Kalenji X Rosapark "#eatyourrun" (2016) 1:48 (France)
Posted in: UncategorizedGoogle Built an Escape Room, and Is Making People Use a Bunch of Its Apps to Get Out
Posted in: UncategorizedGoogle France has built an escape room to seamlessly unite online and offline worlds.
Created by We Are Social, Première Pièce will open at an undisclosed location in the heart of Paris. The campaign builds on the escape room trend, in which you and a bunch of friends pay to get locked in a room for an hour or two, left to solve puzzles and work in collaboration to find a way out. Last month, the Toronto Film Festival built an escape room that lives on Instagram. (Google’s is a physical room, but uses virtual tools as a central conceit.)
Peugeot "Better Sensations" (2016) 1:00 (France)
Posted in: UncategorizedThis French Insurance Ad Warmly Spotlights Society's Invisible Heroes Who Help Others
Posted in: UncategorizedThis is for the tree-climbers.
France’s GMF is the leading insurer of public sector workers. But, typical of the modest sector it serves, it’s spent the past 80 years of its existence running ads that the brand itself has acknowledged are “cautious” and not too screamy.
Well, the world has changed and everyone’s screaming. So, it teamed up with TBWA Paris to assert its position in a way that feels loyal to who the brand is—it’s a quieter competitor, but therein lies its power.
GMF "We are for those" (2016) 1:15 (France)
Posted in: UncategorizedLove the way this was shot. There are some surprisingly moving moments in here.
Peugeot uses naked, cheating man to sell the 208
Posted in: UncategorizedBETC has created an interactive choose-your-own-adventure style video titled “Let Your Body Drive”. Follow a cheating guy trying to escape and “let his body drive” in true French fashion.
See it at www.letyourbodydrive.com.
Mouvement du Nid "Bad pleasure" (2016) :50 (France)
Posted in: UncategorizedCaudlíe "Powered by the grape" (2016) :30 (France)
Posted in: UncategorizedDignity Institute, talking bones DM images
Posted in: UncategorizedWhile you can watch the case study explanation of the “talking bones” campaign here, the x-ray records need to be seen on their own. The x-rays are of Arta, Adnan and Fideles bones, revealing the torture that their bodies have suffered through. Arta’s, Adnan’s and Fidele’s stories were then recorded onto vinyl, which had the X-ray of them on it. You’d see the damage and hear the stories at the same time.
Dignity Institute – Talking Bones – (2016) 1:47 (France)
Posted in: UncategorizedGrey Paris wanted to show you you what you can’t see, and took x-rays of the victims. They then put the victim’s audio testimonies on their own medical x-rays. Place the x-ray on a turntable and you can play it like a vinyl record and listen to Arta’s, Adnan’s and Fidele’s stories. Hearing the victims tell of what happened, while you can see their physical injures is a reality-jab. It becomes impossible to ignore. You can take a closer look at the x-rays here.
Grey Paris sent vinyl records to key French influencers to create a real conversation about this highly sensitive subject.
The hashtag #TALKINGBONES is spreading on social media, and you can learn more at talking bones.
Cinema to Go by Air France – (2016) :50 (France)
Posted in: UncategorizedParisian Gentleman – Real Heroes (2016) :90 (France)
Posted in: UncategorizedSo yes, lets bring back elegance. It’s a rare thing these days. Perfect fools Parisian Gentleman want you to know that the real heroes these days are the elegant people. A rare breed indeed.
It was a great year for censorship
Posted in: UncategorizedReports without borders are “celebrating,” censorship with a campaign denouncing the lack of freedom of the press in twelve countries. These include:
If Choreography Were an Olympic Sport, Lacoste's Rio 2016 Ad Would Surely Win the Gold
Posted in: UncategorizedWith less than 100 days to go before the Rio Olympics, Lacoste builds on its “Life is a beautiful sport” campaign with a chic new video called “Support with Style.”
Created by BETC and its music subsidiary BETC Pop, “Support with Style” follows a troupe of “beautiful supporters” through Paris, whose landscape has been transformed into an eerily empty (and clean!) playground for Rio 2016 stadium seats.
The clip reinforces Lacoste’s relationship with the French National Olympic Committee (CNOSF), for whom it will outfit all French Olympic teams. The partnership was born in 2013, and will conclude this year (barring an extension of the contract).
BETC Pop gets together with Burn energy drink
Posted in: UncategorizedBurn, which is an energy drink now part of the Monster Energy conglomeration, is making a big comeback as beign the official energy drink partner of France’s hottest electronic music festivals: Nuits Sonores (Lyon), Weather Festival (Paris)Astropolis (Brest ), the Peacock Society (Paris) and Marsatac (Marseille).
Lacoste "#supportwithstyle" (2016) 1:34 (France)
Posted in: UncategorizedMcDonald's "Emoticon City" (2015) 1:00 (France)
Posted in: UncategorizedEveryone Is an Emoji in This Bizarre and Terrifying French McDonald's Ad
Posted in: Uncategorized
What are we all but a bunch of emoji with arms and legs and a hankering for McDonald’s?
An insane new French ad for fast-food chain shows a city full of people going about their daily lives—driving around with friends, getting a shave at the barber, break dancing in the streets. But instead of human heads, they all have giant, 3-D, cartoon faces.
The soundtrack—a bubbly electro pop cover of the Buggles’ 1978 classic “Video Killed the Radio Star”—almost makes the ad feel like a music video. But the song, a rendition apparently created specifically for the ad, when coupled with the visual concept, which feels fresh in and of itself, seems to imply a critique of technology that’s more contemporary than the one baked into the lyrical hook, and a bit out of place for a major fast-food marketer.
McDonald’s and agency BETC Paris have explicitly created a world where digital communication reduces facial expression—a wildly subtle and complex phenomenon—to a series of shiny yellow orbs representing monolithic and equally monochromatic feelings. That’s a pretty excellent premise for a video, but the brand presents it here without any of the real anxiety about change that defines the text of the original synth pop song—or the deadpan theatricality with which the Buggles promoted and performed it; or, say, the more explicitly ironic bitterness and dissatisfaction of the 1996 alt-rock cover by the Presidents of the United States of America.
Instead, McD’s presents everyone being a stiff caricature of their own ids as a good thing. And that only really makes sense if you’re a faceless corporation that deals in cardboard platitudes like Happy Meals peddled by a brightly colored clown mascot, and other overly processed hamburgers that can save the doomed love lives of awkward young adults.
It probably doesn’t help the brand’s case that the tagline, “Venez comme vous êtes,” which translates to “Come as you are,” inadvertently bastardizes the spirit of another classic song about the tension between individuality, conformity and perception. (To be fair, that tagline has been around for years—and McDonald’s France has used it to, among other things, promote gay rights.)
Within the emoji ad’s own construct, it includes clever little tidbits—some of them perhaps more deliberate than others, like the kid who turns from angel to devil, as opposed to the weatherman with the smarmy, oafish look on his face. The spot also deserves credit for doing a distinctly better job of getting its message across than some other emoji-driven attempts at marketing. (In fact, it’s way simpler and more accessible—if less delightful—than some of the brands that decided to try to invent their own emoticons.)
It’s also worth noting that BETC Paris is experienced in creating absurd viral sensations, having graced the world with Evian’s classic roller-dancing babies, and the agency appears to be swinging for the fences again here. But the idea, for all its potential, suffers as a result of its attempt to be broadly appealing to what’s seen as the perpetual sunshine ethos of millennials. In that, it turns into a nauseatingly saccharine panacea—without near enough sarcasm or skepticism about what it’s actually saying.
In fact, the insistence on framing a fundamentally disturbing set of images as lighthearted and upbeat can’t keep the dark subtext and implicit social critique at bay. So, the whole thing ends up seeming unintentionally dystopian, like the Kia hamsters tossed into a meat grinder with a deadmau5 helmet and Katy Perry fever dream, with the resulting slime squeezed out into a bunch of circular, cookie-cutter nuggets, baked golden and plopped onto a bunch of necks.
Ultimately, it mostly adds credence to Taco Bell’s case that Ronald McDonald is actually a Stalinist looking to control all aspects of your life—only he’s way more insidious than you thought, mostly interested in brainwashing us into grinning idiots by defining happiness in terms of Big Macs and faces made of pixels.
Plus, you know the spot can’t be trusted because it doesn’t show anyone who just gobbled a McDonald’s burger and turned into the emoji for “I have a stomach ache and I wish I hadn’t eaten that”—which isn’t available yet, but is slated for release in 2016.