Saturday, March 27, 2010

Ga Ga Oo La Product Placement!

gaga-ss

We all know that product placement is nothing new. It’s a multi-billion dollar market that spans across television, movies, music, sports and more. Whether it’s the Coca Cola cups on the American Idol judging table or the food on top of Joey and Chandler’s fridge in Friends, product placement is everywhere all the time. Sometimes it’s subtle and plays in to the storyline of a movie or TV show; other times it’s more obvious. In Lady Gaga’s case, it’s on the screen and in your face, and she doesn’t care if you like it or not.

She’s known for her eccentric outfits and imaginative performances. In fact, being over-the-top is what made Lady Gaga so famous. Now the artist is starting to be noticed for the blatant product placement in her music videos. And with over 50% of brands using branded content for awareness-based marketing, she is a marketer’s dream come true. In fact, Lady Gaga is the only recording artist to reach 1 billion video views across all online video platforms – perhaps making her blatant product placements the most valuable in entertainment history! According to Neilsen AIG, product integration is more likely to drive brand recall than other forms of advertising, so if all goes according to plan, I’ll never make a sandwich without thinking of Lady Gaga, and I’ll never see Lady Gaga without wanting a sandwich.

Maybe when I finish eating I’ll take a picture with my Poloroid camera, upload it on to my Beats laptop, listen to some tunes on my Hearbeats headphones and call my friend on my Virgin Mobile phone. Why? Because Lady Gaga made me do it. "
Posted by grownupthinking

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Consumption of media (even social) goes way down during vacation -Thank God.




“Stay out of my vacation!”
I haven’t seen an advertisement in five whole days. Not a one. It’s not like there aren’t any TVs or magazines or Internet at the Ganesvoort Hotel in Turks & Caicos. I just haven’t been paying attention to them.
The New York Times is handed to me each morning at breakfast, a faxed version, free from ads of any kind. A nice touch, I kind of like it that way. The kids watch TV in the morning and at bedtime but I don’t. Yes, I put on ESPN or CNN during my morning visit to the gym but I only glimpse at it during moments of weakness. Or when they flash a score. (I like knowing athletes are doing their thing when I’m doing mine.) Even the NCAA basketball tournament barely holds my attention. I think the Badgers lost but I don’t know. Maybe I’ll check ESPN’s website. Maybe. I hear they passed healthcare.
Keep reading at http://godsofadvertising.wordpress.com/2010/03/24/consumption-of-media-even-social-goes-way-down-during-vacation-thank-god/
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Thursday, March 25, 2010

Cambiamos o desaparecemos



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Kia spot turns driving experience inside out

Kia spot turns driving experience inside out: "
Kia
Expanding this week's theme of fantastical worlds and unlikely landscapes, David&Goliath's Toronto office drives home its point with a sustained visual metaphor for the Kia Sorento SUV. "Feel at home in any environment" is the tagline, and all the comforts of a well-appointed suburban dwelling—chairs, dressing tables, vanities, bookcases, bathtubs and even wide-screen TVs with screens aglow—magically appear as a family drives along a winding wooded road. Memorable imagery aside, I can't help but wonder: Were they evicted and their stuff tossed out into the forest? That couch won't be so comfy in a hailstorm. Giant hamsters probably took over their house. Now, they'll have to redecorate.
—Posted by David Gianatasio

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Wednesday, March 24, 2010

The World of 100

The World of 100:


The World of 100

If the world were a village of 100 people, how would the composition be? more..."

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Tuesday, March 23, 2010

No, you fool, no one really wants to see your lovely little TV spot

No, you fool, no one really wants to see your lovely little TV spot: "

That 30-second spot may be the pride of your ad agency, but your hopes of it "going viral" may be overly optimistic. In fact, research firm Millward Brown has two words for that idea: pipe dream! Unless you hire Kim Kardashian to star in it, that is. In a study to be released next week, Millward Brown found that fewer than one in six ads becomes even a mild viral success and that only a tiny percentage of commercials will hit the lofty heights of Old Spice's "The Man Your Man Could Smell Like" (shown here) and E*Trade's "Milkaholic." It takes some combination of brand engagement, buzz, high-profile celebrity and originality to compel people to seek out a commercial online, watch it and pass it along. The now-famous Super Bowl Snickers ad with Betty White and Abe Vigoda has racked up more than 1.3 million views on YouTube, for instance, because it's engaging, buzzy and features well-recognized celebrities, Millward Brown said. The Carl's Jr. ad where Kardashian drips salad dressing on her lingerie and then hops into a bubble bath has upwards of 2.3 million views. (Guys dig it and, no surprise, women are largely absent from that fan club.) The researchers have a few pieces of advice for the creative community, including integrating the TV campaign with other media, seeding the ad broadly, leaving a clear brand impression and producing an engaging spot. And perhaps most important, don't hold your breath.


—Posted by T.L. Stanley
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Friday, March 19, 2010

Diet Coke Stay with Sweet Disposition

Diet Coke Stay with Sweet Disposition: "


Coca Cola has launched “Stay”, a large-scale exploration of extraordinary people preparing to go off and do extraordinary things, large and small. These are the kinds of moments that are fueled by Diet Coke. “Sweet Disposition” by The Temper Trap is used as the musical backdrop to a poignant portrayal of the iconic soft drink’s place amid great acts of art and accomplishment. A man fueled by Diet Coke hobnobs with an urbane crowd at a swanky big-city party. A nurse cares for newborn babies with the soft drink by her side. The drink is there beside the runway of an edgy fashion show, on the set of an explosive outdoor movie shoot, in the limo of an actress preparing to take to the red carpet, and in the painting of an expansive mural in a neighborhood.

Diet Coke Stay urban art


Click on the image below to play the video in YouTube (HD)

Credits

The “Stay” campaign was developed at Wieden + Kennedy by creative director Hal Curtis, art director Max Erdenberger, copywriters Ginger Robinson and Tatum Shaw, agency producer Erika Madison.

Filming was shot in Los Angeles by director Christian Loubek via Anonymous Content with producer Deannie O’Neil, executive producer Dave Morrison, and production supervisor Mariska Leyssius.

Editor was Terence “Biff” Butler at Rock Paper Scissors with executive producer Carol Lynn Weaver and producer Cassie Hulen.

Post/Effects were produced at A52 by VFX supervisor Patrick Murphy, executive producer Jennifer Sofio Hall and VFX producer Cassie Hulen.

Sound was mixed at Lime Studios by Loren Silber. Sound was designed at Stimmung by Gus Koven.


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Custom notebooks feature your tweets or Facebook feed

Custom notebooks feature your tweets or Facebook feed: "



Now that sites like Facebook and Twitter have become a major part of many consumers' lives, there's growing need to bridge the online and offline worlds, as we've noted before. Efforts like HotPrints, News from YOUs and Kodak's new kiosk capabilities all get at that to some extent, and recently we came across two more interesting examples: Famebook and TweetNotebook, both of which embellish custom notebooks with select online content.

With Famebook, Facebook users can create a unique notebook featuring a post from their Facebook feed at the bottom of each page. By connecting to Facebook from the Famebook site, users allow Famebook to access their status updates. If there are fewer than 320 available, Famebook will duplicate some to fill the pages; if there are more, it makes a random selection. Either way, the result is a mostly-blank notebook with one timestamped update on the bottom of each page. Pricing is EUR 18 for a 200-page hardcover notebook or EUR 14 for the 320-page paperback version. Users can choose their own cover post and design.

TweetNotebook, meanwhile, does much the same thing but featuring the user's Twitter posts instead. Customers simply enter their Twitter name on the site, and it automatically populates each page in a blank 320-page notebook with one randomly selected tweet along with its timestamp and URL. As with Famebook, users can customize the cover post and design; three colour choices are available. Pricing on a TweetNotebook is EUR 12.

Both Famebook and TweetNotebook are the creations of Belgian agency Boondoggle. Who will push the OFF=ON integration even further—notepads, t-shirts, laptop skins, bags, anyone...?

Website: www.myfamebook.netwww.tweetnotebook.com
Spotted by: Murtaza Ali Patel

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The Future of Publishing - created by DK (UK)

Beautiful

Whopperface

Adidas Originals

Adidas's house party is continuing. The brand's earlier star-studded video, released in November 2008, has gotten worldwide attention, not to mention a Simpsons parody. Now, agency Sid Lee has moved the party out into the street, but some things remain the same. David Beckham is still there, though he looks a bit more hirsute this time, and DJ Pilooski is still spinning the tunes, though this time he's playing his rendition of Dee Edwards's "Can't There Be Love" (and no, there's nothing wrong with your YouTube feed, that's the way the song goes). Snoop Dogg is a new addition, as are Noel Gallagher of Oasis and lots of people I'm too old to recognize. Once again, it's a fine piece of advertising, making Adidas's Originals line seem both of-the-moment and retro, athletic and leisurely.
—Posted by Todd Wasserman

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Detects up to 16 faces

You can open this image in full size to see all the hidden stuff...
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Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Beer = Woman

Stella Artrois

Lady Gaga - Telephone (Official Explicit Version) ft. Beyoncé

Product placement sin pena

Surfrider Foundation Europe

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Heineken Italy Activation Milan AC Real Madrid

Esto si es un patrocinador

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Move through time


A man moves through time for this new History Channel promo directed by Daniel Askill.




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Monday, March 15, 2010

Friday, March 12, 2010

Brand Quiz

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logorama movie | Logorama is an Oscar winning movie 2010

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Intolerable Beauty: Portraits of American Mass Consumption

"Exploring around our country’s shipping ports and industrial yards, where the accumulated detritus of our consumption is exposed to view like eroded layers in the Grand Canyon, I find evidence of a slow-motion apocalypse in progress. I am appalled by these scenes, and yet also drawn into them with awe and fascination. The immense scale of our consumption can appear desolate, macabre, oddly comical and ironic, and even darkly beautiful; for me its consistent feature is a staggering complexity.

The pervasiveness of our consumerism holds a seductive kind of mob mentality. Collectively we are committing a vast and unsustainable act of taking, but we each are anonymous and no one is in charge or accountable for the consequences. I fear that in this process we are doing irreparable harm to our planet and to our individual spirits.

As an American consumer myself, I am in no position to finger wag; but I do know that when we reflect on a difficult question in the absence of an answer, our attention can turn inward, and in that space may exist the possibility of some evolution of thought or action. So my hope is that these photographs can serve as portals to a kind of cultural self-inquiry. It may not be the most comfortable terrain, but I have heard it said that in risking self-awareness, at least we know that we are awake."
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Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Where the Hell is Matt in South Africa?

varios años con el mismo baile alrededor del mundo

Monday, March 8, 2010

"Different" by Youngme Moon

Different in a way that makes a difference

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Surfrider Project "Rise Above Plastics"

Recicle

Brilliant Negative Space Illustrations by Noma Bar


Todas las ilustraciones en http://www.pixelelement.com/brilliant-negative-space-illustrations-by-noma-bar/
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Tuesday, March 2, 2010