1973 Personals Ad Reminds You Trolling Was a Thing Even in 1973

Ahh, the good old days, when men were men, women were women, the Internet didn't exist and one had to troll at a much slower pace.

According to this personals ad from 1973, found by a Redditor, there was still plenty of shenanigans happening in the hot social media of the day—aka, the newspaper.

These days, of course, men still troll their partners via newspaper personals. They just do it to their current ones, not their exes.

Via HuffPo.




Two Guys Suffer Through Relentless Downpours of Food for a Good Cause

Attention large-hearted rubberneckers: Watching some dude making dumb faces and getting slimed, Nickolodeon-style, with all kinds of food stuffs is better when some of the proceeds go to an anti-hunger charity.

A pair of Internet personalities, Steve Kardynal (infamous for his bearded Chatroulette reenactment of Miley Cyrus's "Wrecking Ball") and Alex Negrete (of meme animator Animeme), made these slow-motion, close-up videos of themselves getting showered by consecutive meals like hot dogs with extra ketchup and mustard followed by spaghetti and meatballs, and a Denver omelette followed by chicken and waffles. After releasing the clips, the duo decided to donate "a large portion of the profits" to Action Against Hunger, according to a fundraising page they set up to help the nonprofit's mission to feed malnourished children. (A number of YouTube comments had called out the video makers for wasting food.)

Presumably, any profits for the clips, which (as of this writing) have 1.5 million and 74,000 views, respectively, come from ad revenue earned via the video-sharing site.

As we saw with last week's Pedigree video, there's always the question of how much money viewers can actually generate just by watching videos, given downward pressure on YouTube ad rates. And sure, there might be better ways to raise awareness about hunger than dumping a bunch of edibles on your head for the amusement of others. But there's no use crying over spilled milk, and so far Kardynal and Negrete's fundraising page shows $280 committed of an $8,000 goal. At $45 to feed one starving child back to health, it's still a lot better than nothing—anything is.

As for the videos themselves, they're willfully stupid, disgusting and kind of amazing to watch, for a little while at least—beautiful in an odd way, but not anywhere near as charming as Proximity BBDO's masterpiece of pastry porn for French coffee brand Carte Noir.

On the bright side, these aren't likely to make you as hungry, either.

Via Devour.




Has This Creepy Guy From Mother New York Been Stalking Your LinkedIn Profile?

Have you noticed a man named Donald Buscando looking at your LinkedIn profile?

You'd remember him. He's wearing a beige turtleneck that somehow accentuates his eerily white teeth and his hair, which is reminiscent of Robert Cornelius (you know, the guy that took the alleged first selfie ever).

Well, it seems Buscando is a faux executive—part of a tongue-in-cheek effort by Mother New York to recruit interns for its summer program. Mother is identifying potential interns and having "Donald" stalk them on LinkedIn, which is easier than ever thanks to the site's newly souped-up "Who's viewed your profile?" section.

Mother explains Donald's approach this way: "Using the advanced search feature of LinkedIn, he sources the profiles of the best students in the world by filtering by school, specialty and using power keywords like 'Alpha' and 'Pintegrated.' Based on these criteria, Donald identifies the best students and clicks on their profiles over and over again."

Donald's own LinkedIn page is treasure trove of odd, too. He writes:

I spent a few hours on your profile looking deep into the soul of your business-related online identity. From what I saw, you should apply.

Are you a copywriter or art director? I've closely examined your portfolios and you should apply.

Are you a designer? You have beautiful bezier curves. You should apply.

Are you a strategist looking deep into what makes people tick? Yes. You should apply, too.

Do you want to work in the shop? Don't know what that is? Sounds like you should apply.

Are you a producer who makes things happen? I've seen your profile and yes you are. Yes, apply.

There also the video below. You can go to mothernewyork.com/opportunity to apply.

"Tonally this is nothing unusual for us," Mother founding partner Paul Malmstrom tells AdFreak. "We thought it'd be a fun way of learning about the program and give a sense of what it's like to work here."




El Al’s New Airline Joins the Parade of Funky In-Flight Safety Videos

Even the discount airlines need a rockin' safety video now.

Get down with the latest in-flight jam, titled "Up," created for a new budget airline also called UP, owned by Israel's El Al. The jaunty boogie takes a five-minute scenic tour through some great moments in rock history, including Devo, Robert Palmer and Ziggy Stardust.

Yes, they're jumping on the flight-video bandwagon without a unique take like Air New Zealand's bikini models or Delta's attack of the killer scrunchies. In fact, it's rather similar to Virgin's "Safety Dance." But that doesn't make it less charming.

In general, informational videos forced on a captive audience should be applauded for any attempt at edutaining us. And the afros and cottonball cloud costumes are certainly working here. Plus, you gotta love a good keytar.




The Women in This Tequila Commercial Only Have Time for One Kind of Bro

This new ad for Mezcal El Silencio tequila by agency Pablo Escargot starts off the same way many beer/liquor ads do—i.e., like from a clip of Ocean's Eleven, with bunch of guys in suits walking in slow motion to a steady rock/techno beat and a deep raspy voiceover.

It celebrates men being men, and the viewer quickly realizes it's satire. (The Post-it notes on the forehead are a nice touch.) When it comes to the requisite seduction scene, though, things totally fall apart and an unlikely hero emerges.

There's plenty of goofy overacting here, and the celebration of the strong, silent type isn't exactly revolutionary, either. But it's still a funny jab at all of the fist-pumping bro-mercials we've seen lately.

Via Co.Create.




Darwin to Shakespeare: If Historical Figures Had Business Cards and Letterhead

I've often wondered what the business cards and personal stationery of William Shakespeare, Henry VIII and other historical figures would look like. I mean, who hasn't?

Well, wrack your brains no more! British online printing company MOO has created cards and letterhead for a dozen iconic names known for their strong personalities and penchant for writing and communications.

Some of the results are playful, some powerful. Are they printed on cool pastel retro machines like this? Of course! (Not.) But they're well worth a look. Highlights include:

 
• Martin Luther King, Jr.'s "I have a dream" layout, which conveys his message of hope in an appropriately bold and inclusive black-and-white motif.

 
• The irony of Jane Austen's canny quote about friendship and financial reward (sense) rendered in a frilly, romantic typeface (sensibility).

 
• Charles Darwin's card, clearly identifying the naturalist as a "Homo sapien," in case there were any doubt.

 
• King Henry VIII's oversized script and boastful claims—"polymath," "poet," "lover," "Renaissance man"—which crowd the white space, reflecting his girth, ego and penchant for excess. (As I recall, he never needed a business card to get ahead.)

 
• A damned spot (actually, an asterisk) playing off an age-old controversy by calling Shakespeare's authorship into question.

 
• Albert Einstein's cleverly formulaic address, though judging from the ZIP code (20210, which is Washington, D.C.), there seems to be some confusion over the relative position of Mercer County, N.J., in space and time.

See more at MOO's Flickr page. Via Design Taxi.




OK, This Parody of ‘World’s Toughest Job’ Is Actually Pretty Funny

Bud Light's spoof of the super-viral American Greetings "World's Toughest Job" video was a bit underwhelming. But now Funny or Die has delivered a more amusing one—even if the "punch line" isn't really a laughing matter. The hashtag is: #actualworldstoughestjob.

Wisely, they get to the point pretty quickly, and also spend quite a bit of time mimicking actual lines from the original. Plus, thankfully, it has nothing to do with dads.




Hair in a Can? This Insane Product Demo Might Actually Be Real

Is it just me or did hair-loss products evolve a million years since the days of spray-on hair?

Bald dudes everywhere rejoice! Check out this demo for a product that appears to be real (although we've got our eye on you, Kimmel). With more than 5 million views in just a few days for this crazy ad—for a product that seemingly sprouts freaking hair on your scalp in seconds—the folks at Caboki may have a hit on their hands. 

According to the company websitethe product is all natural and works like this: "When you sprinkle Caboki into a thinning area of your hair, the fibers automatically cling to your hair like millions of tiny magnets. Each thin wisp of your hair instantly becomes thicker and fuller, eliminating those embarrassing thinning areas."

One reviewer warns, however: "There will be marks on your pillow covers if you don't wash your hair before you go to bed." Thanks, Debbie Downer.

Take a look below at this miracle of follicular wizardry.

UPDATE: This appears to be a reupload of an older video. And according to several commenters, stay away from this stuff!




Jeweler’s Clever Business Card Rolls Into a Ring Sizer

I have a pile of business cards on a tray in my office, and I'd be hard pressed to remember where I met the people whose names are on those cards if it weren't for some hastily scratched notes in the white space. ("Start-up owner, kept joking about Mad Men, didn't catch my Tupac reference.")

It's generally hard to make an impression on a piece of cardstock that's 3.5 by 2 inches, but German agency Jung von Matt definitely found a winner with its incredible business card for jewelry company Marrying—which, as the name suggests, specializes in engagement rings and wedding bands.

The card rolls up, becoming a handy tool to measure one's ring size. The idea is that men who are shopping for a ring can use the card at home to subtly check the size of a woman's current rings, saving them the rather obvious reveal of saying: "Hey baby, what's your ring size? What? No reason."

The agency effectively married (sorry) utility with good advertising, and I like it.

Via Design Taxi.




K-Pop Group Twerks to the (Really) Oldies in First Classical Music Video Ever

Belgium's B-Classic music festival, whose mission is to "give classical music the same recognition as pop and rock music," brings us a rather interesting sensory collision in the form of the music video below, promoting its "Classic Comeback" competition.

Korean pop-dance group Waveya interprets the godfather of Slavonik dance music (and Brahm's brosef) Antonín Leopold Dvo?ák in the three-minute synchronized bump-'n'-grind-gyration-twerk-fest set to "Symphony No. 9 Allegro con fuoco."

The video, shot by Raf Reyntjens in South Korea, is cleverly edited and choreographed, albeit shameless in its attempts at drawing in a younger demographic. See, the organizers of the festival believe "the kids" simply need more access to classical music.

Music videos, they believe, are the best way to do this.

In a short documentary also posted below, Frank Peters, a Dutch classical pianist and spokesperson for B-Classic, says he's "not convinced that youth are uninterested in classical music. I think that it's simply more difficult for them to discover."

Chereen Gayadin, a senior music programmer at MTV, adds, "I think that this is the first video in which one listens to classical music without being aware that it is classical music."

Via Ads of the World.

CREDITS
Client: B-Classic
Agency: DDB, Brussels
Creative Director: Peter Ampe
Creatives: Tim Arts, Stefan Van Den Boogaard
Designer: Christophe Liekens
Account Team: Francis Lippens, Kaat De Brandt
Strategic Team: Dominique Poncin, Maarten Van Daele, Michael D’hooge
Digital Strategy: Geert Desager
Digital Project Manager: Stefanie Warreyn
TV Producer: Brigitte Verduyckt
Production Agency: Caviar
Producer: Geert De Wachter
Director: Raf Reyntjens
Music, Sound: Sonicville
Aired: April 2014




Bud Light Does Its Own Version of ‘World’s Toughest Job’ … for Dads

Every giant viral ad needs a parody (or a few dozen), and so Bud Light is here with a spoof of the American Greetings "World's Toughest Job" video—celebrating dads instead of moms.

The joke writing is a little odd—it's caught between wanting to honor dads and wanting to make fun of them, and doesn't really accomplish either one very well.

The gold standard for this kind of parody was the spoof of Dove's "Real Beauty Sketches" where the guys suffer from excess self-esteem rather than the lack of it. That came from a comedy group, though, not from a brand with a vested interest in not making guys look too buffoon-like.




Lease-to-Own Retailer Promises You’ll Go From Rags to Riches in No Time

Can't afford that furniture, those appliances or those electronics? Sure you can.

Aaron's, the lease-to-own retailer, has unveiled a new ad campaign that suggests leasing products from the company isn't just a wise idea for credit-challenged people—it's the first step toward becoming rich and famous beyond your wildest dreams.

The ads, from 22squared, feature characters—Bobby, Charmony and Emilio—who've become wildly successful, but as it turns out, they once didn't even know the basics of living beyond their means. A fourth ad stars Nascar driver Brian Vickers, who apparently just gets super excited about Aaron's in general.

The theme is "Own the life you want," which is certainly an interesting mix of aspirational and financial—a reminder that, for many, they're one and the same.




Dodge Celebrates 100 Years With Great New Ad Starring Centenarians

Elderly people tend to get short shrift in commercials, much as they do most everywhere in life. Kudos to Dodge and The Richards Group, then, for celebrating the automaker's 100th birthday by putting the spotlight on humans born around the same time.

Not all of them are centenarians, but many of them are. (The rest mostly seem to be sprightly 90-somethings.) And they're here to dispense some hard-won wisdom about what they've learned in a century on this Earth. And they dispense it with humor, style and not a little defiance.

"You learn a lot in 100 years," says on-screen copy, as a 2015 Challenger screeches out of the frame. "Dodge. Born 1914."




Merry Men : Agency Profile

Merry Men is a media neutral creative agency that loves audacious ideas,  challenging the status quo, and of course being merry. We bring together the best of what a traditional and a digital agency have to offer – loads of experience, passion for ideas, a sound understanding of building brands, and youthfulness. We also pride ourselves on our strong ethics. For example we never test any of our concepts on animals because it would piss off our co-founder- Wagger, the in-house dog.

What made you start Merry Men?
When I saw the kind of integrated work that was happening abroad, where brands were taking ideas seamlessly across media and changing the rules, it made me want to do the same for brands in India. Basically a desire to create an agency that could be and act as a media-neutral solutions partner to brands.

Tell us about your Art Professionals. Did they go into fine art or design schools? How do you pick them up?
Actually we have never cared too much about art schools. A lot of agencies only pick art graduates but at Merry Men we look for nimbleness, flexibility and of course a good design sensibility/ taste. In fact almost all our art people have been from a non-art background. Our last art director was a trained pilot, and one of the guys in the current team actually came for a copywriting interview.

How would you define the design style at Merry Men?
Because we work trans media we have no defined style. We adapt according to the medium, brief and the idea. We believe that a style ties you down and it’s important to never get tied down. In fact we are proud that no two pieces of work done by us look or feel the same.

What does Merry Men do which sets it apart?
The ability to understand what’s needed in different media and deliver integrated solutions. We are also not an egoistic bunch. So we are always looking at co-creating, collaborating with talented folk and even jamming with the client to come up with awesome work for the brand. We love taking risks and experimenting, this we believe is the only way to create new ideas.

Do you think the advertising business in India is undergoing a change?
Yes, it is. Digital is no longer the stepchild in a marketing budget and has almost gone mainstream. Clients no longer want a digital idea for 10,000 Rs. Plus ideas are entering the digital workspace. Social Media is the bus that everybody wants to be on right now. Mobile is still nascent but growing. Which is why traditional agencies and networks are busy gobbling up agencies with any of these specialties.

Were there any particular role models for you when you grew up?
When you’re young your role models are based on mostly on bedtime stories you hear. One such story and role model was Robinhood, who led his Merry Men to victory against a might army simply because they believed in what they were doing and used unconventional warfare techniques. It told me that size was irrelevant and the only thing that mattered was how much you believed in your idea. It was the reason we called the agency Merry Men.

Who was the most influential personality on your career in Brand Building?
Bill Bernbach. Piyush Pandey. KS Gopal (EX NCD of Contract), Josy Paul, Richard Branson and Alex Bogusky.

How important is the focus on good brand idea in Merry Men?
Very important. We love good ideas. But increasingly the focus is on ideas that can spread.

Is there any particular work that you have done which has helped build a brand?
I don’t like talking about the past, so let me tell you about something we did recently. For a new dairy brand called Milky Moo which wanted to tell people that their milk didn’t have to be boiled, we created TVCs and other work that showed people in pop culture who boil a lot or get angry, like newscasters (one in particular) and moms-in-law in TV soaps. The idea was to have a calming influence on the entire country and tell them that neither they nor their milk needs to boil anymore. The campaign went across mediums, from TV to print to in-store and even social media, and really helped the brand clock healthy sales and register high awareness of their core proposition.

What do you feel about the state of design in Brand Building in India?
It’s at a very interesting juncture. Though our traditional design skills like print and brand identity are very good, we are not as good in the digital space. This is because art colleges are still not teaching students digital design in a big way. If designers want to remain relevant and competitive they need to master both.

Internet speed at Merry Men?
Seriously? Okay, fast.

Is it difficult to find good people for work ?
Absolutely. The number one problem.

Any other Indian agencies you admire?
None really. But i do like the work that’s coming out of Creativeland Asia and Happy Creative Services.

What advice do you have for aspiring creative professionals? Would you advise them to take on advertising as a career option?
Join advertising only if your desire to express ideas for a brand is so strong you don’t mind the sleepless nights, reclusive lifestyle and loads of hard work.

Who would your team like to take out for dinner?
Narendra Modi. To get to know the real man.

What’s on the company iPod?
Stadium Arcadium by Red Hot Chilli Pepper.

Mac or PC?
Mac. Most definitely.

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The post Merry Men : Agency Profile appeared first on desicreative.

Creative Design Set Installations

L’artiste Elise livre un travail qui se situe entre la publicité, la photographie, les sets design et la sculpture inspirée du cubisme. Ses installations complexes, à la fois conceptuelles, géométriques et colorées se situent à l’intersection de la 3D et la 2D et donnent l’illusion d’une image construite de toutes parts.

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St. John Ambulance Hits the Pool for Its Latest Shocking First-Aid PSA

St. John Ambulance, the first-aid teaching and awareness organization, has put together some incredible, horrifying PSAs through the years.

We've covered many of BBH London's ads for the group. Last year, the agency won a silver Film Lion at Cannes for "Helpless," a two-minute film based around the statistic that first aid could prevent 140,000 deaths a year—the same number who die from cancer. BBH followed that up with the heartbreaking "Save the Boy" spot last fall.

Now, here's a new spot—for St. John Ambulance in Australia. Created by The Brand Agency in Perth, it's equally heart-wrenching and difficult to watch. And effective, at least in my case. After watching this, I found myself searching the Internet for local first aid courses.

Warning: The video below may be upsetting.




Mini-Documentary Looks at Advertising’s Most Unsung Artists

It's easy to forget that for every flashy, handpainted wall advertisement you see in a city, there are a handful of people who endure discomfort (and risk death) to put it there.

Online tabloid Vocativ made this mini-documentary about these painters, who call themselves "wall dogs," and it's a refreshingly straightforward and unglamorized piece of work. The painters mostly talk about how they prepare for a job where they spend most of the day hanging from a chain, at the mercy of the elements and unable to step back and get better perspective of their work until it's complete.

But there's no bitterness or false bravado in any of them. In fact, they all seem pretty happy with what they do, which isn't something a lot of us can say about our jobs. Watch this as an antidote to the other cynical garbage you read online in a given day.




Don’t Drink and Drive. In This Powerful Ad, It Really Does Sound Like a Broken Record

This is what it sounds like when you drink too much, then get behind the wheel. Surprise: It does not have a happy ending.

A new PSA by ad agency La Chose for French road safety organization Association Victimes et Citoyens uses a simple yet effective single shot of a vinyl record player to offer a fresh version of a familiar and important point.

Perhaps counterintuitively, the absence of any violent footage actually increases the power of the message. The literal realization of the casual "same old song" metaphor (translated from "la méme chanson" in French) risks coming off as a little off kilter or even off color, since there isn't actually a song, and the subject matter is so serious.

But the whole concept hinges on the idiom, and the ad does too good a job of illustrating the point to nitpick much. The skips in the audio easily build suspense, to the point where, sadly, anyone with half a brain will know where the storyline is going—but has to hear it out to be sure.

La Chose also made 300 12-inch vinyl records featuring the ad's soundtrack and sent them to journalists. That should be a hit at parties.

Via The Denver Egotist.




Samsung Ad Introduces the Cutest, Pluckiest Smartphone Memory Card Ever

A Samsung SD smartphone memory card morphs into a cute, miniature robot action hero in this engaging 45-second clip from Cheil Worldwide in Seoul and Museum Film. The ad, running exclusively online at present, targets smartphone users in the U.K., North America, Europe and Japan.

RoboCard's adventures, directed by J.M. Lee, illustrate product attributes. He soars with a jetpack (demonstrating speed), repels thumbtacks and paperclips (the card is impervious to magnets) and makes a splash by riding a tropical fish rodeo style (it's waterproof). The details are great fun. Note how his metal feet sprout tiny flippers for his fish-tank dive. The cat's miffed reaction as the bot bursts above the water's surface is a neat touch, too.

I also like how his antics take place in a typical home/office setting, infusing the everyday world with some high-tech panache—which, after all, is part of the product's appeal.

Best of all, MemBot is much too adorable to join a robo-rebellion and subjugate mankind … I think. Still, I wouldn't cross the little guy. He's got a long memory. (Up to 64GB!)




Klondike Bar Plays Doctor With a Hot Candy Nurse, and a New Product Is Born

Best ice-cream bar ever conceived? That would be the Klondike Kandy Bar, born an indeterminate number of months after an illicit tryst between a regular Klondike Bar and a tall, striking, chocolatey candy-bar nurse—according to a male shopper's adult-movie-addled brain in this sweet spot from The VIA Agency.

It's a fun idea, brought to life quite nicely. In particular, the visual look is pleasantly unique, blending real-world footage and animation. "A ton of ads use animated characters. So we made the decision to shoot as much as we could in camera," says Greg Smith, chief creative officer at VIA. "The awkwardness of putting 'real' characters on 'real' sets and then animating their eyes, arms and legs made it different and it helped us stay true to the lo-fi vibe we wanted to portray."

Turns out the Klondike-candy relationship extends beyond the '70s candy-porn set, too. Klondike is partnering with CollegeHumor to produce a comedy series about the couple. That should be interesting—particularly the inevitable reality-show squabbles over why she's the one who's way more phallic looking.