Grey New York and DirecTV Check in with ‘Peyton on Sunday Mornings’

Grey New York launched a new campaign for DirecTV called “Peyton on Sunday Mornings.” As you might expect, the Peyton in question is (unfortunately) Peyton Manning.

What you might not expect is Lionel Ritchie retooling his 1977 hit with the Commodores, “Easy,” changing the lyrics from “easy like Sunday morning” to “Peyton on Sunday Mornings.” Each spot opens with Ritchie sitting at a piano playing the revamped song, followed by Manning pitching DirecTV’s NFL Sunday Ticket offering in a scenario that makes playful use of Manning’s retirement.

In the spot “In a Park Watching NFL Sunday Ticket,” for example, a robe-clad Manning meanders his way onto a park bench. While watching a game on his phone, he tells the man next to him about NFL Sunday Ticket letting him watch any game. The man tells him that he’s retired but misses work and that Peyton should “Work as long as you can.”

In “Phone Call,” Peyton invites his little brother Eli Manning over to watch some games, but he’s a little busy quarterbacking the New York Giants. “Groceries” let’s us know that Manning now has time to clip coupons for groceries (as if he’d need them with all that Papa John’s money). The 30-second broadcast spots will be supported by print and social components.

Would it be too much of us to suggest that at a time when advertising’s gender equality issues and sexual harassment scandals are making headlines, perhaps hiring a retired NFL quarterback who is an alleged perpetrator of sexual assault might come across as a little tone deaf? Is there even an upside here?

The riff on “Easy” comes across as a bit too, well, you know. But Manning is undoubtedly a big name, even if he presumably comes with a price tag to match.

'Petite Randy Moss' Is Cable's Latest Victim in DirecTV's New Height-Mocking Ad

Grey New York plays the height card in a new ad touting DirecTV’s NFL Sunday Ticket.

The commercial stars Randy Moss, a future NFL Hall of Famer mulling a comeback. In the spot, tall Randy has SundayTicket, so he can watch his favorite teams every Sunday no matter where he happens to be. Clearly, this dude rocks. Short Randy, meanwhile, has cable, which doesn’t carry the games of his hometown team, so his life, apparently, is not so great.

Reviewers at USA Today and SB Nation find it funny. A number of YouTube commenters, never short on opinions, are predictably weighing in with outrage.

“Here we go again!” says 5f4ohno. “Tall=Positive human being, Short=negative subhuman. Try doing this with any group in the USA and you get crucified. But short people are put on this planet to get shit on. Hello DirecTV ! Some of us are getting tired of this bigoted crap known as heightism.

Or, in the more pointed words of Greg: “Welp, guess I’m not good enough for DirecTV because I’m a short man. Will be calling up to terminate my subscription tomorrow. This is like making an ad where a ‘Black Rob Gronkowski’ is seen as inferior, learn how to advertise without offending your customers if you want money.”

LightAbyssion cuts really deep: “Next time DirecTV makes a commercial, use a fat or flat woman to represent inferiority. Don’t just mock what’s politically correct to insult. Go all out. Otherwise, your company is full of hypocritical cowards.”

Full disclosure: I’m 5’8″ in three-inch lifts. OK, 5’5″. And while the commercial doesn’t bother me personally, and I’d dismiss a fair share of its detractors as trolls, I’m surprised that a major corporation would even bother to go to the trouble of producing it in 2015 (In 2010, maybe. In 2005, sure).

Then again, stirring up a little controversy and the extra press attention may well be the objective. At this point, it’s a call from a well-thumbed playbook. Offend some folks, but not too much. (“Petite Randy” is just a little bit controversial, after all).

Indeed, for its part, DirecTV seems pleased. “Randy Moss was one of the tallest receivers to play the game, which of course is the joke,” the brand tells AdFreak in a statement. “Besides, these ads obviously take place in an alternative reality, something our viewers understand. The feedback we’re getting is the vast majority enjoy them.”

In earlier Season Ticket commercials, Eli Manning and Tony Romo face off against “lame versions” of themselves, but the approach was too blatantly cartoonish for anyone—save bad comedians and die-hard arts and crafts fanatics—to take offense. And the whole lesser-men-have-cable concept is born of DirecTV’s run of ads starring Rob Lowe as ugly, creepy, and awkward, which fired up plenty of viewers, too.

Moving forward, it would probably be wise for advertisers and agencies creating humorous scenarios to bear in mind that derogatory depictions of most aspects human physicality—height, weight, ideals of “beauty”—are out of bounds (Didn’t 1977 teach us anything?). Marketers that don’t play by the rules run the risk of being swiftly penalized in the arena of popular opinion, even if they win the game.

Grey NY Moves Past Rob Lowe with New DirecTV Spots

DirecTV Ditches Rob Lowe for Hannah Davis and a Horse in Shamelessly Silly New Ads

DirecTV doesn’t want you to have to look at ugly cable wires and boxes. So, it’s putting Hannah Davis on your screen instead (and saying goodbye to Rob Lowe).

Sports Illustrated’s 2015 Swimsuit Issue cover girl anchors two new spots for the satellite TV service from Grey New York. In the first ad, she rides a white horse down a tropical beach in a scene vaguely reminiscent of Isaiah Mustafa for Old Spice, offering an otherwise standard pitch for the wireless satellite service. In the second, she’s just sitting next to her ride.

There’s a twist in both, though, and it’s consistent with the brand’s history of cranking out solid comedy.

The work replaces DirecTV’s long-running Rob Lowe (and his lesser versions) campaign, which was dinged Tuesday by the National Advertising Division of the Council of Better Business Bureaus for making unsubstantiated comparative claims about cable. (The fact that Comcast worked to ruin everyone’s fun is another good reason for consumers to hate that company—even if some of the DirecTV ads weren’t the nicest.)

Davis also appeared as a cat lady in a DirecTV print ad in the S.I. Swimsuit Issue. But—spoiler alerts ahead—the TV campaign hits the holy trinity of advertising clichés: run-of-the-mill sex appeal, a funny talking animal and a visual play on words.

It’s worth noting, though, that followed to its logical conclusion, the joke is basically saying DirecTV is a horse.



SI's Swimsuit Models Look a Bit Less Lovely If They Have Cable Instead of DirecTV

To date, Rob Lowe has been the only celebrity to suffer physical indignities in Grey’s DirecTV campaign making fun of cable customers. But now he can add three famous supermodels to the mix—Hannah Davis, Chrissy Teigen and Nina Agdal, all of whom are made over to look quite a bit less supermodelish to portray cable users in print ads in the new Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue.

Check out the series of seven ads below.

Like the Rob Lowe TV spots, this print work comes uncomfortably close to being mean-spirited—i.e., aren’t ugly misfits just horrible? But they largely sidestep that charge because of the cartoonish execution. Plus, people tend to give props to any celeb who gamely agrees to look “ugly.” (If you actually have shy bladder, though, or if you actually are a lunch lady—Agdal’s ugly character—you might actually get pissed.)

We wrote about Snickers’s great back cover of the new Swimsuit Issue, too. And interestingly, they’re quite similar campaigns. (DirecTV’s message is, basically, “You’re not you when you have cable.”) Perhaps it’s no surprise that the two most famous campaigns that urge you to fight against uglier versions of yourself have found creative ways into this particular magazine all about perfection.



Rob Lowe Talks About the Awesome Randomness of His DirecTV Characters [Video]

Grey has gotten a lot of buzz out of its DirecTV campaign featuring oddball versions of Rob Lowe as a cable subscriber. After shooting the first five ads last year, the agency’s global chief creative officer, Tor Myhren, thought Lowe might have completed his run. But the actor’s zeal for the role convinced the shop to produce another five ads, two of which (see below) have already rolled out this year.

“On set, he’s totally engaged,” said Myhren. “He’s so into it. He’s so passionate about it.”

That enthusiasm is clear in the interview below—filmed during the last shoot—in which Lowe describes with amusement how he saw people dress up as Super Creepy and Painfully Awkward on Halloween. Not since St. Elmo’s Fire in 1985 does he remember being the inspiration for a Halloween costume, which he believes is the ultimate sign of fame.

Lowe also shares what his kids like about the campaign and his favorite character so far.

Adweek responsive video player used on /video.

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Also, here’s a look at the most recent ads:

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Adweek responsive video player used on /video.

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Scrawny Arms Rob Lowe Is DirecTV's Freakiest Rob Lowe Yet

While shy-bladder sufferers debate the offensiveness of Painfully Awkward Rob Lowe, DirecTV is plowing ahead with all sorts of other less-than-ideal Rob Lowes—you know, the ones with cable and not DirecTV.

The latest disturbing specimen is Scrawny Arms Rob Lowe. And thanks to some CGI, he certainly looks like a pathetic weakling. Hopefully Grey New York at some point will have time to do a digital composite of all the subpar Rob Lowes, and we’ll get to have a look at Creepy Less Attractive Painfully Awkward Crazy Hairy Scrawny Arms Rob Lowe.

CREDITS
Client: DirecTV
Spot: “Scrawny Arms”
Agency: Grey, New York
Chief Creative Officer: Tor Myhren
Executive Creative Director: Dan Kelleher
Group Creative Director: Doug Fallon
Group Creative Director: Steven Fogel
Agency Executive Producer: Andrew Chinich
Agency Producer: Lindsay Myers
Agency Music Producer: Zachary Pollakoff, Amy Rosen
Account: Chris Ross, Beth Culley, Anna Pogosova, Aaron Schwartz, Meredith Savatsky, Eddie Mele
Strategy: Michelle Leo
Production Company: MJZ
Director: Tom Kuntz
Producer: Emily Skinner
Production Supervisor: Daniel Gonzalez
Director of Photography: Hoyte Van Hoytema
Editorial Executive Producer: Sasha Hirschfeld, Mackenzie Cutler
Editor: Gavin Cutler, Mackenzie Cutler
Assistant Editor: Ryan Steele & Mike Rizzo, Mackenzie Cutler
Mixer + Sound Designer: Sam Shaffer, Mackenzie Cutler
VFX: Method Studios, NY
VFX Supervisor: Jay Hawkins, Method Studios
VFX Producer: Carlos Herrera & Christa Cox, Method Studios
Casting (OCP): Francine Selkirk, Shooting From the Hip
Casting (VO): Nina Pratt and Jerry Saviola, Avenue 3 Casting



Scrawny Arms Rob Lowe Is the Latest Subpar Rob Lowe to Join DirecTV's Campaign

While shy-bladder sufferers debate the offensiveness of Painfully Awkward Rob Lowe, DirecTV is plowing ahead with all sorts of other less-than-ideal Rob Lowes—you know, the ones with cable and not DirecTV.

The latest disturbing specimen is Scrawny Arms Rob Lowe. And thanks to some CGI, he certainly looks like a pathetic weakling. Hopefully Grey New York at some point will have time to do a digital composite of all the subpar Rob Lowes, and we’ll get to have a look at Creepy Less Attractive Painfully Awkward Crazy Hairy Scrawny Arms Rob Lowe.

CREDITS
Client: DirecTV
Spot: “Scrawny Arms”
Agency: Grey, New York
Chief Creative Officer: Tor Myhren
Executive Creative Director: Dan Kelleher
Group Creative Director: Doug Fallon
Group Creative Director: Steven Fogel
Agency Executive Producer: Andrew Chinich
Agency Producer: Lindsay Myers
Agency Music Producer: Zachary Pollakoff, Amy Rosen
Account: Chris Ross, Beth Culley, Anna Pogosova, Aaron Schwartz, Meredith Savatsky, Eddie Mele
Strategy: Michelle Leo
Production Company: MJZ
Director: Tom Kuntz
Producer: Emily Skinner
Production Supervisor: Daniel Gonzalez
Director of Photography: Hoyte Van Hoytema
Editorial Executive Producer: Sasha Hirschfeld, Mackenzie Cutler
Editor: Gavin Cutler, Mackenzie Cutler
Assistant Editor: Ryan Steele & Mike Rizzo, Mackenzie Cutler
Mixer + Sound Designer: Sam Shaffer, Mackenzie Cutler
VFX: Method Studios, NY
VFX Supervisor: Jay Hawkins, Method Studios
VFX Producer: Carlos Herrera & Christa Cox, Method Studios
Casting (OCP): Francine Selkirk, Shooting From the Hip
Casting (VO): Nina Pratt and Jerry Saviola, Avenue 3 Casting



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.



Rob Lowe Is Ugly, Creepy and Hilarious as a Cable Customer in DirecTV Ads

DirecTV has gotten lots of actors to poke some fun at themselves over the years—notably Charlie Sheen in the Platoon spot. Now, it’s Rob Lowe’s turn to look hilariously foolish.

A pair of new ads from Grey New York outlandishly show what Rob Lowe is like as a cable customer compared to what he’s like as a DirecTV customer. As a cable customer, he’s literally falling apart (in the first spot) or a complete pervert (in the second spot). As a DirecTV customer, thankfully, he is neither.

The message? You too can choose not to be a pervert with a combover and a lazy eye. Get DirecTV today! As an nice added bonus, these commercials—directed by Tom Kuntz of MJZ—end with the theme from St. Elmo’s Fire. He’s come a long way, baby.

CREDITS
Client: DIRECTV
Campaign: Versus
Spot: Less Attractive, Creepy
Agency: Grey, New York
Chief Creative Officer: Tor Myhren
Executive Creative Director: Dan Kelleher
Group Creative Director: Doug Fallon
Group Creative Director: Steven Fogel
Agency Executive Producer: Andrew Chinich
Agency Producer: Lindsay Myers
Agency Music Producer: Zachary Pollakoff, Amy Rosen
Account: Chris Ross, Beth Culley, Anna Pogosova, Aaron Schwartz, Meredith Savatsky, Eddie Mele
Strategy: Michelle Leo
Production Company (location): MJZ LA
Director: Tom Kuntz
Producer: Emily Skinner
Production Supervisor: Daniel Gonzalez
Director of Photography: Hoyte Van Hoytema
Editorial Executive Producer: Sasha Hirschfeld, Mackenzie Cutler
Editor: Gavin Cutler, Mackenzie Cutler
Assistant Editor: Ryan Steele & Mike Rizzo, Mackenzie Cutler
Mixer + Sound Designer: Sam Shaffer, Mackenzie Cutler
VFX (company): Method Studios, NY
VFX Supervisor: Jay Hawkins, Method Studios
VFX Producer: Carlos Herrera & Christa Cox, Method Studios
Casting (OCP): Francine Selkirk, Shooting From the Hip
Casting (VO): Nina Pratt and Jerry Saviola, Avenue 3 Casting



DirecTV Kicked Off the NFL Season With an Ad Featuring a Gay Couple

A same-sex couple locked in an embrace (or is it a tackle?) smash through their home in slow-motion in a surprisingly inclusive spot for DirecTV’s NFL Sunday Ticket.

These guys have a “friendly rivalry.” One roots for the New York Giants, and the other for the Dallas Cowboys. At first, viewers might think it’s just a moment of roughhousing between friends, but they eventually make it clear by saying that, while they may argue sometimes, “we’re just like any couple.”

Despite the nod to the Cowboys, the ad from Grey New York was almost certainly filmed before the team signed Michael Sam, the first openly gay player to be drafted into the National Football League. The spot broke last Thursday during the NFL’s first regular-season game between the Green Bay Packers and the Seattle Seahawks.

Sports has factored into several pro-LGBT ads lately. To protest Russia’s anti-gay laws ahead of the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, a Canadian equal rights group created a PSA that claimed, “The games have always been a little gay,” a reference to the visual association one might make concerning the two-man luge. While applauding the spot’s good intentions, some felt the humor reinforced stereotypes. Norwegian apparel firm XXL took a different tack with its mini-epic Olympic commercial with a lesbian twist .

Some commenters have disparaged the “little yippity dog” in the DirecTV spot as a homosexual cliche, but it otherwise has received a pretty warm response from LGBT advocates. The ad scores because it levels the playing field and presents its themes in the same loud, goofy and accessible style as the client’s other “Most Powerful Fan” commercials. Here, sports fandom becomes a fun, credible metaphor for inclusiveness. DirecTV called the right play.

Via The Advocate.



DirecTV Strikes Gold Again With Manning Brothers Rap Sequel

Eli and Peyton Manning are back to rapping for DirecTV, and it’s still pretty glorious.

Last summer, the pro footballers and the satellite provider graced us with “Football on Your Phone.” Now they’re using song to hawk DirecTV’s dedicated fantasy football channel as a dream come true in its own right.

Like the first spot, “Fantasy Football Fantasy” leans hard into its own stupidity, delivering a 3-minute blitz that builds from a football filled with nachos to an auto-tuned Eli Manning floating in space, and includes cameos from Chris Johnson and Joe Namath. 

It’s not dissimilar in spirit from Toyota’s Swagger Wagon joke-rap work, which also made a recent comeback after a much longer hiatus. But the new DirecTV ad manages to be less cringeworthy, probably by being more insane.

So, extra points to the broadcast brand’s agency, Grey New York, for not dropping the ball on the sequel.

Full credits after the jump.

 

CREDITS

Advertiser: DIRECTV
Spot Title: Fantasy Football Fantasy
First Air Date: 8/11
Agency: Grey N.Y.
President, Chief Creative Director: Tor Myhren
Executive Creative Director: Dan Kelleher
Group Creative Director: Doug Fallon
Group Creative Director: Steven Fogel
Creatives: Kim Nguyen & Marques Gartrell
Agency Executive Producer: Andrew Chinich
Agency Producer: Lindsay Myers
Agency Music Producer: Zachary Pollakoff
Account: Chris Ross, Beth Culley, Anna Pogosova, Meredith Savatsky, Eddie Mele
Production Company: DNA, Inc., Hollywood, CA
Director: Director X
Executive Producer: Missy Galanida
Executive Producer: Patricia Judice
Producer: Justin Diener
Production Supervisor: Tara Martin
Director of Photography: Omer Ganai
Editorial Executive Producer (person & company): Maura Woodward, Cosmo Street
Editorial Producer (person & company): Heather Richardson, Cosmo Street
Editor (person & company): Tom Scherma, Cosmo Street
Assistant Editor: Dave Otte, Cosmo Street
Mixer + Sound Designer: David Wolfe for Mister Bronx Audio
Music: Butter Music & Sound
Creative Director : Andrew Sherman
Executive Producer: Ian Jeffreys
Produced and mixed by Glen Cavanaugh
Additional vocal mixing by Richard Furch at mixHaus studios
On-set recording services by Studio 101 NOLA
Post VFX (company): Method Studios NY
VFX Supervisors: Jay Hawkins & Doug Luka
Producer: Carlos Herrera
Casting: Caballero Casting & Avenue 3 Casting
 



AT&T-DirecTV Deal Churns Regulatory Waters

While AT&T’s bid for DirecTV bears similarity to Comcast’s deal for Time Warner Cable, experts say the differences could lead regulators to separate conclusions for each one.



DealBook: Options for Rivals in Wake of AT&T’s Bid for DirecTV

Few industries have been as embroiled in merger mania as telecommunications. Now, with another mega-deal in the works, will there be even more consolidation among others?



DealBook: AT&T to Buy DirecTV for $48.5 Billion in Move to Expand Clout

Under the terms of the $48.5 billion deal, AT&T will pay about $95 a share in stock and cash as it looks to gain leverage in negotiations over its video offerings.



DealBook: AT&T Is Said to Be Near a Deal to Buy DirecTV

AT&T is poised to announce a takeover, people briefed on the matter said on Saturday, ushering in another transformation of the telecommunications industry.



Marionette Wives Feel Pretty Insecure in an Age of Wireless DirecTV

If DirecTV is trying to position its Wireless Genie Mini device as a high-tech toy for doofy bros who view women as puppets—mission accomplished!

Perhaps that's a tad harsh or too literal. Still, there's something unnerving about these new ads from Grey New York, directed by Bryan Buckley, featuring a life-size blonde marionette. In one ad, she struggles with her wires while pouring lemonade for a pair of DirecTV-lovin' dudes. In a second spot, our heroine dangles from the bedroom ceiling in a sexy negligee, concerned her human beau is more attracted to DirecTV.

Self-conscious oddness is the obvious goal, and the campaign certainly works on that level. Even so, there's a touch of mean-spiritedness that doesn't sit right. The puppet is the most appealing part of these commercials, and it's easy to sympathize with her plight. This, in turn, kind of keeps me from feeling good about the Wireless Genie itself, which lets multiple TVs share HD-DVR programming over WiFi (so first-worlders won't trip over unsightly wires and fall flat on their Google Glass).

Cut those cords and free yourself, my wooden sister! Today, there are so many ways for a marionette to be fulfilled—like rapping for JCPenney or blogging for Target. Don't let some half-wit string you along!

 

CREDITS
Client: DirecTV
Campaign: "Marionettes"
Agency: Grey, New York
Chief Creative Officer: Tor Myhren
Executive Creative Director: Dan Kelleher
Vice Presidents, Creative Directors: Doug Fallon, Steven Fogel
Art Director: Marques Gartrell
Copywriter: Kim Nguyen
Agency Executive Producer: Andrew Chinich
Agency Producer: Lindsay Myers
Agency Music Producer: Zachary Pollakoff
Account: Chris Ross, Beth Culley, Anna Pogosova, Aaron Schwartz, Meredith Savatsky
Production Company: Hungry Man
Director: Bryan Buckley
Executive Producer: Mino Jarjoura
Producer: Rachel Curl
Production Supervisor: Colette Findley
Director of Photography: Scott Henriksen
Editor: Tom Scherma, Cosmo Street
Assistant Editor: Dave Otte, Cosmo Street
Editorial Executive Producer: Maura Woodward. Cosmo Street
Editorial Producer: Heather Richardson, Cosmo Street
Visual Effects: The Mill
Visual Effects Executive Producer: Sue Troyan, The Mill
Visual Effects Producer: Anastasia Von Rahl, The Mill
Casting Director, Los Angeles: Kathy Knowles, Kathy Knowles Casting
Casting Director, New York: Fay Shumsey, Fay Erin Casting
Audio Mixer: Tom Jucarone, Sound Lounge




Weather Channel Returns to DirecTV

As part of a deal to end a three-month dispute, the cable network agreed to reduce reality programming, while it received a small price increase.



DirecTV Reports Gain in U.S. Subscribers

The increase of 139,000 subscribers was certainly helped by CBS’s dispute with Time Warner Cable. In Latin America, growth slowed significantly.

    



Are You Ready for Some Freakball? DirecTV Tells Tall Tales in Ads From Grey

DirecTV's NFL Sunday Ticket, which offers every game live on any digital device, turns average Joes into "the world's most powerful fans" in three goofy spots from Grey. These godlike guys grow freakishly tall, grill burgers using their bare hands as spatulas and ride around on lightning bolts and date adoring goddesses clad in sparkly bikinis and Mercury-winged caps. They're like the Titans—from mythology, not Tennessee—reborn as outsized, sports-obsessed, media-savvy fanboys. Meanwhile, regular dudes who still watch the games on cable are portrayed as nebbishy geeks.

Guys are hyper-competitive and love to brag about everything, so I can see where these ads would appeal to some. And they're visually memorable. That said, they seem a tad mean-spirited, portraying "powerful" football fans as boastful loudmouths who lord it over everyone in earshot. What? You've got the game on DirecTV? Well, good for you, big man!