Beauty Brand's Floating Billboard Cleans a Polluted River by Absorbing Toxins

Japanese natural cosmetics brand Shokubutsu Hana and TBWASMP have floated an unconventional idea in the Philippines to help clean Manila’s grievously polluted Pasig River—an 88-foot-long billboard made of vetiver, a grass that absorbs deadly toxins. Vetiver is often used to treat waste water and landfills, and the billboard can cleanse up to 8,000 gallons a day.

On its website, Shokubutsu Hana says the effort represents the company’s belief in “healthy beauty brought about by the restorative power of nature” and commitment to “provide not only a clean message but also a clean future.” Additional vetiver signs are planned for the ailing waterway, which was declared “biologically dead” in the 1990s after decades of contamination from industrial runoff and sewage. The Pasig River Rehabilitation Commission and Vetiver Farms Philippines are also partners in the project.

A similar concept sprouted in the Philippines three years ago, when Coca-Cola and the World Wildlife Fund created a 60-by-60-foot billboard covered in Fukien tea plants to absorb air pollution.

The notion that social-issues campaign should not just call for action, but also take action themselves or facilitate change, is growing. Recent examples include Peruvian billboards that generate clean air and water, a “Drinkable Book” with pages that filter contaminants and a “Blind Book” designed to teach sighted folks how vision-impaired people feel when denied access to literature because it is not published in a format they can read.

Via PSFK.



Pantene Philippines Takes Its Battle for Gender Equality to Facebook

In December, a powerful Pantene Philippines ad went viral, with each scene depicting a gender double standard. The goal was to address labels in the workplace, and the campaign has been running strong ever since.

In the Philippines, where patriarchy is still certainly the norm, Pantene is using social media to continue to challenge the status quo. The Facebook page hardly looks like most brand pages. There's less product display than you'd expect from a personal care brand, and there are plenty of photos addressing roles and gender bias, all with the hashtag #whipit.

Some display surprising statistics about women in the workplace and society—many of them suggesting women are accepting of the inequality—with a simple piece of copy underneath: "Together we can overcome bias."

Pantene is also posting photos directly related to the December spot about labels. Each photo shows a negative word often aimed at women—some in English, some in Tagalog, varying from "whiny" to "weak" to "attention whore"—with a caption ending in "Don't let labels hold you back."




Viral Filmmaker Gets $25,000 to Promote a New Movie and Instead Spends It All on Typhoon Recovery

If you had a modest budget of $25,000 to create a promotional clip for a feature film, how would you spend it? Unless you're viral video director Casey Neistat, it probably wouldn't occur to you to donate it all to the Philippines.

20th Century Fox contacted Neistat to ask him to make a video promoting The Secret Life of Walter Mitty. Neistat proposed that the studio instead let him use the budget to help recent victims of the typhoon in the Philippines, and somewhat surprisingly, Fox agreed. 

Known for occasionally being a well-intentioned troublemaker—like when he protested a cycling ticket by comically riding into the many obstacles that were blocking New York City's bike lanes, or when he used Nike Fuel ad dollars to travel the world with a friend—Neistat has now created one of his most intriguing and simple films yet. 

Exactly as promised, Neistat flies to the Philippines, buys two buses full of supplies and hands out more than 10,000 meals, a bunch of tools and some medicine to 35 villages. What's amazing is that while relief organizations have said they're having trouble mobilizing, finding transport and getting supplies to those who need them in the Philippines, Neistat just waltzes in and, with one tweet, gets the connection he needs to deliver food to those in need. The longish film has over 600,000 views in just a few days. So, unlike Walter Mitty, how would you live your dreams?


    

Amazing Pantene Ad Defiantly Tackles How Women in the Workplace Are Labeled

Pantene Philippines has launched a powerful campaign pointing out how identical behavior often earns men and women different labels in the workplace.

In this spot by BBDO Guerrero in Manila, a lovely cover of "Mad World" by Tears for Fears plays while each scene displays a double-standard in a working environment. A man is the "boss" while a woman is "bossy." A man is "persuasive" while a woman is "pushy." He's "neat" but she's "vain." He's "smooth" but she's a "show-off." "Don't let labels hold you back. Be strong and shine," says the copy at the end.

There's nary a shampoo bottle in sight, although glossy hair certainly features here. But the video delivers, and the #whipit campaign has inspired discussion on both the YouTube video and Facebook.

• "Too bad they couldn't find a male equivalent of 'bitch.' This is the one I hear the most about strong women in the workplace."
• "Sell product by convincing your target market that you are more invested in contributing to emotionally charged, globally relevant women's image issues than you are in advertising your product."

While it is disappointing that they used only light-skinned models—a long-standing trend in the Philippines—it's a potent spot with an important message criticizing gender stereotypes. Oh, and Sheryl Sandberg is a fan.


    

Waterfall Restaurant

Situé aux Philippines, ce restaurant étonnant propose de se restaurer au bord et au pied d’une cascade. Un rendu splendide pour un dépaysement total avec ce Labassin Waterfall Restaurant. L’ensemble est à découvrir en images dans la suite de l’article.



waterfall-restaurant-5

waterfall-restaurant-4

waterfall-restaurant-2

waterfall-restaurant-1

waterf1








Previously on Fubiz

Copyright Fubiz™ – Suivez nous sur Twitter et Facebook

Venus: Escalator

Venus: Escalator

Advertising Agency: BBDO Guerrero Ortega, Philippines
Executive Creative Directors: David Guerrero, David Lubars
Creative Directors: Joni Caparas, Joel Limchoc, Simon Welsh
Copywriters: Gunter Liermann, Maui Reyes
Art Directors: Joni Caparas, Ming-mei Hung
Photographer: Jonathan Tay
Advertiser’s Supervisors: Jennifer Dauer, Brenda Bynarowicz, Kimberly Doebereiner

Advertising in Third World Countries

Online Advertising Philippines

Apparently, the power of online advertising has been so far restricted and acknowledged only by the people who are in the United States and the United Kingdom. While online advertising and Internet marketing is rampant in the world today, it is really out of curiosity that countries such as the Philippines has not adopted such a tactic.

I call this funny for the fact that most of the Internet marketers in the world today come from the Philippines and India. While they are serving countries abroad through telecommute jobs, it makes you wonder why their point of origin does not know what it is missing.

“There is still a huge potential in the Philippines when using the Internet for marketing and advertising campaigns. All that is needed is that they are informed with the methods and tools that can be used by local advertisers and marketers,”

(Source) Philippine Daily Inquirer

Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,

Music One: Maroon 5

Music One: Maroon 5

Advertising Agency: DM9 JaymeSyfu Manila, The Philippines
Creative Directors: Louie Sotto, Merlee Jayme, Eugene Demata
Creatives: Allan Montayre, Louie Sotto
Photographer: Paolo Gripo
Account Directors: Merlee Jayme, Marj Aznar

Music One: Buble

Music One: Buble

Advertising Agency: DM9 JaymeSyfu Manila, The Philippines
Creative Directors: Louie Sotto, Merlee Jayme, Eugene Demata
Creatives: Allan Montayre, Louie Sotto
Photographer: Paolo Gripo
Account Directors: Merlee Jayme, Marj Aznar

Music One: Britney

Music One: Britney

Advertising Agency: DM9 JaymeSyfu Manila, The Philippines
Creative Directors: Louie Sotto, Merlee Jayme, Eugene Demata
Creatives: Allan Montayre, Louie Sotto
Photographer: Paolo Gripo
Account Directors: Merlee Jayme, Marj Aznar