Gitar Hero-Like Game Offers Chance to Win V Festival Tickets
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It’s like Guitar Hero on your computer!
It’s like Guitar Hero on your computer!
(TrendHunter.com) These baby car logos and emblems are too darn cute! The Minichamps campaign features the opulent Italian brands Jaguar, Lamborghini, Ferrari and Maserati in their imagined infant stages.
The adorable ads were created by Dentsu Brazil for Minichamps, a company that makes miniature Italian luxury car…
YORK, Pa. (AdAge.com) — There's no denying Funny or Die is funny. Yet, as amusing as it is to watch Hollywood comedy scenesters (and their children) goof around, what else is the website, one year after its much-hyped debut? A Web 2.0 comedy breeding ground? A star maker for undiscovered comedians? A branded franchise? The future of online network media? An advertising vehicle? In a word, yes.
(TrendHunter.com) Believe it or not, this is a dog house that, in all likelihood, was patterned after the dog owner’s own house design.
Doggie Dream Homes will build a smaller version of a real home for dogs that may include furniture, curtains, air conditioning, satellite TV, internet and even a phone line.
“It …
Oh the Oreo. That delightful bite of heavenly joy. Unfortunately, in countries other than the US, consumers disagreed. After being on the market for 12 years in China, Kraft finally learned that the lackluster sales of Oreo cookies were due to excessive sweetness. Their solution? Revamp the morsel into something less… sugary. Enter the Oreo WaferSticks. Layers of chocolate wafers, chocolate cream and vanilla cream all coated in milk chocolate. Now, to me, they still look sweet, but with the help of some guerilla marketing from college students the Oreo WaferSticks has taken off and become a top selling treat in China. So here’s the important question. When will this delicious looking treat be available in the US? Cause frankly, it looks fantastic.   (Source WSJ)
Technorati Tags: Oreo, Kraft, China, wafer, cookie, chocolate, international
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Last week, Microsoft reported a 24% decline in Windows sales in the third quarter.
According to USA Today, Vista, Microsoft’s new operating system, is getting hammered in the press and corporate buyers are refusing to upgrade from XP. Hence, the poor numbers.
Microsoft rebuilt Windows from scratch to create Vista, which has a dazzling interface and improved security tools. But so much computing power is required to run it that many people find their new PCs run slower than older, less powerful XP machines. To spur sales, Microsoft earlier this month said consumers will no longer be able to purchase XP as of June 30. The announcement and pending date have unleashed a firestorm of Vista angst.
Online magazine InfoWorld is waging a Save XP campaign. More than 175,000 signatures have been gathered. “Why pull the plug on XP when there’s clearly a lot of people who still like it?” says Galen Gruman, InfoWorld executive editor.
Influential analyst Michael Silver at research firm Gartner calls the Vista launch a “disaster.” Other critics have been no kinder. CNet called Vista one of the “biggest blunders in technology.” PC magazine chronicles Vista’s “11 Pillars of Failure.” The Christian Science Monitor likened it to Coca-Cola’s disastrous New Coke experiment in the 1980s.
There’s an old saying in Adlandia. “You can’t polish a turd.” But, as Apple proves below, you sure as hell can ridicule the competition’s turd.
(TrendHunter.com) The knitted delectables series by artist Ed Bing Lee is the perfect gift to torture that dieting friend of yours.
The knitted food items include a burger, hotdog, cupcake with sprinkles, pumpkin pie, key lime pie, ice cream cone, chocolate cupcake, and other delectables.
Check out the complete col…
The government has today been ordered to disclose records of lobbying efforts by a business interest group in a precedent-setting case.
(TrendHunter.com) Ahhh… I want to track down a Spa-Jet this instant.
The high-tech ‘pod’ is programmed to deliver 12 distinct luxury spa treatments, including steam sauna, Hydrofusion, tropical rain mist, aromatherapy, and a vibratory massage bed.
According to the manufacturer of this innovative water-massa…
(TrendHunter.com) If you’ve got wicked graffiti skills, you know the real fun comes from showing off your art. Since scrawling on public buildings is generally considered vandalism, it makes it difficult to select an appropriate canvas. That’s where the Cans Film Festival comes in.
Instead of prohibiting street art…
Here’s is an absolutely perfect (and hilarious) representation of what real life would be like if everyone acted the way they do when they use Facebook.
What’s Arnold’s Chief Creative Officer, Pete Favat, up to? Last year the agency hired cognitive scientist Dr. Lisa Haverty to run an intuition analytics department. Now, the agency has announced a research and development lab tasked with creating new media channels.
“I think…I’m creating jobs I want to live vicariously though,” Favat told Creativity.
“I wanted to put a couple of people in place who are not concerned with or thinking about the day-to-day brand messages, with what we have to do for Jack Daniels, truth, or Tag, but are coming up with software, coming up with different technologies, whatever we can to dispense new ideas out in the world,” Favat says. “I told them ‘The day you guys think about certain brands is the day you lose your job.’ Their mantra is to just play; I don’t want them to ever worry about being attached to a client.”
Ryan Habbyshaw, 25, an agency art director/designer, and Todd Vanderlin, 23, who studied at Parsons School of Design are the two explorers. They report to creative director Meg Siegal.
LONDON – UK digital marketing agency, The Search Works, has appointed a new European management team to coordinate its expansion across Europe.
LONDON – Comedian Paul Whitehouse lends his voice to the talents of Aardman, the award-winning animators behind Wallace and Gromit, for a new campaign for weed killer brand Resolva 24H.
LOS ANGELES (AdAge.com) — The video is a little unsteady and clearly camcordered, not filmed. We can make out that it's in a Las Vegas wedding chapel, and the familiar-looking bride and groom appear to be drunk. No, it's not another Britney misadventure — just a viral campaign to goose the tracking numbers on Twentieth Century Fox's upcoming comedy "What Happens in Vegas."
LONDON – IPC is to boost its portfolio of marine titles with the launch of SuperYacht World, a bimonthly consumer magazine featuring the world’s premier yachts.
Apparently with the rise in prices, worries about recession, and the real estate debacle, the advertising agency is doing just fine.
More from an article in Wired
Omnicom, the largest marketing-services holding company by annual revenue, just announced organic growth in the U.S. at 6.7 percent in 2007, just 1 percent lower than in 2006. Randall Weisenburger, Omnicom Group’s executive vice president and C.F.O., characterized Omnicom’s outlook for the year as “cautiously optimistic,” in his February conference call announcing annual results to analysts. “We’ve been to this movie, and we’ll weather it very well, I think,” he said.
Last Friday, WPP Group, Omnicom’s closest competitor, announced 5.1 percent like-for-like revenue growth for North America, as opposed to 3.9 percent in 2007. “North America remained relatively strong and better than last year, and global revenues were in line with budget,” materials for its first-quarter trading update stated.
Of course, business, good or bad may not matter for Creatives, as their job security goes hand in hand with their last campaign :).
Technorati Tags: Wired, Omnicom, WPP Group, advertising, recession, finance
LONDON – Channel 4 is launching an interactive food website for users to pick their favourite local restaurants and food stores.
NEW YORK (AdAge.com) — 2008 will go down in the Larrypedia as the year in which I got old. A few stray silver streaks now dot my mane. Loud restaurants agitate me. I can't handle hangovers without the aid of Pedialyte or elephant tranquilizers. And still, with one flip around my cable dial last week, I realized I ain't dead yet. Thank you, network news broadcasts, for reminding me that my tastes remain decidedly mod, at least when it comes to information acquisition.