Archive for the ‘Advertising’ Category

You can ‘go hard’?…you can go home

Tuesday, January 17th, 2012

I was flicking channels the other day (as you do) and the video for Will.I.Am ‘The Hardest Ever’ came on. It was one of those situations where I couldn’t pull my eyes away from what was before me. I was simultaneously mortified, outraged and curious as to where this video was going to take me…

What initially intrigued me was the close relation it had to the ‘Impossible Dream’ ad by Honda (made in 2006 in which a hirsute fellow upgrades his transport in the 2 minute story – to end driving his speed boat off a waterfall only to appear in a hot air balloon) and the Levis ‘Freedom to Move’ advert by Jonathan Glazer made in 2002 where a couple literally run through walls accompanied by Handel’s ‘Sarabande’ both award winning adverts and both brilliant executed.

The Will.I.Am (what a ridiculous bloody name) video takes both these concepts and literally turns it up to ELEVEN. It is a classic example of too much money and ego and quite frankly it’s rubbish. It doesn’t help that the lyrical content involves lines like: ‘Tell a jealous chicken I don’t know what the beef is – I’m just making money for my grankids’ nieces’ and ‘I’m way out like NASA, I’m way over here I done past ya, I get stacks of cash, you get cashews, I go hard, statues.’

I beg your pardon Mr I. Am, you are making no sense whatsover.

But what of the video? Well Mr I. Am begins on foot runs through a wall with ‘Hardest’ written on it, smashes through the other side on a bicycle and then proceeds to smash through walls upgrading his ‘rides’. At one point he is sitting on top of a ‘super train’ and just when he has gone through all the terrestrial forms of transport he’s up in to space where he then rips off the 2001 A Space Odessey light show (but with J-Lo instead) and finally it ends with bloody Mick Jagger singing ‘Hard like Geometry, and Trigonometry, this is crazy’!

Yes Mr Jagger crazy indeed.

1/10

Bang on!

Thursday, August 11th, 2011

Sometimes a brand comes up with a campaign so utterly superb in every way that you are left with no choice but to fling your corned beef sandwich to the floor, rise to your feet and shout ‘hurrah’ at the naked bloody brilliance of it. (Sorry, but we’re just so blasted impressed.)

Direct your eyeballs at this classic piece of beery banter from Bombardier.

Bang On!

Our new radio advert for Chatsworth

Wednesday, August 10th, 2011

In amongst all the strange and frightening new pop music (we’re getting old) the radio airwaves are now buzzing with something a good deal lovelier – our latest summer radio advert for Chatsworth. With the help of some superb production from our chum Paul Lord and some impressive real life cow ‘moos’ we came up with the rather super recording you can now hear by clicking that clicky finger on this very spot, here.

 

Jingle it

Tuesday, August 9th, 2011

Forgive us for coming over all Michael McIntyre, but have you noticed how many TV adverts appear to have recently brought back the ‘Jingle’?

Spend an hour or two in front of the telly and you’ll easily clock up at least a dozen or so current ads that ring out their own appalling, although infuriatingly memorable theme tune.

Whether it’s the chirpy Moon Piggers, the frankly terrifying ‘Ma-Ma-Zuma’ or the disarmingly thumping ‘We Buy Any Car’ it seems that the advertising jingle is very much in the ascendancy.

But in a world of Augmented Reality, Touch Technology and other such smart media voodoo evil, there is something rather uplifting about the fact that this most outdated of advertising methods is alive and well (in a rather pathetic sort of way).

Keep on jingling, say I. Apart from the ‘Go Compare Man’, he can just piss off now. Right now.

But before these new-wave Jinglers get entirely too pleased with their efforts it’s important to remind them of the greatest TV advertising jingle ever composed – the benchmark of sheer musical genius against which they must continue to strive.

Altogether now: ‘Way down deep in the middle of the Congo…’

 

Stop it. Stop it right now.

Monday, August 8th, 2011

In television they call it ‘Jumping the Shark’. The moment when what once was genuinely funny and fresh became just a little bit tiresome.

In advertising speak, I fear that this phenomenon may become known as ‘Whoring the Meerkat’.

For the first time since Aleksandr Orlov, that aristocratic Russian rascal stormed onto our screen in 2009 I actually found myself wincing with mild depression at the latest ‘Compare the Market/Meercat’ ad.

I doubt very much that the latest ad is any worse than the first ones which rightfully garnered such an avalanche of praise. Maybe it’s just me who felt an overwhelming desire to punch him squarely in his furry little snout when he smugly declared that all was ‘Simples’. Maybe I just need a hug.

Whatever the reason, as far as I am concerned, Comrade Aleksandr can happily take a seat alongside the ‘Go Compare’ man and the ‘Halifax’ radio ‘DJs’ on the rocket ship that I intend to cheerfully fire into the sun.

So, although we had some good times I fear that our meerkat chum has overexposed his way out of contention for my prestigious list of the top three greatest TV ad characters of all time.

Monkey: PG Tips


Although he was initially the knitted face of the almighty catastrophe that was ITV digital, Monkey (correctly pronounced ‘Muunkeee’ by Jonny Vegas, The Gielgud of the North) has been reborn as the champion of PG Tips. And in doing so is now ranked just a fraction behind the Queen, Stephen Fry and Greggs the bakers in the list of British National Treasures.

 

George the Volcano and Tyrannosaurus Alan: Volvic

A criminally short lived campaign in which a mildly camp and utterly dim-witted T-Rex sought the wisdom of the impeccable suave George the Volcano. The fact that George was voiced by Matt Berry, a man with a voice so sexually smooth he must polish it with the tears of a Panther, only added to the sheer magnificence of the ads. If I didn’t have a tap I might even have treated myself to a bottle of Volvic.

 

Polar Bear: Birdseye

Never let it be said that Willem Dafoe shirks an acting challenge. With a career that has seen him wrangle rather embarrassingly with Madonna, engineer the ‘Finding’ of Nemo and die probably the most iconic death in the history of film in ‘Platoon’, the offer of voicing a quietly threatening puppet Polar Bear was too much to resist. Brilliant in their own right, these ads are also an immeasurable improvement on the increasingly creepy Captain Birdseye character.

(Tell me if I’m wrong. I can take it. Probably)

Our outdoor campaign for Nottingham Trent University

Thursday, June 23rd, 2011

There’s nothing more satisfying than seeing your work slapped up on a big old poster for all to see. Which is why we were all rather chuffed to see our latest posters for our chums at Nottingham Trent University Business School popping up all over region. Here’s one of our creations doing it’s ‘thing’ at East Midlands’ Airport.

new balls

Wednesday, June 15th, 2011

If you liked the bouncing balls ad for sony bravia then take a look at Sony’s is new viral version of the “Balls” campaign to raise awareness of it filming this years Wimbledon Finals in 3D.

Crayon produced this viral film with thousands of tennis balls bouncing through the streets of suburban Wimbledon.

The film is also supported online, in national press, on absolute radio and in social media space where you can take part in a game to win tickets to be at the 2011 Ladies Singles final.

 

Inspired? Heavily influenced? Parody? …or just a bit of plagiarism?

Wednesday, May 4th, 2011

There seems to be a trend within the creative industry… it’s basically taking someone’s idea and passing it as your own. When I was at college (granted it was a long time ago) this was called plagiarism and it was generally frowned upon by tutors and students alike.

So what’s the big idea? What have I missed? – Saatchi & Saatchi who I’ve heard are pretty good and stuff – are ripping off an ages old wedding video with something like one trillion views on YouTube adding a royal wedding slant for T-Mobile and viola everyone goes ga-ga like it’s the first time they’ve seen it – it was even on I Got News For You where it also got another big laugh. Is this going to start a trend for agencies trawling YouTube for funny videos and repacking them for big companies?

If ‘borrowing’ ideas from the general public wasn’t bad enough how about an established creative idea and packaging it as parody or spoof…like Little Thor which was inspired buy Volkwagon’s The Force ad is this acceptable? Or just take the ‘idea’ and just change for instance the ‘sport’ or the ‘high profile sports man’ and hope no one notices?

It seems the lines become blurred, is a good idea worth milking or remixing? Is the process a creative act in itself?.. or is it just a matter of I can’t think of anything I know let’s take this idea present it as our own?

it’s only a puppet

Tuesday, April 12th, 2011

Love it or hate it. There are things other than marmite that are that polarised. Like clowns for instance, aniseed balls, the Tory party…

… and puppets. Not the hand ones like the loveable Sooty but the ‘I’m trying to be human’ wooden ones that live on strings and bounce about in a freaky way.

I was never a fan of Thunderbirds. Pinocchio was never a real boy and quite frankly Terrahawks was Terrifying! And as for those goats in the Sound of Music. They looked slightly demonic even with their rosy cheeks and sugar sweet sountrack.

So the new ads for diet coke starring puppet personalities Eleanor, Bernadette and Irene have done absolutely nothing for me at all. Introduced last year they are about to hit our screens again, this time wielding a chain saw and a blow torch (all in the name of fashion of course).

I really don’t ‘love it’ but what I do like the look of is the Diet Coke Limited Edition Bottle Collection by Karl Lagerfeld which will be supporting the ‘fashion inspired’ campaign.

 

These will be available through selected retailers across Europe so will have to see if I can get hold of one myself.

In the mean time I’m going to take my own ‘diet coke’ break, forget about all those nasty puppets and reminisce about the good old days.

 

Goodbye pirate… hello kitty

Friday, March 11th, 2011

Last week we shed a piratey tear at the last outing of Cravendale’s genius ‘Pirate, Cow and Cyclist’ – surely some of the most engaging, bonkers and utterly genius TV advertising of recent years.

This week, we welcome in the new era of Cravendale ads, with this cheeky little number…

Whilst we mourn the passing of the beloved pirate, cow and cyclist, we welcome this new televisual offering, which proves that the Cravendale boys haven’t lost their sense of humour… even if it does present a rather nightmarish vision of the future.

You can check out what Bertram Thumbcat is up to at the Milk Matters campaign site.