Audi RS6: Performance in a microsite

BBH and GT have released the newest bit to the Audi RS6 Campaign I wrote about a few weeks back (with the gymnasts), this time in the form of an impressive microsite. In addition to showcasing the gymnastics ad, complete with a decent making-of video and downloadable wallpapers, it showcases the RS6 (as a good auto site should) in all it’s glory, and with a great interface. The audio, video, and navigation come together to create a pretty impressive microsite. Definitely worth a browse, even if you’re not a big automotive fan.

$12 Mil. And Six Years of Legal Fees Later…

I’m a creative. Accounting might as well be rocket science, because that’s about how familiar I am with it. Despite this personal inadequacy, I bring you this from Ad Age, a story on accounting practices gone wrong at McCann.

Interpublic Group of Cos. and its global agency network McCann Erickson Worldwide today said it will pay $12 million to end a longtime accounting probe by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

Resolution of the charges, while anticipated, brings to a close a long-running federal investigation into the company’s accounting practices that began in the fall of 2002 and prompted turmoil including a slew of financial restatements to fix its improper bookkeeping and a revolving door of senior leadership.

“We are very pleased to have settled with the SEC and we believe this matter is now behind us,” said Interpublic Chairman-CEO Michael I. Roth.

Okay, now back to our regularly scheduled programming…

Real Toys Become Virtual – Lego Universe MMOG (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) It seems kids today are no longer satisfied with any kind of toy if it doesn’t have an online component, and that includes Lego.

Did you know kids spend 5 billion hours playing with Lego each year? That number could double, triple or even increase 10 fold with the launch of a new massive multiplay…

Ask your doctor today about ass effects

Aciphex
There’s nothing particularly funny about this commercial for the acid reflux drug Aciphex. Unless someone tells you they’re saying “ass effects,” and then you’ll never watch it the same way again. Via @parrotheader on Twitter.

—Posted by David Griner

Using Company Shares to Settle Advertising Fees

Using Company Shares to Settle Advertising Fees

We all know for a fact that paying immediately for all ads that we have produced would need payment in the worst way. All companies including the advertising agencies need to financially resolve their current standing and while some of them may not be as liquid as many would hope large companies would be, the alternative mode of payment today has been in the form of offering company shares.

If you think about it, what will you do with shares in these times where it seems that everyone is in need of cash? Further, it may be risky to take shares in lieu of cash for advertising services and if concerned parties tasked in business and advertising projects are concerned are not careful, they may end up in the losing end.

ONE of India’s leading newspapers launched an unusual advertising drive last month. “Money cannot buy our integrity” read a front-page slogan in Daily News & Analysis (DNA), a Mumbai daily. “Make the headlines tomorrow.

By paying for it,” it added, in reference to some other papers’ supposed tendency to give favourable coverage to firms that place advertisements. That charge is hard to prove.

But an increasingly popular practice is exposing Indian newspapers to growing conflicts of interest: accepting payments for ads in the form of shares in the advertiser’s firm.

(Source) Economist.com

Round-the-World Green Flights – Solar-Cell Hy-Bird

The Hy-Bird, a hydrogen-powered electric airplane that gets 10% of its power through solar-cells, is made of super-lightweight (and expensive) carbon fibre. The French company behind it, Lisa Airplanes, states that the power system will allow the plane to circumnavigate the globe in 3,000 km stages.…

Robotic Fashion Campaigns – Levi’s Metal Denim Passion

Robotified fashion campaigns continue to emerge as the obsession with futurism and luxury space travel continues. Now Levi’s has jumped on board with this ad campaign.

The Levi’s Copper Jeans ads are running on a new website called Metal Denim Passion. The Asia Pacific campaign features models who…

Tub of Cool Whip too Challenging? Try the Can


CHICAGO (AdAge.com) — Kraft Foods, which has made a business out of making meals easy, has heard from consumers that its products still weren't easy enough. And so Kraft is preparing to unveil to grocers some 80 new products at the Food Marketing Institute show in Las Vegas next week designed to appeal to even the laziest Americans.

Media Democracy on the March

The Federal Communications Commission is about to give Big Media a big gift. Media activists are trying to take it back.

Ratings Continue to Slide for Top 10, Including ‘Idol’


MINNEAPOLIS (AdAge.com) — Not surprisingly, Paula Abdul's critique of a contestant's two songs when only one had been sung on Fox's "American Idol" was the network TV story of the week. But "Idol" also played into the network TV story of the year: the audience attrition for so many programs, particularly compared to pre-writers strike averages.

Iron Man torches Batman’s viral marketing

There’s some truly inspired repartee in this newest installment of the “I’m a Marvel, I’m a DC” parody series. This time, Iron Man and Batman exchange barbs over their big-budget movie adaptations, which are likely to serve as bookends for the summer blockbuster season. Personally, I’m just glad to hear someone—even if it is a sarcastic action figure—point out the labor-intensive, minimally rewarding nature of the viral marketing for The Dark Knight. “What they really want,” Iron Man says of young movie fans, “is to go on a three-hour scavenger hunt for a secret code that lets them wait six hours online to see the left shoe of an actor in a photo op taken by an on-set grip.”

—Posted by David Griner

Disney has more than Miley to worry about

Disney Miley Cyrus has learned how hard it is to maintain a public image built on chastity, but Disney’s share of the outrage over her “racy” Vanity Fair photos is complicated, given this Disney ad from Beijing, which Slate investigated earlier this week. Actually, the billboard, while unsettling, isn’t sexualized nearly as much as Miley’s photos (which aren’t that bad either), and China’s laws in this area greatly differ from ours anyway. (Plus, the ad was done by a Disney licensee, not Disney itself—though Disney did order it removed when made aware of it.) What Disney really needs to worry about is what happens to Miley’s wholesomeness once her albums stop selling.

—Posted by David Kiefaber

Round-the-World Green Flights – Solar-Cell Hy-Bird (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) The Hy-Bird, a hydrogen-powered electric airplane that gets 10% of its power through solar-cells, is made of super-lightweight (and expensive) carbon fibre. The French company behind it, Lisa Airplanes, states that the power system will allow the plane to circumnavigate the globe in 3,000 km stages.…

But what I really want to do is direct.

You know the old saying, the grass is always greener on the other other side of the fence?
Well, when you don’t work in advertising, the other side is an ad agency. And when you do work in advertising, the other side is Hollywood. Now all you frustrated copywriters can get a chance to create your own FOX sit-com!

The New York Television Festival (NYTVF) has partnered with FOX to create a Comedy Script Contest.

read more

Robotic Fashion Campaigns – Levi’s Metal Denim Passion (VIDEO)

(TrendHunter.com) Robotified fashion campaigns continue to emerge as the obsession with futurism and luxury space travel continues. Now Levi’s has jumped on board with this ad campaign.

The Levi’s Copper Jeans ads are running on a new website called Metal Denim Passion. The Asia Pacific campaign features models who…

The Challenge of Keeping Up With the Digital Zeitgeist


NEW YORK (AdAge.com) — As her company readied for its upfront presentation, MTV Network's CEO Judy McGrath spoke with Ad Age as her company was readying its advertiser presentation about her efforts to stay on top of its youthful demo, how MTV has built scale without acquiring MySpace or Facebook, and why branded entertainment is no match for commercial ratings at the end of the day.

One Show Draws Nearer, Adrants Prepares for Liftoff

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Monday the 5th kicks off the One Show madness in NYC all next week. This may be your golden opportunity to stand in dark corners with me (!!!), get trashed, and make fun of those less fortunate.

Ultra High-Def Banner Ads – Dr. Pepper Drool

After their tremendous success with the Cherry Chocolate Rain campaign, Dr. Pepper is trying their hand at viral once again, this time opting to use a series of “ultra” high-definition banner ads on AOL. The campaign, being launched under the title, “Drool,” is supposed to do just that: get you sali…

California Is Another World

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Rolling Stone has an in-depth interview with Dr. Larry Brilliant, the man running Google DotOrg, the philanthropic arm of the search giant.

DotOrg is not just another corporate philanthropy — it’s a bold experiment in philanthropy itself. Its uniqueness begins with its structure. Unlike most foundations, DotOrg has no endowment in the traditional sense and no external board. It was funded with an initial grant of 3 million shares of Google stock, currently valued at $1.3 billion, and a promise of one percent of the company’s profits each year. Its goal is not simply to give away traditional grants like the nonprofits of yore but also to allow Google to invest money in projects that have the potential to do good and turn a profit at the same time. “We have a tremendous amount of flexibility,” Brilliant says. “We can give away grants like a traditional foundation, or we can invest in new companies or even start companies of our own.”

Brilliant calls this approach a “hybrid philanthropy.” In the Old World, the essential dynamic of corporate giving was extract, exploit, get rich, then pass out nickels to charity to atone for past sins. In the New World, Google wants to sink those nickels into clean-energy ventures and promising entrepreneurs in the developing world. “Yes, there may be profit from that,” Brilliant acknowledged recently. “But the real reason for doing it isn’t to make a profit. It’s because business is a better engine for creating jobs than aid.”

Brilliant offered his medical services to the Native Americans who occupied Alcatraz in 1969, he helped eradicate smallpox in India, co-founded Seva and The Well and was friends with Jerry Garcia.

Carne Asada is NOT a Crime

oppose the ban. eat more tacos.

http://saveourtacotrucks.org/