You can make a great ad with stock footage
It just depends what it’s for…
(Thanks, B.)
It just depends what it’s for…
(Thanks, B.)
(Thanks, J.)
The new Argos commercial is based on the idea that visiting aliens find certain kinds of human behaviour to be pretty strange. The answer, of course, is found in the much smarter experience of shopping at Argos:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S2d9uuDSCEI
The old Smash commercial is based on the idea that visiting aliens find certain kinds of human behaviour to be pretty strange. The answer, of course, is found in the much smarter experience of eating Smash:
And the PPG (post-pack gag)? WTF?
Darren Aronofsky, director of Black Swan, has just directed a new anti-meth campaign.
Although I’m not sure of its intention (I think it’s to put non-meth addicts off trying the drug rather than an attempt to help current addicts see the error of their ways) I think they could have a good chance of succeeding.
Back in the 1980s, scenes like these certainly scared me off heroin:
So I’d imagine that these could certainly have the same effect (by the way, these are quite disturbing, particularly the first and second clips. Don’t say I didn’t warn you; thanks, B):
(For a real laugh, imagine you are the kid on the bed and your most hated client is the bearded man.)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=12bvBHG6ChM&feature=player_embedded
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eyxn1ol6kNI&feature=player_embedded
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fLwYIElNjho&feature=player_embedded
Sorry, but for so many people Christmas is already a guilt-ridden consumerist nightmare that they can’t hope to afford.
This ad, with its naked smashing of those very buttons with a titanium sledgehammer, makes me feel a little bit sick.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pSLOnR1s74o
Another impeccably crafted slice of middle-class GB.
It’s just unfortunate what happened to the dog, a theory compounded by this REAL version of the ad:
Awkward family pet photos (thanks, J).
Movie poster trends (includes the excellent phrase ‘High likelihood of suck’. Thanks, A).
Hitchcock on the art of cinematic tension (thanks, P):
George C. Scott watches the trailer for the new Adam Sandler movie (thanks, N):
Eating insects (thanks, P):
The world’s most expensive photo (thanks, J).
Don’t embarrass yourself by sending your friends internet links they’ve already seen (thanks, D).
London Olympic posters, some very good (thanks, D).
Biggest wave ever surfed (thanks, P):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nd2jtwviyC8&feature=youtu.be
Is the finger really the future of interactivity? (Thanks, A.)
When I was working at 4 Creative last year they gave me a brief to do a poster for a new show called Phone Shop.
My expectations were low, but I ended up watching the pilot three times, then went on to become a big fan of the whole series (best clip here).
Well, series two is about to start (Thurs, 10pm, E4) and by a strange coincidence my friend Stephen Gash has just signed Phil Bowker, its writer, producer, creator and director, to QI Commercials (reel here). This has given me the wonderful opportunity to ask Phil a few questions:
How many lottery ads have we seen?
And how many have been really quite poor?
Well, just like Bag of Smiles, this one has decided to avoid the down and dirty crapola we usually see and instead bring a simple truth to life in a beautifully charming way.
(Thanks, L.)
(Thanks, L.)
He’s right. There is something unusually appealing about a good independent bookshop. I suppose they are like calmer versions of independent record shops, which allow you to browse for the rare, the obscure and the forgotten.
It’s hard to resist the bargains and convenience of Amazon, but this is the point at which we have to understand that all our choices have consequences.
Perhaps you have no interest in preserving shops which provide a more expensive product that you actually have to go out and buy. Perhaps you’d like Amazon to grow even bigger so that it can sell even more products (houses? Cars? Pets?).
Neither path is right or wrong, but it’s good to be aware that the choice you make will cause the rise of something and the fall of something else.