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After 60 Years in Advertising, I Believe True Creativity Is More Powerful Than Ever

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A good thing about getting old in this business is that you've actually lived through all the changes and survived the perennial predictions of ad agency extinction.

Along the way you've also observed, maybe even been a part of, any number of power shifts. But when I was asked by Adweek's editors to contribute a few lines about the evolution of power within our industry, my thoughts went immediately to the one thing that's remained constant throughout my 60 years in the business: creative power—the power of an idea to transform the meaning, and thus the fortunes, of brands.

Keith Reinhard Headshot: Alex Fine

In the '50s, it was creative power, certainly not horsepower, that transformed an ugly little German car into the most popular import of its time. Creativity gave the Volkswagen Beetle a winning countercultural identity, a feature no engineer could add. Years later, it was the power of a one-word urban greeting—"Wassup"—that lent youth and hipness to an aging Budweiser, and caused its brewer to state publicly, "In our lifetimes, we'll never see so much value created from a single idea!"

More recently, a former wide receiver for an NFL practice squad urged us to "Smell Like a Man, Man," turning a sleepy deodorant, Old Spice, into an international phenomenon. Those are just three examples of the wonder-working power of creative ideas developed by agencies partnering with great clients over the years.

There is power in partnership, and I sometimes lament the passing of the kind of partnerships we once enjoyed when CEOs of agencies had close, top-to-top relationships with their client counterparts. David Ogilvy said, "Chairmen should harangue chairmen." The president of the Minnesota Valley Canning Company said, "I want the little guy with the rumpled suit," meaning Leo Burnett himself, who, in turn, gave his new client a much jollier Green Giant. Bill Bernbach could tell Edgar Bronfman he was wrong about a headline suggestion for Chivas Regal, and it was Bill's close relationships with Carl Hahn at Volkswagen and Bob Townsend at Avis that resulted in advertising that changed advertising forever.

But in time, many CEOs gave up their responsibility as ultimate brand managers and transferred their decision-making power from the corner office to the office of a chief marketing officer. Some of these CMOs not only embraced the power of creativity but also advanced its cause within their organizations and our industry. Jim Stengel at P&G was one of the first to lead a delegation of his execs to the International Festival of Creativity at Cannes, an initiative that other clients soon followed, seeking to better understand the creative process and its brand-building powers.

There were other CMOs however, who exercised their new powers to create a wasteful churn of agency reviews and change, not for the sake of creativity, but apparently for the sake of change itself. In that process, valuable brand equities and powerful long-running campaigns were often lost or abandoned. Such losses give credence to the boast of the late Rosser Reeves, chairman of the Ted Bates agency and father of the unique selling proposition (USP), who promised he could beat you with the third-best campaign because you'd keep changing and he wouldn't. How many readers today know the Avis tagline that four years ago replaced the long-running and still relevant "We Try Harder"?

The mid-'80s saw a consolidation of power in the agency world touched off by the brothers Saatchi who seemed to be doing a deal a week. Our idea in 1986 for the three-agency merger that formed Omnicom was to amass unequalled creative power to better serve clients across the globe. The media called it "The Big Bang," after which other consolidations soon followed. Today, agencies of the five big holding companies dominate the advertising and marketing landscape, as well as the stages where creative excellence is honored.

Not long after the merger mania had subsided, full-service agencies experienced a damaging loss of power when media buying was shifted to separate, independent firms which promised clients unparalleled clout. Some observers now say this clamor for low-cost GRPs underestimated the rise of the internet and, in turn, the importance of digital and mobile advertising where the lines between content and connection are blurred. For many of us, losing the media function came at a time when, in response to the proliferation of media channels, we in the agencies were elevating the media practice and joining it with our creative resources. I'm with those calling for a reintegration of the two disciplines, however such a reunion might occur.

Another flashback reminds us that beginning in 1948 and continuing until the late 1980s, the big three networks dominated U.S. television—controlling the vast majority of advertising and pretty much determined what Americans watched, and when. Conventional wisdom holds that the power to choose now resides with consumers. But one could argue that this presumed power is an illusion, given that six media giants now control almost all of what we watch, read or listen to. The introduction of the internet in the '80s led to the digital disruption later in the century. This in turn has become an unrelenting tsunami of technical innovation, with each wave bringing us new creative possibilities.

As marketers, however, we need to make sure that these disruptions don't become distractions, taking focus away from building enduring brands.

Inside our own companies, technology allows us to easily connect with each other and with our clients from any point on the globe. But as with all technical advances, this benefit comes at a cost, most notably the power of presence—physical human presence. The synergy that results from team members interacting with each other in the same place at the same time cannot be matched by teams whose members are all working from different, often far-flung locations. And all the emails in the world will never substitute for real live managers walking the halls and offering a word of encouragement or genuine appreciation. It's easy to underestimate the power of being there and caring. It can inspire great work or even turn a life around.

Where will technology take us? VR and AI offer awesome, perhaps fearsome, possibilities. Some predict that machines, already composing news stories without any human involvement, will soon be originating our creative content, replacing our people and their talents. I question that prediction if for no other reason than that machines, for all their intelligence, still lack the power of passion, without which, according to the German philosopher Hegel, nothing great has ever been accomplished.

Now that the big legacy agencies are up to speed with the newest technology and specialist skills offered by the startup shops born during the great digital disruption, we'll likely see another cycle of agency consolidation. Clients will encourage this consolidation as they discover the advantages of partnering with a new definition of full-service agencies.

But within those agencies, instead of power residing only at the top of an outdated organizational chart, we'll see flatter, more flexible organizations that quickly form and reform in response to fast-changing needs. Decision-making power will be more broadly distributed to on-the-ground operatives able to act and react quickly and creatively to real-time opportunities. Leaders will be reminded that the best way to gain power is to give it away—to the right people.

And some of those people may well represent a new blend of generalist and specialist skills: perhaps a Leonard Bernstein-like advertising composer, arranger, synergist and conductor, all in one person. And given what scientists are telling us about who's best at multitasking, that person is likely to be a woman.

In any case, we're sure to see a lot more power placed in the hands of women. The many panels we've all sat through addressing the subject will finally establish a marketing world where talent truly has no gender. As for diversity and inclusion, I like what DDB's Wendy Clark said at the recent 4A's conference: "We will not rest until our company reflects the marketplace we serve."

We'll also see a fresh appreciation and application of the power of story, especially as neuroscientists are giving us new evidence that telling a good brand story is better for the bottom line than presenting rational arguments. As Peter Guber, the Hollywood producer and former CEO of Sony Pictures, put it, "In this age of rapid technological change, it's not the 0s and 1s of the digital revolution, but rather the oohs and aahs of a good story that offer the best chance of compelling listeners to act on behalf of a worthy goal."

The power of story was given even more importance by Joe Nye, former dean of Harvard's Kennedy School for Government, when he wrote: "Conventional wisdom has always been that the government with the largest military prevails, but in an information age it may be the state (or nonstate) with the best story that wins." The same goes for brands.

Some scholars, perhaps channeling Mahatma Gandhi, make a distinction among three kinds of power: "power over," "power to" and "power with." "Power over" is the ability to dominate a person or a group. "Power to" is the ability to do something on one's own, relying on one's intellect, knowledge and stamina. But "power with" is the ability to work with others to accomplish a common goal.

In our business, power will always reside with those who have the money. But in the future, as in the past, clients have a choice in how to use power. They can use their "power over" to intimidate, scare or starve their agencies, or they can use their "power with" to partner with agencies to unleash the kind of creative power that can make their brands rich and famous.

Not too long ago, I enrolled in a class on Basic Content Strategy at the General Assembly in New York. The instructor was younger than any of my kids. But in my attempt to stay current, I just might go back and take a class in writing code. As Bernbach said, "The future, as always, belongs to the brave." I'm not sure how much future I have left in advertising, but given these exciting times—were it in my power—I'd sign up for another 60 years.

Every Wednesday for 20 years, Keith Reinhard (@kreatividad), chairman emeritus of DDB Worldwide, sent out a memo to the global agency he ran that offered up pieces of wisdom. The memos became known as Any Wednesday, which is the title of a recently published book cataloging the insights. Reinhard was also the recipient of the 2015 Lifetime Achievement Award from Clio.


This story first appeared in the May 23, 2016 issue of Adweek magazine.
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Old Spice Just Made Its Weirdest Commercial Yet, and That's Saying Something

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It's been more than six years since Old Spice advertising started getting very peculiar indeed, with help from Isaiah Mustafa and, particularly, Terry Crews. But Wieden + Kennedy Portland has now outdone itself in the oddities department, taking two strange Old Spice spots from last year and remixing them, with help from video artist Nick DenBoer, into—in the brand's own words—a "horrifying mutant nightmare abomination."

It's as over-the-top as a commercial can get, and some might say the brand officially jumps the shark here by fully crossing over into self-parody . (There's even a shark in the spot.) But W+K tells AdFreak it's proud of this deviant monstrosity.


W+K creative director Jason Kreher says the idea for the remix came about when the agency team was looking over some contracts and realized they still had usage rights for a couple of 2015 commercials.

"We'd all seen Nick's work from Conan, but right during this period of time he released The Chickening, which is amazing," Kreher says. "We worked with him for about three weeks, and every version got better and funnier and weirder. He is obviously a video genius, but he also composed the song. … The stuff he was able to create using assets from just two commercials seemed impossible."

Check out the original two ads below. 

These 6 Great CPG Commercials Were the Whole Package

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Consumer packaged goods aren't usually considered a creative canvas for agencies. But these six campaigns proved otherwise—showing that even staid categories can be fertile ground for fascinating creative ideas, and massive viral hits. 

 
Old Spice

Agency: Wieden + Kennedy
Year: 2010

W+K had been revitalizing the P&G brand for a while, but nothing could prepare the world for Isaiah Mustafa in his towel—at once, the ideal man and the ultimate parody of him. With its sharp writing and hyperbolic visuals, this spot defined postmodern masculinity and created a whole, often-imitated style of self-aware advertising.

 
Dove

Agency: Ogilvy Brazil
Year: 2013

The Unilever brand's "Campaign for Real Beauty," launched in 2004, reached its apotheosis with "Real Beauty Sketches." As part of a brilliant social experiment, a police sketch artist drew women as they described themselves, and as others described them—illustrating, quite literally, women's issues with self-esteem.

 
Cheerios

Agency: Saatchi & Saatchi
Year: 2013

This General Mills brand became a somewhat unlikely pioneer for progressive advertising after a quiet, cute spot with a mixed-race family got swamped by racist comments online. The brand seemed taken aback at first, but embraced its sudden role as a leading voice for acceptance by running a follow-up spot on the Super Bowl.

 
Honey Maid

Agency: Droga5
Year: 2014

Mondelez also took up the cause of inclusive advertising with "This Is Wholesome," a campaign showing the full range of real American families. The launch spot showed gay dads, two mixed-race families (one military) and a single dad—and the lauded campaign has also touched on everything from divorce to disability to immigration.

 
Axe

Agency: 72andSunny
Year: 2016

For years, this Unilever brand was stubbornly troglodytic in its ads, appealing to young men with bluntly sexist portrayals of women. But lately it's been evolving, and this year rolled out a campaign with an impressive, grownup take on manhood. One guy in high heels, another in a wheelchair—this isn't your older brother's Axe.

 
Knorr

Agency: MullenLowe
Year: 2016

Tatia Pilieva, who directed the famous "First Kiss" film a few years back, returned with this great branded work for Unilever's soup mixes and condiments brand. It was another social experiment about affection—to see if strangers could fall in love over food. With almost 60 million views, it's one of 2016's most viral ads to date.


This story first appeared in the June 20, 2016 issue of Adweek magazine.
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2 New Old Spice Guys Kick Off Hilariously Weird 'Smell 'Em Who's Boss' Campaign

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After so many years of its signature quirky advertising, it's tempting to think of the Old Spice work as dated. But then "Rocket Car" plays for a full house at the Cannes Lions Film awards, to the absolute delight of the crowd, and you remember that this is a campaign that stays fresh not by reinventing itself regularly—but by fully committing to its bizarre ideas and executing to perfection.

A new Old Spice campaign by Wieden + Kennedy Portland for the Old Spice Swagger line broke during the Cannes festival with a spot called "Five Year Plan." It stars a brand new Old Spice guy, actor Thomas Beaudoin, who emerges victorious in the most anatomically freaky job interview you'll ever see.

The new tagline is, "Smell 'Em Who's Boss."



That spot is already well on its way toward 4 million YouTube views. But it turns out it's just the opening piece of a larger campaign that actually introduces two new Old Spice guys—Beaudoin for Swagger, and actor Alberto Cardenas for the new Desperado scent.

A second Beaudoin spot has rolled out, along with two Western-themed ads starring Cardenas. Check those out below. The work as a whole illustrates the "transformational" powers of the Swagger and Desperado scents to give men "pure unadulterated confidence," says the agency.



As usual, all the language around the campaign is amusingly pear shaped. (Check out the YouTube descriptions of the spots for a chuckle.)

Here's a description of the campaign that W+K provided: "Once there was a man who wanted to be the man. But that man lacked the confidence to be the man. Then along came Old Spice Swagger and Desperado. And soon that man smelled like the man. But not just the man. A better smelling version of the man."

CREDITS
Client: Old Spice
Project: Old Spice | Smell Em Who's Boss
Janine Miletic: Marketing Director
Mathew Krehbiel: Brand Manager
Danny Suich: Senior Assistant Brand Manager

Agency: Wieden + Kennedy, Portland, Ore.
Creative Directors: Erik Fahrenkopf | Max Stinson
Copywriter: Matt Mulvey
Art Director: Lawrence Melilli
Integrated Executive Producer: Erika Madison
Producer: Chris Capretto
Account Team: Georgina Gooley | Nick Pirtle | Michael Dalton

Production Company: MJZ
Director: Steve Ayson
President: David Zander
Executive Producer: Emma Wilcockson
Line Producer: Mark Hall
Director of Photography: Robert Elswit

Editorial Company: EXILE
Editor: 5-Year, Innocent, Perfect Ending: Kirk Baxter
Editor: Standoff: Nate Gross
Assistant Editor: Zaldy Lopez
Post Producer: Toby Louie / Brittany Carson
Head of Production: Jennifer Locke
Executive Producer: Carol Lynn Weaver

VFX Company: The Mill | LA
Executive Producer: Sue Troyan
Producer: Chris Harlowe
Coordinator: Rustie Burris
VFX Supervisor: James Allen
2D Lead Artist: Narbeh Mardirossian
2D Artists: Andy Dill, Alex Candlish, Jale Parsons, Don Kim, Lisa Ryan, Brad Scott, Chris Payne
3D Artist: Michael Lori
Matte Painting: Andy Wheater, Nathan McKenna

Music and Sound Design – Five Year Plan, Standoff
Original Music: Walker
Executive Producer: Sara Matarazzo
Senior Producer: Abbey Hickman
Sound Designer: Brian Emrich / Trinitite

Music and Sound Design – Innocent
Original Music: Joint
Composers: Noah Woodburn, Tim Ribner
Producer: Sarah Fink
Sound Designer: Brian Emrich / Trinitite

Music and Sound Design – Perfect Ending
Original Music: Woodwork
Track: Sunset Scrubdown
Composer: Philip Kay
Producers: Rachel Wood, Andy Oskwarek
Vocal Arrangement: Walker
Vocals Producer: Abbey Hickman
Sound Designer: Brian Emrich / Trinitite

Final Mix
Studio: Lime Studios
Engineer: 5-Year, Innocent, Perfect Ending: Rohan Young
Engineer: Standoff: Sam Casas
Assistant Engineer: 5-Year, Innocent, Perfect Ending: Ben Tomastik
Assistant Engineer: Standoff: Peter Lapinski
Executive Producer: Susie Boyajan

Color Transfer
Company: Company 3
Artist: Sean Coleman
Color Producer: Matt Moran

Von Miller, Noted Chicken Farmer Who Also Plays Football, Is Your New Old Spice Guy

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From raising chickens to tackling the world's biggest men to dancing for the nation, it seems there is nothing Von Miller can't do. And now, he's adding the revered title of Old Spice guy to his résumé.

Procter & Gamble today announced that the Denver Broncos linebacker and Super Bowl 50 MVP will be the face of Old Spice for the 2016 season. He will promote the brand's Hardest Working Collection. The first creative will be here early in the season, the brand tells AdFreak. For now, you'll just have to enjoy these two photos.



"Between winning the Super Bowl, solidifying my status with the Broncos and being named the newest Old Spice guy, 2016 is shaping up to be quite a year," Miller says in a statement. "I've had my favorite Old Spice scents for a long time, and I only trust the Hardest Working Collection to give me a deep clean after practices and keep me smelling fresh on and off the field. There's a reason you find Old Spice in every team's locker room."

In a release, Old Spice called the 27-year-old former Texas A&M star as "a perfect fit" for the brand, citing not only his on-field successes but his colorful personality and pastimes, including his proven ability to "successfully raise chickens, devour the latest scientific and natural curiosities, plus display amazing dance moves on television and in the backfield, all while marching to his own fashion and style beat."

"We're excited to welcome Von, one of the NFL's top-performing players and unique personalities, to the Old Spice family," says Janine Miletic, Old Spice brand director at Procter & Gamble. "Von's engaging, humorous demeanor and hardworking on-field performance align perfectly with our ridiculously masculine brand and the performance of our Hardest Working Collection combining our most popular scents with our most powerful sweat and odor protection and deep cleansing body washes."

Von Miller Shows Off His Many Quirky Talents in His Debut as the Old Spice Guy

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Denver Broncos linebacker and Super Bowl 50 MVP Von Miller has some big cleats to fill as the latest Old Spice guy, following popular pitchmen Isaiah Mustafa and Terry Crews as the star of Wieden + Kennedy's high-profile ads for the P&G brand.

In a pair of spots tagged "Unforsweatable," touting Old Spice's Hardest Working Collection of deodorants and body washes, Miller quickly establishes his game plan. Less self-consciously suave than Mustafa, and way less manic than Crews (who came off like a crazed human cartoon character in some of his Old Spice appearances), Miller exudes a highly relatable vibe, and his confident charm really shines through.

"The Road," online now and running Sunday during the Broncos-Colts telecast, shows him taking the "less traveled" route through the Mojave Desert, wielding a jackhammer and pavement pounder like a pro.



Dude appears to be having a grand old time, even if he doesn't bust out the moves like he did for Madden 17.

"Be Harder," also currently online, though it won't break on TV until mid-season, finds Miller keeping cool as he overcomes a series of absurd in-game challenges such as a limbo contest and egg-spoon race—all with his arm stuck inside a hornets' nest, naturally.



Director Steve Rogers, who helmed Nike's epic sports-themed "Snow Day" commercial, also from W+K, adopts a sitcom-y style that's fast-paced but less jerky and jokey than some Old Spice ads. This approach puts the spotlight squarely on Miller, allowing his considerable charisma to carry the day despite the busy (and buzzy) goings-on.

For the race against the schoolgirls in "Be Harder," Miller's egg was glued to his spoon, while the kids had to balance theirs for real. Tough luck, ladies! (Away from football, Miller raises chickens. Wonder if he brought his own egg to the shoot?)

CREDITS
Client: Old Spice
Agency: Wieden + Kennedy, Portland
Creative Directors: Matt Sorrell, Ashley Davis Marshall
Copywriters: Ryan Niland ("The Road"), Andy Laugenour ("Be Harder")
Art Directors: Chen Liang ("The Road"), Derrick Ho ("Be Harder")
Producer: Melanie Fedunok
BA: Nestor Gandia
Account Executives: Dave Ellerbee, Georgie Gooley, Madison Savary

Production Co.: Biscuit Filmworks
Director: Steve Rodgers
Managing Director: Shawn Lacy
Executive Producer: Holly Vega
Head of Production: Rachel Glaub
Head of Production: Mercedes Allen-Sarria
UPM: Jay Veal
Production Supervisor: Jennifer Berry
Director of Photography: Jeff Cronenweth
Production Designer: Bruce Mccluskey

Editorial Co.: Mack Cut
Editor: Gavin Cutler
Asst. Editor: Brendan Hogan
Post Executive Producer: Gina Pagano

VFX & Design: The Mill
Head of Production: Dan Roberts 
Producer: Kris Drenzek
Production Coordinator: Samantha Hernandez
Creative Director: Tim Davies

Ad of the Day: Dollar Shave Club Shamelessly Mocks Axe and Old Spice in Shower Gel Ads

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Attention, men. If your body wash makes you feel like a muscle-bound rage monster, or a cologne-oozing nightclub sleaze, Dollar Shave Club wants you to consider a simpler option.

The subscription toiletries service is out with three online ads promoting its new line of shower soaps in which it lobs thinly veiled insults at major competitors like Procter & Gamble's Old Spice and fellow Unilever brand Axe.

Set in the shopping aisle, each 30-second spot (the campaign was created in-house and directed by DSC veterans the Spielbergs—aka, writer/director/actor Alex Karpovsky, from HBO's Girls, and graphic designer/musician Teddy Blanks) follows the misadventure of a guy as he studies a different product.

In one, titled "Massive Hero," a man's girlfriend suggests he try an eponymous product packaged in bright red—just like Old Spice. It has "a fully jacked amino protein delivery system," she says, quoting the copy on the bottle. Right on cue, a bodybuilder shoves his way between the couple, grabs the same stuff, rips off his shirt and starts screaming at them.



In a second ad, "Deep Midnite" two buddies examine another product that promises "24-hour pheromone release." Enter a preening discotheque nightmare clad in a too-tight black button-down, gold chains and—despite being indoors—wraparound designer sunglasses.

This doofus naturally proceeds to squeeze in the shower gel down the front of his white pants—all part of an elaborate knock at Axe's mystical product names and decade-plus of over-the-top sex-god advertising.



The third commercial, "Neon Groove," pokes fun at the kind of garishly dressed bro who might swarm an electronic dance music festival and shotgun water, presumably because he's on a steady diet of molly.



"How about a shower product that's more you?" says the voiceover at the end of each spot, promising "straightforward ingredients" and "honest fragrances" like mint and cedarwood, from the Dollar Shave Club's own line.

It's a clever strategy for the relative newcomer to the market, especially in the case of Old Spice. By reframing what in recent years has been that brand's strength—its advertising, emphasizing dapper manliness with the likes of Isaiah Mustafa and zany hyper-masculinity with the likes of Terry Crews, always wrapped up in an everyman sense of humor—as a weakness, Dollar Shave Club is presenting itself as a well-timed changing of the guard, and its success as fait accompli (even if Old Spice has lately been moving toward a weirder brand of chest-thumping braggadocio).

Whether that's an effective approach is a different question, given the considerable goodwill Old Spice has built up.

In the case of Axe, the tack is a little more like beating a dead horse, if no less entertaining. That brand has, for a good while now, been associated with a type that might be best described as delusional ladies man (though, to be fair, it has been making efforts to mature, despite hitting some sizable bumps along the way).

The real irony there is that since Dollar Shave Club was sold to Unilever for $1 billion or so earlier this year, and so shares a parent company with Axe.

In fact, Dollar Shave Club seems to be playing for a different audience altogether. Rather than, say, insecure teens desperate to get laid, it might be looking at a slightly more mature market segment. As the shower product's branding, Wanderer, suggests, it could be restless millennial men who just can't quite figure out what they want, but fancy a less expensive version of the natural scents of Malin and Goetz in the meantime.

Though even that shouldn't be confused with Old Spice's Timber and Mint offering.

CREDITS
Client: Dollar Shave Club
CEO: Michael Dubin
Assistant to CEO: Kristina Kovacs
CMO: Adam Weber
Assistant to CMO: Alex Danzer
VP of Brand Marketing: Nick Fairbairn
Director, Brand Marketing: Chrissy Cartwright
Sr. Manager, Brand Marketing: Oscar Weis

Agency: Dollar Shave Club In House
Creative Director, VP of Creative: Alec Brownstein
Creative Director: Matt Knapp
Creative Director: Matt Orser
Senior Producer: Matt Sausmer
Producer: Candice Vernon
Agency Director: Raechelle Hoki
Project Manager: Christine Melloy
Project Coordinator: Kristen Moran
VFX: Peter Quinn
Business Affairs: Ingenium
Legal Affairs: Allison Buchner & Vahid Redjal

Production Company: AMD Films
Directors: Spielbergs
DP: Zachary Galler
Producer: Clint Caluory

Editorial: Arcade Edit
Managing Partner, Executive Producer: Damian Stevens
Producer: Rebecca Jameson
Editor: Sean Lagrange

Animation: The Craft Shop

Score by: John Vella Music

Color Grade & Finishing: Moving Picture Company
Colorist: Ricky Gausis
Flame Artist: Mark Holden
Executive Producer: Mike Wigart
Executive Producer: Meghan Lang
Producer: Colin Clarry

Sound Mixing: Beacon Street Studios
Producer: Kate Vadnais
Associate Producer: Christa Jayne Sustello
Mixer/Sound Designer: Rommel Molina
Assistant Mixer: Aaron Cornacchio

Why Marketers Like YouTube and E! Are Embracing Twitter Moments

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Brands have been test driving a new tool to get their message to the masses in a scrapbook-like format from Twitter called Moments.

When it first launched in October 2015, Twitter curated the day's big tweets, or Moments, for users via the web; if brands wanted to cull their own, they had to pay. But since this past fall, the tool has been open and free to everyone on mobile, and marketers are diving in. Bud Light used the feature as a recipe roundup for its margarita-flavored Lime-A-Rita beer; Old Spice collaborated with Denver Broncos star linebacker Von Miller on Moments dubbed "Live Von Air"; and early last month, E!'s hit show The Royals pulled tweets containing GIFs, images and quotes into a Moment as a recap for fans ahead of its Season 3 premiere.

"We're always looking for innovative ways to engage and bring value to our fans," said Jen Neal, evp, marketing at E! Entertainment and Esquire Network. "There is a lot of room for experimentation with this tool." The network also summoned Moments for its most popular show, Keeping Up With the Kardashians.

Steve Babcock, CCO at digital agency VaynerMedia, which has created Moments for E! and other clients, added, "You can curate fan reaction to other social campaigns in a Moment, but it's not [just] another place to copy and paste your assets. It has to be worth being packaged together. Otherwise, what's the benefit to a viewer?"

Even Twitter competitor YouTube has employed Moments, promoting its YouTube Red series called Escape the Night. The digital video behemoth created a choose-your-own-adventure version of Moments for the new mystery series that stars Joey Graceffa—who tweeted out the campaign. Engagement rates for the Moment were more than two times better than its promoted Twitter trend—which cost well over $100,000—with the same content, according to YouTube.

 

Rebecca Lieb, a digital media and marketing analyst, pointed out that Moments is as easy an add-on as it's inexpensive to produce. "Twitter Moments just leverages what Twitter is already about, which is real-time marketing," she noted.

Publishers like Newsweek are also getting into the act. "I wish people used them more," remarked Margarita Noriega, Newsweek's executive editor, who recently produced a Moment on what happens when President-elect Donald Trump attacks journalists online by publishing his combative tweets.

"We're a small newsroom, so it's difficult for us to prioritize nontraffic driving social Moments above our own reporting. If we had more resources, we'd probably use it every day," Noriega said. "Many newsrooms are missing an opportunity to engage on topics that trend in real time, serve audiences and look great."

With similar formats on Facebook and Instagram, Twitter Moments could end up being key to a well-rounded social strategy, industry players said, as long as they are carefully curated for the user. "For brands with a robust Twitter presence, the time and cost can be minimal to gain a better understanding of how users respond to a richer storytelling format," said Noah Mallin, head of social at MEC Wavemaker.

With Twitter's recent struggles to grow advertising revenue and its user base, which hovers at 317 million followers, analysts say Moments may be an important driver in attracting eyeballs. And Twitter is banking on it. "The best Moments tell a story," said Andrew Fitzgerald, who leads Twitter Moments' curation team. "The more you use Moments as a storytelling tool, the more powerful your Moment will be."


This story first appeared in the January 2, 2017 issue of Adweek magazine.
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Instead of Just Ads, Equinox Made Crazy Luxe Products That Tell Their Own Story This New Year’s

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So, you put on a few pounds over the holidays. What would it take to entice you to work off that festive flab at high-end fitness club Equinox? How about a sweatsuit stitched together from surgical scrubs? Or cologne infused with the DNA of a marathoner? Or would lipstick made from the pages of the...

How Twitter Plans to Evolve Its Partnerships With Brands and Agencies in 2018

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Today Twitter announced that it has promoted head of U.S. agency development Stephanie Prager to head of global agency development, consolidating the two roles. The move is part of the social media company's plans to evolve its relationships with the biggest names in the ad industry in the new year. Prager, who is herself a...

Family Guy Will Air an Episode With a Reduced Ad Load for the First Time

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After 15 seasons on the air, there's very little ground that Family Guy has yet to cover, but Fox has managed to pull off something new for the comedy's March 11 episode, which will air with limited commercial interruptions for the first time in series history. The episode will air with fewer ad pods than...

Tinder Traces the History of Dating to Caveman Times in Gorgeously Detailed Animated Spot

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Dating: So easy, a caveman can do it? Since the dawn of time, human beings have been yearning for connection. Over the years, we've only made it more and more difficult to find. Or, at least, so says a new spot from Tinder and production spot Buck, which posits that Tinder isn't so much an...

Why Brands Should Be Ready for Alexa Ads, Despite What Amazon Says

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It's soon going to become Alexa's world that we're just living in, complete with its own product recommendations disguised as ads. According to a report from CNBC, Amazon is considering adding ads into Alexa and is in talks with companies like Procter & Gamble and Clorox about it. It's yet another wake-up call for brands...

When Do Things Cross the Line and Become Online Harassment?

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In a new report released this morning, Pew Research Center sought to bring into focus the blurry lines that tend to define what does and does not constitute online harassment. The research organization asked respondents to look at three fictional scenarios depicting potential online harassment, and asked which elements of each should be considered harassment....

Fox’s Network Chiefs Say ‘It’s Business as Usual’ Until the Deal Closes With Disney

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The Television Critics Association's winter press tour kicked off with a bang today. Fox's network chiefs spoke publicly for the first time about their company's uncertain future since last month, when Disney announced its acquisition of 21st Century Fox for $52.4 billion after spinning off some Fox assets--including Fox Broadcasting, Fox News and Fox Sports--into...

Hyperlocal Targeting and AI Have Made Orangetheory Fitness a Nearly $1 Billion Business

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By the end of 2018, Orangetheory Fitness plans to have 1,300 studios in 17 countries, and by midyear, it expects to hit $1 billion in revenue. To get there, the fitness brand has worked with Knoxville, Tenn.-based The Tombras Group over the past three years, building its membership with a hypertargeted approach--strategic programmatic, social and...

The Logan Paul Incident Illustrates Why YouTube Will Never Be 100% Brand-Safe

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Just a couple of days into the new year, YouTube already has another brand safety crisis on its hands. Logan Paul, a YouTube star with 15 million followers who has inked marketing deals with Walmart and Dunkin' Donuts, uploaded a video over New Year's weekend in which he visited Japan's Aokigahara, a forest known as...

3 Priorities That Will Help Experiential Marketers Step Up Their Game in 2018

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Experiential marketers have a lot to celebrate. At a time that's seen predictions of declining advertising spend, marketers have shown an interest in growing their experiential budgets. According to a 2017 report from Rakuten Marketing, 80 percent of global audiences say that online advertising hasn't got any better with time, on any device or platform,...

Why Mark Zuckerberg’s Personal Challenge for 2018 Is Different

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"Of all the content on Facebook, more than 99 percent of what people see is authentic. Only a very small amount is fake news and hoaxes. The hoaxes that do exist are not limited to one partisan view, or even to politics. Overall, this makes it extremely unlikely that hoaxes changed the outcome of this...

Omnicom Reaches Settlement in Anti-Gay Discrimination Case

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After more than two and a half years of legal developments, holding company Omnicom has reached a settlement in a discrimination suit brought by a now-former employee of its agency DDB. The case went through a series of dramatic turns, including a dismissal by a U.S. District Court Judge in 2016, before the plaintiff successfully...
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