Flora by Gucci ad, agency: REM, director: Chris Cunningham, production: RSA Films Ltd/Filmmaster, Post: Golden Square
Chris Cunningham is back with a new ad for Gucci. Although the idea that the master of dark and disturbing music videos has teamed up with a fashion brand may be a surprising one, the collaboration is most successful, with Cunningham managing to make the first interesting perfume ad we’ve seen in some time. The spot also features a reworking of Donna Summer’s I Feel Love, which was produced and arranged by the director.
Next up is one of a series of films for Powertape made out of Partizan Dark Room. This chimp-tastic number was directed by Double Zero. The rest of the films can be viewed here.
ITV Sunshine, agency: BBH
Rupert Sanders has directed this filmic ad campaign for ITV which aims to emphasise how the brand is “synonymous with optimism”, according to David Pemsel, group marketing director at the channel. The spot, which shows sunlight bursting through a grey British beach scene, is “symbolic of ITV’s offering and wish to pierce through the nation’s doom and gloom in a beautiful and glorious way”. Whether this is quite what the channel’s programming actually achieves is of course open to debate.
Dutch Comedy Central Channel ad, agency: Modernista!, director: Nate Naylor
Sticking with ads for TV channels, Modernista! in Amsterdam has created this TV and print (below) campaign for the Dutch Comedy Central channel.
Dutch Comedy Central channel poster, agency: Modernista!, photographer: Chris McPherson
Honda Keep Doing ad, agency: Wieden + Kennedy London, directors: Coan & Zorn, production: Not To Scale
Wieden + Kennedy London emphasises Honda’s environmental qualities in this animated spot by Coan & Zorn.
RAC commercial, agency: AMV BBDO, production company: HLA, director, Simon Ratigan
Simon Ratigan has directed this ad for RAC, which manages to make car breakdowns seem surprisingly beautiful.
Petit Bateau campaign, agency: BETC Euro RSCG
BETC Euro RSCG in Paris won the Grand Prix at the recent APPM awards in France for this print campaign for Petit Bateau (two of a series shown above), which aims to emphasise that the clothing brand is for adults as well as children.
This ad depicting Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling holding aloft a white rabbit (instead of the red leather budget briefcase) as if plucked from a magician’s hat ran in today’s Financial Times to promote the paper’s coverage of the forthcoming UK budget.
Finally, we end on a surreal note with this viral ad for Amstel from 180 Amsterdam. The spots (one shown above) see a series of 1970s-style science experiments taking place on Amstel Pulse beer bottles.
Have you ever seen a dog that looks remarkably like its owner? Well, the RSPCA in Australia is setting up its first ever pet shop that will look to match pets with owners – but very sensibly on the basis of personality and lifestyle, rather than looks…
George Patterson Y&R agency in Brisbane just sent us press, TV and radio ads for their newly launched campaign for the RSPCA’s new pet shop which will, as the ads suggest, match up day-to-day behaviours and lifestyes of potential owners with the personalities and behavioural traits of pets – thus finding a perfect match.
There are three TV executions but this one is our favourite:
And here’s one of the radio ads, entitled Chihuahua:
Credits Agency: George Patterson Y&R Brisbane Creative directors: Piet Human & David Joubert Art director/Copywriter: Andre Hull & Lee Sunter Account manager: Jessica Hughes Client: RSPCA
Press Photography: Alex Buckingham Retouching: Santi Drane
Radio Agency Producer: Kohbe Vela Sound Studio: Voice Plant
A new commercial for Burger King from Crispin Porter + Bogusky is at the centre of a complaint from the Mexican ambassador to Spain, who claims it denigrates Mexico’s image.
The spot, for the Texican Whopper burger, depicts a lanky cowboy moving in with a small Mexican wrestler. As the two settle in together, a voiceover intones, “People said it would never work, but somehow one plus one equals three… the Texican Whopper, the taste of Texas with a little spicy Mexican.” The ad is only airing in Europe and was shot by directing duo Albert through Thomas Thomas Films.
Poster accompanying the Spanish ad campaign
Spain’s Mexican ambassador has complained in particular about the use of a cape worn by the Mexican wrestler, that appears to resemble the Mexican flag. The cape is particularly evident in the accompanying poster campaign, shown above. Mexico has strict laws that ban the defamation of its flag.
Controversy is nothing new for CP+B and Burger King, with their Whopper Virgins campaign earlier this year receiving accusations of being patronising and potentially exploitative after it depicted indigenous people eating burgers for the first time. Usually the client and agency ride out the storm, with the debate surrounding their ads often seen as being ultimately beneficial, yet, according to Ad Age, Burger King has this time issued a statement saying that the creative in the Texican Whopper spot will be revised, with a new version on air “as soon as commercially possible”. It is unknown at this stage what changes will be made to the ad.
Meanwhile, if that weren’t enough, CP+B and BK have also caused consternation from parents with regard to this ad/video for the burger brand, which aims to emphasise its tie-in with SpongeBob SquarePants. The spot shows the unnerving King character dancing around with a bunch of square-butted companions while singing a version of 90s hit Baby Got Back. While undeniably funny, if a little weird, it has raised the ire of advocacy groups in the US who complain it is overly sexual for a kid’s meal ad.
Women’s Aid ad, agency: Grey London, production company: D.A.B. Hand Media, director: Joe Wright
Keira Knightley stars in this powerful new ad for Women’s Aid, which aims to raise awareness of domestic violence. The spot is directed by Atonement and Pride & Prejudice director, Joe Wright.
The ad, from Grey London, shows Knightley return home from a day’s filming to be confronted by her abusive partner who violently attacks her. Knightley, Wright and all the crew, which included Oscar nominated cinematographer Seamus McGarvey, donated their time for free to work on the film.
“I wanted to take part in this advert for Women’s Aid because while domestic violence exists in every section of society we rarely hear about it,” said Knightley. “Domestic violence affects one in four women at some point in their lifetime and kills two women every week.”
Npower commercial, agency: Beattie McGuinness Bungay; Creative director: Bil Bungay; Copywriter: James Loxley; Production company: Aardman; director: Merlin Crossingham
It’s Friday, so it must be time for a round-up of great new advertising work, along with some other treats. First up is a new Npower ad from Beattie, McGuinness, Bungay. The ad stars Wallace & Gromit, fresh from their stint as fashionistas in a campaign for Harvey Nicks. Here the charming duo demonstrate the advantages of an energy efficient boiler.
Ray Ban Super Chameleon, agency: Cutwater, San Francisco Next up is the latest spot in Ray Ban’s Never Hide campaign. The low-fi feel of the earlier spots continues in this viral ad, where a chameleon is tormented in the name of fashion.
Schweppes posters, agency: Mother London; illustrator: David Hopkins
Mother London has created this new poster campaign for Schweppes. Inspired by 18th century artist and satirist William Hogarth, a new ad will be released every two weeks until the end of the year, all of which will reference current affairs. Naturally then, the first ads in the series remark upon the current financial crisis.
8 Kilomètres, agency: Mother London
Also from Mother is this viral campaign for Stella, which sees Die Hard, 8 Mile and 24 reimagined as French cinema classics. Shown above is 8 Kilomètres, and the rest of the films can be viewed here.
Ikea PS, agency: Nordpol; production company: Parasol Island
Ad agency Nordpol in Hamburg has created this ethereal ad for Ikea.
Bartle Bogle Hegarty created this poignant new poster campaign for The Child Bereavement Charity which aired to coincide with Mother’s Day in the UK.
Pictoplasma Conference opening animation, directed and designed by David O’Reilly
Moving away from advertising, here is David O’Reilly’s (a former CR Creative Future) beautiful opening animation for the recent Pictoplasma Conference in Berlin.
Vellum, Slices of a Virtual Sculpture by Robert Seidel
Finally, we end on an artwork by Robert Seidel, which is currently on show at the SKT Tower in Seoul. The beautiful “virtual sculpture” is shown across multiple LED screens within the space.
Honda’s brand new Let It Shine commercial, shot by Erik van Wyk through Bouffant breaks today. Written by Wieden + Kennedy Amsterdam, the spot features a vast grid of Honda’s new Insight model parked in the desert. The Insight is, the voiceover tells us, Honda’s new, “affordable hybrid” car. In the spot, each of the cars’ headlights act as pixels to perform an animated sequence. Click Read More to view the ad and also W+K’s making-of film…
Let It Shine credits:
Ad agency: Wieden + Kennedy, Amsterdam Executive creative director: Jeff Kling Executive creative director: John Norman, Creative director: Sue Anderson Copywriter: Zach Watkins Art director/Animator: Nacho Guijarro Art director: Craig Melchiano Production company: Bouffant Director: Erik van Wyk Executive producer: Melina McDonald DoP: Tim Pike
Rick Poynor looks back over two decades of the Designers Republic plus, Spanish type case art, Alison Carmichael and our very own Mumbai taxi – all in the April issue of CR
April is our special issue on type and typography and all things letter-related. As detailed here, our cover features a Mumbai taxi covered in typography specially designed for the issue (watch an interview with the artists here)
We also have a profile of hand-lettering artist Alison Carmichael, whose work has a ribald charm that is proving very popular with ad agencies (hence the punning headline)
And a feature on the recent Art of Lost Words show in which selected designers and illustrators each based a piece on a word that is fast disappearing from the English language
Plus, from Barcelona, Jordi Duró and Meri Cuesta reveal how the remarkable ingenuity of Spanish printers gave rise to a unique form of modernist design
And Rick Poynor’s aforementioned tDR piece (which, in part, draws on his intro for the ill-fated, never-published-despite-what-they-said tDR book), which stretches over six pages and follows up our exclusive revelation that the studio had closed its doors earlier this year
Our subscriber-only Monograph this month features Synthesis, a series of organic forms created by Jeff Knowles
The April issue is on sale from 25 March. Next month: The Annual
The winners of this year’s British Television Advertising Awards were announced last night at a gala ceremony at London’s Grosvenor House. It was another good evening for Miles Calcraft Briginshaw Duffy, who picked up the Thinkbox Award for Best Television Commercial of the Year for its epic Hovis ‘Go On Lad’ spot.
This is the latest big win for the Hovis ad, which recently picked up the top gong at the Creative Circle Awards, another celebration of UK-only creativity. The spot, which is a sentimental trip through the last 122 years of British history, is the strongest example of the wave of nostalgic advertising that seems to be sweeping the UK at the moment. But with such an over-arching emphasis on ‘Britishness’, it remains to be seen how successful it will be within the international awards schemes.
PG Tips Breakfast ad, by Mother
Nostalgia was also on display in the spoof of Morecambe & Wise’s Breakfast sketch for PG Tips, which picked up a gold award for Mother, who also headed home with the Adstream Award for Most Successful Agency of the Year. Rattling Stick, the company behind the Hovis spot, won the Panalux Award for Most Successful Production Company. Directing team Traktor received the Chairman’s Award for an outstanding contribution to the commercials industry, while Joe & Co was awarded the BTAA Fellowship for an outstanding contribution to the production of commercials.
Comfort ‘Naturist’, by Ogilvy
Other gold winners were VCCP, which picked up two golds for its Binge Drinking Awareness ad, and CHI & Partners which also won a double gold for its Britvic Drench Water ‘Brains’ spot. Ogilvy scored a gold for its hilarious Comfort ‘Naturists’ spot, while AKQA won gold its PG Tips ‘Queen’ ad.
Binge Female for the Home Office Binge Drinking Awareness campaign by VCCP
While there are some worthy winners here, as a representation of the best UK television commercials of the last year the list of BTAA winners suggests a medium lacking in energy. There is nothing on a par with last year’s big award winner, Gorilla, which while proving a massive hit with viewers also stirred up debate about how TV commercials may compete in the face of ever-increasing competition from online and integrated advertising. An ad that crosses so firmly into popular culture may only ever come along every few years, but no signs of further evolution in the format are evident this year (T-Mobile Dance perhaps?). And with a deepening recession on the horizon, the question of where TV advertising might go next seems more pertinent than ever. Perhaps one solution may be for agencies to tear themselves away from looking misty-eyed into the past, and begin to look forward into the future again instead.
A list of all of this year’s BTAA winners can be viewed online here.
Crispin, Porter + Bogusky is an advertising agency that, to say the least, divides opinion. When bestowing its coveted agency of the year award for 2008 on CP+B, the US trade magazine Ad Age sounded almost apologetic, acknowledging that the announcement meant that “any number of curmudgeonly bloggers and envious creative types all over adland are fuming”. Its sister title, Creativity, observed that “the agency is unrivalled in the amount and the intensity of antipathy it arouses”. Most successful advertising agencies will suffer sniping from others in the industry, often motivated by simple jealousy, yet CP+B’s detractors are especially persistent and vocal – but why?
A survey of online commentary about the agency, combined with the opinions of creative directors at rivals (off the record, natch) reveals certain themes. Accusations of facile humour, a lack of interest in art direction or aesthetic qualities, and an aggressive interest in courting the press, both for its clients and its own gains, are all regularly repeated. Another common complaint is that CP+B is simply a ‘rock star’ agency, fond of its own press but without the work to back it up. A recent rant on thedenveregotist.com claimed that the agency’s “recent ‘big’ ideas were recycled, either from themselves or other work”. (Although the author, Felix, also neatly illustrated the dichotomy surrounding CP+B by claiming at the end of his long rant that he’d “still take a job at CP+B. I’m just mad … not insane.”)
Whopper Sacrifice homepage at whoppersacrifice.com
Certainly the agency appears to enjoy courting controversy. As is typical, it entered 2009 riding on a wave of both admiration and admonishment, caused largely by its recent work for Burger King. Whopper Virgins, the agency’s latest spot for the fast food brand, was launched in early December to accusations of insensitivity and even cultural imperialism. People in far-flung corners of the world who were previously untouched by American fast food were featured in a BK comedy taste test. ‘Poor, backward foreigners: let’s give them some real food’ is one possible reading of its message. By contrast, Whopper Sacrifice, a Facebook application also for BK that encouraged users of the social networking site to ditch ten friends and receive a free burger in exchange was being heralded as an innovative step forward in digital advertising (despite being quickly banned by Facebook itself for breaking its privacy rules). Such debate and discussion is nothing new for a company which actively encourages conversation around its clients’ work, recognising that creating discourse around a brand can be a vital way of breaking through our over-saturated media. “We ask ‘will the press write about it?’,” readily admits partner/co-ECD Rob Reilly. “That’s our ultimate goal.”
CP+B’s unconventional approach to advertising has been evident since its early days. The agency was quick, far quicker than most, to realise the benefits of digital advertising, and scored a huge hit with its Subservient Chicken website, created in collaboration with the Barbarian Group, which has achieved over a billion hits since its launch in 2004. Other experimental projects followed, with the agency creating Burger King’s Xbox King Games project – a tie-in with Microsoft to create a series of computer games around the BK ‘king’ character, which were sold only through BK outlets. Both of these campaigns were prescient in predicting the structure of CP+B today, with its heavy emphasis on digital – its in-house digital team is “the biggest at any advertising agency”, according to partner/co-ECD Andrew Keller – and also its recent expansion to include an in-house industrial design department. Designs produced by the agency so far range from the invention of Chicken Fries for Burger King to a LED Wi-Fi lightbulb.
LED Wi-Fi lightbulb, designed in-house at CP+B
CP+B’s attempts at creating a one-stop shop for its clients – providing them with solutions in digital and product design, as well as traditional media such as TV – has been heralded by many as representing a model for the ad agency of the future. The agency’s emphasis on collaboration means that every department will be involved in a brief, allowing the possibility for unexpected results, as John Winsor, VP/executive director of strategy and product innovation, explains. “It’s fully integrated,” he says. “So when there’s a brief for a project, our planning department attacks the strategy and research side of things, and the guys from the design group look at that problem as a product problem versus an advertising and marketing problem…. I think it’s the future. I think more and more clients want and need, especially in this financial environment, to figure out how to serve their customers better and how to grab market share and do a better job. Some of that’s advertising and some of it’s trying to figure out how to serve the client better with different design products.”
BK Chicken Fries, an idea dreamt up by CP+B
Keller (who now oversees all client work at the agency alongside Reilly, following Alex Bogusky’s move to co-chairman) sees the range of services on offer at the agency as a way of helping clients to adapt to the new marketing possibilities available now. “I think a lot of clients still think about television a lot, it’s still the main thing that they can think about,” he says. “And if we didn’t do digital, we’d be really happy to let them carry on thinking that way. But since we do digital, there’s no conflict of interest for us to help them see the light. We’re going to do that whether they want it or not, because we believe in it and we’ve got to help them be great. I think because we do both we’re in a great position to help clients make that transition.”
Not everyone agrees that such multiplicity of skills is the way forward for advertising, however, with concerns that no company is able to provide all the specialist skills required in today’s complex communications world across all media at the same time and at equal quality. And other commentary around CP+B’s practise has trodden a darker path than simply whether it is constructing a good business model for the future of advertising. In its early collaborations with digital agencies, it was accused of a lack of generosity when it came to acknowledging the input of others on projects: many felt that it could have done more to credit the contribution of the Barbarian Group in the Subservient Chicken website, for example. But these are issues for the ad industry as a whole, particularly when it comes to the major awards, which often reduce the contributions of digital agencies to a bit part, with the credit given solely to the lead agency. CP+B says that all its digital work is now done in-house (bar “some programming and testing and things like that”, says Keller), though complaints about its past behaviour in this area rumble on.
Burger King Whopper Freakout
What is undeniable about the agency however, and is a point that even its more furious detractors will acknowledge, is that it has a deft ability to recognise what will seep effortlessly into popular culture. It began 2008 with another hit for Burger King, for Whopper Freakout, which showed CCTV footage of BK patrons ‘freaking out’ when told that their beloved Whopper had been taken off the menu…. forever. The ad spawned a number of spoofs, including most famously the Whopper Ghetto Freakout, which has had over three million views on YouTube. The ad may have contained a gentle mockery of BK’s customers at its core, but this in no way put them off, with the ad leading to a significant increase in sales of the Whopper.
Other hits of last year included the introduction of Tivo-based ordering for Domino’s pizzas, as well as the ability to custom order your Domino’s pizza online and follow the order via the website a la FedEx. The Tivo ordering, while undeniably a clever idea, led to claims that the agency was promoting laziness, and in turn, obesity. “You see a lot of the press and they are on it,” acknowledges Keller. “And it’s just natural that they’re going to have to take a dig of the notion that ‘ah, how much lazier could you be?’. We can’t expect them to grab the insight, which is what we’re doing is connecting our product with moments…. To connect with movies and television that directly is an incredible thing. But certainly part of the tension resides in the fact that it’s like ‘wow, you couldn’t even get up to use the phone’.”
Alec Baldwin in an ad by CP+B for hulu.com
CP+B has also demonstrated a knack of knowing which celebrities will get our attention. Going against the commonly held theory of using a squeaky clean star that will make the associated brand look good, CP+B regularly chooses celebrities who have a history, and sometimes even a rather checkered past. It used Brooke Shields in a series of ads for VW’s family wagon, the Routan (which were accompanied by a website where users could get a glimpse of what their future babies may look like, with either real or fantasy partners), and, most recently, Alec Baldwin in an ad for online video service Hulu that aired during this year’s Super Bowl. Both had been caught up in very public celebrity spats in recent years (Shields with Tom Cruise and Baldwin with his own daughter).
Keller and Reilly emphasise that central to the agency’s success with such campaigns is a deft understanding of what will get people talking. Inevitably such a goal will also have its downsides, however, and the coverage of its first work for new client Microsoft last year can’t have made for easy reading. The campaign began with two ads featuring Bill Gates and Jerry Seinfeld, an unlikely pairing that made for awkward exchanges and a somewhat confusing message, before the strategy abruptly changed direction with the ‘I’m A PC’ ads, which came as a direct response to the ‘Mac vs. PC’ ads by Apple. While the intention of these latter spots may have been clear, the agency was derided for riding on the coat-tails of the Apple campaign and faced further humiliation when some nifty technical types exposed that the ‘I’m A PC’ spots were in fact made on a Mac.
Microsoft ad from CP+B starring Bill Gates and Jerry Seinfeld
This seemed a surprising mistake from such a press savvy agency, but if it was attention that they wanted with this campaign, attention is what they got, even if it was broadly negative. “You know, there really is no such thing as bad publicity,” says Keller. “People like to say it, but you have to believe it, because it really comes down to the fact that [if you want] to generate energy around something, [it] can’t be harnessed for a positive outcome. Unfortunately it’s not the nature of culture to generate a lot of excitement and energy around really positive things. But our goal is to be positive, it’s not to be cynical…. We know that we have to generate a conversation and to have a conversation there has to be two sides. If you’re not willing to have the negative side, then you’re not willing to have a conversation, and if you’re not willing to [do that], you’re not going to create anything.”
Perhaps in this lies the root of CP+B’s success. Its work may not be pretty, and it may at times centre on a certain style of frat boy humour, but it will always get our attention and get us talking. As will the agency itself. Those working there might find it frustrating – “it’s bad enough dealing with clients and the economy, before attacking each other,” says Reilly of the regular swipes the agency receives – but it seems that the debate around CP+B is as ingrained in the agency’s DNA as the conversation that its ads are intended to encourage. It will no doubt continue to be the one agency that everyone, but everyone, has an opinion about. But perhaps secretly that’s just the way it likes it.
This is site is run by Sascha Endlicher, M.A., during ungodly late night hours. Wanna know more about him? Connect via Social Media by jumping to about.me/sascha.endlicher.