Quantcast
Channel: Adweek Feed
Viewing all 5066 articles
Browse latest View live

YouTube's 10 Most-Watched Ads in May

$
0
0

Let the games begin!

Sony and Microsoft stormed Adweek and YouTube's Ads Leaderboard in May as both companies introduced their next-gen gaming consoles—the PlayStation 4 and Xbox One—in teaser videos. Both of those clips made the top five this month. But they were eclipsed by a teaser for an actual video game, which took the top spot.

Elsewhere on this month's list, Old Spice nailed down two spots in the top 10 for the second straight month. And Kmart followed up April's enormously successful "Ship My Pants" ad with "Big Gas Savings," which reached less stratospheric but still respectable levels.

Audi of America placed high on this month's list with its hilarious spot starring Leonard Nimoy and Zachary Quinto. And Cruzan Rum also snuck in with its amusing take on laid-back island life.

The view counts, which fell back significantly from their record levels in April, are as of June 5. To be eligible for the YouTube Ads Leaderboard, videos must be marked as ads on YouTube (i.e., they get some paid views) but must also earn significant organic views. See all 10 spots at the link below.

Video Gallery: YouTube's 10 Most-Watched Ads in May


The World's Best Commercials, 2012-13

$
0
0

It was a long haul of judging for Sir John Hegarty, Joe Pytka and their jury teams at the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity last week.

Hegarty's Film Lions jury watched 3,125 commercials. Pytka's Film Craft Lions jury watched 2,029. In total, they awarded three Grand Prix, along with 21 Gold Lions, 38 Silver Lions and 70 Bronze Lions.

The Grand Prix and Gold Lions went to 21 different spots or campaigns. That work represented just 0.4 percent of all Film submissions this year—truly the cream of the crop.

See all 21 campaigns below:

Video Gallery: The World's Best Commercials, 2012-13

Architect Sweats, and for Good Reason, in Old Spice's Latest Bar-Soap Ad Parody

$
0
0

Old Spice had a couple of hits back in April with its "Shower" and "Watermelon" ads for its Fiji Bar Soap. Now, the brand's Swagger Bar Soap gets some play in this amusing spot from Wieden + Kennedy called "Architect." Again, it's a parody of '80s bar-soap commercials, complete with cheese-spirational song lyrics and meaningful brow-sweat-wiping moments … and a comically sideswiping ending. Nice slippy product shot at the end, too.

Wieden + Kennedy Takes on Tax Preparation

$
0
0

The agency that found a way to contemporize an old deodorant brand is venturing into tax preparation software.

Wieden + Kennedy, famous for its award-winning rebranding of Procter & Gamble's Old Spice, is the new lead agency for Intuit's TurboTax, which has left Dailey after 11 years. The software rival to bricks-and-mortar stalwarts like H&R Block spent more than $100 million in media last year, according to Nielsen.

In making the hire, Greg Johnson, vp of marketing at TurboTax, cited chemistry with Wieden executives and the agency's "long history of developing great work that tranforms brands."

The assignment came after a review in which there were three other finalists: Crispin Porter + Bogusky, Goodness Mfg. and Campbell Ewald, according to sources.

Select Resources International in Santa Monica, Calif. managed the search, which began in the spring. Dailey, which is based in West Hollywood, Calif., did not defend.

 

Dos Equis Spokesman Does the Most Interesting 'Ask Me Anything' in the World

$
0
0

You might think Dos Equis' mind-bendingly classy pitchman was too busy saving supermodels on the far side of the world to spend any time answering to the dweebish hoi polloi on an Internet forum. Guess again. Jonathan Goldsmith, the actor who plays the brewer's "Most Interesting Man in the World," took to Reddit last week for an"Ask Me Anything" Q&A session with the site's community. While he's quick to point out he's had roles in some 350 movies and TV shows, he's also a crowd pleaser. The lion's share of his banter is very much in character. For example, what does he drink when he's not drinking beer? "A gin martini or almost anything from the Isle of Islay," of course. What are the seven words Eskimos use to call his beard? "Lovely, strong, ticklish, charming, mysterious, tasty, electric." How often does he get recognized? "Very often. A set of twins jumped out of a Rolls Royce to meet me in Hollywood traffic." His feelings toward fellow hyper-suave pitchman, Old Spice's Man Your Man Could Smell Like? "Isaiah [Mustafa] is a friend and a charming gentleman." But it's not all fun and games. Goldsmith did the Q&A to raise money for nonprofits Clear Path International and Mines Advisory Group, and their efforts to remove explosives from postwar zones like Vietnam. The actor's appearance has the masses clamoring for more, with one commenter challenging Dos Equis owner Heineken and Old Spice parent P&G to pair up Mustafa and Goldsmith for a "summer action blockbuster film," with part of the proceeds going to the mine-clearing cause. It's a great idea. Allow us to join in the pipe dreaming, and point out that the title more or less writes itself: "The Most Interesting Man Your Man Could Smell Like—in the World." 

Ad of the Day: Old Spice Perfects the Stupid-Funny Parody Jingle in NFL Spots

$
0
0

Here's a sentence I never thought I'd write: The bar for deodorant ads has gotten really, really high over the last few years.

Don't look at me. I didn't decide this was the category that needed really absurd comedy creative. But Procter & Gamble's Old Spice has proven remarkably game throughout multiple campaigns from Wieden + Kennedy, and its directors—in this case, Steve Rogers of Biscuit Filmworks—have been correspondingly willing to let their freak flags fly.

Old Spice just released four new 15-second spots for the NFL season. First off, these are really funny ads. "Snow Globe" may be my favorite, but "Absent" made me laugh really loud at my desk just now, so that's got to be worth something. It's interesting how directly these spots, done in the same style as W+K's recent Old Spice bar-soap ads, make fun of a specific kind of creative—basically everything with a choral jingle over an otherwise-silent CPG spot in the 1980s. Musically, they're all dead on.

They're kind of perfect for ad nerds, actually. Remember the Doublemint ads where everybody loaded their gum into their mouths in exactly the same ridiculous way? Right, OK. Now, see how these guys sniff the deodorant sticks in exactly the same ridiculous way no one has ever sniffed a deodorant stick (in public, at least)? That's some deep CPG ad knowledge right there, my friends. Learn from it.

That, ultimately, is what makes these ads so good—they're super-accurate pastiches of a specific kind of ad with one huge, horribly wrong difference. You may not know all the little ins and outs of the parodies—I'm fairly sure I'm missing several—but we've all seen somebody transported to a beach by the taste of his beer/smell of her laundry detergent/experience of sucking Cheeto dust off his thumb. Yet for some reason, lizards are never eating that guy's legs, as in the "Lizards" spot, although Wes Welker of the Denver Broncos will probably never catch another forward pass now. (The other guy in the ads is New England Patriots linebacker Jerod Mayo.)

Really, if you think about the number of inexplicable beachside teleportations that go totally well, this is just the law of averages finally working itself out.

CREDITS
Client: Old Spice
Spots: Snow Globe :15 | Lizards :15 | Absent :15 | Coach :15

Agency: Wieden + Kennedy, Portland, Ore.
Creative Directors: Jason Bagley | Craig Allen
Copywriter: Nathaniel Lawlor
Art Director: Croix Gagnon
Producer: Lindsay Reed
Producer: Jennifer Fiske
Account Team: Liam Doherty | Nick Pirtle
Executive Creative Directors: Joe Staples | Susan Hoffman
Head of Production: Ben Grylewicz

Production Company: Biscuit Filmworks
Director: Steve Rogers
Executive Producers: Shawn Lacy | Holly Vega
Line Producer: Jay Veal
Director of Photography: Ben Seresin

Editorial Company: Rock Paper Scissors
Editor: Adam Pertofsky
Asst. Editor: Marjorie Sacks
Post Producer: Julia Batter

VFX Company: The Mill
Head of Production: Arielle Davis
Producer: Christina Thompson
Coordinator: Ben Sposato
Creative Director: John Leonti
Shoot Supervisor: John Lenoti | Narbeh Mardirossian
Visual Effects Supervisor | Lead Flame Artist: Tim Davies
3D Lead: Lu Meng-Yang
2D Artists: Ben Smith, Narbeh Mardirossian, Adam Lambert
3D Artists: James Ma, Thomas Briggs, Mike Di Nocco, Jason Jasnsky, Brian Yu
Matte Painter: Daniel Thron

Music: Libman Music
Composer | Arranger: Paul Libman
Record | Mix: Avatar Studios
Engineer: Jay Messina
SFX Studio: Lime Studios
Sound Designer: Loren Silber

Color Transfer: Company3
Artist: Sean Coleman
Producer: Matt Moran

Hunkvertising: The Objectification of Men in Advertising

$
0
0

Call it hunkvertising.

The objectification of men in advertising (as with women) is not new. Consider icons like the Marlboro Man and Old Spice’s sexy pitchman Isaiah Mustafa. And yet, a disproportionate number of buff, often-shirtless studs are lately popping up in ads for everything from salad dressing to air freshener—in other words, consumer products not normally associated with sexual imagery.

As ever, sex sells—even the hirsute sex, apparently.

Many ad experts and social critics see the whole thing as a harmless turning of the tables following decades of bikini-clad babes in beer commercials. Double entendres abound when dissecting the trend, the overriding feeling being that it can’t be taken all that seriously because, after all, we are just talking about guys here. “We’re all in on the gender-reversal joke,” explains Lisa Wade, associate professor of sociology at Occidental College. “It’s funny to us to think of women being lustful.”

Adds Steve O’Connell, ecd and partner at Red Tettemer O’Connell + Partners: “Objectifying men doesn’t really upset anybody. You really can’t offend the white male.” O’Connell’s agency helped pioneer the manvertising trend last year with print ads for Renuzit featuring small product shots alongside a parade of beefcake. (“Now that is gorgeous. And the man is not so bad either,” reads the copy in one ad.) O’Connell says, “It’s tongue-in-cheek and calls itself out. The hot guy clearly had no business being there. Because it’s guys, you get the extra safety net of it not being too offensive.”

Renuzit refreshed the campaign last month with a whole new batch of dudes. The new push from Pereira & O’Dell, themed “Choose Them All,” introduces eight handsome new “Scent Gents” who personify the brand’s aroma palette and promise “a good-looking man in every room.” Each a master of the come-hither stare. The Gents also star in a branded reality show featuring Joan Rivers called Romancing the Joan, presented by the site SheKnows TV.

And, they’re a hit. “Our digital banner CTRs are 25 percent above CPG averages and are driving users to our Facebook page where our likes have increased significantly,” reports Jeanne Howard, home care brand manager at Renuzit’s corporate parent, Dial Corp., a unit of Henkel AG.

But while largely seen as good-natured fun, others argue that this trend bears as much scrutiny as advertisers using women as sex objects. One detractor is marketing and media critic Åsk Dabitch Wäppling, who maintains, “Studly Steve is as bad of a stereotype as Doofus Dad. They’re stereotypes, and that’s by definition not original. When can we return to product-as-hero advertising? When will we stop insulting people?”

On her Adland blog, Wäppling savages the poster boy of the pecsvertising trend, the hunky model Anderson Davis, best known for his shirtless (sometimes pantless) pitch for Kraft Zesty Italian salad dressing. That campaign, created by TBWA’s Being, bowed this past April with an eye-popping spot casting Davis as a chef who adds Kraft Zesty Italian to a hot skillet. As flames shoot progressively higher, he asks the viewer, smolderingly, “How zesty do you want it? A little? A little more? How about a lot more?” Ultimately, his shirt catches fire and is singed right off his body, revealing a chiseled torso in all its glory.

Once again, man candy proved a winning strategy. The clip garnered 2.5 million YouTube views and shot Davis and the brand into the chat-o-sphere, with fans able to share his image on social media via Zestygrams.

“I would be lying to say I knew it would be that successful,” says Patrick O’Neill, ecd at TBWAChiatDay, Los Angeles, who oversaw the campaign. O’Neill strove to create “the ultimate chef” to engage the brand’s female demographic—fans of Sex in the City, Bridesmaids and 50 Shades of Grey who are tired of purely “functional” ads and hungry for spicier fare. “It’s nonthreatening and playful,” O’Neill says of the campaign, leaving “viewers in control” to concoct whatever fantasies they choose. And, he argues, “It was never meant to be taken seriously.”

Just Say No to Nud*ty
But some took it quite seriously, most notably the group One Million Moms, which raised all kinds of heck about a Zesty Italian print ad that ran this spring in national magazines such as People, Cosmopolitan and Glamour and that featured Davis sprawled with a picnic blanket covering his croutons.

“Last week’s issue of People magazine had the most disgusting ad on the inside front cover that we have ever seen Kraft produce,” howled OMM, an offshoot of the conservative group the American Family Association. “Christians will not be able to buy Kraft dressings or any of their products until they clean up their advertising.” OMM was widely ridiculed for its uptight use of asterisks to censor terms like “g*nitals” and even “n*ked”—all of which served to give the campaign fresh legs, with Davis’ Zesty Guy doing a late-summer encore in a fresh flight of ads.

As Wäppling sees it, OMM might have a point, as she, too, finds the ads shallow. And as a mother herself and part of the target audience, she doesn’t feel they speak to her. Moreover, she contends that by objectifying men, Zesty Italian actually does female consumers a disservice by reducing them to voyeurs on par with guys ogling models in ads that sexualize women.

The critic draws an analogy with the controversy over Titstare, an app (that turned out to be a joke) exposing men gawking at women’s cleavage. “We might as well make an app called Ab-Stare, where Bethenny Frankel and the Good Morning America ladies fawn over Anderson Davis’ abs and share those images over social networks,” Wäppling says. “This is, in fact, exactly what these women did when Anderson Davis visited their shows—they posed with their heads next to his abs.”

And yet, the Zesty Italian campaign isn’t even Davis’ hottest gig. This year, he also went shirtless for Beam Inc.’s Sauza Tequila in a marketing push by Havas Worldwide Chicago that appeared around the same time as his first Kraft ad.

Sauza’s “Make It With a Lifeguard” spot finds Davis at the beach on a sweltering summer day, suggestively squirting suntan lotion into his palm and rubbing it in, at times in slow motion. He prepares a Sauza-Rita, with time-outs for rescues and peering through binoculars to see his own hunky image staring back. The commercial was a sequel to 2012’s “Make It With a Fireman,” which starred Thomas Beaudoin. “The brand wanted to target women, which was pretty revolutionary for the tequila category,” says Havas cd Ecole Weinstein. “So we figured, what better way … than with a hot, impossibly perfect man?”

“Don’t overthink it,” says Rebecca Cullers, a copywriter and AdFreak blogger. “It means that heterosexual women like to look at fit, attractive men. It shouldn’t be a shocking revelation. I’ve heard that heterosexual men like to look at attractive women, too. And in general, people like to look at attractive people.” (Obviously, there are men who like to look at the hot dudes, too.)

Still, Cullers sees obvious pitfalls. “What should worry men about these portrayals is that there’s really only one kind of guy being held up as ‘hot,’” she says. “It’s dangerous to limit the notion of attractiveness to a single model and, in the case of Kraft Zesty and Sauza, the same exact model.” (While the debate rages, indications are that the ads may be helping cash registers ring. Beam reported an 8 percent gain in global sales to $1.2 billion in the first half of this year, with Sauza a key performer, up 5 percent worldwide.)


Getting Cheeky
Injecting the studly ads with humor may help to offset any controversy—and Zesty Italian, Sauza and Renuzit all do to some extent. The Scent Gents have a light touch but don’t exactly bring the funny. Other hunkvertising campaigns make more of an effort.

“There’s a difference between the Liquid-Plumr daydreaming girl, who swoons over the hardware store man as he drills a piece of wood, and the Zesty Guy who keeps losing his top,” says Wäppling. She views Kraft’s effort as “pure objectification,” but praises Liquid-Plumr as “situational comedy, recognizing that even suburban housewives have an active imagination.” The everywoman heroine of the Liquid-Plumr spot, called “Urgent Clear,” fantasizes about Peter, a handyman who promises to satisfy her with a seven-minute cleaning of her pipes. That effort followed the brand’s similar “Double Impact” commercial from 2012, featuring a pair of hunks.

Some critics find Liquid-Plumr’s push safer and more appealing than the Zesty Italian or Sauza campaigns because it includes women in the silly narrative, clearly establishing that they are the ones indulging in fantasy. “We were able to put a twist on a key insight into our consumer—her take-charge, get-it-done attitude,” says Stacey Grier, chief strategic officer at DDB California. “We weren’t trying to make a statement or lead an advertising trend. We were just trying to use humor to communicate the benefits of Clorox products.”

Elsewhere, a Diet Dr Pepper ad from Deutsch LA pushes the self-awareness envelope and pokes fun at studvertising itself. Josh Button, who rivals Davis for pure pulchritude, frolics shirtless in the sand and surf.

“Millions of guys are born good-looking,” his voiceover begins. “But not many are really good-looking. Even fewer are really, really, really, really, really good -looking. At least, that’s what I’m told. I’m Josh Button, and I’m one of a kind.” A countdown appears on-screen during his spiel, running from 70,611,600 to 1.

“We’re poking fun at ourselves and the trend of hot guys in advertising,” said Dr Pepper svp, marketing Jaxie Alt when the spot launched in May. Deutsch creatives Xavier Teo and Erick Mangali say the spot caught on at least partly because the setup is played as a goof from the get-go.

Davis, appearing more sexually aggressive and subversive (he is one hot dude, to be sure), invites criticism from groups such as OMM; meanwhile, Button’s broader, over-the-top approach is more accessible and likely helped mitigate any complaints, say experts.

Some marketers are digging through the vault to take advantage of this whole sexed-up-man boom. Take Diet Coke, which chose to revisit its famous construction worker spot from the early ’90s that (very) briefly made a star of the hunky model Lucky Vanous.

For the reboot, BETC London cast Brit Andrew Cooper as a hardworking, overheated landscaper who catches the attention of some female onlookers, one of whom rolls a can of Diet Coke his way. Cooper promptly pops the top, salaciously spraying himself with product. And like Lucky Vanous before him, Cooper became overnight watercooler fodder.

“The sexual imagery is obvious to the point of being silly,” notes Occidental’s Wade, pointing out “the sweating Diet Coke can rolling in the grass, the phallic tower in the background, the ejaculation imagery with both the spewing grass cuttings and, of course, the exploding soda.”

Sweet Six-Pack
Some hunkvertising has moved past comedy into the realm of the absurd.

A 12-foot-tall fiberglass statue of Colin Firth promoting the BBC’s adaptation of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice was erected in the middle of a lake in London’s Hyde Park this summer. (In the miniseries, the actor, who portrays the aloof Mr. Darcy, takes a swim in his shirt and emerges sopping wet.) Even more curious, Dove Chocolate whipped up a sculpture of TV personality Mario Lopez (just his torso, actually) to introduce its Mint & Dark Chocolate Swirl variety. The huge hunk of chocolate was served at an August event in Los Angeles to drive home the message that Dove’s latest confection “tastes as good as it looks.”

Perhaps what’s good for the goose is good for the gander, and does hunkvertising, in fact, amount to equality of the sexes?

“As women gain in education and the workplace and men take on more household and childcare responsibilities, there’s more gender parity” versus a generation ago when Lucky Vanous strutted his stuff, offers Ann Mack, who follows popular culture as JWT’s director of trendspotting. “This trend is symbolic” of a more even playing field, she says.

Then again, maybe it’s all much baser than that. “This has nothing to do with equality—though equality is a good excuse for looking at hot men if you’re the sort of woman who needs an excuse,” argues blogger Cullers. “It had to do with equality back when Cosmo picked Burt Reynolds as the first nude male centerfold. At this point, looking at some abs while drinking Diet Coke is hardly a feminist revolution, particularly when it’s a remake of a popular spot from decades ago.”

Occidental’s Wade concurs. “I wouldn’t call it equality—I’d call it marketing, and maybe capitalism,” she says. “Market forces under capitalism exploit whatever fertile ground is available. Justice and sexual equality aren’t driving increasing rates of male objectification—money is.” 

Wieden Media Leader Tom Winner Retires

$
0
0

After more than 18 years at Wieden + Kennedy, Tom Winner is calling it a day.

Winner, the longtime U.S. director of media buying for the full-service shop, is retiring and will be succeeded by a key lieutenant, group director of media buying Patrick Mauro. The handoff takes effect next month.

Mauro himself is a veteran of Wieden, having joined in 1996. Most recently, he worked on accounts such as Electronic Arts, Old Spice and Booking.com. As director, he’ll lead broadcast buying on more than a dozen brands, including Nike, ESPN, Facebook and ABC.

Winner, 67, was among the first staffers at Wieden’s New York office when it opened in 1995. He joined the independent agency after more than 20 years in the business, beginning in the research department at NBC and continuing at Advanswers, William Esty and Anheuser-Busch, where he was director of the Busch Media Group in New York.

“That’s a 42-year career in advertising. Think about that for a minute,” Wieden president Dave Luhr said. “That’s unheard of and a true testament to his substance.”

Before Wieden, the 43-year-old Mauro handled TV planning and sales at Paramount Television and Blair Television. In his new role, he'll oversee about 20 staffers. Wieden’s North American media boss--leading all media planning and buying--is director of media Lawrence Teherani-Ami, who is based in the shop’s Portland, Ore., headquarters.


Hello, English Ladies. Isaiah Mustafa Returns for Old Spice in the U.K.

$
0
0

If you've been unable to sleep since the Old Spice guy faded from the spotlight, or suffered from nightmares that he was permanently relegated to playing a lesser version of himself in Israeli beer commercials, you can finally rest easy. Isaiah Mustafa is back.

You'll find him over at Old Spice's U.K. Facebook page with his junk wrapped in a Union Jack. The images there are just teasers of what's still to come: videos (from Leo Burnett, not Wieden + Kennedy) of Mustafa exploring the virtues of what he describes in one promo as "the manliest man to ever grace this planet, the great British gentleman."

It's a certain kind of flattery, but it's not without charm—and a kernel of truth, insofar as anyone can really measure manliness. (Old Spice tried, finding in a 2,000-person survey that less than 20 percent of people think it's manly to wear a Speedo.) Mustafa has already begun traipsing around London on a white horse, and snapped an Instagram photo outside St. Paul's Cathedral.

Given his equity as a pop culture icon, it's not really a surprise to see Old Spice return him to the role. It might not smell as fresh as it once was, but it's pleasing nonetheless.

Ad of the Day: Old Spice Sprays Boys Into Men, and Moms Lose Their Minds

$
0
0

Old Spice appears to be gunning directly for Axe with a new line of refresh body sprays, two new spray scents—with the explosively awesome names of Bearglove and Lionpride—and some of its first spots targeted directly at the fragile psyches of teenage boys.

The concept is that Old Spice will make you smell like a man, which will make ladies treat you like a man, which will make your poor mother cry. Easier than running afoul of the law and far more satisfying than simply talking back, men around the nation now have a healthier way to rebel: Just spray to get laid.

In the three spots from the "Smellcome to Manhood" campaign, by Wieden + Kennedy in Portland, Ore., the lamentations of the mothers are conveyed in amusing musical fashion as they stalk their sons. The frumpy old moms are seriously creepy, dressing up like janitors, washing up on beaches like corpses and sliding up the ball return at the bowling alley as their sons are out on dates with nice young ladies. Even better, the nice young ladies actually look like nice young ladies and not lingerie models twice their age. For extra mom-upsetting value, the two :15s are both interracial. The :30 is better than the :60, which is a more in-depth bildungsroman and has some seriously weird parts in it.

Fun fact: While the spots don't get into it, the campaign is part of an education effort by the brand to prevent the scourge of overspraying—you know, where young men overcompensate for the hideous smell of their pubescent bodies by dousing themselves with the magical juice that promises to bring bikinied babes running at them in slow motion, except all it does is set off the fire alarm or cause kids in the school to be hospitalized. Supposedly, Old Spice is tackling that somehow with these spots. (See more in the infographic below.) But more important, it's doing it with an awesome PSA about how to scent responsibly that involves synthesizers and a guy in a mullet.

If anyone can spray goodbye to boyhood hygiene habits, Old Spice can.

CREDITS
Client: Old Spice
Project: Old Spice Global | Refresh Body Sprays
Global Marketing Director: Bobbie Jo Ehlers
Global Brand Manager: Mathew Krehbiel
Global Associate Brand Manager: Charlie Nutting

Agency
Wieden + Kennedy, Portland, Ore.
Creative Directors: Craig Allen, Jason Bagley
Copywriters: Justine Armour, David Povill
Art Director: Ruth Bellotti
Senior Producer: Lindsay Reed
Account Team: Liam Doherty, Diana Gonzalez, Yaya Zhang, Jessica Monsey
Executive Creative Directors: Susan Hoffman, Joe Staples
Head of Production: Ben Grylewicz

Production
Production Company: MJZ
Director: Steve Ayson
Executive Producer: Emma  Wilcockson
Line Producer: Mark Hall
Director of Photography: Ryley Brown

Editing
Editing Company: HutchCo
Editor: Jim Hutchins
Assistant Editor: Patrick O’Leary
Post Producer: Jane Hutchins

Visual Effects
Visual Effects Company: The Mill
Head of Production: Arielle Davis
Executive Producer: Sue Troyan
Producer: Adam Reeb
Coordinator: Ben Sposato
Creative Director, Flame Lead: Tim Davies
Shoot Supervisor: Steve Anderson
3-D Lead: Meng-Yang Lu
3-D Artists: Mike Di Nocco, John Price
2-D Artists: Lisa Ryan, Margolit Steiner, Jale Parson, Edward Black, Steve Cokonis, Tara De Marco, Tim Robbins, Dag Ivarsory

Music
Music Company: Walker
Producer: Sara Matarazzo
Assistant Producer: Abbey Hickman
Composer, Arranger: Brad Neely
Music Record: Warehouse Studio, GGRP Productions
Music Record Engineer: Vince Renaud 
Composition Engineer: Graeme Gibson
Music Engineer Assistant: Zach Blackstone
Record Coordinator: Derick Cobden
Final Mix Studio: Barking Owl
Post Engineer: Brock Babcock
Producer: Whitney Fromholtz

Color Transfer
Company: MPC
Artist: Mark Gethin

Adweek's Top 5 Commercials of the Week: Jan. 3-10

$
0
0

In our first ad showdown of 2014, brands come strong with spots focusing on family—particularly mothers, both happy and sad—and all the good and bad life can bring. 

Three of our picks this week are from agency Wieden + Kennedy, with one destined for the Winter Olympics in Sochi and another that's part of a campaign that's heading to the Super Bowl. The other contenders are Grey's latest installment in a successful DirecTV campaign and a PSA that will make you never want to drive again. 

Which was the best? Vote below. And if your favorite isn't here, tell us in the comments.

UPDATE: Congrats to this week's winner, Procter & Gamble!

Old Spice, Isaiah Mustafa Stage 'Interneterventions' on 9 Fake Websites for Manly Products

$
0
0

Isaiah Mustafa, who recently returned to the Old Spice world in a British campaign, is now fronting a new online initiative for the P&G brand's new body spray. The campaign is built around nine bogus websites that advertise fake, faux-manly products and services—like black leather sheets, spray-tan parties, push-up muscle shirts and more—and Mustafa's comical disdain for all of them, and anyone who would be sucked in by them.

You can send the sites to friends as a prank (via Twitter, Facebook or email), and when they try to click around, a warning buzzer sounds and Mustafa appears to deliver a good scolding—an "Internetervention"—in his trademark style. A different video plays on each site, and there are all sorts of sight gags and other funny bits.

Check out the nine sites and accompanying videos below.

Credits at the bottom of the post. Via The Denver Egotist.

www.glitzelectronics.com
www.partytanz.com
www.zaneckworkouts.com
www.toughsheets.com
www.smellpulse.com
www.theflatteringman.com
www.brodominiums.com
www.freshbodycoupons.com
www.flavorpatch.com

CREDITS
Client: Old Spice
Project Name: "Internetervention"

Agency: Wieden + Kennedy, Portland, Ore.
Creative Directors: Craig Allen, Jason Bagley
Interactive Creative Director: Matt O'Rourke
Copywriter: Andy Laugenour
Art Directors: Matt Sorrell, Matt Moore, Croix Gagnon
Executive Interactive Producer: Mike Davidson
Interactive Producer: Ben Sellon
Account Team: Liam Doherty, Yaya Zhang, Michael Dalton, Jessica Monsey
Executive Creative Directors: Susan Hoffman | Joe Staples
Director of Broadcast Production: Ben Grylewicz
Director of Digital Production: Pierre Wendling
Group Media Director: Kelly Muller
Associate Media Director: Kerry Antos
Media: Lisa Feldhusen, AJ Blumenthal
Technology Lead: Ryan Bowers
Business Affairs Lead: Cindy Lewellen
Print Producer: Heather Smith Harvey
Group Strategy Director: Britton Taylor
Brand Strategy Director: Anibal Casso
Digital Strategy Lead: Michael Holz
Social Strategist: Danny Schotthoefer
Director of Interactive Strategy: Zach Gallagher

Digital Production Company: Stinkdigital, New York

Production Company: Skunk
Director: Craig Allen

Editorial: Arcade Edit
Editor: Geoff Hounsell
Assistant Editors: Sean Lagrange, Dean Miyahira
Managing Partner: Damian Stevens
Executive Producer: Nicole Visram
Producer: Leslie Carthy

VFX: Timber
Creative Directors: Kevin Lau, Jonah Hall
Producer: Shelby Wong
Lead Flame Artists: Chris Homel, Matt Lydecker, Jan Cilliers
Assistant Flame Artists: Eli Beck-Gifford, Austin Hickman-Fain

Sound Design and Mix: Barking Owl
Executive Producer: Kelly Bayett
Engineer: Brock Babcock

Your Hair Can Now Leap Off Your Head and Hit on Women, Thanks to Old Spice

$
0
0

Attention men: Want hair-care products that turn your hair into a sentient toupee capable of the most charming antics?

No? Really, it's better that it sounds. It's great for when you're in a business meeting and some dial tone is droning on about whatever who cares, and the hot woman across the table is eyeing you hard … it will mack on your behalf without anyone noticing.

So says one of two new oddball spots from Wieden + Kennedy for Old Spice hair products, vaguely reminiscent of Axe's walking-hair-loves-headless-boobs commercial from 2012. (The director, Tom Kuntz, also has experience working with hair that has a mind of its own—going back to Skittles' "Beard.")

Another new Old Spice ad tells you that your creepy-furry head pet will also serve you exceptionally well when you're on a date at the boardwalk. Just look at the magical surprise it can pull, hands-free, out of the arcade claw.

It really is the perfect marriage of the campaign's tagline, "Hair that gets results," and the brand's classic marketing ethos—"If your grandfather hadn't worn it, you wouldn't exist."

Credits plus a print ad below.

CREDITS  
Client: Old Spice
Spots: "Meeting" and "Boardwalk"

Agency: Wieden + Kennedy, Portland, Ore.
Creative Directors: Craig Allen, Jason Bagley
Copywriter: Jason Kreher
Art Director: Max Stinson
Producers: Hayley Goggin, Katie Reardon
Account Team: Georgina Gooley, Liam Doherty, Nick Pirtle, Jessica Monsey, Michael Dalton
Executive Creative Directors: Susan Hoffman, Joe Staples
Head of Production: Ben Grylewicz

Production Company: MJZ
Director: Tom Kuntz
Executive Producer: Scott Howard
Line Producer: Emily Skinner
Director of Photography: Andre Chemetoff

Editorial Company: McKenzie Cutler
Editor: Gavin Cutler
Assistant Editor: Ryan Steele
Producer: Sasha Hirschfeld

Visual Effects Company: Framestore
Visual Effects Supervisor: Alex Thomas
Compositing Supervisor: Russell Dodgson
Producers: Tram Le, Claudia Lecaros
Flame: Stefan Smith, Trent Shumway
Nuke Leads: Vanessa DuQuesnay, Jonni Isaacs, J.D. Yepes
Nuke: Geoff Duquette, Jason Phua, Carl Schroter, Jack Fisher, Anthony Lyons, Katerina Arroyo, Nick Sorenson, Kenneth Quinn Brown

Music Company: Rumblefish
Producer: Mikey Ecker

Final Mix Studio: Lime Studios
Post Engineer: Loren Silber
Assistant Engineer: Patrick Navarre
Producer: Jessica Locke

Color Transfer: CO3
Artist: Stefan Sonnenfeld

Old Spice-Styled Hair Can Play 29 Different Huey Lewis Songs on the Keyboard

$
0
0

When you use Old Spice hair products, your hair is capable of anything.

First, it leaps off your head—that's a given. Then, as we've seen, it either hits on women at work or skillfully operates claw machines on the boardwalk to retrieve lost children.

Now, though, it reveals its most impressive talent to date—playing all the best-loved Huey Lewis and the News songs on the keyboard. In the interactive video below, also embedded at ThatsThePowerofHair.com, you can request any of 29 Huey Lewis songs, and a mop of hair will play them soulfully for you, supported by props like a disco ball and Hula girl.

"The Power of Love," "The Heart of Rock 'n' Roll," "I Want a New Drug," "Bad Is Bad," "Doing It All for My Baby"? Hear all those and 24 more great hits right now.

The digital experience, on desktop and mobile, is being embedded online in custom banners, news sites and Old Spice's social channels. Agency: Wieden + Kennedy.

Credits below.

CREDITS
Client: Old Spice
Project: "That's the Power of Hair"

Agency: Wieden + Kennedy, Portland, Ore.
Creative Directors: Craig Allen, Jason Bagley, Matt O'Rourke
Copywriter: Jason Kreher
Art Director: Max Stinson
Executive Interactive Producer: Mike Davidson
Director of Broadcast Production: Ben Grylewicz
Director of Interactive Production: Pierre Wendling
Technology Lead: Ryan Bowers
Account Team: Georgina Gooley, Liam Doherty, Nick Pirtle, Michael Dalton, Jessica Monsey
Executive Creative Directors: Susan Hoffman, Joe Staples

Production Company: MJZ
Director: Tom Kuntz
Executive Producer: Scott Howard
Producer: Emily Skinner

Editorial Company: Rock Paper Scissors
Editor: Carlos Arias
Asst. Editor: Christopher Mitchell
Producer: Lisa Barnable

VFX Company: Framestore, New York
Creative Director: Mike Woods
Producer: Christine Cattano
Head of Commercial Development: Ming-Pong Liu
Lead Developers: Sebastian Buys and Nien Liu
Lead Compositor: Mindy Dubin

Music Company: Stimmung
Executive Producer: Ceinwyn Clark
Post Engineer: Rory Doggett
Composer: Greg Chun

Terry Crews Can Shave Anything With His Old Spice Razor, Including Tiny Terry Crews

$
0
0

It's been almost a year since we've seen Terry Crews psychotically scream his way through an Old Spice sales pitch. So, to make up for lost time, we get twice the Terry in one spot. 

"Get Shaved in the Face" is the newest oddity from Wieden + Kennedy, which first tapped Crews in 2010 for a series of over-the-top spots directed by comedy duo Tim & Eric. In this installment, Crews faces the existential dilemma of whether to shave off a facial hair that appears to be his micro-clone.

While Isaiah Mustafa is still the most iconic Old Spice guy, Crews seems to be the brand's personality of choice over the long term. He's gone from advertising Odor Blocker Body Wash to shaving cream—and here he's fronting Old Spice's newest foray into grooming hardware. Thanks to a partnership with Braun, you can now buy an Old Spice Hair Clipper ($49.99), Beard & Head Trimmer ($49.99), Wet & Dry Shave & Trim ($59.99), Shaver ($69.99) and Wet & Dry Shaver ($79.99).

They're apparently the perfect devices for committing anthropomorphic follicide—you know, in case that's an issue for you.

CREDITS
Client: Old Spice
Project: "Get Shaved in the Face"

Agency: Wieden + Kennedy, Portland, Ore.
Creative Directors: Craig Allen, Jason Bagley
Copywriter: Andy Laugenour
Art Director: Matt Sorrell
Broadcast Producer: Jennifer Hundis
Director of Broadcast Production: Ben Grylewicz
Account Team: Georgina Gooley, Nick Pirtle, Michael Dalton, Jessica Monsey
Executive Creative Directors: Susan Hoffman, Joe Staples

Production Company: Gifted Youth
Direction, Editing, Visual Effects: Fatal Farm
Sound Mix: Charlie Keating, Joint Editorial


This Physics Professor Just Found Out His Theory Is True

$
0
0

It’s not often that you get wildly popular videos from the scientific community. But, seeing Stanford University professor Andre Linde find out the most solid evidence for inflation theory—the concept that the universe rapidly expanded microseconds after the Big Bang—will make you want to share his story.

While it doesn’t contain your usual viral tropes, watching a physicist learn he’s got the smoking gun for the theory he’s been trying to prove his entire life may make your heart grow three sizes today. It’s a great way to mark the proof of gravitational waves, which is already sparking a lot of chatter that the project scientists may win the Nobel Prize. Plus, the popularity of the video helps prove something that nerds have know all along: Science is pretty cool. 

In other inspiring science and technology news, Intel released a short video on Daniel, a double amputee in South Sudan who received 3D printed prosthetics. Not Impossible Labs founder Mick Ebeling explains how his company is building labs in the area to help victims of the Civil War.

See the other top 10 brands from this week's VideoWatch/VidIQ charts:

NOTE: Adweek’s VideoWatch Chart, powered by VidIQ, reveals the Top 10 Branded Web Videos on YouTube every week. The chart tracks more than just pure views, as VidIQ incorporates sharing data from Facebook, Twitter and YouTube, among other data sources in an effort to measure true engagement. Every video is also ranked with VidIQ’s proprietary Score which helps judge the likelihood of a video being promoted in YouTube Related Videos, Search and Recommended Videos.

The 6 Manliest Fashion Brands of All Time [Video]

$
0
0

What is it that makes a fashion item quintessentially manly? Historian and in-house Brand Genius Robert Klara talks us through the styles that will make a man of you.

Old Spice Lets Its Fingers Do the Walking in Real-Time Twitter Campaign

$
0
0

Idle hands are the devil's playthings, and those hands look particularly evil when they have 14 fingers or the heads of chickens.

Earlier today, Old Spice posed a simple question on Twitter:

The answers came flooding in, and the team at Wieden + Kennedy has been busy ever since, whipping up Photoshopped images of some of the more peculiar replies.

Check some of them out below, and give Old Spice a hand for another inspired time-waster.

Breaking the Rules at Deutsch

$
0
0


Specs
Who Kerry Keenan
New gig Chief creative officer, Deutsch, New York
Old gig Global executive creative director, YR Entertainment
Twitter @kerry_keenan
Age 45

After studying religion in college, how did you end up in advertising?
I spent one-and-a-half years in India while in college and religion found me. I studied Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam and Christianity from a different perspective from my Catholic background. I was a big reader—I was an English major as well—so religion was the political side to all the books I loved. What it has to do with advertising is that maybe it was the opiate to the masses. When you study something like that, you have different perspectives and it gives you the chance to look at something from more than one place. As a creative you have to be able to do that.

What was your first ad job?
I started as an intern at BBDO for [creative director] Charlie Miesmer. I had no advertising experience and I think he thought I was funny. He asked to see my advertising book, and I said I hadn’t written one yet but I’d like to someday. A couple of weeks later I was taking briefs off the copy machine, and I presented an idea for Sun Chips, a new brand, and sold it. I was 22.

You’ve had some very senior-level jobs. Why don’t we see more women in top roles?
There are a lot of women at high levels of the industry but not in creative departments. Why that is, I’m not sure. But I am sure it is changing fast. Within the next 10 years we’ll see more of an appropriate ratio because people now in my position don’t look at gender when they look at portfolios, they look at the work. They look at the person who is either really good or not so good and make decisions that way about who is coming up through the ranks.

What were your first impressions of Deutsch? What surprised you the most?
People either don’t leave Deutsch or they’re called boomerangers, they come back. In our industry it’s perfectly normal to have 10 jobs on your resume by the time you’re 40. You don’t find that here. That was a real surprise. People become part of the family here and they stay.

What’s been your focus since joining the agency?
We had work to do to create an environment where our studio is more creatively integrated. We needed to have our younger art directors and copywriters not just getting the runoff of work that’s hard to do which nobody wants to handle. We needed to make sure everyone is getting their assignments from scratch so they could learn how to answer a brief and develop their skills. So we’re acting like a much smaller shop than we are, a lot more entrepreneurial. We have meetings once a month with each team, asking what are they doing that’snot assigned.

What do you do when you’re not working?
If I’m not working, I watch TV. It’s how I relax. There’s a show called Hannibal, about Hannibal Lecter. It’s not a cooking show, but it has the most disgustingly beautiful food photography I’ve ever seen.

What is some of your favorite work and what are you looking forward to at Cannes?
I like “Momsong,” the Old Spice commercial where the moms cry because their sons are growing up. It’s only a TV spot, but sometimes that’s all it takes because right now there are no rules and it’s just craft we’re looking for. I particularly like the way Cannes is evolving with category diversity. It’s exciting when they recognize new categories like mobile and, this year, health.

Photo: Alfred Maskeroni

Old Spice Scores With World Cup Ad Full of Screaming

$
0
0

Old Spice scores another goal with Terry Crews, this time for the World Cup.

The brand would like you to know it's now available in Brazil, and it's a good time to tell you that because there's a rather large sporting event taking place there right now. Wieden + Kennedy in Portland, Ore., cranked up its crazy machine and decided to have Crews power drill through the Earth to Brazil, where he meets his Brazilian double and congratulates him on being awesome, spontaneously creating a pineapple in the act.

Someday, they'll just have Crews scream the whole thing; this time they settle for screaming half. Luckily, Crews's elongated vowels work great for celebrating a sporting event where people yell "Goooooooaaaaaaal" all the time.

Viewing all 5066 articles
Browse latest View live