Creative Director Christopher Brady Leaves Mullen

This morning Christopher Brady announced his departure from Mullen after eight years in what has nearly become a traditional way: with a public Facebook post.

Brady has yet to announce where he’s headed, but for context, he spent more than eight years at the agency as group creative director. Before joining Mullen, he worked as a senior art director for Apple in Cupertino, CA for two years (one of which he spent as an employee of Wirestone LLC).

Updates as we receive them.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

5 Marketing and Creativity Books That Stand the Test of Time

I recently cleaned out my Mullen office after 31 years at the agency and lugged my remaining books to my new office at Boston University. When I shared a photo of the transition, someone asked which of the many marketing and creativity books I'd collected over the years still held up.

So I made a list.

It doesn't include many of the more recent hits; it's too soon to tell if they'll truly hold up. So no Malcolm Gladwell or Clay Shirky or Steven Johnson. Nor does it include many of my personal favorites (Helmut Krone, The Book or D&AD's The Copy Book). I excluded others that I’d recommend you read (Ken Segall’s Insanely Simple or Ken Auletta's Googled). Why leave them out? Because the question was quite specific.

So here's the answer: five marketing/creative books that have stood the test of time.

1. A Technique for Producing Ideas, James Webb Young (1965)

This 48-page gem was published in 1965, and written, I believe, 20 years earlier. There is no better advice for understanding where creative ideas come from and how to generate them.

The art of producing ideas has nothing to do with luck, serendipity or the shower. It's not about where you go to look for them; it's a matter of "how you train your mind in the method by which all ideas are produced." Once you understand that an idea is nothing more or less than a new combination of old elements, that you can learn to create combinations and collisions, and that the process involves both an active and passive mode, you're on your way.

(Where to buy it.)

2. The Soul of a New Machine, Tracy Kidder (1981)

It's not book about marketing per se, but it is a book about innovation.

I worked at Data General during the years that Tom West's engineering team was racing the calendar to develop a faster machine to compete against Digital Equipment Corporation's VAX in the emerging 32-bit minicomputer market. Kidder, who was embedded in the company chronicling the team's round-the-clock efforts, tells the compelling story of what happens when you abandon top-down management and instead inspire creativity and innovation from below.

The engineers in the basement of DG never worked for the money. They worked for the challenge of inventing and creating something new. The lessons—speed, collaboration, freedom, and project management—are still relevant for any fast-paced creative organization striving to invent anything new and motivate people to do so.

(Where to buy it.)

3. Bill Bernbach's Book, Bob Levenson (1987)

I bought this book the day it came out 27 years ago. Within hours I had devoured every chapter, every ad, every Bernbach quote.

Even then, ads featured in the book were 20 years old. But the thinking was as fresh as could be and in many ways remains so. Many of Bernbach's quotes could have been written for the digital age and social media.

A few of my favorites: "To succeed, a brand (or a person or product, for that matter) must establish its own unique personality, or it will never be noticed." "The only difference between the forgettable and the enduring is artistry." "If you stand for something, you will always find some people for you and some against you. If you stand for nothing, you will find nobody against you and nobody for you." I still go back to Bernbach for inspiration.

(Where to buy it.)

4. The Book of Gossage, Howard Gossage, edited by Bruce Bendinger (1995)

"Nobody reads ads. People read what interests them, and sometimes it's an ad." I heard Jim Mullen use a version of that line many times and always thought it was his until I picked up The Book of Gossage.

It was given to me by a planner who said, "Jeff Goodby swears by Gossage’s thinking."  It was the 1960s when Gossage criticized the industry for talking "advertisingese." Instead he suggested having conversations with people, even if in those days it simply meant a coupon.

More importantly he espoused being interesting. Relentlessly pounding people with the same message over and over made no sense to him. If it's interesting, people will remember it. If it's not, no number of forced exposures would make up for the shortcomings. The idea of involving readers and being interesting: Now there are two ideas that hold up.

(Where to buy it.)

5. The Cluetrain Manifesto, Rick Levine, Christopher Locke, David "Doc" Searls, David Weinberger (2000)

Go back and read it. Fourteen years ago it predicted and explained much of what has happened since. A number of the original 95 theses ring perfectly true today.

Examples:

Thesis 16: Already, companies that speak in the language of the pitch, the dog-and-pony show, are no longer speaking to anyone.

Thesis 17: Companies that assume online markets are the same markets that used to watch their ads on television are kidding themselves.

Thesis 23: Companies attempting to "position" themselves need to take a position. Optimally, it should relate to something their market actually cares about. 

For anyone still trying to understand how to market in the digital age, this is a great read. It's not about technology. It's about behavior.

(Where to buy it.)

Runners-up:

I've recently been reading The Hero and the Outlaw and that remains relevant. As does Jon Steel's Truth, Lies and Advertising. If you’ve got time, read them all.

My current favorites:

Creativity, Inc. by Ed Catmull and A More Beautiful Question by Warren Berger.

Edward Boches, former chief creative officer and chief innovation officer for Mullen, is now a professor of advertising at Boston University. You can follow him on Twitter at @EdwardBoches.




JetBlue’s Pigeon Reflects on Human Foibles in Web Series From Funny or Die

Humans generally consider themselves to be better than pigeons in all ways, significant or not. But are we, really?

JetBlue's "Air on the Side of Humanity" campaign from Mullen, which launched last fall in Boston and is now rolling out to New York and Florida markets, suggests we're actually quite pigeon-like ourselves—at least, those of us who don't fly JetBlue are.

Indeed, much like the humble pigeon, who flies in crowded spaces, gets crumbs for snacks and is generally ignored and/or despised, we tend to be unappreciated when we take to the skies aboard other airlines.

Along with the TV work, JetBlue has been running a new Web series from Funny or Die that extends this notion of pigeon-on-human empathy. Called "Shoo's Bird's Eye View," the series stars a pigeon named Shoo who watches humans go about their business—and wryly remarks on how odd people can be.

The idea is that, through his comical observations, we might come to see the errors of our ways—like flying those airlines that don't have JetBlue in their name.

"The idea of bringing these two brands together, JetBlue and Funny or Die, was really appealing from the start," says Tim Vaccarino, executive creative director at Mullen. "Both have great sensibilities and a unique perspective on things. A way of getting right at the truth in a smart humorous way."

He added: "The use of the pigeon POV was a conscious one. It allowed us a unique perspective on humans and all their quirks. It let us show things we humans do every day but may overlook or ignore. Through Shoo's simple yet comical observations, the hope is people will wake up and change bad behavior. Such as the behavior of accepting a substandard level of customer service when we travel, for example. Just a thought."

The "Air on the Side of Human Campaign" has also included custom homepage takeovers, branded Spotify playlists, an interactive mobile rich media game and lifelike Pigeon Props riding atop taxi cabs.




UPDATE: Bud Light Has Your ‘World’s Toughest Job’ Spoof Right Here

Well, that was quick: here’s the first of what will almost certainly be a series playing off this week’s viral Mullen “world’s toughest job” spot.

The ad loosely ties itself to the ongoing “Up for Whatever” campaign via hashtag.

Its underlying gender joke and brand association aren’t quite clear until the final shot, though the text makes sure to poke fun at the Mullen original by both linking to the clip and noting that the fake job listing behind it never actually existed.

UPDATE: The responsible agency is Boston-based Relevant 24, which has done work for Priceline, Arby’s, FOX Sports, Doritos and more (homepage here).

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Mullen ‘World’s Toughest Job’ Spot Goes Viral

One day in and this Mullen spot already has more than a million views thanks to its appearance on every blog around as well as, you know, the enduring power of maternal love.

Because we’re cynical bastards who don’t fully appreciate our mothers, our favorite part of this campaign is the fact that the original fake listing supposedly scored 2.7 million impressions but only 24 applications–thereby demonstrating the incalculable value of paid placement.

We also applaud the Huffington Post for yesterday’s most blatant Upworthy ripoff headline:

“24 Applicants Were Terrified To Do This Job. Then They Found Out Why Billions Already Do It.”

On the shameless self-promotion front: the “job” in the spot was obviously not real, but these open positions at Mullen most definitely are.

Now please talk about how much you don’t want to apply for them.

continued…

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

24 People Who Applied for the World’s Toughest Job Were In for Quite a Surprise

Here's a pretty cool project from Mullen for a client we won't immediately reveal, lest we spoil the surprise. (Scroll down to the bottom of credits, or watch the video to find out.)

The Boston agency posted this job listing online for a "director of operations" position at a company called Rehtom Inc. The requirements sounded nothing short of brutal:

• Standing up almost all the time
• Constantly exerting yourself
• Working from 135 to unlimited hours per week
• Degrees in medicine, finance and culinary arts necessary
• No vacations
• The work load goes up on Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Year's and other holidays
• No time to sleep
• Salary = $0

The job ad got 2.7 million impressions from paid ad placements. Only 24 people inquired. They interviewed via webcam, and their real-time reactions were captured on video.

Check out what happened below. It's worth watching to the end.

CREDITS
Project: World's Toughest Job

Agency: Mullen, Boston
Chief Creative Officer: Mark Wenneker
Executive Creative Directors: Tim Vaccarino, Dave Weist
Creative Director: Jon Ruby
Associate Creative Director, Copy: Andrea Mileskiewicz
Associate Creative Director, Art: Blake Winfree
Executive Director of Integrated Production: Liza Near
Head of Broadcast: Zeke Bowman

Producer: Vera Everson
Account Director: Jessica Zdenek
Account Supervisor: Laila Lynch
Director of Digital Strategy: Eric Williamson
Senior Brand Strategist: Ryan Houts

Production Company: Caviar
Director: Amir Farhang
Executive Producer: Valeria Maldini
Producer: Jason Manz
Director of Photography: Brian Rigney Hubbard

Editing, Visual Effects: PS260
Editor: J.J. Lask
Assistant Editor: Colin Edelman
Senior Producer: Laura Lamb Patterson
Lead Visual Effects Artist: Patrick Lavin
Assistant Artist: Matt Posey
Audio Post: Soundtrack
Sound Design, Mixer: Mike Secher
Music: Human
Casting: House Casting
Casting Agent: Shawn Alston

Client: American Greetings
Executive Director, Marketing: Alex Ho




We Hear: Cuts at Mullen…

mullen-ogWe’ve heard your whispers–which turned into shouts this morning–regarding changes at Mullen.

Los Angeles ECD Peter Rosch left the agency several weeks ago, and one tip names CCO Mark Wenneker as his replacement.

Multiple reports place the total layoffs that occurred yesterday in the 15-20 range; these cuts appear to be based strictly or primarily in the agency’s Boston office.

We’ve received no official word from Mullen, but based on the volume of helpful hints we assume that a basic restructuring followed Kristen Cavallo‘s recent promotion.

Updates to follow if/when we get them.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

We Hear: Cavallo Promoted to Prez at Mullen?

KC1Nearly three years after officially joining Mullen as chief strategy officer, Kristen Cavallo is moving up the ranks according to those in the know on the Spy line. Word on the street is that Cavallo, who works out of Mullen’s Boston HQ, has been promoted to president of the agency (in her second stint).  As CSO at Mullen, has led planning, biz dev and analytics efforts for a range of clients including JetBlue, Google, Acura, Adidas and Zappos.

Prior to Mullen, Cavallo spent well over a decade at the Martin Agency, last serving as SVP/planning and development at said agency, where she led efforts for clients including Pizza Hut, Expedia, Wal-Mart, Coca-Cola and Miller. During her career, Cavallo has also worked on the planning side at the likes of Arnold Worldwide.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Mullen Alum Behind ‘Agency Fight’ Heads to Translation

schuylerIf the name Schuyler Hunt doesn’t ring a bell, perhaps we can refresh your memory by recalling some of his fun projects during his two-and-a-half years at Mullen including the “Agency Fight,” “The Riddlist” and the cat-friendly, seizure-inducing and brief retuning of his old agency’s “Work” section. The “Zach Braff lookalike” as one tipster has coined him (ok, maybe they’re onto something) has joined up with NYC-based Translation, which is fresh off of hiring a new CCO in Martin Agency/Chiat LA alum John Norman, as an ACD/creative technologist. Prior to his time at Mullen, Hunt also had a brief spell or two at the Martin Agency as a CT and spent 15 months at the VCU Brandcenter.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

What is Going on with Mullen’s Bay Area ‘Talent Hub?’

golden-gate1

Having typed Mullen in our email search this week, it’s been flooded with tips that have rung the death knell for the agency’s San Francisco office, which was opened in 2012. At the time, Mullen CCO Mark Wenneker proclaimed to staff that the SF office would serve as a “talent hub” that would be “composed of a small group of creatives and a little DNA from the Boston office” who would work as an extension of the agency’s Beantown hub for clients including JetBlue, Grey Goose and Google. We’ve reached out to the agency a couple of times on the alleged closing of its SF branch, but, unusually, have yet to hear back on the matter (you’re not helping yourselves, folks).

While we look into the situation, it does appear that we were correct in our assumptions that Mullen SF chief digital officer Stephen Goldblatt was no longer with the agency. If you recall, Goldblatt joined Mullen as CDO a year ago after spending five at fellow Bay Area outfit, EVB, where he served as partner/ECD.  Anyhow, if you need a breakdown, here’s just a smattering of tips that we’ve received this week alone from different sources but all ringing the same tone:

This morning: “Mullen shut down its SF office”

Yesterday afternoon: “Mullen has shut down the San Francisco office and let go of all but two staffers.”

Two days ago, 2/24: “Mullen is shuttering the San Francisco office.”

 

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Architectural Representations by Daniel Mullen

L’artiste Daniel Mullen utilisent plusieurs techniques (crayon, collage de bandes de papier, peinture) pour composer des oeuvres qui questionnent la représentation de l’espace. Jouant avec talent sur la perspective, l’artiste parvient à nous plonger dans son univers conceptuel à travers des toiles à découvrir dans la suite.

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Daniel Mullen Architectural Representations

Epic Acura Ad Presents the World’s Most Brutal Mechanical-Horse Race

You probably didn't know your Acura isn't really a car. It's actually a real live dark horse. In a world full of creepy and brutish mechanical horses.

It will catapult from the back of the pack to win, and wrench an existential scream from the depths of your soul. Because in this tortured journey down the racetrack of life, feelings can be so real—especially when you are driving an Acura horse. Also, because you are a three-piece-wearing fop, says a new commercial from ad agency Mullen and director Adam Berg.

It's painfully literal and beautifully produced, an unusual blend of posh emo dystopian leisure car porn. It's got horsepower! Up next, a Shia LeBeouf lookalike rides Acura Seabiscuit to defeat the evil horse Transformers in a game of Polo Tron.

Credits below.

CREDITS
Client: Acura
Senior Vice President, Automotive Operations, American Honda Motor Co.: Michael Accavitti
Assistant Vice President, Advertising, Marketing, American Honda Motor Co.: Tom Peyton
Manager, Acura Advertising, Brand: Gary Robinson
Spot: "Let the Race Begin"
Agency: Mullen, Los Angeles
Chief Creative Officer: Mark Wenneker
Executive Creative Director: Peter Rosch
Art Director: Sean Stell
Copywriter: Amir Farhang
Executive Director of Integrated Production: Liza Near
Director of Broadcast Production: Zeke Bowman
Senior Producer: Trish Dowley
Co-Director of Strategy: Kelsey Hodgkin
Account Service: Jeff Prince, Alison Kaplan
Product Information Manager: Scott King
Product Specialist: Curtis Millward
Associate Director of Business Affairs: Stephen Duncan
Production Company: Smuggler
Director: Adam Berg
Founding Partners: Patrick Milling Smith, Brian Carmody
Bidding Producer: Shannon Jones
Line Producer: Karen O’Brien
Director of Photography: Mattias Montero
Production Supervisor: Pete Slowey
Production Designer: Tino Schaedler
Editorial: Cosmo Street
Editor: Paul Hardcastle
Assistant Editor: Hugo Jordan
Producer: Jaclyn Paris
Executive Producer: Yvette Cobarrubias-Sears
Color Correction: MPC
Colorist: Mark Gethin
Visual Effects: MPC
Executive Producer: Elexis Stearn
Producer: Mike Wigart
Visual Effects Supervisors: Andy Boyd (3-D), Benoit Mannequin (2-D)
Graphics: Artjail
Audio Post: Phase UK
Sound Supervisor, Designer: Matthew Collinge
Audio Post: Eleven Sound
Mixer: Scott Burns
Original Music: Bobby Tahouri
Track Title: "I Was Set Up!"
Casting Agency: Sonnenberg Casting
Casting Agent: Jodi Sonnenberg


    



Hey, Stephen Goldblatt, Are You Still at Mullen?

goldblattmullenJust want to find out, man, as we’ve been hearing from the Spy line that you may have parted ways with Mullen, the agency you joined and took on the post of chief digital officer like a year ago. We’re just Curious George-ing because a couple of calls to the agency left us nowhere, and we’re just trying to find if it’s true and all.

Shit, while we keep shoegazing, let us reminisce on a career where you spent five years at Evolution Burea–oh shit–sorry, EVB to us and last served as partner/ECD (who can forget “Mob the Rainbow” for Skittles?). Oh yeah, almost forgot that you spent nearly seven years as GCD/AD at Goodby after toiling as an art director at the likes of BSSP and DDB Dallas. Anyways, bro, just reaching out, give me a holler when you can, you know, and–oh shit, my laces are untied (*cue Slowdive*).

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Mullen Makes Ad-Blog Comments More Pleasant With the Hater Translator

Tired of all the nasty anonymous attacks in the comments section of ad blogs? Mullen has a festive solution this holiday: the Hater Translator, a fancy Dr. Who-style machine that rewrites obnoxious comments as nice ones—and even turns the word "fuck" into real fudge!

Check out the video below for more, featuring some great cameos from a ton of agency people. Apparently the Hater Translator did some translating of comments on AgencySpy—until its commenting handle was blocked. If it's unwelcome over there, it can certainly take a stab at cleaning up some AdFreak stories.


    

Ah, So This is Who to Blame for ‘Hater Translator’

If you’re a frequent reader of this site (and especially if you’re a regular commenter) you may remember the “Hater Translator” from a few weeks back. Hater Translator would take a spiteful comment and translate it into something nicer. Since most comments on this site are made by hateful pricks, the Hater Translator kept pretty busy. It was kind of funny the first time, less so the second, and it quickly wore out its welcome. Pretty soon, everyone was annoyed and our inboxes were flooded with complaints. Sure, the haters are annoying, but Hater Translator only seemed to make things worse. Now, the folks over at Mullen have come out as the creators of the Hater Translator, with a new site and holiday-themed video (featured above).

The video tells the story of the Hater Translator’s creation by an IT guy at Mullen who looks kind of like Zach Braff. He noticed that all the internet hate was making people sad, “especially when they read nasty comments posted about their work.” The video then shows a bunch of priceless reactions to hateful comments from advertising folk, which is pretty funny. “Don’t they know that advertising is one of the most important jobs in the world?” he asks of the haters. So he decided to “turn the Internet into a friendlier place” with the Hater Translator, but, as well all know, this just redirected the hate back onto the Hater Translator. At any rate, Zach Braff IT guy walks us through how the crazy machine works — it turns the word “fuck” into real fudge, and then shows us the Hater Translator”in action.” In other words, translating comments from this site. They mention their four days translating “hundreds of nasty comments on Agency Spy into expressions of love and joy” and complain of being shut down on the fifth day. Apparently, that makes us Scrooges.

Mullen calls the Hater Translator “a really great way to spread some holiday cheer to a place that really needs it,” but we’re guessing you disagree. Take it away, comments section…

 

 

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Q&A: Jerry Seinfeld on His Intentionally Bad, New-Old Acura Ads

Jerry Seinfeld has written eight new Acura commercials in collaboration with Boston ad agency Mullen as part of the brand's title sponsorship of his Web series Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee. The faux-vintage spots—all eight are posted below—will bookend new episodes of the show, coming Jan. 2. They were directed by Barry Sonnenfeld and inspired by actual old car commercials from the '60s.

But while those old spots sound a bit ridiculous these days (Seinfeld ran actual vintage Acura ads as pre-roll on Comedians in Cars last season), these new ads are intentionally silly—playing off the old style but taking it in absurd directions.

Seinfeld spoke with AdFreak on Tuesday about the creative process behind the ads, his experience with Super Bowl spots and what he thought of Will Ferrell's Dodge work.

So, these are fun spots. This must have been an exciting project for you.
You know, I have done a bit of advertising over the years. But I have never been given the creative freedom that I was given on these by Acura. They're gutsier than any other company I've ever worked with. Not that I've worked with that many, but I've worked with a few. Because this work, as you can see, is not like any other work that they've done. And usually—as you well know, being in the ad game—the clients tend to get nervous, especially when they're spending a lot of money. But [Acura marketing chief] Mike Accavitti, I've never seen a guy like this guy. Nerves of steel. It's pretty rare. But I think that's why they came out so good. I would give him all the credit.

Tell me about the creative process—how you worked with Mullen on these.
Mullen and I sat in a room together. Now, we ran vintage Honda and Acura stuff from the '60s and '70s last season on Comedians in Cars. And everybody kind of enjoyed that. And I said, Yeah, I've looked at everything that exists of the old advertising, and I picked out all the good ones. And I don't have any more. And I thought, Why don't we make new old advertising … that's bad. Because that's what's fun. A lot of the lines are stuff we actually found. We would put our little spin on it.

A lot of the advertising in the old days focused on the size of the car. People felt that you were really getting your money's worth if the car had a big trunk. Which of course is something that no one cares about now. No one buys an SUV and goes, "Well, how big is the trunk?" Because they're all big.

So, it's about taking the old tropes and pushing them a little bit.
Yes. And you know, to me, a lot of things have gotten worse that you could point to in our culture. A lot of advertising has gotten worse. I think it's kind of lost its nerve, to be honest with you. I feel like the advertising of the '60s, they were nervier. You know why? Because there was less at stake. It always worked. There were three networks. Everyone's going to see this. They're going to buy the car. And now, everyone's more nervous. Eyeballs are harder to get. And everyone's less inclined to take a risk.

You've seen those high stakes firsthand, having done Super Bowl ads for American Express and, of course, Acura.
Yeah. I've done a number of Super Bowl ads. And that is the best advertising of the year. That is when people realize they're going to be compared directly against other ads.

What did you think of Will Ferrell's ads for Dodge?
I like anything Will Ferrell does, so I was a fan of those. But it didn't seem to be a different type of car advertising. It seemed to be a different type of movie advertising. But different is always good.

So, you wrote a lot of the jokes for these Acura ads?
I did. We just wanted to get that feeling of "Hot, handsome and a honey to handle." Nobody says things like that anymore. Or "The perfect car for the big-car man." And the "Yesterday, today and tomorrow" thing. I like the little tension between the spokesman and the spokeswoman, that we can see that they aren't quite getting along.

My favorite thing is: "MDX. Three letters that stand for 'Earth, style and you.' " That's just like, nobody read that over and went, "What do you mean? Why does it stand for that? The letters don't even match up to that. Why are we saying that?" So, it's also part of the drunken, lazy ad culture of the '60s.


    

What Every House Needs: A Century 21 Branded Landing Pad for Amazon Drones

Behold the C21 Delivery Landing Pad, designed to accommodate package deliveries by airborne drones. According to the product's maker, real-estate giant Century 21, "no home of the 21st century will be complete without one." Even so, don't expect the pad to be included with your next split-level colonial.

Roughly the size of a welcome mat and equipped with tiny landing lights, the C21 is, in fact, a fictitious item, promoted in yet another quick-turnaround, tongue-in-cheek video from Boston ad agency Mullen. These promos riff on buzzy current events, in this case Jeff Bezos's claim that Amazon will offer deliveries via flying bots sometime in the future. (Such a system at Walter White's Albuquerque home—listed "for sale" by Century 21 in a Craigslist ad timed to the Breaking Bad finale—would've been invaluable for receiving drone-dispatched beakers, Bunsen burners, Badfinger CDs, etc.)

Alas, since Bezos made his announcement on 60 Minutes last Sunday, it's become increasingly clear that in light of regulatory hurdles and safety concerns, it may well be Century 22 before drone deliveries become commonplace.


    

‘Tryptophan Slow Jam’ Video Is Easily the Strangest Thing Century 21 Has Ever Done

Century 21 and its agency, Mullen, have been doing some offbeat stuff together lately—pretending to sell Walter White's house on Craigslist; urging Twitter's mascot to upgrade to a bigger birdhouse after the company's IPO. But this new video is truly out there—a Thanksgiving ode to the soporific effects of turkey meat called "Tryptophan Slow Jam." It's available on iTunes, and Century 21 will donate all proceeds from the sales to its philanthropic partner, Easter Seals. It doesn't seem to have much to do with real estate—nor does the #Tryptophan hashtag, which Century 21 is also pushing this week. But hey, amusing content doesn't always have to double as a sales pitch. (Right?)


    

Trying to Sell Your ‘Slightly Haunted’ Condo? Century 21 Can Help.

As if putting Walter White's house on the market a few weeks back for Breaking Bad's finale weren't enough, Century 21 and Mullen return with five fun videos that channel the Halloween spirit.

The clips take place in a "slightly haunted" house and were actually shot in a single day in the home of Mullen group cd Tim Cawley, who wrote and directed the campaign. (He's quite the boo-ster of scary movies, with two horror shorts to his credit).

In one clip, "Master Suite," a claw reaches out from beneath a bed, grabs a pair of slippers and devours them. Another video, "Playroom," features a toy box with a ghostly inhabitant. Household items—chairs, doors, shoes, candle holders—move by themselves in several clips, including "Pet Friendly," which stars Duke, Cawley's Great Dane puppy, who looks cute enough to charm any poltergeist.

At the end of each vignette, on-screen copy—"Yeah, we could sell it"—assures us that even though the place has some slight supernaturally issues, Century 21 is up to the challenge. No Realtors are shown. Guess they would've scared prospects away.

Check out all the clips after the jump.


    

Century 21 Sells Walter White’s House in the Only Worthy Brand Tie-In to the Breaking Bad Finale

Many brands tried to ride the Breaking Bad bandwagon for last night's series finale, with results that were generally clumsy or worse. The exception was Century 21's inspired listing of Walter White's Albuquerque home for sale on Craigslist. The house is "fit for a king," says the promotional copy, which had lots of fun little plot points worked into it. Don't get sucked in, though—it might actually be in worse condition than the listing would indicate.

The stunt was dreamed up by Mullen.

UPDATE: OK, this Monday-afternoon tweet from Truvia isn't bad. A little late, but then, it takes a while to get ricin jokes through the lawyers.

Full text of Century 21's Craigslist listing below.

3BR/2BA Albuquerque ranch is fit for a king. In-ground pool with lovely patio, perfect for grilling with family. Two-car garage for a Pontiac Aztek, Chrysler 300 or both. Water heater replaced in 2009. Secret crawl space great fun for kids. Near airport. Great local schools with dedicated teachers who take an interest in students. World-class local hospitals. Perfect for outdoorsmen, with first-rate area camping and RV spots. MOTIVATED SELLER. MUST BE OUT BY SUNDAY, 10:15 PM. MAKE AN OFFER TODAY.