Laura McGeough’s Blog : Creativity & Freshness


GORILLA AND HALO 3 TAKE TOP PRIZES
August 29, 2008, 8:45 pm
Filed under: Advertising, Award winning Ad, Branding, Creativity, Marketing budget | Tags: , ,
gorilla

gorilla

TWO Film Grands Prix ave been won by Gorilla for Cadbury’s, and Halo 3 for Microsoft Xbox 360. According to Chris Willingham of winning agency Fallon of the UK, Gorilla has spawned a whole new advertising genre.

The video of a gorilla drumming to a Phil Collins song was intended for the UK market but spread virally on the net, generated legions of re-mixes – some on producer Glass And A Half Full Productions site – and is being used in Canada, New Zealand and Australia, Willingham said. “This is the one ad that has the ‘Wow, did you see that!’ factor.”

Halo 3, which won the Integrated Grand Prix for this and other parts of the campaign, has also won a Grand Prix in the Other Film Content section of the Film categories. The film is from McCann Worldgroup San Francisco and T.A.G. The creative team is Scott Duchon, Geoff Edwards, and John Patroulis. Art director on Gorilla was Juan Cabral.

Willingham said Gorilla’s underlying philosophy of branded entertainment is here to stay, with Glass And A Half Full Productions already at work on the next ad. “Now the idea has become established we will see a whole range of ads. We could put almost anything in the framework we have established with Glass And A Half Full. As long as it gives you the same uplift as eating chocolate, the idea will go on and on.”



Guinness Music machine TV commercial
August 12, 2008, 8:54 pm
Filed under: Award winning Ad, Branding, Creativity | Tags:



Amnesty International Ad: “Signatures”
August 10, 2008, 10:32 pm
Filed under: Award winning Ad, Creativity | Tags: , , ,



MULTIMEDIA THREAT TO 30-SECOND SPOT
August 8, 2008, 8:50 pm
Filed under: Advertising, Branding, Creativity
Leo Burnett

Leo Burnett

LEO Burnett Worldwide dug into its archives to screen some entertaining multimedia campaigns that proved the 30-second spot is no longer indispensable.
The Cannes presentation was hosted by Tom Bernardin, chairman/CEO; Reed Collins, executive creative director at Leo Burnett USA; and Paul Kemp-Robertson, Contagious magazine’s editorial director. They showed recent works that have been so effective, they achieved the following: Method detergent has become a $100m company; 460 million litres of foam helped make the viral campaign for Sony’s latest cameras one of the biggest in history; 330,000 LED screens were wrapped around a 15-metre Coke bottle to raise brand awareness in China; and IKEA’s catalogue is now the third most printed publication after Harry Potter and The Bible.



Adrenaline Is a Key Ingredient to Success
August 2, 2008, 8:42 pm
Filed under: Creativity

You’ve probably read stories about people who have used superhuman strength to save themselves or someone else from certain doom. It’s true that people are able to do things, such as lifting a car with their bare hands, because adrenaline shoots through their body in such a way that their muscle fibers contract at the exact same moment. At least, that’s what The Science Channel says. Believing you can do something is more important than physics. In a crisis, superhuman strength can happen automatically. However, many examples of superhuman feats happen with a determined will and effort.

Imagine if we could apply this phenomenon to our business. If an agency’s staff could work in unison, it would have an incredibly positive effect on its innovation potential. If adrenaline causes superhuman capabilities to happen, what would act as the adrenaline to cause the same to happen in our agencies?

I think an example of this type of occurrence happened during this year’s Olympics. The U.S. men’s swimming team literally willed themselves to victory over the French. As Jason Lizak, the swimmer who made up a half body-length lead on the final leg, said, “I guess I just wanted it more.” Why did the U.S. team want it more? Earlier, one of the French swimmers told the press his team would crush their American rivals. Does your agency have a “French” competitor? If so, use it to fire up your team to dig a little deeper and do what no one gives them hope to accomplish. In the sentiment of U.S. swimmer Michael Phelps, use the “trash talk” as motivation to prove everyone wrong.

Another adrenaline injection could be administered by creating an audacious goal that challenges your agency. Once the goal is decided, keep it in front of your group as a continuous reminder that they have something special to accomplish. Give it a scary deadline. Give accomplishment a reward. Do whatever you have to to get your people to stretch beyond their perceived strength.

The lack of high-quality work in our industry is due to the opposite operation of the agency. When people and departments are working independently of one another (and in many cases against one another), greatness is impossible.

Too much of what we are doing in this industry is an example of hoping for superhuman strength rather than using a determined will. We are full of excuses for our poor work that shift the blame beyond ourselves, yet they hold no weight because we all have competitors that have the same obstacles and still succeed.

The greatest challenge for agency leaders is to successfully inject the proper adrenaline into their agency. We must examine what our employees need most and then supply every opportunity for them to succeed. Day-to-day business can be distracting, but we must not forget that our success tomorrow will be greater if we act on the belief that we can do something superhuman today.

source :

2 Comments


Heres to the crazy ones
July 20, 2008, 8:42 pm
Filed under: Advertising, Creativity | Tags:



Frozen Grand Central
July 15, 2008, 8:40 pm
Filed under: Advertising, Creativity



Big Boobs, Erotic Vegetables, and Burger King’s European Ad Campaign
July 12, 2008, 8:23 pm
Filed under: Creativity | Tags:
Burger King

Burger King

Last month I was hungry when the plane landed in Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport. I decided to get a bite to eat at the fast food restaurant Burger King. Removing my Whopper, fries, and Coke from the tray revealed very non-traditional tray liner artwork… a scene from the Veg City Airport. Veg City is where the Burger King vegetables live… Live it up, actually.

This scene depicts airport security at the Veg City Airport stopping an onion that is not up to Burger King standards. Just like airport security blocks bad people, Burger King similarly screen for only quality ingredients.

You know this onion is bad because they found in his bag: Botox, anti-aging cream, as well as copies of the magazines… “Wet Vegs”, “Playveg” and “Green & Horny.”

Then there’s the surly pickle about to perform a cavity search on the onion. Wow!

This artwork is fun to explore while you’re chomping your burger and fries… But – as I originally asked on my site – is it truly representing the brand Burger King wants to be? And even if there are different standards regarding the appropriateness of nudity in Europe versus the U.S., should Burger King be a different type brand in Europe than in the US?

A Split Audience

I originally posted this on my site on July 7th and have received over 100,000 hits and had to add bandwidth to support the traffic!

The comments I’ve received split into three camps.

  • Group 1 – Those that feel this is the coolest artwork.
  • Group 2 – Those that are going to boycott Burger King because they don’t want their children exposed to the inappropriate material. (Most people missed the fact that this is a European campaign and wouldn’t be seen in U.S. locations).
  • Group 3 – Those that are slamming Group 2 for being so narrow minded. That they should be boycotting Burger King because of their junk food versus cartoon images.

There are a few of you marketers who have commented on my original question… is this tactic appropriate for brand Burger King?

The artwork is part of a series called Veg City supported with an on-line virtual city. In addition to the Airport tray liner other executions include:

The campaign for Burger King is by BBDO’s German Group Munich-based agency, .start. I’ve emailed them a couple of times, but have not received a response.

Take a look at the comments to my original post at the Idea Sandbox Blog.

You can view more images at Chrossn’s Flickr Photostream and by visiting the German Veg City website.

Is this adult-themed humor on-target with the Burger King brand? Has BK shifted from competing with McDonald’s as a family restaurant to an adult destination – closer to Hooters?

source : http://www.mpdailyfix.com/2008/08/big_boobs_erotic_vegetables_an.html