Archive for the ‘Popular culture’ 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

Royal Wediquette from Together

Monday, April 11th, 2011

Have you been lucky enough to bag an invite to the Royal Wedding? What if you get smashed on free Pimm’s and disgrace yourself in front of our Monarch?

Never fear, our cheeky Royal Wediquette guide for how to behave on the big day has all the answers…

(Don’t tell the Queen, do tell your chums).

Gentlemen’s Relish

Wednesday, February 23rd, 2011

The website Net-A-Porter has recently launched a menswear site called Mr Porter. Big deal I hear you say… but they have done something quite interesting than the usual e-shop experience – setting the site between somewhere to buy luxury brands, a gentlemen’s club and premium menswear magazine. A nice touch is the question and answer section where people can post sartorial questions.

eg. Question – Inspired by Don Draper, I love the idea of wearing a traditional felt hat. Any objections?

Answer – None at all, provided you remember that hats are no longer normal. They make an impression, and one that may not be conducive to professional success. That said, they often look great when the shape in general, and the width of the brim in particular, are in proportion with your head size.

Brilliant!!!

It reminds me fondly of a book a friend of mine bought me for Christmas – Hardy Amies’ ABC of Fashion (reissued by V&A Books).; Which answer such questions as the difference between egyptian cotton and sea island cotton and what colour shoes to wear in the country (Wellies?). And with regards to slippers – Hardy says: ‘Grandest of all are velvet slippers, with your monogram or crest embroidered in gold thread. These you can dine in, at home of course.’

Is this dawning of the well dressed gent? – where sartorial rules are never broken like always wearing a collar and tie in a town, even if it’s by the sea, after six o’clock, and never wearing shorts except actually on the beach or on a walking tour with a pipe.

Why the new Yell.com advert fails

Tuesday, February 8th, 2011

Rapier have updated the classic Fly-fishing Yellow Pages J R Hartley advert from the 1980′s for the 21st century with a DJ searching for a record – finally finding it via his daughter on the Yell Iphone app.

There’s being a lot of online criticism including – If he wanted to find the record, surely he’d know to just Google it? or go to Discogs, eBay or Amazon Marketplace

But where it ultimately fails is that as someone who has dabbled in the mid 90′s making records and flogging them is that you tend to end up with a box of unsold records – it’s just the nature of the fickleness in dance music, one minute people are chewing you hand off for a copy the next everyone has moved on to the next big thing and you can’t give ‘em away..

All Day V Lately really has to do is pop into the loft and have a rummage and he’ll find several copies probably still sealed and in mint condition…

Infact a more realistic advert would be Mr Lately getting bollocked by his wife for the amount of tut in the attic and him subsequently having to sell all 50 copies of his beloved remix via ebay…. probably for a pound each…but before he sells his last copy he brings his old 1210′s down and try’s to convert his bewildered daughter into the joys of early 90′s trance – dancing round the lounge pulling feeble middle aged shapes which his daughter can’t help but film on her iphone and put up on Youtube where he becomes an internet sensation titled ‘Sad Dad’

Wills and Kate memorial plates

Tuesday, December 14th, 2010

The time is almost upon us that out future king and his patient lady friend tie the knot and the folks at KK Outlet have done some great memorial cermaics…they go one sale in January




Aardman out Banksy

Thursday, December 9th, 2010

Aardman have done this wicked little animation for Bristols Encounters Festival – Check it out

Can you name all films?

Tuesday, October 5th, 2010

The Guardian and Observer Film Season have an accompanying short by Wieden + Kennedy in which 26 films are referenced..

Its very similar to 35mm by Pascal Monaco

Rip off or influenced

Controversial?

Jazzin’

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

Seems I’m in the minority when it comes to jazz (even saying it my head it comes out like the fast show’s Jazz Man)

Whenever a bit a jazz comes on the juke box there a general tide of disapproval – which is a shame cos it’s nice to work to some jazz noodlin’

The epitome of timelessly cool graphic design to me are the Blue Note record covers by Designer Reid Miles and Photographer Francis Wolff – between them they designed several hundred covers during the 50′s and early 60′s.

Blue Note set the benchmark for cool designed record covers – Bold, direct and dramatic. Treating words as building blocks, restricted colour palettes and tinted black and white photography. Its influence can be seen today…and this was before computers when designers designed with…a….

what did designers use?

Anyway here are some Blue Note covers in motion by a designer named Bante. The piece was conceived to promote a series of summer jazz concerts at the Bella Vista Social Pub in Siena, Tuscany.

Sorry guys for the ‘Jazz’

Hi-Fi from bante on Vimeo.

Très beau et directe au but.

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

I loved last seasons French Connection’s Man & Woman ads and i’m delighted to see they’ve moved it on bit – Fashion John says more humour in Fashion

That’s Adver-tainment

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

'Aren't you that bloke from the BT adverts?'

Now don’t get me wrong, I would happily run Kris Marshall down in a lawn mower, but I do have to take my hat off to the advertising brains behind the long running BT ‘Adam and Jane’ adverts.

Personally, they make me want to set fire to my own feet just to distract me from the sheer, gushing awfulness of this epic tale of love and speedy broadband. But there seems to be millions of people who have actually become rather gripped by the whole foul business.

This all serves as a reminder that the days of adverts as purely functional sales tools are as dead as Marshall’s career as a serious actor (a few decades of being known as ‘that bloke from the BT ads’ might help to wipe the grin of his hatefully smug, floppy haired face).

Modern adverts have a duty to entertain, even if providing that key audience engagement is to the detriment of filling their slot with as much product information as they would ideally want.

It may make marketing departments weep with frustration, but dammit, it’s what the people want.

I can’t even remember the last time a car was even shown on the Compare the Market/ Meerkat adverts even though their primary function is to sell cheaper deals on car insurance, not give a platform to the wacky ramblings of a furry Russian raconteur.

After all, although we do live in an age where we can simply filter out TV advertising from our viewing, their remains no creative marketing medium that can generate the viral effect quite as powerfully as a truly entertaining TV ad.

If only BT had given me the option to have Jane batter Adam to death with her wireless broadband router then I think even a cynic like me would have been won over by their campaign.