Dunkin' Donuts Offers Up Some Special Views in VR Videos Created With Discovery

“Boats run on diesel and coffee.”

That pearl of wisdom comes courtesy of Glen Miller, a tugboat captain who stars in “The Harbor That Never Sleeps,” one of several new 360-degree videos from Dunkin’ Donuts.

The brand’s “Always Running” film series begins rolling out this week across Discovery’s online platforms in a deal fashioned by Hill Holliday media agency Trilia. Produced by Discovery’s creative team, with agency input, the content focuses on average folks whose busy lives are powered, at least partly, by coffee.

read more

Dunkin's Shark Week Donut Is Not for Use as a Flotation Device

Dunkin’ Donuts has partnered with Discovery Channel’s beloved Shark Week to bring you the offering above, the Shark Bite donut, a yeast confection iced with a red-and-white pattern resembling a life preserver.

The partnership extends to the Dunkin’ logo on the Shark Week homepage—it’s mostly the same, except it shows a missing bite and the slogan reads, “Shark Week runs on Dunkin'” rather than “America runs on Dunkin'”.

The donut is going out to select stores across the country, says Harold Morgenstern, svp of national ad sales for Discovery. “Very rarely does Dunkin’ Donuts change its logo,” he said. The deal is part of a larger Discovery partnership for the restaurant: “They’ll be in all of our higher-rated premiere shows across the network,” said Morgenstern. “For Shark Week, [Dunkin’ is] new. They’ve been on and off the network for quite some time.” Morgenstern says the partnership will also include a billboard in Times Square and ways for fans to interact.

“We’re going to have ‘Take a Bite, Take a Pic,’ encouraging fans to take a bite and take a picture of it [for social media]. During Shark After Dark, we’ll show some of those and have some prizing involved,” he said.

Accordingly, we thought of some suggestions for future donut/show integrations.

Nude Donut (Naked & Afraid) — It’s free, but you don’t get a napkin.

Crab Surprise (Deadliest Catch) — A box with 11 mousetraps and one donut inside.

Lucky Donut (Gold Rush) — Available to groups of 10 or more. One customer gets a delicious donut of his or her choice, and everyone else gets cold french fries.

Hide-a-Donut (Moonshiners) — Actually a flask.

Experimental Donut (Mythbusters) — Explodes.

We expect to hear back from Discovery about these suggestions any moment now. Shark Week comes back Aug. 10; you can get your life preserver donut at Dunkin’ from Aug. 4.



Seattle’s Best Tried to Take a Dig at Dunkin, but Taco Bell Stole Its Thunder

Imitation is the sincerest form of fla—rather, great minds think alike. 

Seattle's Best Coffee's new spot features various dudes who happen to be named Duncan proclaiming their love for the Starbucks-owned brand. 

What's interesting here is that this video was published two whole days before Taco Bell's somewhat viral "Real Ronald" ads featuring guys named Ronald McDonald. 

According to the coffee company's behind-the-scenes website, "The ad, which appeared before a fast-food chain launched a similar campaign, is part of a national taste test that found people preferred the new House Blend from Seattle’s Best Coffee over a competitor’s original blend coffee."

Given the close timing between these two, it's clear that neither brand was ripping off the other's idea. (As we've noted, it wasn't even a completely new idea in the first place.) Rather it reads as an uncanny coincidence fueled by the brand-obsessed zeitgeist. 

So, take a look at the two ads below and see the uncanny resemblance for yourself. 

Via Business Insider.




Dunkin’ Donuts Apologizes for Blackface Ad, but Not Everyone Is Sorry

Dunkin' Donuts in Thailand has just seen a 50 percent bump in sales on the heels of a new print, TV and Facebook ad campaign, and the CEO of the local franchise is crowing about the sugar rush. So what if it's all because of a controversial ad?

No, really, CEO Nadim Salhani says—so what? The ad in question shows a smiling woman in blackface with bright-pink lipstick holding the chain's new "charcoal donut." Predictably, this is kicking up a fury—outside its target region—though Salhani says that's just "paranoid American thinking." Salhani, whose teenage daughter is the model in the ad, further asks the Associated Press: "We're not allowed to use black to promote our donuts? I don't get it. What's the big fuss? What if the product was white and I painted someone white? Would that be racist?"

Dunkin' Donuts in the U.S. sees the situation differently, posting an apology on its website and promising a swift takedown due to the campaign's "insensitivity." Human Rights Watch called the ad "bizarre and racist." There's no word on whether Salhani, a surefire candidate in his own mind for father and marketer of the year, is still employed.


    

Com o nome no Serasa, Al Pacino faz até product placement em filme do Adam Sandler

Que o Adam Sandler faz filmes embaraçosos você já sabe. Que ele é o rei de fazer product placement em suas bobagens você também sabe.

O que não dá pra entender é o Al Pacino aceitar participar disso, e da maneira mais vergonhosa possível.

O ator – que um dia foi Michael Corleone – atuou na última “obra” de Sandler: “Jack & Jill”, que no Brasil ganhou o belo título de “Cada Um Tem a Gêmea Que Merece”. No Rotten Tomatoes o filme tem a incrível cotação de 3%, mas, mais uma vez, esse não é o caso.

O caso é que o senhor Pacino faz dentro do filme um triste product placement do tamanho do mundo para promover uma bebida do Dunkin’ Donuts, o Dunkaccino.

Eu reclamava de sempre vê-lo em filmes ruins nos últimos anos, mas isso é o de menos depois de assistir o vídeo abaixo. É a prova definitiva de que Al Pacino deve mesmo estar com o nome no Serasa.

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


Advertisement


Dunkin’ Donuts | Dunkin’ Run

Assim como existe a guerra das cervejas no Brasil, lá nos EUA existe a guerra dos cafés. O novo ataque foi dado pela Dunkin’ Donuts, que vive batendo na Starbucks.

A “Dunkin’ Run” é uma campanha que inclue site e um aplicativo para iPhone e outros celulares, com a proposta de reunir e coordenar grupos de pessoas para uma “corrida” pro café. Você pode convocar os amigos através de email ou telefone, todos fazem o pedido pela ferramenta e então é só buscar em uma Dunkin’ Donuts.

O aplicativo ainda guarda os pedidos anteriores e marca seus ingredientes preferidos, além de contar com integração com Facebook. A proposta do “Dunkin’ Run” é lembrar o momento da pausa para o café, facilitando pedidos coletivos e conectando diretamente com compra real.

Assista o vídeo explicativo do aplicativo. A criação é da agência Hill Holiday.

Dunkin Donuts Run

Dunkin Donuts Run

Brainstorm #9Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
Twitter | Contato | Anuncie

If You Had $100 Million?

This is an excerpt of an early 2009 interview with a McDonald’s Coffee-Banger Street Lieutentant who asked to be kept off the record. I asked him what he would do with $100 Million…

“A hundred million? We’d use the-playersit to knock Starbucks the *&^% out! Yeah! We’re tired of that punk chain hanging around. Don’t they know who we are? We are Mac-Don-Olds! MacD. Or Big Mac, to our friends. And that Starbucks been runnin things for too long. I thougAwright man, so here’s the story. Starbucks been cornerin the coffee business for a while now, you know? And for us, that was too long. They lost their focus. Got sloppy. Opened too many stores. Charged too much. People got tired of goin there, ya know? So, other shops started hanging out on their turf, right? Dunkin’ Donuts. 7-11. Caribou. They all make a pretty mean brew. And, you know what? A dude don’t have to wait in line for no 20 minutes at those other places, or use fancy terms that don’t make no sense! A grande means small! What? All them other places produce quality product…and it’s all about gettin’ caffeine into the blood, right? Mmm. I can feel it now.ht we had ‘em a couple months back, but they hung on like a booger. But we got the credibility, ya know?fourbucksisdumb2

We were just watchin, you know, playin’ it safe for a while, but then we got tired of those little coffee-bangers running around…this is our turf. They was ruining da whole coffee business! We are Mac-Don-Olds. King of all these streets! Why not let the real King take over? We brought in all the heads, the bosses, and met out at Hamburger U. It was decided to sock it to ‘em! Free Coffee Mondays. Everywhere. Give it away, earn their trust, then sell it, sell it, sell it! All the way to the bank.

(KFC tried to do it with chicken… Chicken? Who wants to walk around with a chicken breast in their hand!? Man, give ‘em a Coke! But not a hunk of chicken!)

Anyway, Starbucks started runnin’ around, not sure which way they was goin’…sending out crazy messages that they weren’t “special,”  just a regular cup of Joe. What regular coffee costs $4? Well, they cut their own brand apart, right out from underneath their own-selves. Punks! But, they still here. So, now we gonna finish it, And, after we’re done with Starbucks, we goin’ after that creepy-King-looking %*&!)$&@#+)$ that plays with sponges…”

And there you have it…McDonalds once again to make the streets a virtual coffee war zone. AdAge printed a story this morning, speaking with Neil Golden:

“I assure you that we’re going to be surrounding the consumer with very relevant messaging,” said Neil Golden, chief marketing officer, McDonald’s USA. He said the initial ads “will pulse on and off very strongly through the summer, with sustained weight well into 2010.” 

The fast-food chain won’t state how much they’re going to spend overall, but the goal is to add $100 billion to the bottom line in 2009. With McDonalds on the prowl again, the other competitors are circling the wagons for the upcoming battle.

Starbucks, after directionless floundering a month ago, finally responded by running full-page newspaper ads designed to tell their story and to warn consumers not to “trade down.” This marks the first branding campaign of any weight in years, and comes six months after  Wieden & Kennedy quit the account, citing that Starbucks did not seem receptive to driving the brand forward.starbucks-revised-bag

One  has to wonder at the recent choices made by Starbucks, and their new agency, BBDO. They’ve closed 600 stores, cut  1000 jobs, and sent out conflicting messages that stated “we are like everyone else” but “we are still the premium  choice.” To top it off, they choose newspaper, a medium that is failing in its own right, to deliver their messaging?

 Time will tell if Starbucks is able to survive in the long-term, but one thing is certain: McDonalds is coming. Again.

 Jeff Louis: Strategic Media Planner, Project Manager, and New Business Coordinator. His passion is  writing, contributing to BMA as well as freelancing. He’d love to hear from  you: linkedin.com/in/jefflouis or twitter.com/jlo0312.


Dunkin’ Donuts Announces Iced Coffee Day

iced-coffeeDunkin’ Donuts takes the Spring time a great opportunity to push its iced coffee variant along with a worthy cause. Apparently, the price for a small (16 oz) cup of Iced Coffee will be reduced to 50 cents at participating Dunkin’ Donuts shops throughout the country during Dunkin’s all-day “Iced Coffee Day” event on April 21. For every small Iced Coffee purchased on this day, Dunkin’ Donuts will donate five cents to benefit Homes for Our Troops, a national, non-profit organization that builds specially adapted homes for severely injured veterans.

Dunkin’ Donuts began its partnership with Homes for Our Troops in December 2008 when the Dunkin’ Brands Community Foundation, which is dedicated to serving those who serve others – especially in times of crisis – donated $100,000 to the organization to support ten “Build Brigades.” A “Build Brigade” is a three-day construction blitz to get a house framed, install doors, windows, roof and siding. Professional trades people and volunteers will participate in more than 30 “Build Brigades” throughout the country in 2009.

Brian Yalung is the editor for Beneath the Brand and Beyond Madison Avenue. He is also the owner of several other premium blog sites like Star Life Talk and Gossip. Stick around for unique and sensible posts coming your way.

(Source) Press

Dunkin’ Donuts: Egg White Flatbread Sandwich

Dunkin’ Donuts: Egg White Flatbread Sandwich

Advertised brand: Dunkin’ Donuts

Advertising Agency: Hill Holliday Boston, USA
Chief Creative Officer: Kevin Moehlenkamp
Creative Directors: Tim Cawley, Kevin Daley
Art Director: Megan O’Connell
Copywriter: Lindsay Bowen
Illustrator / Photographer: Alice Blue
Published: August 2008

Dunkin’ Donuts: Rebuilding

Dunkin' Donuts: Rebuilding

Advertising Agency: Hill Holliday, Boston, USA
Executive Creative Director: Kevin Moehlenkamp
Senior Art Director: Darren Bult
Associate Creative Director / Copywriter: Scott Noble
GCD / Copy: Time Cawley
GCD / Art: Kevin Daley
Published: April 2008

Dunkin’ Donuts: Almost there

Dunkin' Donuts: Almost there

Advertising Agency: Hill Holliday, Boston, USA
Executive Creative Director: Kevin Moehlenkamp
Senior Art Director: Darren Bult
Associate Creative Director / Copywriter: Scott Noble
GCD / Copy: Time Cawley
GCD / Art: Kevin Daley
Published: April 2008

Dunkin’ Donuts: Now open

Dunkin' Donuts: Now open

Advertising Agency: Hill Holliday, Boston, USA
Executive Creative Director: Kevin Moehlenkamp
Senior Art Director: Darren Bult
Associate Creative Director / Copywriter: Scott Noble
GCD / Copy: Time Cawley
GCD / Art: Kevin Daley
Published: April 2008

Dunkin’ Donuts: Dragon

Dunkin' Donuts: Dragon

Advertising Agency: Hill Holliday, Boston, USA
Chief Creative Officer: Kevin Moehlenkamp
Group Creative Directors: Tim Cawley, Kevin Daley
Art Director: Mike Shaughnessy
Copywriter: Rick McHugh
Agency Producer: Lisa Belden
Production Company: H.S.I.
Director: The Saline Project
Aired: February 2008

Dunkin’ Donuts: Welders

Dunkin' Donuts: Welders

Advertising Agency: Hill Holliday, Boston, USA
Chief Creative Officer: Kevin Moehlenkamp
Group Creative Directors: Tim Cawley, Kevin Daley
Art Director: Mike Shaughnessy
Copywriter: Rick McHugh
Agency Producer: Lisa Belden
Production Company: H.S.I.
Director: The Saline Project
Aired: February 2008

Dunkin’ Donuts: Caramel

Dunkin' Donuts: Caramel

Advertising Agency: Hill Holliday, Boston, USA
Creative Directors: Kevin Daley, Tim Cawley
Art Director: Megan O’Connell
Copywriter: Lindsay Bowen
Illustrator / Photographer: Alice Blue
Published: May 2008

Dunkin’ Donuts: Blueberry

Dunkin' Donuts: Blueberry

Advertising Agency: Hill Holliday, Boston, USA
Creative Directors: Kevin Daley, Tim Cawley
Art Director: Megan O’Connell
Copywriter: Lindsay Bowen
Illustrator / Photographer: Alice Blue
Published: May 2008

Dunkin’ Donuts: Hazelnut

Dunkin' Donuts: Hazelnut

Advertising Agency: Hill Holliday, Boston, USA
Creative Directors: Kevin Daley, Tim Cawley
Art Director: Megan O’Connell
Copywriter: Lindsay Bowen
Illustrator / Photographer: Alice Blue
Published: May 2008

Dunkin’ Donuts: Berry Berry

Dunkin' Donuts: Berry Berry

Advertising Agency: Hill Holliday, Boston, USA
Creative Directors: Kevin Daley, Tim Cawley
Art Director: Megan O’Connell
Copywriter: Lindsay Bowen
Illustrator / Photographer: Alice Blue
Published: May 2008

Dunkin’ Donuts: Frame

Dunkin' Donuts: Frame

Incredibly warm and toasty. Oven-Toasted Breakfast Sandwiches.

Advertising Agency: Hill, Holliday, Boston, USA
Creative Directors: Kevin Daley, Tim Cawley
Art Director: Meg O’Connell
Copywriter: Mark Nardi
Photographer: Steve Bronstein
Published: May 2008

Dunkin’ Donuts: Hula

Dunkin' Donuts: Hula

Incredibly warm and toasty. Oven-Toasted Hash Browns.

Advertising Agency: Hill, Holliday, Boston, USA
Creative Directors: Kevin Daley, Tim Cawley
Art Director: Meg O’Connell
Copywriter: Mark Nardi
Photographer: Steve Bronstein
Published: May 2008