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Ad of the Day: FNSF

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The tragedy of domestic violence has always inspired some of the more harrowingly beautiful PSAs.

The most famous example is Y&R Chicago's 2010 spot "It Rarely Stops" for the National Domestic Violence Hotline, featuring the battered woman who tries in vain to conceal an ever-growing set of cuts and bruises that keep mysteriously appearing on her face and neck. Now, from France, we get another striking piece of film aimed at helping women who are in abusive relationships.

Created by Paris agency W&Cie for the Fédération Nationale Solidarité Femmes (FNSF), the new spot, titled "Breath," shows menacing men, filmed against stark black backdrops, trying to attack the viewer. One after another, they are forced back by a gale-force wind. At the end, we see the full shape of the metaphor, as a woman blows out a candle and the text appears: "20 years of fighting domestic violence." Over two decades, the PSA suggests, the FNSF has snuffed out the flame of violence in thousands of relationships, blowing back the abusers through the country's domestic violence hotline, 3919.

The visuals, perhaps a little over the top in parts, are arresting nonetheless. The spot's own violence, bloodless yet overwhelming, renders the abusers impotent and represents a triumph of defense, offering a strong counterpoint to the bloody violence it opposes.

In the past 20 years, the agency says, there have been some 350,000 calls made to 3919. The spot simply and memorably raises further awareness of the number for anyone who doesn't know about it.



CREDITS
Advertiser: FNSF (Fédération Nationale Solidarité Femmes)
Agency: W&Cie, Paris
Creative Director: Ivan Pierens
Art Director: Arnaud Wacker
Copywriter: Renan Cottrel
Account Manager: Grégoire Weil
Advertiser Manager: Françoise Brié
Production Company: Wanda Productions
Director: Wilfrid Brimo
DOP: Nicolas Loir
Sound: THE, Paris


The Spot: Angels of Death

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IDEA: Safety PSAs are gloomy and tedious and largely ignored by young people hardwired to resist them—except when they're irresistibly fun and impossible not to share with friends. McCann Australia managed just such an evolution of the genre with "Dumb Ways to Die," its animated train-safety spot for the Melbourne Metro. The three-minute music video shows adorable blobs making the stupidest decisions ever—messing with animals, sticking forks in toasters, eating superglue, etc.—leading to all sorts of gruesome, fatal accidents. The dumbest way to die, the ad suggests at the end, is by being careless around trains. "The idea for a song started from a very simple premise: What if we disguised a worthy safety message inside something that didn't feel at all like a safety message?" said McCann executive creative director John Mescall. "So we thought about what the complete opposite of a serious safety message would be and came to the conclusion it was an insanely happy and cute song." With more than 30 million YouTube views, it seems happy, cute and grisly was the way to go.

COPYWRITING/SOUND: The song begins, "Set fire to your hair/Poke a stick at a grizzly bear/Eat medicine that's out of date/Use your private parts as piranha bait," before the chorus repeats the two lines, "Dumb ways to die/So many dumb ways to die." Mescall wrote most of the lyrics in one night at the agency. "It then took a few weeks of finessing," he said, "getting rid of a few lines that weren't funny enough and replacing them with new ones." The line "Sell both your kidneys on the Internet" was a late inclusion. "I'm glad it's there. It's my favorite," he said.



Australian musician Ollie McGill from the band The Cat Empire wrote the music. "We basically gave him the lyrics and told him to set it to the catchiest nonadvertising type music he could," said Mescall. McGill delivered something almost unbearably catchy. "The melody is easy to remember and sing along to, the lyrics are fun, bite-sized chunks of naughtiness, and the vocals have just the right amount of knowing innocence," Mescall said. "It's a song that you want to hate for living in your head, but you can't bring yourself to hate it because it's also so bloody likable." The singer is Emily Lubitz of another Australian band, Tinpan Orange. (The song is credited to Tangerine Kitty, which is a mashup of the two band names.) "Emily brought a great combination of innocence, playfulness and vocal integrity," Mescall said. "She brings a level of vocal quality you don't normally get on a video about cartoon death."

ART DIRECTION: Australian designer Julian Frost did the animation. "We gave him the most open brief we could: Just make it really funny and really awesome and do it to please yourself," said Mescall. The visual reference points ranged from Edward Gorey's The Gashlycrumb Tinies to Monty Python's "Always Look on the Bright Side of Life" (which showed men singing while being crucified) to "any number of hokey indie music-video flash mobs you see on YouTube," said Mescall.



"Julian was keen to contrast the extreme situations described in the lyrics with the simplest animation possible. Otherwise it would become just too much." After the spot blew up online, Frost wrote on his website: "Well, the Internet likes dead things waaay more than I expected. Hooray, my childish sense of humor pays off at last."

MEDIA: The spot lives online, in short bursts on music TV, and may reach cinemas. The campaign is also running in radio, print and outdoor. The song is on iTunes, where it reached the top 10. The agency is also producing a book as well as a smartphone game that should be ready by Christmas.

THE SPOT:


CREDITS:
Client: Metro Trains Melbourne
General Manager, Corporate Relations: Leah Waymark
Marketing Manager: Chloe Alsop
Agency: McCann, Melbourne, Australia
Executive Creative Director: John Mescall
Creative Team: John Mescall, Pat Baron
Animation: Julian Frost
Digital Team: Huey Groves, Christian Stocker
Group Account Director: Adrian Mills
Account Director: Alec Hussain
Senior Account Manager: Tamara Broman
Senior Producer: Mark Bradley
Producer: Cinnamon Darvall
Composer and producer: Oliver McGill

Looks Could Kill in Christmas Ad for Harvey Nichols

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A holiday party becomes a Star Wars-like showdown for two women who show up in the same red dress in this amusing new Christmas spot from Adam & Eve DDB for British fashion retailer Harvey Nichols. Both women start shooting deadly looks at each other—literally deadly, as red lasers shoot from their eyeballs and destroy much of the apartment, while the rest of the guests party on, mostly oblivious to the commotion. A little dog gets in on the action, too. "Avoid a same dress disaster this season," says the on-screen copy at the end. This is accomplished by getting a dress from Harvey Nichols. Perhaps each dress is one of a kind. Whatever the case, you know it will still look good on that walk of shame the day after the party. Via Copyranter.

Ad of the Day: Canal+

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Oh, I get it—soccer players.

Canal+ (that's pronounced cannle-plue, francophiles!) is the European HBO, and obviously people are excited about it—and about the big soccer matches it broadcasts—if this BETC spot is anything to go by. Even if you don't get the non-American-football joke straight away, the visuals here are excellent. And really, the potbellied man with the front of his T-shirt pulled up over his face is the international sign for sports fan.

Here, three pals do the "Gooooooal!" knee-slide through a French town, and river, and dock, and wheat field, presumably because their favorite Ligue 1 team has just scored. Where there seems to be CG in this spot (if you can figure out how they got the fans through the hedge using casters or drag mats, feel free to explain it to me in the comments), it is used well—these gentlemen appear to be going faster via knee than most of us can go on the subway here in New York City. (This agency-client team knows a thing or two about effects, too, having won the Grand Prix in Film Craft at Cannes this year for their triumphant spot "The Bear.")

Other nice touches here: the costume on the biker on the little farm-country road; the trip down the stairs (again, if that was a practical effect, I'd love to know how it was done); the "Ode to Joy" going underwater and becoming briefly muffled; and, of course, the postman, who has that reaction everyone has when they recognize that people who like their team are cheering.

All of this raises some serious and important questions about knee-based inter-département travel. Do you have to have a knee license to cross regional boundaries? Can you go at any time, or must you have recently seen a rerun of Zinedine Zidane headbutting Marco Materazzi? Are all knees all-terrain, or just those of soccer fans?

And will someone be waiting for you at the end of your journey with a spray can of Bactine and a Band-Aid? Because, as everyone who has been 6 remembers, doing that to your knees hurts like hell.



CREDITS
Client: CANAL +
Client Management: Samantha Etienne, Béatrice Roux, Mathieu Mazuel, Guillaume Sionis
Agency: BETC Paris
Agency Management: Alexandre George, Guillaume Espinet, Barbara Hartmann
Chief Creative Officer: Stephane Xiberras
Creative Director: Olivier Apers
Art Director: Ludovic Labayrade
Copywriter: Antoine Lenoble
TV Producer: Isabelle Ménard
Production Company: Henry de Czar
Film Director: Bart Timmer
Director of Photography: Alex Lamarque
Media Strategy Planner: Vianney Vaute

Portrait: Thinkmodo

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Specs
Who
Co-founders Michael Krivicka (l.) and James Percelay
What Viral video marketing agency
Where Outside New York offices

Each time a mysterious new viral gimmick breaks on YouTube, among the first questions that comes to a reporter’s mind is, “Is this another Thinkmodo marketing stunt?” Michael Krivicka, a video editor, and James Percelay, a former line producer for Saturday Night Live, quickly made a name for their year-and-a-half-old venture by creating eye-catching, buzz-worthy guerilla footage for brands. Its recent video for Popcorn Indiana about a machine that shoots popcorn straight into your mouth has racked up some 1.9 million YouTube views since launching in mid-September. Still, Krivicka said, “You’ll never see us use a cute baby or a cat.” 

Diesel Relaunches 1993 Shoe With 'Pre-Internet' Campaign

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The pre-Internet world—just before the boom, circa 1993—hella sucked. I am, of course, too young to remember that dark and disturbing era, since I'm only 9 years old. But if I could recall those grim analog times, I'd see a land of screenless phones connected to cords, like babies dangling from umbilicals, voices on the other end screaming in anguish for streams of digital data to set them free. From that overblown metaphor we smoothly segue into a discussion of Diesel's "Pre-Internet Experience" campaign via ad agency SMFB. The work promotes the relaunch of the low-tech YUK shoe, originally introduced in '93 and being brought back "just like they were," by challenging people to give up Facebook for three days or Facebook, Twitter and Instagram for two. (The contest ignores Pinterest entirely, like all sane people should.) The brand is using Facebook and a website to drive the contest, an irony that's either delicious or nonexistent, take your pick. (Diesel could hardly count on skywriting and faxes alone.) Twenty winners will receive YUKs. Promo clips offer hotel-room karate and urban parkour scenarios and play up the fact that these backward-ass, bone-age shoes don't support tracking, timing or wall posting. They just protect your feet. Who the hell wants that?

Ad of the Day: Expedia

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Expedia's journey through darkness into light continues.

The travel site isn't shying away from big, difficult topics in its "Find yours" campaign from 180 LA. Back in October, it unleashed a powerful long-form spot endorsing gay marriage through the story of a father who tells of the long journey he took to understand his lesbian daughter—but not before he almost disowned her. Now, the brand has released an even more gut-wrenching spot—the three-minute film below starring Maggie Cupit, a cancer survivor who offers an almost unbearably poignant reminiscence of a young friend named Odie.

Odie was 13 when they met. They were both patients at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital. Maggie fought back her cancer and became healthy; Odie died from his. In the spot, Maggie is seen traveling to Dallas for a St. Jude's fundraiser, where she tells Odie's story—remembering their incredible bond, and in particular his almost superhuman fearlessness in the face of a viciously untimely death. Like the earlier spot, this one is about more than one kind of trip. It relates a physical journey and an emotionally transformative one at the same time—which is Expedia's larger point about all kinds of travel. "Find your understanding" was the tagline on the earlier spot. This one ends with "Find your strength."

It's a commercial that frankly bowls you over. It will have its enemies who will say it's exploitative. But in fact it feels like the opposite. It's a story that deserves to be heard by as many people as possible—it was created in collaboration with St. Jude's and thus is also a de facto PSA—and if Expedia wants to tell it, and tie a brand positioning to it, that's not the worst thing in the world. And even if it is opportunistic, it nevertheless has a tangible charitable aspect. Over at the Expedia website, the company is matching donations to St. Jude's up to $250,000.

In the wilds of uncertainty, pain and loss, these Expedia ads suddenly discover redemption. That's a significant accomplishment—and not out of character at all for a company that helps you see everything the world has to offer.



CREDITS
Client: Expedia
Client: St. Jude Children's Hospital
Agency: 180 LA
Executive Creative Director: William Gelner
Creative Director: Gavin Milner
Copywriter: Mike Burdick
Art Director: Mike Bokman
Head of Production, Managing Partner: Peter Cline
Producer: David Emery
Production Company: Boxer Films
Director: David Adam Roth
Director of Photography: Lawson Deming
Executive Producer: Beth George
Producer: Emile Hanton
Editorial Company: Rock Paper Scissors
Editor: Gabriel Britz
Producer: Alexandra Zickerick
Executive Producer: C.L. Weaver
Assistant Editor: Ko Massiah
Colorist: Bob Festa
Transfer Facility: New Hat
Recording Studio: Eleven Sound
Mixer: Scott Burns
Assistant Mixer: A.J. Murillo
Executive Producer: D.J. Fox
Composer: Adam Taylor
Brand Marketing Director: Vic Walia

Ad of the Day: ESPN

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Listen up, wankers. Two British soccer fans would like a word.

While their French counterparts are spending their time moronically knee-skidding through wheat fields, the fans of Manchester United and Manchester City have more serious business to attend to—namely, denigrating each other in the most colorful language they can find. In this ESPN spot from Wieden + Kennedy in New York, it is certainly colorful—so much so, particularly to the American ear, that it requires a whole second spot to give helpful definitions for most of the insults.

The conceit for the spot is to ask each fan to imagine rooting for the other side. But they simply can't do it. To the United fan, supporting City means you've been doomed since birth to be a moppet, a billy-no-mates, a plonker. To the City fan, supporting United means you're likewise preordained to be a divvy, a minger, a right git. None of these are compliments. Had they been born on the other side of the rivalry, both lads confirm, they'd have no self-respect, no value, no girlfriend (sorry, no "fit bird") and no future.

It's a timely spot—the latest Manchester derby will be played on Saturday—and it fits nicely into the ongoing "It's not crazy, it's sports" theme. We'll ignore the inconvenient fact that British fans often are crazy, renowned for having criminals and bigots in their midst, and focus instead on the more lighthearted core truth here—that ridiculing the opposition's fans is a fundamental, and usually harmlessly amusing, part of sports.

Got that, you tosser?





CREDITS
Client: ESPN
Spot "Born Into It"

Agency: Wieden + Kennedy, New York
Executive Creative Directors: Scott Vitrone, Ian Reichenthal
Creative Directors: Brandon Henderson, Stuart Jennings
Copywriter: Dave Canning
Art Director: Cyrus Coulter
Head of Content Production: Lora Schulson
Executive Producer: Temma Shoaf
Brand Strategists: Jason Gingold, Marshall Ball (Digital Strategist)
Account Team: Casey Bernard, Katie Hoak, Alex Scaros
Business Affairs: Sara Jagielski, Kara Driscoll

Production Company: Imperial Woodpecker
Director: Stacy Wall
Executive Producer, Chief Operating Officer: Doug Halbert
Line Producer: Sam Levine 
Director of Photography: Danny Cohen

Editorial Company: Mackenzie Cutler
Editor: Ian Mackenzie
Post Executive Producer: Sasha Hirschfeld

Visual Effects Company: Mass Market
Visual Effects Flame Artists: Fabien Coupez, Drew Downes
Executive Producer: Louisa Cartwright
Producer: Giselle Bailey

Telecine Company: Company 3
Colorist: Tom Poole

Mix Company: Heard City
Mixer: Philip Loeb
Sound Designers: Sam Shaffer, Mackenzie Cutler
Producer: Gloria Pitagorsky

Song: "Beginning of the End"
Artist: Cockney Rejects


Newcastle's 'Subtexter' Puts Honest Captions on Your Crappy Photos

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On the heels of College Humor's viral Instagram parody set to Nickleback, Newcastle Brown Ale is offering an app called The Subtexter—part of its ongoing "No bollocks" campaign from Droga5—that lets you expose the more honest subtext behind your shoddily lit, clichéd photos of everyday crap. All those humblebrag shots of you on vacation? Or the billion and one photos you took of your cat in the hope that one of them will catapult your feline (and by proxy, you) to meme stardom? You can now turn that subtext into actual text directly on the picture. Created by Droga, The Subtexter lets you choose a clichéd category, select a stock photo and cover it, meme style, with impact type and a number of witty captions like "Look, I'm relaxing and bragging" for vacation pics and "I'm at brunch, I hope you wish you were here" for the many budding food photographers. Of course, the idea is to Subtext your own pictures, not the stock ones, which takes a certain amount of irony awareness. But who cares? It's good, branded fun!

Goodby Expats in Startup Club

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Two numbers spurred Jamie Barrett, a former partner and executive creative director at Goodby, Silverstein & Partners, to open his own agency in San Francisco: 10 and 50.

“[Last year] I hit my 10-year mark [at Goodby], and I turned 50 years old,” said Barrett, a veteran creative leader known for his work on Nike, Comcast and the NBA. “Those two things made me go, ‘I’ve got another big chapter in me, and what’s that going to be?’”

This month, Barrett, who’s now 51, and another Goodby expat, Patrick Kelly, 35, launch barrettSF with two accounts (Pac-12 Networks and California Redwood Association), a handful of projects and the deceptively simple goal of creating great ads and having fun. Barrett, who in his 27-year career also worked at Fallon and Wieden + Kennedy, is creative director, and Kelly, who was director of brand publicity at Goodby, is managing director.

With barrettSF, Barrett joins a string of accomplished creative leaders who have left established shops in the past two years to strike out on their own, including Ty Montague, Gerry Graf and Alex Bogusky. Each was in his 40s or early 50s and drew on decades of experience to start anew.

“It’s a challenge for agencies, but a great time for clients because small, new startup agencies have a tremendous amount of top-level talent that is underutilized,” said Ken Robinson of Ark Advisors. “It’s a terrific opportunity to get people who are going to work even harder to prove themselves and give you tremendous access and great insight.”

Barrett said his move didn’t stem from any disaffection with his previous agency. Rather, he sought a new challenge in a market that he knows well. Also, he had considered starting a shop as far back as 1998, when he left Wieden’s Portland, Ore., office to become the creative chief at the New York office of Fallon.

“I’m really looking to assemble a group of people where collectively we’re able to do anything and everything well,” said Barrett. “That’s the nature of advertising now. You have to look at it holistically. You can’t be good at one thing but blind in another area.”

Classically, barrettSF’s initial accounts came via past relationships. A friend introduced Barrett to executives at the Redwood Association, which seeks to promote the virtues of using redwood for, say, building a deck. The group hasn’t advertised before. Likewise, Pac-12, which launched in August, is just getting into marketing. The network’s president, Gary Stevenson, is a former marketing leader at the NBA, which Barrett and Kelly worked on at Goodby.

Like most startups, barrettSF is self-financed. “I was just naive enough, I suppose, just emotionally ready to do this, that I didn’t have [investors] lined up when I made this decision,” Barrett said.

Barrett is all about creating a more casual and quirky office environment by going shoeless and displaying a baby redwood tree as a plant.

Soon, he’ll also hang a photo of oddly profound graffiti that someone spray-painted last week on the glass door to barrettSF’s storefront office: “Don’t Let Your Dreams Be Dreams.”

“If you’re going to write graffiti, it’s better than, ‘Screw you, new ad agency,’” Barrett joked.

First Mover: Robert Harwood-Matthews

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Specs
Age 42
New gig
President, TBWAChiatDay, New York
Old gig Group president, TBWA U.K.

As soon as you arrived at TBWAChiatDay N.Y., one of the agency’s largest clients, Vonage, went into review. What’s that been like?
You have to wrestle advantage out of these situations. I want to try to make the office agile and modern, and it’s an opportunity to sit down and completely reassess where we’re at and build a new team out of it.

Any advice from TBWA CEO Tom Carroll?
He said, “Build more from what you have here.” This agency has been quite focused on New York, but I want to make it feel more worldly and bigger, more globally connected to the TBWA network.

You studied archeology at university, specializing in French Paleolithic cave painting. How did you get into advertising?
I didn’t have a [career] plan. I was playing sports with somebody who worked in the industry. I joined Young & Rubicam’s media department in London. I was one of those guys back in the early ‘90s with a calculator and a big pile of paper, trying to work out rates and negotiate.

Any mentors?
I’m genuinely an explorer and try to figure things out for myself. I’ve tried everything from the peaceful end of the spectrum with meditation to the crazy end where I was jumping off a hill with a hang glider. Mentors have been a very wide and eclectic bunch. Nancy Koehn, a professor of history and business at Harvard, taught me at Babson College, which is the [TBWA parent] Omnicom University. Of all the speakers, she was the one I was drawn to as a mentor because she combined the love of classics, history and ancient Greek plays with modern business context.

You’re living in SoHo after working for TBWA in London, L.A. and Manchester. How do you like Manhattan?
It makes you burn brightly. And for somebody who enjoys that phosphorescence, it makes me feel that way. There are so many possibilities here, it’s a very exciting place for somebody like myself who always wants to go out there and explore, learn and do.

Was it a hard decision to uproot your family?
My children have had exactly the same response to the city as me. They’re wandering around, bright-eyed and getting stuck into everything.

How did you become a good friend of Craig Carton, co-host of WFAN’s Boomer and Carton radio show?
We got to know him through our kids, who are best friends at [Chris Whittle’s new private school] Avenues. There was an instant connection. Our wives are best friends as well. Beer and pizza on a Sunday afternoon is a fairly regular format for us, but Craig’s obviously watching five screens at once and interpreting the games, and I’m still wrestling to understand the basic rules of American football.

How long have you had the nickname “Badger”?
I’ve tried to leave it behind and here I am being asked about it again. I went pretty much salt-and-pepper gray virtually overnight when I was 18.

You’re a serious runner. How is a marathon like running an agency?
You’ve got to have a long game in your head about how you’re going the distance and a sense of how you’ll get there. You need to cut out a lot of noise around you and be quite Zen about how you’ll get there.

 

Wieden, Beyond 'Halftime'

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It takes a fool to create something ingenious, says Chrysler global marketing chief Olivier François. In other words, if you’re blissfully unaware of boundaries, you may create something extraordinary—say, an epic Super Bowl ad starring an iconic actor that’s gritty and inspirational and even becomes part of the national dialogue around the U.S. presidential election.

Wieden + Kennedy’s “It’s Halftime in America” with Clint Eastwood—which aired, naturally, in the first break after the second quarter of February’s game—was an instant classic, and an exceptional blend of star power and humanity. Against Eastwood’s rasp, images of “people who are out of work” and “hurting” gave way to the determined faces of men assembling Chryslers. The balance of dark and light and Eastwood’s gravitas disarmed cynics and turned even hardened ad critics into believers.

“That final punch line where they say, ‘It’s halftime in America, and the second half is about to begin,’ I was about ready to go out and try to enlist in the Marines,” says Robert Thompson, director of the Bleier Center for Television and Popular Culture at Syracuse University. “It was very rousing. It was very patriotic without being jingoistic.”

“Halftime” and other work on Wieden’s global reel this year represent advertising at its best—words and images that spark emotions and transcend categories. Surprise is another key element—making, for example, a chubby boy jogging on an open road the focal point of “Jogger,” a Nike ad that aired during the Olympics. Likewise, the shop featured moms not athletes in “Best Job,” an ad that marked Procter & Gamble’s first global sponsorship of the Olympics and celebrated the little things that mothers do as their children grow into Olympians. The two-minute ad won the Emmy for outstanding commercial. Other creative highlights this year include “Beach” for Southern Comfort, “Crack the Code” for Heineken and “Shake on It” for ESPN.

Even for a premiere creative agency like Wieden—Adweek’s Global Agency of the Year for 2012—this was an exceptional year. The most memorable Super Bowl ad. The Emmy (its fourth straight). The biggest campaign ever for Heineken, celebrating the brand’s global sponsorship of the James Bond flick Skyfall. A whopping 45 Lions at Cannes (including 29 out of its Portland, Ore., headquarters, making it Agency of the Year). Banner wins like Tesco, Sony, Facebook and American Express Open. New business and organic growth from existing accounts fueled a swift rebound from the loss of Nokia and Target, in 2011 and early ’12, respectively. The agency ends this year with global revenue growth of 5 percent to an estimated $294 million. U.S. revenue also grew 5 percent, to $205 million.

Among its peers, independent agency Wieden, now in its 30th year, inspires both pride and envy. After all, in the past four years, Wieden has won an average of 29 Lions a year. Agency co-founder and global president Dan Wieden attributes that creative consistency to building a culture that’s “just more fun than you can believe and harder than hell. That generates ideas, great enthusiasm and new ways of looking at old issues.”

Much of Wieden’s standout work in 2012 centered around major events. In late 2011, Chrysler’s François needed an execution to fit a halftime buy during the Super Bowl, perennially the most watched program on TV. Chrysler had made a big splash in the previous big game, casting Eminem in a starring role for the launch of the “Imported from Detroit” campaign. This time, François wanted Wieden Portland to make Chrysler’s turnaround feel part of a national comeback. Hence, the casting of an American icon, who, after some initial hesitation, signed on. The agency enlisted poet Matthew Dickman and novelist Smith Henderson to help write the script.

“Powerful spot,” tweeted Obama adviser David Axelrod shortly after the two-minute ad aired Feb. 5. The next day, Republican strategist Karl Rove asserted that “Halftime” was payback for the federal government bailout of the auto industry. But even Rove admitted the ad was “extremely well done.”

Parodies ensued, including a series of Saturday Night Live clips in which Bill Hader, as Eastwood, squinted and railed about presidential candidates, China and Mexicans. “If those kinds of things happen,” says Wieden, laughing, “you know you just hit a home run.”

Going into the London Summer Olympics, P&G global marketing chief Marc Pritchard wanted to give the “Thank you, mom” campaign a global makeover. Previous ads, from Wieden Portland, focused on U.S. athletes (P&G sponsored the American team at the 2010 Winter Games in Vancouver, Canada). Back then, Wieden global chief operating officer Dave Luhr had challenged Pritchard to create “world-class marketing” for a “world-class event.” This time Pritchard pushed Wieden to “surprise us.” He approved the moms-on-the-job concept on the spot. “When you see something that makes your spine tingle, you’re onto something,” says Pritchard. “I knew immediately that this was a winner.”

While the maternal message is universal, local customs vary. That’s why one scene shows a Chinese mom watching her daughter compete on television. In China, moms don’t attend such events, explains John Jay, Wieden’s global ecd.

“Best Job,” from CDs Danielle Flagg and Karl Lieberman, launched in April, and the global push is on track to generate $500 million in incremental sales gains across 34 brands, including Tide, Crest and Pampers, says Pritchard. One of every three people on YouTube has shared the two-minute ad.

In the spring, the challenge facing Wieden’s Amsterdam office in marketing around Heineken’s sponsorship of Skyfall was to build on the brand’s existing “Man of the World” campaign. The campaign’s 30-ish leading man gets most of the screen time in the 90-second spot, in which bad guys chase the hero through a train full of colorful characters. The star of Skyfall, Daniel Craig, does have a cameo, though.

The ad broke in September and is still running in 34 countries. It is the centerpiece of a broader sponsorship push backed by an unprecedented $70 million in media spending, according to Sandrine Huijgen, global communications director at Heineken. Huijgen, who also works with Wieden’s offices in New York; São Paolo; and Delhi, India, says of agency leaders like Amsterdam ecd’s Eric Quennoy and Mark Bernath: “They push things and I think it works well with Heineken in terms of the personality of the brand. You know, we just want to do things that are different, and Wieden is very, very good at that.”

That reputation led Facebook to approach the agency in October 2011. The social media giant wanted to launch its first brand campaign to celebrate its upcoming billion-user milestone. Facebook execs worked with a small group at the agency including CDs Flagg, Lieberman and Eric Baldwin to develop “The Things That Connect Us,” a 90-second ad that broke in October and has generated massive buzz (not all of it positive) which Facebook shared via its own network. Asked about negative reactions to the spot, Facebook brand marketing chief Rebecca Van Dyck says, “I’m not afraid of that at all.” She adds, “It’s important for iconic brands. I think that’s what Wieden + Kennedy actually does well.”

Tesco’s Matt Atkinson likes what he sees thus far in Wieden’s London office, which, led by managing director Neil Christie, beat TBWA, VCCP and JWT in July to claim one of the most coveted accounts in the U.K. The retailer, which each year produces more than 1,000 ads and spends about $175 million in media, last month broke a campaign that centers around a familiar object in England this time of year: the holiday hat.

Wieden brings “an ability to help you express yourself in the new world,” says Atkinson, Tesco’s group marketing and chief digital officer. “That was what we were looking for.” 

Game Maker Kills App That Let You Mock-Assassinate Your Facebook Friends

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Japanese video-game maker Square Enix tried to advertise its game Hitman: Absolution by allowing you to pretend to put a hit on your Facebook friends for a variety of appalling reasons. The application, created by advertising agency Ralph, was pulled after just one article by online gamer mag Rock Paper Shotgun. The app let you select identifying features of your friends as reasons to threaten them on Facebook—among them, her awful makeup, ginger hair, annoying laugh, strange odor, big ears, muffin top, hairy legs and "small tits." You could then select reasons to kill her—for example, "She's cheating on her partner!"—resulting in a lovely Facebook post sent directly to that friend that said "I hope you get killed by a hitman!" and linked to a nice video of the main character from the game shooting the crap out of that friend's profile picture. The concept itself could possibly have been done in a fun, less bullying way, but the execution shows how impressively sexist you can be with nothing more than a drop-down box. To be fair, you could also be sexist against dudes and put a hit out on your male friends for having a small penis. The link to the application no longer works, and the company issued an apology in less than a day. Quick work, PR department! Now, somebody fire the copywriter.

Ad of the Day: Cisco

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On Friday, Cisco CEO John Chambers met with financial analysts to outline the company's ambitions to become the world's leading IT player by expanding its services and software offerings. Today, Cisco takes that Wall Street message global in a new repositioning campaign, themed "Tomorrow starts here," from Goodby, Silverstein & Partners.

Even as Cisco signals a corporate makeover, the pitch brings the company back to its roots after recent confusing attempts to make itself more of a consumer brand in spots featuring Juno actress Ellen Page. Gone now is "The human network," Cisco's tagline of the past six years and reference to its position as the largest manufacturer of computer networking equipment. The new campaign takes a larger view of Internet possibilities made real by all those routers and switches.

Financial observers liken Cisco's current shift to IBM's transformation from a mainframe manufacturer to a provider of software, services and hardware, and this spot has the aesthetic feel and tone of Big Blue's "Smarter Planet" commercials from Ogilvy. Cisco's research indicates that 37 billion new things will be connected to the Internet in the next eight years, and 2.5 billion people will log on for the first time. Goodby's TV commercial underscores that connectivity. The young narrator predicts that in the future, "Trees will talk to networks that will talk to scientists about climate change. Cars will talk to road sensors that will talk to stoplights about traffic efficiency." The print work features outtakes from the spot, and in an inspired detail for business-to-business advertising, an augmented reality app allows smartphone users to learn more specifics about the Internet connections behind the images.

Cisco CMO Blair Christie says the strategy speaks not only to the changes under way at Cisco but to a larger evolution. "We're seeing one of the biggest market transitions in our business," she says. "We're calling it 'The Internet of everything.' It's the intelligent connection of people, process, data and things to the Internet."



CREDITS
Client: Cisco Systems
Spot "Tomorrow Starts Here"

Agency: Goodby, Silverstein & Partners, San Francisco
Partner: Rich Silverstein
Executive Creative Directors: Rick Condos and Hunter Hindman
Art Director: Tyler Magnusson
Copywriter: Matt Rivitz
Executive Producer: Hilary Coate

Production Company: Directors Bureau
Director: Mike Mills
Director of Photography: Jakob Ihre
Executive Producer: Lisa Margulis

CLIENT
Chief Marketing Officer: Blair Christie
Vice President, Global Marketing and Branding: Michele Bogdan
Senior Director of Global Advertising, Media and Sponsorships: Julia Mee
Senior Managers, Global Advertising: Chris Nordstrom, Kathleen Watson

The Spot: Gifts That Do

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IDEA: In so many holiday ads, the moment of gift giving is the culmination of the journey—an easily exploited emotional high point for those giving and receiving. In Best Buy's new spot (running as a :30 and a :60), it's just the beginning of the story. The focus isn't the technology inside the latest gadgets but the amazing, unexpected things you can do with it—things the retailer, while serving as a knowledgeable guide, could never have predicted. Crispin Porter + Bogusky scoured the country looking for real people who have done inspiring things with gifts they received—finding, among many others, Claire Jantzen, a 13-year-old digital photographer; and Brian Jones, who used his laptop to help turn the house from A Christmas Story into a museum. The theme is: "What will your gift do?" "It's a simple message," said CP+B creative director Dave Cook. "It pushes people to think about giving in a way that could actually lead to something great."

TALENT: The people range from grand to goofy. Robert Nay used his laptop to start his own gaming company at age 14. Jamie Moran, a surfer, created a wave-finding app. Ryan Rusnak was so enthralled by his TV that he never wanted to leave the couch—so he built a machine that launches beverages at him from across the room. "Telling real stories was important," said CP+B senior integrated producer Ramon Nuñez. "It makes us feel like, 'Hey, I could do that too.' " The agency and the directors, Emmett and Brendan Malloy, used agency JLA to find their subjects. "We didn't want to get too heavy, but we also wanted our stories to have substance … [to be] both relatable and entertaining," said Nuñez. At the end, a Best Buy employee, flanked by four others, makes the pitch straight to camera.



COPYWRITING: The gifters and giftees split a single sentence in each scene. "My gift turned my daughter…" starts Jantzen's mom, and Claire finishes: "… into an Instagram sensation." "Splitting the lines was just one of many deliveries we tried," said interactive copywriter James Beikmohamadi. The secret was to boil down each line to "its simplest, most compelling form—something that would explain their innovation quickly but not have it be too straight," added senior copywriter Jim Heekin. Jantzen, Nay and Jones are also the subjects of longer videos posted online. In scripting those spots, said Heekin, "we focused more on what questions to ask them versus what precise lines they would read."

ART DIRECTION/FILMING: The Malloys shot on location. "They come from a documentary background, and we knew their insights and experience would help us honor these real stories," said executive creative director Steve Babcock. Each shoot had its obstacles. "We went from being out on a boat in the ocean, where Emmett and the makeup lady got very seasick but kept on working, to inside the Christmas Story house in Cleveland, where it started raining as we started our exterior shot," said associate creative director Jamin Duncan. A 4D camera and RED camera got a mix of formal and candid footage. The store shots were done at a Best Buy in Palm Springs, Calif., over two nights. The Rusnak scene was tough. "I think there was one take where he nailed the line and caught the soda," said Duncan.

SOUND: The soundtrack, "The Bright Side" by Tim Myers, "fits the feeling that the spot evokes," Beikmohamadi said. "It has a nice bed without lyrics and an uplifting vocal."

MEDIA: National broadcast and cable through Dec. 24, supported by cinema spots, rich and standard banners, including YouTube and Xbox, and radio.

THE SPOT:


The three long-form videos:






CREDITS
Client: Best Buy
Spot: "Holiday Montage"
Agency: Crispin Porter + Bogusky
Partner/Worldwide Chief Creative Officer: Rob Reilly
Executive Creative Director: Steve Babcock
Creative Directors: Dave Cook, Rich Tlapek, Matt Fischvogt
Associate Creative Directors: Alvaro Ramos, Jamin Duncan
Senior Art Director: Asan Aslam
Senior Copywriters: Jim Heekin, Peter Majarich
Senior Interactive Copywriter: Moon Yang
Interactive Copywriter: James Beikmohomadi
Design Art Director: Jeff Hunter
Associate Design Director: Scott Pridgen
Group Planning Director: Benny Thomas
Senior Cog: Omar Quinones
Senior Integrated Producer: Ramon Nuñez
Integrated Producer: PJ Haarsma
Jr. Integrated Producer: Jamie Slade
Production Company & City: HSI, Culver City, Calif.
Directors: Emmett Malloy, Brendan Malloy
Executive Producer (Production Co): Kim Dellara
Producer (Production Co): Caleb Dewart
Bidding Producer: Mari Geraci
Head of Production: Doron Kauper
Post Production & City: Method, Los Angeles
Post Producer: Paula Jimenez
Editor: Kevin Zimmerman
Editing Producer: Leslie Tabor
Sound Design Company & City: Lime Studios, Santa Monica, Calif.
Animation Company & City: Buck Studios, Los Angeles
Group Account Director: Scot Beck
Account Director: Adrienne Walpole
Management Supervisor: JP Nissenberg
Content Supervisor: Carrie Frash
Content Manager: Nick Larkin
Assistant Content Manager: Dave Ellerbee
Business Affairs Manager: Lisa Gillies


No Liftoff (Yet) for Launchpad

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Red Bull just gambled (and won big time) on backing daredevil Felix Baumgartner’s supersonic sky dive on YouTube, but a crowdsourcing stunt may prove to be a more daunting challenge.

Red Bull introduced Launchpad, the crowdsourced contest, in February. Instead of going to its usual stable of star athletes, it asked regular people to submit stunt ideas and vote for them on Facebook. The prize: a chance to see your stunt executed, plus $5,000.

The contest attracted more than 220 submissions and almost 325,000 votes, per Red Bull insiders. The company even ran promos of the contest with popular YouTube videos of its sponsored celebrity athletes including Ryan Doyle, who runs across city roofs (200,000 views).

The winning entry came from Joe Ridler, associate creative director at Chicago packaging agency BurgoUSA. His idea was to have sky divers in wingsuits race through an airborne obstacle course. The social buzz he got played no small part in his selection. A Twitter account he set up for the stunt, @RedBullTopGun, drew 838 followers, while a Facebook page attracted 1,400 likes.

But since announcing a winner and posting video on its Launchpad site in September, Red Bull has gone silent. No time line has been set for staging the stunt and almost no fresh references to the contest show up on Twitter or Facebook. Among bloggers, the once-lively buzz about the contest and winner’s wild idea is petering out. AKQA, Red Bull’s agency on the campaign, referred questions to the client. Red Bull had no comment.

Industry pros experienced in crowdsourced marketing say working with fans who are unpaid amateurs is different than creating content with professionals and celebrities. Crowdsourcing is a collaboration, they say, and the fans need attention and interaction to keep them interested.

Jon Yokogawa, vp of consumer engagement for ad agency interTrend, said consumers are hungry for something that they can get personally involved in. This past summer his agency created a crowdsourced Web series for AT&T, “Away We Happened,” that grabbed an unexpected 6 million YouTube views over six weeks.

“A big advantage in crowdsourced marketing is the ability to see brand ambassadors appear and actually defend your brand by endorsing it or pointing out product benefits, via real-life experiences,” Yokogawa said. “It’s about having the crowd interact with the brand, rather than [passively] watch or get distracted by the entertainers or athletes.”

It’s understandable that Red Bull wants to tap those advantages. But the company can only hope that when the user-generated sky dive race takes place, the thousands of contest participants and their social friends—who initially had some skin in the game—will still care.

Preteen Rapper and Dance Crew Recruited for Kids' Tablet Spot

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Precocious kiddie talent is always a reliably entertaining route in youth marketing. Our favorite example is probably the crazy Weetabix spot with then-9-year-old British street-dance phenom Arizona Snow. Now, a new spot for Fuhu's Nabi2 kids' tablet enlists not just dancers but a budding rapper to deliver the pitch. The commercial, by agency mOcean, features a rap by 10-year-old Lil P-Nut (aka Benjamin Flores Jr.) and a dance routine by The Art of Teknique—two 11-year-olds and a 10-year-old who competed on America's Got Talent last year. Lil P-Nut doesn't actually appear in the ad—that's the Art of Teknique kids lip-syncing the lyrics. Rapping and dancing would seem to have little to do with using a tablet, but Fuhu says it's a broader metaphor about the "art of genius"—that it enlisted kids who excel in music and dance to tell the brand's story about helping kids achieve their best in learning, playing and growing. Credits below.

CREDITS
Client: Fuhu
Product: Nabi2 tablet

Agency: mOcean
Executive Creative Director: Christianne Brooks
Director of Client Services: Mike Braue
Copywriters: Erik Moe, C. Dubb
Assistant Account Executive: Shira Shane

Production Company: mOcean
Director: Peter McKeon
Director of Photography: Kevin Sarnoff
Executive Producer: Teresa Antista
Line Producer: Don Anderson
Producer: Andrew Wright
Editing House: mOcean
Editor: Philippe Bergerioux
Producer: Andrew Wright

Ad of the Day: Lacoste

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You are walking down the street. You decide you don't like the color of your shirt. You swipe at your chest like it's a touch screen. Your shirt changes color, and you are happy. You are not on acid. You are in the future, as imagined by Lacoste.

This is a novelty ad celebrating the 80th anniversary of the invention of the tennis brand's iconic polo shirt. At its core, it's just another fashion spot, heavy on the atmosphere, projecting feel-good-youthful-sporty cool. It's more fun to watch than most fashion ads, as it weaves in a conceptual thread suggesting that one day in the not-too-distant future, we'll be able to customize out shirts on the fly. Take a step back, and it's decidedly goofy.

Mostly, it's another testament to how much the iPhone has defined the zeitgeist. Five years ago, the digital effects in this spot would have read as cheesy sci-fi at best, and weirdly psychotic at worst. Now, the fundamentally ridiculous clothes-fondling gestures that serve as the spot's linchpin aren't only part of the physical vernacular—they're a commonly accepted status symbol. The ad's subtext: Today, only Neanderthals don't have touch-screen smartphones. Someday, only Neanderthals won't have touch-screen polo shirts.

A generation of affluent, tech-obsessed digital natives won't even have to blink twice to suspend disbelief while watching the commercial. And its chameleonic effects are aimed squarely at those same millennials, notoriously perceived as fickle, by a brand that doesn't really ever seem to change that much. Lacoste wants those kids—geeky preps of tomorrow—to know it has the shirts of tomorrow.

Of course, concepts for digital clothing abound. Earlier this year, whiskey brand Ballantine's actually designed a prototype of an Internet-connected T-shirt with an LED screen on the front. Macy's and P. Diddy's Sean John brand are selling a $223 digital sweater with a miniature screen on the sleeve. Not that any of this will really catch on—it's all, to varying degrees, absurd. But it's also further evidence that non-digital brands feel the need to use digital gimmicks to prove their continuing relevance in a tech-obsessed world, even as brands that actually are cutting edge work to prove their relevance to the physical world of yore.

Now, Lacoste just needs to figure out how to actually mass-produce the tricks it's pitching. Or maybe, shirts will always just be shirts.



CREDITS
Client: Lacoste
Agency: Mnstr, Paris
Director: Fleur & Manu

Bad Gifts Make Good Comedy in Georgia Lottery's Holiday Ads

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You know how, when someone gives you a horrible gift, you lie and say it's the perfect thing? Don't you wish could just exclaim, "Are you seriously trying to insult me with this?" Or, "You know what makes the baby Jesus cry? This gift." BBDO's new holiday scratchers ad for the Georgia Lottery does away with seasonally enforced insincerity and lets the giftees say what they're thinking, with amusing results. Five friends gather around a fireplace for a gift exchange, and they're all disappointed, to say the least. There's the insult gift—a books about kittens that tells everyone you're single. There's the style disaster—a sweater that looks like a mountain of cotton candy. And there are the general "What were you thinking?" gifts that "accidentally" get left behind or end up straight in the trash. In the end, they agree to buy scratchers and never do something like that again. Thankfully, none of them seems to realize that lottery tickets are the crappiest gifts of all. What a blessing. The spot is part of a series, but only this one is online so far.

Axe Pillow Ensures You'll Never Have to Snuggle With a Woman Again

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We're all familiar with Axe's low-humming sexism, but DDB Latina Puerto Rico has gone through the looking glass with this idea. The Morning After Pillow might be the most egregious cure for a fake problem since Listerine invented halitosis. Is it really that bad to be kept in bed by a good-looking woman all day, especially when the alternatives are playing tennis or video games? Both of those things suck compared to cuddling. I know it's a joke, but still. Plus, that pillow isn't even a real pillow. It's inflatable. It's might as well be a bath toy. Spring for memory foam next time, you classless goons.

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