October 17, 2006
October 09, 2006
"Fearfest"



[Click to enlarge pictures]
With the goal of promoting Paramount Canada's Wonderland Fearfest, the agency ACLC spreaded these posters in Toronto's subway.
The buzz was such that CTV (Canada's leading news station) did a ridiculously long story on how the ads are in bad taste.
September 29, 2006
"Snowball"
Agency: Fallon Minneapolis
Client: Travelers Insurance
Production house: Morton Jankel Zander
[Via: Cafeína Lowe]
September 28, 2006
eBay moments
"Food for thought"
"We'll interact with advertising where once we only watched; we'll seek out advertising where once we avoided it. Advertising will not go away; it will be rejuvenated." -- Michael Schrage, Wired
September 25, 2006
"You're Trumped"
"MyTBWA, YourTube"
When my network decides to announce and share their
new portal to all TBWA's around the world, via YouTube.
September 22, 2006
"That's hot!"
Banksy, the British iconoclast "agigator" has done it again. The target this time was Paris Hilton.


Swindle Magazine published a recent interview with him worth reading.
[Via: Marketing Alternativ | Brand Noise | Sharl's Flickr]
Yes ... what happened?
"What Happened To Creative Advertising?"
"Gone are the days when gray-suited admen would commute to Grand Central Terminal from the Connecticut suburbs, walk the few blocks to Madison Avenue, spend the day concocting clever, feel-good ads, collect 15 percent commissions for placing them with the three TV networks and glossy magazines, and schmooze clients over three-martini lunches.
Today, the center of gravity has moved downtown to SoHo and TriBeCa, and much of the work is done by twentysomethings in jeans and T-shirts. They earn less and work harder to peddle niche products through a fragmented media market to savvy consumers who tune out messages they find boring or irrelevant. The cushy commissions have been replaced by stingier, cost-plus-fee schedules imposed by numbers-driven corporate marketing officers who care less about the creativity of advertising than its return on investment."
[Source: Washington Post]
"Gone are the days when gray-suited admen would commute to Grand Central Terminal from the Connecticut suburbs, walk the few blocks to Madison Avenue, spend the day concocting clever, feel-good ads, collect 15 percent commissions for placing them with the three TV networks and glossy magazines, and schmooze clients over three-martini lunches.
Today, the center of gravity has moved downtown to SoHo and TriBeCa, and much of the work is done by twentysomethings in jeans and T-shirts. They earn less and work harder to peddle niche products through a fragmented media market to savvy consumers who tune out messages they find boring or irrelevant. The cushy commissions have been replaced by stingier, cost-plus-fee schedules imposed by numbers-driven corporate marketing officers who care less about the creativity of advertising than its return on investment."
[Source: Washington Post]
Evian Spa

[Click on image to see the film]
When the experience becomes one of the greatest expressions
of a brand.
[Agency: Sharpe Blackmore Euro RSCG, Toronto]
September 21, 2006
Bus window shopping

Following my previous Mango post, here's another interesting example done by Proximity Portugal last year for a shoe-shop chain.
So there you are waiting for the bus to come, with lots of time in your mind, you look at the shoes and think "hmm maybe I need a pair of these for the winter".
September 20, 2006
September 19, 2006
"Food for thought"
"By definition, a good creative brief contains a bold hypothesis. To generate hypotheses you need to speculate: you need to progress from the known to the unknown." -- Jeremy Bullmore, WPP
September 18, 2006
September 15, 2006
September 12, 2006
September 11, 2006
September 09, 2006
Mango "window shopping"


[Seen on the streets of Lisbon]
An effective and clever way of taking the new collection closer to where the consumers are ... the streets.
September 02, 2006
Eureka moments
"How did you come up with it?" -- Is a rather interesting blog/initiative created by Alex Beker (Canadian Art Director and Graphic Designer). In it creatives from around the world share their thoughts about their ideas that've won a Lion at this year's Cannes Festival.
"Food for thought"
"We are not paid to put a product in an ad, but in the consumer's mind."-- Guido Heffels, Springer & Jacoby
September 01, 2006
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