Lame Dolby reference aside, The Royal Navy will deliver a message from you to anyone at Get The Message. Pretty well done, but I do not know what purpose this serves whatsoever. As you can see though, I sent the spam tin lads one.(Via.)
Lame Dolby reference aside, The Royal Navy will deliver a message from you to anyone at Get The Message. Pretty well done, but I do not know what purpose this serves whatsoever. As you can see though, I sent the spam tin lads one.








I thought I rambled. What the hell is he even saying? Why do I have this fear that the government is going to start an advertising oversight committee and Frank is going to be CCGO? (Chief Creative Government Officer.) Watch him wander through the CNBC clip answering questions nobody asked and constantly attacking corporate golf sponsorships:
Maybe you saw the New York Times article out about the Tropicana redesign and how that’s just going over like gangbusters. While it’s nice to respond to the public outcry, it’s ironic given they’re owned by Pepsi, a brand itself that has ignored public opinion regarding its own redesign issues.
True for the most part. Even though I tear into the new Pepsi work I still use both products because I prefer them to any other brands. I don’t care what the Tropicana in my fridge looks like right now, I just know I like it over others I’ve tried.
Redesigning any brand packaging is risky. (I’ve done package redesign on major brands and know the careful moves you have to make in evolving a look forward.) Any change, revolutionary or not, is risky.
“A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky, dangerous animals and you know it.”
All those ideas that died in the brainstorm or at the client now have a home. (Besides award shows.) Steve Hall over at AdRants along with book publisher Blurb and Ammo Marketing have created Killed Ideas. Which is... basically for ideas you love that the client didn’t. Unlike award shows too, it doesn’t cost $500 per entry. Zip. Nada. Zilch. Submit your ideas by March 31st and it may make into Killed Ideas Volume 1, the first collection of the 50 best dead ideas. (Speaking of stuff that never ran, how ironic if someone enters something that did.) So get to coming up with stuff the client will hate and enter now. (Follow them on their blog and on Twitter too.)



What stood out:
Directed by Helen Hunt, it’s the story of Lisa Nigro, a former Chicago police officer who opened up a restaurant for the homeless, and then won the chance to have her story made into a commercial. Read about it here and watch the clip. Before you read further and feel the love, I do like these spots a lot.
(The final entry in the series on why people follow, continued from part 1 and part 2.)






Sex sells, even in church. Or outside in this case. Banners for Mercy’s Cross Church in Sherwood, Arkansas feature their Porn Sunday series about the difference between sex and pornography. (Less mutually exclusive and more sequential in my mind: The former leading to the latter when you no longer get... the former. Circle of
“Unfortunately, most advertisers and their agencies seem incapable of realizing the stunningly obvious fact that virtually everyone filters everything they see and hear, then chooses to ignore those parts that don’t excite, enthuse, inform, or have relevance to them.”
iwasyoungnstupid.com