BETC London Names Russell Davies as Chief Strategy Officer

BETC London hired Russell Davies as its chief strategy officer, effective as of January, 2017. In the role, Davies will be part of the agency’s management team, alongside executive creative director Rosie Bardales (pictured with Davies above) and a soon to be appointed managing director.

“What can I say, we’re incredibly excited to work with a guy as talented as Russell. His experience, curiosity and innovative mind-set is a true sign of a new, dynamic time for BETC London. It’s awesome,” BETC London executive creative director Bardales said in a statement.

Davies joins the agency from an interim role as CEO of digital charity Doteveryone. He arrives with over 25 years of experience, including working with agencies iW+K and RGA and brands such as Nike, Apple, Microsoft and Honda. He spent nine years as a strategic planning director with W+K’s London and Portland offices, before leaving to join Nike as global consumer planning director in 2005. After two years with Nike, he spent a year as strategic director, EMEA with Ogilvy & Mather and one as strategic planning director with R/GA London.

“I’m really looking forward to working with Rosie and the team,” said Davies. “BETC are trying new things and are keen on working in different ways. That suits me. It’s going to be fun.”

Who Is Louise Delage? The Troubling Truth Behind an Overnight Instagram Success

We all know a girl like Louise Delage. You’ve been on Instagram for years and are scraping by with 50 likes on a good day—then she appears on the scene, with her fun little life, and cultivates over 16,000 followers in a few months.

In the years following LonelyGirl15, we learned to be wary of that kind of success. Who is this girl, and what does she do? But “personal branding,” Instagram stardom and the overall pressure to demonstrate the most photogenic parts of our lives has perhaps blunted our critical knives. Aren’t we all stars for somebody? 

So when Louise Delage arrived on Instagram on Aug. 1, bearing drinks and a cheerful, sun-soaked smile, few wondered who she was. Many assumed she was one more chic Parisian. Maybe she had one of those depressed Instagram husbands whose sole role in life is to capture their muses for an insatiable audience.

read more

Porn Stars Lose Their Partners in French Cable Ads That Would Never Fly Here (NSFW)

Mainstream American marketing doesn’t like to touch pornography at all, but this French campaign for pay-cable TV provider Canal+ revels in it—in amusingly offbeat fashion.

The agency, BETC, wanted to communicate that Canal+ now has gathered together the best porn content, leaving other providers a bit … empty-handed. So, it filmed mock sex scenes—with real porn stars—but with only one of the two people present.

read more

Orangina's Ingenious Upside-Down Can Forces You to Mix Up the Pulp

Lots of Orangina’s marketing is about shaking up bottles of the stuff—to mix up the pulp, which makes the carbonated citrus beverage taste better.

“An advertising guy told me there was a weakness, and we’re going to make a strength out of this weakness by saying, ‘The bottle needs to be shaken,’ ” Orangina’s founder, Jean-Claude Beton, said in an interview a few years before his death in 2013. “Television offered an opportunity to shake things.”

Orangina’s most recent marketing coup, though, was not in TV but in packaging.

read more

If Choreography Were an Olympic Sport, Lacoste's Rio 2016 Ad Would Surely Win the Gold

With less than 100 days to go before the Rio Olympics, Lacoste builds on its “Life is a beautiful sport” campaign with a chic new video called “Support with Style.” 

Created by BETC and its music subsidiary BETC Pop, “Support with Style” follows a troupe of “beautiful supporters” through Paris, whose landscape has been transformed into an eerily empty (and clean!) playground for Rio 2016 stadium seats. 

The clip reinforces Lacoste’s relationship with the French National Olympic Committee (CNOSF), for whom it will outfit all French Olympic teams. The partnership was born in 2013, and will conclude this year (barring an extension of the contract). 

read more

BETC Paris Makes Everyone an Emoji in McDonald’s Spot

Everyone Is an Emoji in This Bizarre and Terrifying French McDonald's Ad

What are we all but a bunch of emoji with arms and legs and a hankering for McDonald’s?

An insane new French ad for fast-food chain shows a city full of people going about their daily lives—driving around with friends, getting a shave at the barber, break dancing in the streets. But instead of human heads, they all have giant, 3-D, cartoon faces.

The soundtrack—a bubbly electro pop cover of the Buggles’ 1978 classic “Video Killed the Radio Star”—almost makes the ad feel like a music video. But the song, a rendition apparently created specifically for the ad, when coupled with the visual concept, which feels fresh in and of itself, seems to imply a critique of technology that’s more contemporary than the one baked into the lyrical hook, and a bit out of place for a major fast-food marketer.

McDonald’s and agency BETC Paris have explicitly created a world where digital communication reduces facial expression—a wildly subtle and complex phenomenon—to a series of shiny yellow orbs representing monolithic and equally monochromatic feelings. That’s a pretty excellent premise for a video, but the brand presents it here without any of the real anxiety about change that defines the text of the original synth pop song—or the deadpan theatricality with which the Buggles promoted and performed it; or, say, the more explicitly ironic bitterness and dissatisfaction of the 1996 alt-rock cover by the Presidents of the United States of America.

Instead, McD’s presents everyone being a stiff caricature of their own ids as a good thing. And that only really makes sense if you’re a faceless corporation that deals in cardboard platitudes like Happy Meals peddled by a brightly colored clown mascot, and other overly processed hamburgers that can save the doomed love lives of awkward young adults.

It probably doesn’t help the brand’s case that the tagline, “Venez comme vous êtes,” which translates to “Come as you are,” inadvertently bastardizes the spirit of another classic song about the tension between individuality, conformity and perception. (To be fair, that tagline has been around for years—and McDonald’s France has used it to, among other things, promote gay rights.)

Within the emoji ad’s own construct, it includes clever little tidbits—some of them perhaps more deliberate than others, like the kid who turns from angel to devil, as opposed to the weatherman with the smarmy, oafish look on his face. The spot also deserves credit for doing a distinctly better job of getting its message across than some other emoji-driven attempts at marketing. (In fact, it’s way simpler and more accessible—if less delightful—than some of the brands that decided to try to invent their own emoticons.)

It’s also worth noting that BETC Paris is experienced in creating absurd viral sensations, having graced the world with Evian’s classic roller-dancing babies, and the agency appears to be swinging for the fences again here. But the idea, for all its potential, suffers as a result of its attempt to be broadly appealing to what’s seen as the perpetual sunshine ethos of millennials. In that, it turns into a nauseatingly saccharine panacea—without near enough sarcasm or skepticism about what it’s actually saying.

In fact, the insistence on framing a fundamentally disturbing set of images as lighthearted and upbeat can’t keep the dark subtext and implicit social critique at bay. So, the whole thing ends up seeming unintentionally dystopian, like the Kia hamsters tossed into a meat grinder with a deadmau5 helmet and Katy Perry fever dream, with the resulting slime squeezed out into a bunch of circular, cookie-cutter nuggets, baked golden and plopped onto a bunch of necks.

Ultimately, it mostly adds credence to Taco Bell’s case that Ronald McDonald is actually a Stalinist looking to control all aspects of your life—only he’s way more insidious than you thought, mostly interested in brainwashing us into grinning idiots by defining happiness in terms of Big Macs and faces made of pixels.

Plus, you know the spot can’t be trusted because it doesn’t show anyone who just gobbled a McDonald’s burger and turned into the emoji for “I have a stomach ache and I wish I hadn’t eaten that”—which isn’t available yet, but is slated for release in 2016.

Dull Pre-Roll Ads Begone Thanks to BETC’s ‘Ad Filter’ for D&AD

If you’re sick and tired of the bland, insipid and often annoying pre-roll ads that are commonplace throughout the web these days, the folks at BETC and D&AD have cooked up something worthwhile in the wake of the latter’s 2015 awards show. The parties involved have unveiled the aptly titled “Ad Filter,” which replaces tired pre-rolls with some of the most memorable ads that happen to be past D&AD winners and will likely make you less inclined to hit skip.

The plug-in works for both Chrome and Firefox and once you hit the on switch, the usual bad pre-rolls get blocked in favor of some of the most classic ads in recent times, including Fallon’s Phil Collins-loving gorilla drummer for Cadbury and the Jean-Claude Van Damme split spot for Volvo. Olivier Apers, executive creative director at BETC Paris, simply states, “We wanted to demonstrate that people don’t hate advertising, they just hate bad advertising.” By trying to inspire a little creativity before people watch their video of choice, we say the ads–all D&AD affiliation aside–were wisely chosen.

Credits:

Advertising Agency: BETC / BETC Digital, France
Chief Creative Officer: Stephane Xiberras
Executive Creative Director: Olivier Apers
Art Director: Alphons Conzen, Jonathan Baudet-Botella
Copywriter: Adrian Skenderovic
Development: Cogit
Motion Design: Raphaël Benhamou

This Browser Extension Replaces Boring Old Preroll With the World's Best Ads

Looking for a browser extension that approaches ad blocking a bit more creatively? D&AD and Paris agency BETC have just the thing.

The British ad organization, which just handed out its 2015 awards last week, has now released The Ad Filter, an extension for Chrome and Firefox that blocks regular preroll ads and automatically replaces them with D&AD winners from past years.

It might seem odd for an ad group and a famous agency to promote ad blocking, but D&AD and BETC say the plug-in is designed to “celebrate creativity by inspiring and stimulating people in the industry and beyond.”

“We wanted to demonstrate that people don’t hate advertising, they just hate bad advertising,” says Olivier Apers, creative director BETC Paris.

Check out the demo below, and download The Ad Filter here. It certainly works. I installed it, and quickly saw Vodafone’s “The Kiss,” Hahn SuperDry’s “Pioneering Beering” and LG Kompressor Elite’s “Somethings Lurking” spots.

CREDITS
Client – D&AD
Brand Management – Laura Kelly
Agency – BETC X BETC Digital
Agency Management – Niamh O’Connor, Anaïs Pirajean
Chief Creative Officer – Stéphane Xiberras
Executive Creative Director – Olivier Apers
Art Directors – Alphons Conzen, Jonathan Baudet-Botella
Copywriter – Adrian Skenderovic
Development – Cogit
Motion Design – Raphaël Benhamou



Evian's Cute and Clever Print Ads Reveal One-Half of Your Inner Child

Evian’s famous ongoing ad campaign from BETC is all about sight gags showing adults as children. It’s been enormously successful, at least in terms of staggering YouTube view counts on ads like “Roller Babies” and “Baby & Me,” though some people find the whole thing cloying, even creepy.

This new print campaign, though, is straightforward fun—without the CGI that can make the videos off-putting. The beach chair/cell phone one is particularly great. And the framing and simple product placement in each execution are perfect.

Via Adeevee.

CREDITS
Client: Evian
Agency: BETC Paris
Creative Director: Filip Nilsson
Art Director: Agnes Cavard
Assistant Art Dirextor: Felix Falzon
Copywriter: Valerie Chidlovsky
Photographer: Jean Yves Lemoigne
Retoucher: Pierrick Guenneugues, Sparklink
Art Buyer: Isabelle Mocq-Orain, Nathalie Gruselle
Production: Sarah Belhadj



Diet Coke Moves to Dawson Pickering in UK

Diet_Coke_LOGO_2014Diet Coke has dropped agency BETC London and is working with Dawson Pickering — the agency created by former BETC London executive creative director Neil Dawson and head of copy Clive Pickering last year — on a project believed to be related to last year’s “Regret Nothing” campaign, Brand Republic reports.

BETC London had worked on the account since 2012, when it beat out Publicis in a review. “BETC London is proud of all the work we have done with the team over at Coca-Cola,” Andrew Stirk, chief executive at BETC London, told the publications, adding, “We wish the team and the brand the very best for the future, and are excited about the upcoming opportunities for BETC London.”

The news follows the agency losing its share of the Bacardi business, following a global consolidation that left the company’s brands with BBDO and OMD. It also comes as Coca-Cola courts its roster shops to select the direction of its new campaign.

Air France Gets Incredibly Girly in This Retro Flight Safety Video

Air France must have decided that their previous on-board safety videos didn’t have enough hot women in them… because their new one is chauvinistic even by French standards.

Made by BETC and slickly choreographed, the whimsical clip goes through all the standard airplane safety stuff—exit locations, tray tables, etc.—and goes out of its way to add that a properly fastened seatbelt “will elegantly highlight your waistline.” I hear the oxygen masks bring out your cheekbones, too. Yeesh.

The costumes and color palette anchor a fun and playful late 1950s-early 1960s vibe, reminiscent of that bygone era where people dressed up and got excited to fly (or maybe just of an Old Navy commercial). The winking approach extends to the props, with cutesy set pieces where the actresses play with smartphones and tablets—pictures of cats on the screens, naturally—hidden away inside giant, pastel colored books. Because isn’t that cheeky and endearing?

It is, in a way. But if the tone were less condescending, the whole thing might fly better.



Why Don't We Have Unicorns Today? This Ballsy French Ad Explains Everything

We would still have unicorns around today, were it not for an epic screw-up by Noah’s son during the loading of the Ark all those years ago.

That’s the premise of this amusingly overblown Canal+ ad from BETC Paris and director Matthijs Van Heijningen, who so memorably directed “The Bear” for the same agency and client back in 2011.

It’s hard to describe the ad without spoiling it, so just watch it first.

As you can see, the film celebrates—in a roundabout way—the broadcaster’s screenwriters and its showcase of original programming. And yes, it certainly shows a different side of unicorns than we’re used to seeing.

“We had some rather surreal discussions on what unicorns’ balls actually look like,” Stéphane Xiberras, agency president and chief creative officer, tells AdFreak. “We thought about doing something a bit … unexpected. There was talk of little furry balls with twinkling stars. But in the end we opted for a pair of ‘classic’ horse balls. I know, it’s a bit bizarre.”

And the balls were the easy part of this production. “Imagine a gigantic studio reproducing the inside of the Ark, filled with hundreds of animals,” Xiberras says. “Now imagine the smell. Now imagine that the animals couldn’t stand being under the same roof together.”

Asked about the actor who plays Noah’s son, Xiberras replied: “We fell for him straight away. We were looking for a guy capable of incarnating Noah’s son as well as a modern-day ladies’ man and screenwriter. He managed to show loads of emotions without any dialogue, expect the phrase at the end. He goes from embarrassment to anxiety to victory and then shock in seconds. It’s a great performance.”

CREDITS
Client: Canal+
Brand Management: Alice Holzman, Aurélie Stock-Poeuf, Coline André
Agency: BETC
Agency Management: Bertille Toledano, Guillaume Espinet, Elsa Magadoux
Executive Creative Director: Stéphane Xiberras
Creative Director: Olivier Apers
Art Director: Aurélie Scalabre
Copywriter: Patrice Dumas
Traffic: Coralie Chasset
Tv Producer: Isabelle Ménard
Production House: Soixante Quinze
Sound Production: Kouz
Director: Matthijs Van Heijningen
Media Plan: Cinema, TV, Web
Available Formats: :40 :45 :50 :70



BETC and Andy’s Recreate 1984 in 007-Style Peugeot Spot

On a day filled with short film commercials, here’s a spot recycling/paying tribute to an earlier Peugeot ad by French agency BETC.

We weren’t familiar with the 1984 original “Bombardier”; because it’s all French, David Hasselhoff, Tom Selleck and Burt Reynolds are conspicuously absent.

The real star here is the post-production team: the release tells us that 90 percent of the film is, in fact, 3D animation.

And here we thought the bold stuntmen really did chase the new 208 GTi in a combat helicopter.

(more…)

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

This Precocious Director's First Ad Really Gets Inside Its Subject

Here’s a very special delivery from French agency BETC. It’s called “Birth,” and it’s a minute-long promotional film touting the annual Young Director Award that will be presented Thursday at the Cannes Lions festival.

Norman Bates (great name!) directed the impressively offbeat outing that presents—in a single, flowing shot—the “debut effort” of a young filmmaker. And I mean, a very young filmmaker. So young, in fact, that she’s still inside the womb. But not for long.

This marks the second notable “in utero” spot in recent weeks, following Grey London’s British Heart Foundation PSA that used CGI to create some amazingly realistic womb footage. (Someone else held the camera for that kid, I guess. Lazy unborn slacker.)

BETC’s commercial is more lighthearted, offering a memorable riff on “giving birth” as a metaphor for creativity, with dashes of cheeky humor punctuating its labor of love.



Canal+ Lets You 'Be the Bear' in Fun Interactive Sequel to Famous TV Spot

I’m roaring with approval for this interactive sequel, of sorts, to “The Bear,” the 2012 Grand Prix-winning commercial from BETC Paris and French movie channel Canal+.

In the original, an ursine auteur sinks his claws into a big-budget medieval action film, fussing like a temperamental Hollywood diva over every aspect of production, from the script and direction to the special effects and score. Ultimately, the spot pulls the rug out from under viewers’ expectations with an inspired visual punch line.

Now, with “Being the Bear,” users can play director and take over a film set, choosing among several genre types to complete a dramatic scene (shown in the first commercial) in which a woman kneels over a wounded warrior who has been shot through the chest with an arrow. Naturally, some of the selections work better than others, but the writing and on-screen details are sharp throughout, and they reward multiple viewings. (The approach reminds me a bit of Tipp-Ex’s pick-your-own-adventure videos—work from France that featured a goofy, scenery-chewing bear. It also recalls the “Film, TV and Theater Styles” game from Whose Line Is It Anyway?)

My favorites in the new Canal+ campaign include the “Porno” option, which lets the actors have a ball, and “Horror,” a gloriously yucky exercise in spit-screen technique. The “Independent” selection yields the kind of self-obsessed, overly-probing dialogue only an audience of film majors (or Woody Allen) could love.

I wish they’d included a “Wildlife Documentary” option, because it might’ve given the bear—who stays behind the camera this time (we just glimpse his paw)—a role he could really sink his teeth into.

See the original spot below.

Via Adland.



Canal+ Makes Clever Use of Its + Symbol in Redesigned Movie Posters

This Canal+ campaign, which uses the French TV channel's trademark "+" symbol as a visual cue in a series of reimagined movie posters, sure has lots of positives.

The work was created by BETC Paris to celebrate the 67th Cannes Film Festival (which runs May 14-25) and will appear as outdoor and print advertising during the event. Nine movies screening on Canal+ are featured, including Despicable Me 2, Fast & Furious 6, Star Trek Into Darkness and Man of Steel. The "+"s on these particular posters work extremely well, replacing, respectively, a Minion, tire tracks, stars in outer space and the stylized "S" on Superman's chest.

Canal+ has produced notably offbeat advertising in recent years, including ads with bears and dwarf clowns (via BETC) and a mockumentary about the guy behind Hollywood's most famous scream (via FCB).

The original poster artwork for many of the films in this latest campaign was intricate and memorable. (Trek's was quite dynamic, casting the outline-shape of the Star Fleet uniform badge as a dramatic "window" framing device.) Even so, the simplicity of Canal+'s sleek, stripped-down approach offers an uncluttered, clever homage that ultimately amounts to addition by subtraction.

CREDITS
Client: Canal+
Brand Management: Alice Holzman, Élodie Bassinet, Anne-Gaëlle Petri, Coline Andre
Agency: BETC, Paris
Agency Management: Bertille Toledano, Guillaume Espinet, Elsa Magadoux, Hugo Chavanel
Executive Creative Director: Stéphane Xiberras
Creative Director: Olivier Apers
Art Director: Jordan Lemarchand
Copywriter: Julien Deschamps
Traffic: Coralie Chasset
Production: Sarah Belhadj




Canal + Cinema Posters

La chaîne Canal + et l’agence BETC ont réalisé des posters print pour la promotion des films diffusés prochainement sur Canal + à l’occasion du festival de Cannes. Ils ont donc créé 9 posters minimalistes qui détournent le « + » identitaire de la chaîne afin de faire sens avec les thématiques des films.

canal+cinemaposters-10
canal+cinemaposters-9
canal+cinemaposters-8
canal+cinemaposters-7
canal+cinemaposters-5
canal+cinemaposters-4
canal+cinemaposters-3
canal+cinemaposters-2
canal+cinemaposters-1
canal+cinemaposters-6

Air France Campaign

L’agence BETC et les photographes argentins Sofia & Mauro ont collaboré pour la nouvelle campagne print d’Air France qui prend pour nouveau slogan « France is in the air ». Les affiches ressemblent à des clichés de mode et sont accompagnées de phrases clés. Plus de détails dans la suite de l’article.

AirFrance-11
AirFrance-10
AirFrance-9
AirFrance-8
AirFrance-7
AirFrance-6
AirFrance-5
AirFrance-4
AirFrance-3
AirFrance-1
AirFrance-2
AirFrance-12

Máquina imprime, a cada minuto, nome de mulheres que morreram devido a complicações do parto ou aborto

Em uma ação brilhante em Paris, a ONG Doctors of the World criou uma máquina para alertar sobre o grande número de mulheres – mais de 300 mil, todos os anos – que morrem devido a complicações do parto ou abortos clandestinos.

Intitulado “Names Not Numbers”, o projeto imprimia, a cada minuto, o nome de uma mulher morta em um cartão, que já vinha endereçado para algum político. Ban Ki-moon, secretário geral das Nações Unidas, e Najat Vallaud-Belkacem, ministra dos direitos femininos da França, eram os alvos preferidos.

Names Not Numbers

Cada cartão, porém, deveria ser retirado rapidamente, antes que o próximo fosse impresso e a nome anterior se tornasse apenas mais uma estatística.

A máquina esteve em funcionamento no Dia Internacional da Mulher, em frente ao Centre Pompidou, em Paris, mas também conta com uma versão digital no site names-not-numbers.org

A criação é da BETC Paris, com produção da B-Reel e We Do.

Names Not Numbers
Names Not Numbers

Brainstorm9Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
Twitter | Facebook | Contato | Anuncie