Sprint Apologizes in Teaser for Deutsch’s Super Bowl Spot

Late yesterday, Sprint released a teaser for its Super Bowl ad from Deutsch LA “apologizing” to competitors Verizon and AT&T.

The teaser is a simple text scroll and accompanying voiceover imposed on an image of a sheep. Addressed to Verizon and AT&T, the ad claims Sprint owes these companies an apology — “not for cutting your customers’ rate plans in half — we’re gonna keep doing that” — but rather for comparing the brands to sheep in a recent advertisement. Sprint promises to apologize in the third quarter of the Super Bowl to make up for the whole “sheep thing,” but something tells us Deutsch LA has something other than a contrite apology up its sleeve.

The ad will mark Sprint’s fourth appearance in the big game and its first from Deutsch LA, who officially took over as Sprint’s agency of record last month (although rumors of Deutsch’s appointment began spreading over a month earlier).

Jeff Hallock, chief marketing officer for Sprint, hinted that the ad would deal directly with Sprint’s bill-cutting promise. “We have a very crowded industry, very competitive industry and there’s some confusion that comes in customers trying to understand plans and whatnot. We think with this promotion (cut your monthly bill in half), it’s the simplest thing for people to understand. So, we want to make sure we get the awareness as broadly as we can get on it,” he told Adweek.

 

 

 

Figliulo & Partners Coins New Term, Defies Laws of Nature for Sprint

Figliulo&Partners, who partnered with Sprint in November, have just launched the new integrated campaign called the “Frobinsons,” promoting the Sprint Family plan, a new pricing plan allowing consumers to decide who they consider family.

“The American family has changed. Our families today are more than our relatives, but also our friends, our neighbors – basically all the people we love,”explains Jeff Hallock, Sprint’s chief marketing officer.

The “Frobinsons” campaign, which was created in partnership with DigitasLBi and MediaVest, will unfold as an episodic story over the coming months and, we’re told we can expect “surprising cameos from stars of sports, music, screen and stage” in the future. For now, the campaign has launched with two, 30-second spots introducing the framily Frobinsons. The first, “Meet the Frobinsons” introduces all the different friends and family making up the group, as well as the word “framily” itself, and should give us an idea what to expect from Figliulo&Partners in the future. The Frobinsons, we learn in the spot, are a strange bunch. There’s the daughter, constantly surrounded by animated birds, who appears to only speak French. Then there’s the son with the southern accent who spends his time crafting miniatures.

Strangest of all, though, is the father, a hamster voiced by Andrew Dice Clay who objects the “framily” term. Yeah, a hamster. Obviously they’re going for the “families come in all shapes and sizes” message here, but is having a hamster dad really the way to go about this? The mother is presented as the sane voice of reason in the group, despite the fact that she is married to a frucking hamster. “Framily Portrait” spends some time examining each member of the extended framily, including a few characters you don’t meet in “Meet the Frobinsons.” The characters (especially the new additions) in the spot and the way they’re presented give “Framily Portrait” a quirky Wes Anderson quality, probably the direction this campaign will take going forward.

The two broadcast spots will air tonight across national network and cable TV, with an angry rant from One Million Moms expected by the end of the week. In addition to broadcast the campaign also includes “in-store along with a number of digital and social extensions,” with print and out-of-home extensions of the campaign in the coming weeks. Stick around for “Framily Portrait” after the jump. continued…

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