) on Oct 10, 2014 at 5:21am PDT

 

And Rashida Jones!!! #womenarewatching #weheartplannedparenthood

A photo posted by Lena Dunham (@lenadunham) on Oct 10, 2014 at 5:22am PDT

 

Oh excuse you Jenna Lyons!!! #womenarewatching #weheartplannedparenthood

A photo posted by Lena Dunham (@lenadunham) on Oct 10, 2014 at 5:23am PDT

 

Is there anything fiercer than @gabunion ? #womenarewatching #weheartplannedparenthood

A photo posted by Lena Dunham (@lenadunham) on Oct 10, 2014 at 5:24am PDT

 

Amy Schumer, you beautiful nut! #womenarewatching #weheartplannedparenthood

A photo posted by Lena Dunham (@lenadunham) on Oct 10, 2014 at 5:24am PDT

 

Goddamn, America Ferrera, you slay me #womenarewatching #weheartplannedparenthood

A photo posted by Lena Dunham (@lenadunham) on Oct 10, 2014 at 5:25am PDT

 

The angel known as Knope #amypoehler #womenarewatching #weheartplannedparenthood

A photo posted by Lena Dunham (@lenadunham) on Oct 10, 2014 at 5:26am PDT

 

Ladies and gentleman, it’s @unforettable! #womenarewatching #weheartplannedparenthood

A photo posted by Lena Dunham (@lenadunham) on Oct 10, 2014 at 5:28am PDT

 

It’s Sara Quin and… Sara Quin! @teganandsara #womenarewatching #weheartplannedparenthood #canadiansdoitwell

A photo posted by Lena Dunham (@lenadunham) on Oct 10, 2014 at 5:30am PDT



And Here's What Happens When a White Guy Walks the Streets of NYC for 10 Hours

If you haven’t seen the video of the woman walking down the street getting harassed by gawking dudes in New York City, you should probably check it out. It’s truly a dispicable display of shameful behavior.

And while it might seem insensitive to parody such a sincere project, the folks at Funny or Die found a commendable balance with their satire showing us what it’s like to be a man walking the streets of New York. The results are truly harrowing—but you might not be surprised at all by the way such men are treated. 

As a man who lives and works in the city, I can attest to being treated like this on a daily basis. Take a look.

 



Wearing a Fake Ebola Hazmat Suit for Halloween? Donate a Real One Instead

Planning to dress up in fake ebola hazmat gear for Halloween? That’s awfully douchey, don’t you think?

Nonprofit humanitarian group Doctors of the World has an idea, though. Why not join the “More Than a Costume” campaign and help pay for real protective equipment used by medical professionals battling ebola in West Africa?

“Health workers needs a new hazmat suit for each of their rotations, and estimates indicate that over 1 million suits will be needed in the next six weeks,” says the organization.

For $1 you can donate a glove, and $5 buys a mask. You can donate a hazmat suit for $250, and throw in a helmet for $500. (Or text EBOLA to 501501 to donate $10. C’mon, you’ll spend more than that on Halloween candy.)

The initiative was developed with Publicis Kaplan Thaler, which is running pro-bono print and digital ads this week in The New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, USA Today and elsewhere. “Here it’s a costume. There it saves lives,” says one headline.

Props for leveraging the ebola costume craze in such life-affirming fashion. They’ve created a program that lets people contribute to the greater good, even those who plan to clomp around in bogus boots and breathe through phony filters on Halloween.

See the full ad below.



Patagonia Goes Full Chipotle in This Intense Animation About Goose Down

You’ll never think about down jackets or Blue Oyster Cult the same way again after watching Patagonia’s darkly informative new video set to the tune of “Don’t Fear the Reaper.”

In the rather Chipotle-esque clip, we follow the journey of a naive young goose who’s trying to enjoy some time on the ski slopes when a brush with the Grim Reaper turns his whole day upside down. The jacket-clad goose (don’t overthink it) sees each step of how down feathers are harvested. As you can guess, it’s not super fun for the geese involved.

Patagonia is using the video to announce its new commitment to only using “100% traceable down.” That means the brand tracks its suppliers from hatch to harvest, ensuring that feathers are never plucked from live birds.

Much like Chipotle, the Omnivore’s Dilemma morality here stops quite a bit short of PETA standards. The geese plucked by Patagonia are, of course, killed in the process, with most of their bodies being used for food:

“Only birds raised for their meat under strict non force-fed, non live-plucked requirements are slaughtered here. Following the Traceable Down Standard, slaughterhouses observe best practices for animal welfare including the transportation, holding and slaughtering of birds.”

In usual Patagonia style, the transparency-obsessed company has an exhaustive timeline showing how it reached the 100% traceable down milestone.

So now you can at least rest assured that your Patagonia jacket was made from humanely butchered animals who weren’t flayed alive or force-fed. But that cartoon goose wearing the byproduct of his dead brethren is still a bit of monster.



HP Celebrates Human Hands in This Ad for Its Wild New 3-D Touch Computer

We rely on our hands to get us through our various daily projects, whether it’s typing on a computer, creating works of art or instructing others to follow a plan. Now, HP wants us to use the power of our paws in the digital space.

HP’s Sprout is a new immersive computing platform that scans and senses the objects in proximity of the device to allow people to create in real-time 3-D. In simpler words, you can put things directly on the touch mat and, thanks to a projector above, wave your hands around to virtually mold the design you want on the screen. As the ad shows, that includes spilling coffee beans on the flat surface to get that effortlessly strewn artistic look.

Watch the ad below, and then give your hands a pat on the back for all the work they do.

CREDITS
Client: Hewlett-Packard
Spot: “Hands of Time”
Agency: 180LA
Production Company: Park Pictures
Director: Vincent Haycock
Director of Photography: Mattias Montero
Head of Production: Anne Bobroff
Executive Producer: Jackie Kelman Bisbee
Executive Producer: Mary Ann Marino
Producer: Valerie Romer
Original Music by human



Peeps Do Their Best to Get Scary for Halloween

More sweet. Less scary. That’s the promotional campaign, not the ingredient list.

The perennial Easter favorite Peeps continue to try to become a year-round candy with these “peepified” illustrations for Halloween. The simple, colorful drawings are part of an ongoing campaign dubbed “Every day is a holiday,” launched earlier this year to introduce Peeps Minis, diminutive flavored versions of the original chicks. (They’re less than half the size of the flagship product, and come in bags, not the traditional cellophane-front flat boxes).

The airy sugar dumplings, made by confectioner Just Born, haul in an estimated 70 percent of their business at Easter and only a fraction on other holidays like Christmas and Valentine’s Day. There are ghost and pumpkin Peeps on shelves now, but they’ve never moved as briskly as springtime’s puffy chicks and bunnies.

The campaign for Peeps Minis, from New York ad agency The Terri & Sandi Solution, has included digital images on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, with Peeps-centric drawings for obscure holidays like Mutt’s Day, Make Someone Laugh Day and National Singing Telegram Day. Fifteen-second TV ads celebrate National Take Your Pants for a Walk Day, Bubble Wrap Appreciation Day and other “holidays.” (Go ahead, Google them).

And about those ingredients: mainly sugar, corn syrup and gelatin. Boo!



One Woman and Her GoPro Reveal the True Nature of Street Harassment

If you’re a woman, this video is not going to be that enlightening.

It documents some of the creepier instances of verbal harassment—from more than 100 total—that a woman received during 10 hours of silent walking around New York City. You know, the typical stuff that happens to you as a women when you decide to go anywhere alone. It even captures one super-creepy dude who walks alongside her in silence for long enough that we start to worry about her safety.

Oh, I could tell you stories. Every woman I know could tell you stories. We could tell you that it doesn’t matter what you wear. In this video, Shoshana Roberts is wearing jeans and a T-shirt. It doesn’t matter if you try not to look at anybody or get your best bitch face on. As you can see, Roberts doesn’t attempt to draw attention in any way. And it doesn’t make you feel complimented. It makes you wonder if they’re going to take it any further—a little butt pat, a gentle grab, all-out sexual assault?

By the end, Roberts looks exhausted, anxious and fed up. But of course, she’ll get to go through it all again the next time she walks out the door.

Rob Bliss Creative made the video for Hollaback!, an organization committed to ending street harassment by documenting and exposing the harassers. And boy, is there a lot to document. And it turns out Roberts has since been hit with a slew of online rape threats, and Hollaback! is filling police reports on her behalf.

That’s not too surprising, because harassment doesn’t stop in the street. From doxxing or swatting women to sending unsolicited dick pics to your Tinder matches, the Internet has given people more ways to threaten, harass and otherwise scare the pants off people for their own personal satisfaction.

If you want to help, you can document your own experiences with Hollaback! Or let people you know who promote street harassment know that it’s not OK. Seriously, it’s not OK.



NFL Players Say 'No More' to Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault in Powerful PSAs

Nearly two dozen current and former National Football League stars appear in powerful new PSAs condemning domestic violence and sexual abuse.

They look straight into the camera as they say “No more” to excuses and rationalizations that perpetuate the problem. These include “Boys will be boys,” “He just has a temper,” “Why doesn’t she just leave?” and “She was asking for it.”

New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning bookends a 60-second clip, which also features league exec Troy Vincent and Pittsburgh Steelers star William Gay, both of whom have suffered abuse tragedies in their lives. The work was developed by Y&R and produced by Viacom and the Joyful Heart Foundation. The latter’s founder and president, actress Mariska Hargitay, was among the spots’ directors.

“This is a monumental step toward change,” Hargitay tells USA Today. “If badass NFL heroes are coming forward to talk about these issues, I guarantee you it is going to give inspiration and permission to young boys to step up in a new way. Love in a new way, protect in a new way, and to be a man in a new way.”

The NFL, plagued by scandals involving Ray Rice, Adrian Peterson and others, is donating $3 million a week in air time for the PSAs. The player spots broke during last week’s Thursday Night Football telecast on CBS. “No More” spots featuring celebrities like Courteney Cox, Amy Poehler and Ice-T last broke a month ago.

The campaign’s plain talk is compelling, and so is its stark visual style. Against a plain white background, the players establish an instant connection with viewers. That makes it hard to look away when the subjects challenge us to face tough issues and do the right thing.



Chrysler Celebrates Being American by Making You Think It's German or Japanese

How do you sell American cars in 2014? By tricking people into first thinking your goods are Japanese or German.

Chrysler is launching a tongue-in-cheek campaign for its 200 model with TV ads featuring voiceovers that start in foreign languages, touting qualities commonly associated with cars built outside the U.S. Then, the narrators register faux-shock that the car cruising across the screen is, in fact, a Chrysler. Reliability and performance are now “American things,” the ads explain, in a bid to quickly to throw the brand’s past self under the bus.

Created with agency Wieden + Kennedy in Portland, Ore., the spots also feature scenery meant to cue foreign settings, like cherry blossoms and koi ponds for Japan (actually shot in Detroit) and a knockoff Autobahn for Germany (actually shot in Seattle). Chrysler is also promising a Swedish version focused on safety (filmed in San Francisco and Seattle).

They’re branded with the tagline “America’s Import,” also slapped on the Bob Dylan Super Bowl ad from earlier this year. It’s a more explicitly patriotic evolution of the “Imported from Detroit” tagline introduced by Eminem’s ad for Chrysler during the 2012 Super Bowl, and reinforced by Clint Eastwood’s halftime ad the following year.

But since it’s apparently going for a mix of laughs and puffed-up American pride, it’s really a shame there’s no Anchorman movie about to come out—then the company could ride Ron Burgundy’s coattails again.

Credits below.

CREDITS
Client: Chrysler
Project: “Ready to Take on the World”
CMO, Chrysler Group LLC & Fiat Group Automobiles, Head of Fiat Brand: Olivier
Francois
President and Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Chrysler Brand: Al Gardner
Director, Head of Global Advertising, Chrysler Dodge Jeep Ram: Marissa Hunter
Head of Advertising, Chrysler Marketing: Melissa Garlick
Chrysler Brand Advertising Specialist: Danielle DePerro

Agency: Wieden + Kennedy, Portland, Ore.
Creative Directors: Aaron Allen / Kevin Jones / Michael Tabtabai
Copywriter: Smith Henderson
Copywriter (“Three Times” only): Brandon Davis
Art Director: James Moslander
Producer: Bob Wendt
Production Assistant: Julie Gursha
Interactive/Social Strategy: Sarah Biedak
Strategic Planning: Andy Lindblade
Media/Comms Planning: Alex Barwick
Account Team: Cheryl Markley / Lani Reichenbach / Jourdan Merkow
Business Affairs: Dusty Slowik
Project Management: Jane Monaghan
Executive Creative Directors: Joe Staples / Mark Fitzloff
Head of Production: Ben Grylewicz

Production Company: RESET
Director: Andrew Douglas
Executive Producer: Jeff McDougall
Line Producer: Betsy Oliver
Director of Photography: Alwin Ku?chler

Editorial Company: Joint
Editor: Matthew Hilber (“Japanese Quality” & “German Performance”) / Nicholas Davis (“Swedish Safety”)
Assistant Editors Dylan Sylwester / Kristy Faris
Post Producer Leslie Carthy
Post Executive Producer Patty Brebner

VFX (“Japanese Quality” “German Performance – Autobahn” “German Performance – Three Times” Only)
VFX Company: Joint
Flame Artist: Katrina Salicrup
Smoke Artist: Zack Jacobs
VFX Producer: Alex Thiesen
Titles/Graphics: Brad Simon – W+K Studio Designer / Peiter Hergert – W+K Motion Designer

VFX (“Swedish Safety” only)
Flame Artist: Simon Brewster / Andrew Eksner / Sarah Marikar / Katrina Salicrup
Smoke Artist: Zack Jacobs
Titles/Graphics: Brad Simon – W+K Studio Designer / Peiter Hergert – W+K Motion Designer

Song: “The Fire” – The Roots

Mix Company: Joint
Mixer: Noah Woodburn
Producer: Alex Thiesen



This Is Hands Down the Most Messed-Up Halloween Ad You'll See This Year

You remember Vytautas Mineral Water. The Lithuanian water brand was the subject of the single craziest commercial of 2012—a spec ad from director Tadas Vidmantas that the client ended up loving and tacitly endorsing. (It ended up hiring Vidmantas to do ads in a similar lunatic style.)

Well, now Vidmantas is back with a Halloween spot for Vytautas. And it’s completely sick and twisted. Check it out below, and watch out for flying blood.

Credits are also below, and after that, the classic “It’s Earth’s Juice” ad from 2012.

CREDITS
Client: Vytautas Mineral Water
Agency: Superior
Director: Tadas Vidmantas
Producer: Asta Liukaityte



McDonald's Gets Even More Supersized With a Pop-Up Store Shaped Like a Giant Lunchbox

Adorned with awesome characters, packed with a homemade lunch and a note from your mom or dad—there aren’t too many things that spark nostalgia quite like a lunchbox. It reminds you of when life was simple, when you just had to finish your homework and make sure your shoes were on the right feet.

Well, McDonald’s (that’s Macca’s to Australians) and DDB Australia wanted to remind us of that feeling—by assembling a pop-up restaurant in the shape of a giant lunchbox.

The store, built to celebrate the a new rump-steak wrap on the McDonald’s menu, will surely stand out in the crowd of plain old not-shaped-like-childlike-object restaurants. It’s touring major Australian cities, including Perth, Adelaide, Sydney, and Melbourne.

Have a closer look below at the store being built—and, if you’re into it, the wrap too.

Via Neatorama.



Tech Brand's First Ad Shows How Romantic You Can Get With Some Outlets and a Smartphone

Can something as dry as smartphone-controlled appliances ever come across as romantic? 

Gadget brand WeMo and Crispin Porter + Bogusky think so, and they’ve created a rather elaborate video to prove it.

“The Big Anniversary Rig” is WeMo’s first consumer marketing push and features a house-spanning series of contraptions and romantic gestures celebrating a couple’s first year together. 

Owned by manufacturer Belkin, probably best known for its network routers, WeMo makes outlet adapters that allow you to control or automate your home’s electronics. It also partners with other brands to make slow cookers, coffee makers and other devices with its technology built in.

(By the way, the guy in this ad is indeed a terrible cook if his best dish is something called “beer battered ribs.” Pro tip, Dan: You don’t fry ribs, especially in a Crock Pot.)

After the jump, you can see some fake behind-the-scenes videos about “how Dan did it.” (Including slightly more realistic details on his not-actually-battered rib recipe.)

Even if you’re not a hopeless romantic who finds this level of branded affection adorable, you have to admit the concept is a good way to highlight quite a few ways to use the technology. If nothing else, most people would probably just like the idea of starting the coffee pot each morning while checking emails in bed.



Trulia Terrifies Home Buyers With a Haunted Open House for Halloween

Real-estate companies love haunted-house pranks. We saw it earlier this year with this gotcha video from Denmark. And now, digital real-estate brand Trulia is embracing scare tactics with its own hidden-camera prank for Halloween.

Trulia, with help from Olson Engage, held a haunted open house—inviting people in to see a property that was rigged up to mimic paranormal activity. Check out the video below to see the amusing reactions—capped off by the sudden appearance of a dead grandma in a bed. (This place won’t be on House Hunters anytime soon.)

Trulia has done a few other things for Halloween this year, including updating the local maps on its website to show the most likely spots to find zombies, vampires and ghosts (using its existing data on things like cemeteries). It also created the “Housing Scare Report” infographic below, which shows, among other data, the kinds of things that scare people off from buying particular houses—like having “666” in the address or knowing about a previous death in the home.

Click the infographic to enlarge.



Diet Coke Prints 2 Million Unique Labels in Latest Stroke of Packaging Genius

You thought Coca-Cola was getting personal when it rolled out 250 bottle labels featuring people’s first names. Well, Diet Coke just went and individualized 2 million bottle designs.

Coca-Coca Israel created the campaign, with help from Gefen Team, Q Digital and HP Indigo. (In fact, it was Indigo, which was founded in Israel, that helped Coke solve the enormous production challenges around the “Shake a Coke” campaign when it first rolled out in Australia in 2011.) For the Diet Coke project, a special algorithm led to a unique design technique that allowed millions of designs to be completely auto-generated.

The resulting product conveys to “to Diet Coke lovers that they are extraordinary by creating unique one-of-a-kind extraordinary bottles,” said Alon Zamir, vp of marketing for Coca-Cola Israel. (Dr Pepper, whose whole campaign is built around being one of a kind, is going to be pissed about this.)

The concept nicely extended to the ad campaign, which featured hundreds of uniquely designed billboards, as well as point-of-sale stunts that sold T-shirts and other merchandise featuring your specific bottle design.

The genius of “Share a Coke,” of course, was how personalized it felt, rather than how personalized it actually was. (Your first name isn’t exactly unique, after all—and if it is, it wasn’t on a Coke bottle.) Still, the Diet Coke idea is a conceptual and executional triumph—the designs look fantastic, on top of it all—and a brilliant stunt, even if it won’t generate the same level of buzz.

Check out more images below, along with a case study video showing the process.

Via PSFK.



OK Go Guys Ride Tiny Little Honda Unicycles in Their Fantastic New Video

Does OK Go release albums? Like, full-blown records with multiple songs on them? I don’t know. I don’t care. Their videos are enough for all of us.

Japanese creative agency Mori Inc. is behind this one. (You may remember creative director Morihiro Harano, who created that giant xylophone in the woods in that 2011 smartphone ad.) Like all of OK Go’s videos, it’s amazing. I would put it up there with the great Rube Goldberg device video for “This Too Shall Pass,” but maybe not quite as high as the truly awesome collaboration with dance troupe Pilobolus on “All Is Not Lost.”

Anyway, here it is:

Those amazing little motorcycles are the Honda U3-X, a very strange device with some kind of robotic gyroscope inside that keeps it from falling over, even when the guys are leaning back and forth on them. (To be fair, OK Go are samurai warriors when it comes to the art of not falling over.) I don’t want to give away the ending, but it gets nuts from there.

At any rate, the rock world’s answer to Cirque du Soleil is back. Hooray for them, and for us. And also for the drone or helicopter or whatever is filming this thing, because wow.