Leo Burnett Change Aims to Shock with Cosmopolitan Cover

Cosmo_Karma Nirvana coverLeo Burnett Change, a specialist arm of Leo Burnett dedicated to social change, designed an attention-grabbing cover for Cosmopolitan as part of an awareness campaign for Karma Nirvana, a UK charity aiding victims of so-called “honour-based violence.”

The cover (pictured above) was inspired by the death of of Shafilea Ahmed, a 17-year-old British-Pakistani woman who was suffocated to death by her parents in front of her siblings after refusing to honor an arranged marriage. It depicts a woman who appears to be suffocating, and is encased in a plastic wraparound. A 7-second online video, also created by Leo Burnett, depicts the cover being ripped open as a symbolic representation of the release of women from such violence. The harrowing cover will run on limited editions of the February issue of Cosmopolitan in the UK, and the video will run on the magazine’s social channels, including Facebook, Twitter, Vine and Instagram.

Credits:

Creative Agency: Leo Burnett Change

Executive Creative Director: Justin Tindall

Creatives: Darren Keff and Phillip Meyler

Account Director: Chris Jackson, Sofia Sarkar

Photographer: Erin Mulvehill

Design: Tim Fletcher

Producer: Mickey Voaks

Production Co.: Messrs Group

Leo Burnett Makes Nifty Use of ‘Skip Ad’ to Symbolize Ex-Offender Struggles

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Leo Burnett Change has launched a new campaign for the charity Business in the Community, highlighting the difficulties and discrimination ex-offenders face on the job market for the “Ban the Box” project. “Ban the Box,” is a project “calling on UK employers to remove the default criminal-record disclosure tick box from job application forms.” To call attention to this issue, Leo Burnett Chance took an innovative and thought-provoking approach to express the prejudice faced by ex-offenders on the job market.

The interactive spot “Second Chance” (after the jump), directed by Dougal Wilson, puts the viewer in the position of an employer interviewing an ex-offender. Just after the potential employee reveals that he was released from prison six months ago, the “skip ad” button appears. But this isn’t to skip through the rest of the video. The employee in this case is the ad. Leo Burnett equates the hasty discrimination many employers apply to ex-offenders interviewing for a job with viewers hastily pressing the “skip ad” button to get to their desired content. This is where the video gets interactive. If the viewer presses the “skip ad” button he or she is brought back to the video, this time with a more dejected, less articulate ex-offender. This can go on for several clicks of the “skip ad” button until the job applicant becomes fully dejected and says “I’m sorry that you didn’t want to listen. I hope you can find time in the future to give an ex-offender like me a second chance.” If the viewer does not press the skip ad button, the ex-offender becomes more confident and articulate as the video progresses, eventually expressing gratitude to the viewer for listening to him.

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