How 2 Copywriters Convinced Strangers to Take Drugs and Try Building Ikea Furniture

Earlier this week, an updated take on a famous anti-drug PSA posed the classic question: “This is your brain. This is your brain on drugs. Any questions?”

Nope. But what about your Ikea furniture on drugs?

Hunter Fine and Alex Taylor are two veteran copywriters who met several years ago while working at BBDO New York and continue to collaborate on the occasional side project. Last year, they were discussing the shared frustrations of building Ikea furniture when a friend noted that the experience would be particularly difficult for someone under the influence of certain intoxicants.

Using the power of the pun, they then developed the idea for “Hikea,” a video series in which they recruited several willing strangers to go on camera, take substantial doses of psychedelic drugs, and attempt to construct new desks and drawers without injuring themselves in the process.

We think it’s fair to say that they experienced varying degrees of success. In the first episode, things went predictably awry for Giancarlo and Nicole once the LSD kicked in.

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Australia's Brutal New Anti-Meth Ads Will Make Your Skin Crawl

In Australia, “ice” is anything but cool.

Ice addiction—that is, a taste for crystal meth—has become a terrifying scourge Down Under, prompting the federal government to launch a six-week, $9 million ($7 million U.S.) PSA blitz that contains several shocking sequences.

Upsetting scenes in the 45-second spot below, which has been edited into shorter commercials, include a scraggy-looking dude violently robbing his mom, a young woman peeling open her skin because she believes bugs are crawling inside, and an addict’s startling, psychotic attack on hospital staffers.

The message: “Ice destroys lives. Don’t let it destroy yours.”

Assistant Health Minister Fiona Nash says a graphic campaign is required because “nobody sets out to become addicted, and many users think addiction won’t happen to them. It can and does, and these ads aim to show the realities of ice addiction.”

She has a point, and the approach in and of itself is provocative, memorable and obviously well intentioned. That said, I can’t help feeling we’ve seen this kind of stuff before, and I wonder how impactful it will be. (The mom and bug scenes, though strong stuff, might have packed more punch pre-Breaking Bad. That emergency-room freakout, however, feels startlingly fresh and really crashes through the clutter to lodge inside your head.)

Australian Anti-Ice Campaign founder Andrea Simmons gives the work a mixed review on her organization’s Facebook page. “Its a good start, however it will take more than a couple hundred ads” to effectively deliver the message, she says. Simmons argues that since the spots are airing on late-night TV, they’ll probably get lost in the shuffle, concluding, “We can’t use a band aide fix with this epidemic.”



Microscopic Drugs by Sarah Schoenfeld

Avec sa série « All You Can Feel », l’artiste Sarah Schoenfeld a décidé de montrer le vrai visage de différentes drogues telles que le LSD, GHB, la cocaïne ou l’héroïne. Une approche artistique de la dépendance aux médicaments et aux drogues dures est à découvrir dans la suite de l’article.


Fantasy & Ecstasy, GHB & GBL.

LSD.

Ketamine.

Ketamine.

Speed & Magic Mephedrone.

Crystal Meth.

Explosion of Methylone.

Opium.

Pharmaceutical Speed.

Cocaine.

Adrenalin.

Caffeine.

Dopamin.

GHB.

Heroin.

Magic Mephedrone.

MDMA.

Orphidril.

Speed.

Valium.

Melatonin.

Solian.

Estrogen.

Angels Trumpet.

25
24 Angels Trumpet
23 Estrogen
22 Solian
21 Melatonin
20 Valium
19 Speed
18 Orphidril
17 MDMA
16 Magic Mephedrone
15 Heroin
14 GHB
13 Dopamin
12 Caffeine
11 Adrenalin
10 Cocaine
9 Pharmaceutical Speed
8 Opium
7 Explosion of Methylone
6 Crystal Meth
5 Speed + Magic Mephedrone
4 Ketamine
3 Ketamine
2 LSD
1 Fantasy +Ecstasy GHB and GBL

Leave It to Ben & Jerry’s to Write the Best Tweet About Colorado’s New Marijuana Law

On Jan. 1, Colorado became the first state to allow the sale of recreational marijuana to anyone 21 or older. Sales have become so successful that stores are unable to keep up with the demand. Ben & Jerry's acknowledged that with a tweet on Thursday.

It was retweeted close to 10,000 times, and we're surprised more brands haven't addressed Colorado's newfound freedom. It seems like an appropriate time for Kate Upton and Snoop Dogg's weird Hot Pockets' commercial—full of references to marijuana "I bake everywhere!"—to get some extra play in the Centennial State, or for Taco Bell to revive its "Late Night Munchies" jingle.

And Doritos, Cheetos and Funyuns—we're waiting, you guys.

Via Mashable.


    

Weird Burger King Ad Says It’s Better to Be Addicted to Whoppers Than Drugs

In this controversial Burger King ad from Russia, a Whopper crushes a flower as a voiceover informs us: "This is a poppy. It was popular once, but now its time has passed." That's a rather strained drug reference, as a BK official in Russia explains that the poppy, used to make opium, symbolizes a "bad habit" that BK would happily help you replace with a Whopper addiction instead. (C'mon, people, it's obvious!) It's also apparently a play on words, as "mak" is both Russian for "poppy" and a slang term for McDonald's, whose time has also ostensibly run out. Major Russian media outlets won't run the commercial because it seems to position BK as an alternative to opiates. Have it your way, Russia! Of course, as these recent Big Mac ads illustrate, if you don't think McDonald's offers the ultimate psychedelic burger experience, you be trippin'.


    

Luxury Designer Drugs

Voici cette série de l’artiste Desire Obtain Cherish, basé à Los Angeles qui nous propose de découvrir ces détournements de pilules appelés « Designers Drugs ». Reprenant des marques de luxe mondialement connues, ce dernier critique la consommation et les excès véhiculées par l’univers de la mode.

Designer Drugs4
Designer Drugs3
Designer Drugs
Designer Drugs2