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Booking.com Is Now Turning Your Best Summer Snapshots Into Clever, Silly GIFs

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Summer may be coming to an end, but here's a fun way to keep reliving the good times—high-quality GIFs of your photos from the season, courtesy of Booking.com.

The Priceline-owned online travel agency is inviting consumers to submit pics of their summer adventures, then turning its favorites into animated GIFs. For eight days between today and September 3, Booking.com will release a new batch of winners. And if the launch samples are any indication, the results will be pretty great.

Highlights so far include ice-cream thievery, cocktail snorkeling, and a zany rainbow. Check out them out below—the original photos are on the left, and their GIF versions on the right. 

Overall, the contest is an extension of the company's "Wing Everything" push, celebrating spontaneous vacation. Would-be participants can compete by hash-tagging a pic #WingItYeah on Twitter or Instagram, or submitting via the Booking.com Facebook page. Wieden+Kennedy Amsterdam has hired four digital artists to create the GIFS: James Kerr, Cari vander Yacht, Chris Timmons, and Justin Gammon

As for Booking.com's criteria for selecting which photos to GIF, the marketer says its looking for "jealousy-inducing" shots of things like "infinity pools" and "epic views." In other words, it wants to reward you for doing what you were doing on social media anyways: bragging. 

See more GIFs, and the campaign credits, below.

CREDITS 

"BOOKING.COM–WHO WON BOOKING SUMMER?"

Chief Marketing Officer: Pepijn Rijvers
Head of Brand: Manuel Douchez
Brand Communications Director: Andrew Smith
Brand Specialist: Robert Schreuders
Social Media Product Owner: Julian Poole
Media Planning Director: Anoeska van Leeuwen
Media Manager: Kelly Lee
Media Specialist: Marie Lootvoet

WIEDEN+KENNEDY AMSTERDAM

Executive Creative Directors: Mark Bernath, Eric Quennoy
Creative Directors: Genevieve Hoey, Sean Condon
Art Directors: Jeffrey Lam, Kia Heinnen
Copywriter: Jake Barnes
Director of Interactive Production: Kelsie Van Deman

Interactive Producer: Matthew Ravenhall
Strategic Planner: Emma Wiseman
Communications Planner: Josh Chang
Group Account Director: Jordi Pont, Marcos Da Gama
Account Director: Aitziber Izurrategui
Account Manager: Caroline-Melody Meyer
Head of Design: Joe Burrin
Designer: Thomas Payne
Project Manager: Stacey Prudden
Business Affairs: Kacey Kelley

GIF ARTISTS

Cari van der Yacht
Chris Timmons
Justin Gammon
James Kerr

SOCIAL LISTEN AND RESPOND TEAM

AKQA London


Norm Macdonald Is Now Hosting 15-Second 'Fryerside Chats' as KFC's Colonel Sanders

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KFC has rolled out the next phase of its campaign with the revamped Colonel Sanders, and despite Norm Macdonald's recent arrival, he's already feeling presidential. 

Earlier this month Wieden + Kennedy swapped one Saturday Night Live veteran (Darrell Hammond) for another (Macdonald) as part of its new take on Colonel Sanders for KFC.

Now a mumbling Macdonald is helming a series of FDR-esque "Fryerside Chats" in the form of 15-second spots. What's he talking about? Who knows? New deals, I guess. KFC deals.

Adweek responsive video player used on /video.

Adweek responsive video player used on /video.

Southern Comfort Uses Taiwanese Animators to Burn the Word 'ShottaSoCo' Into Your Brain

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Southern Comfort has become known in the past few years for its quirky, faux-epic TV commercials from Wieden + Kennedy. But the agency and brand launched a new campaign Wednesday that goes in a totally new direction—featuring digital shorts, created in Taiwanese animation, that are designed to worm their way into your newsfeed and teach you a brand-new word to say at the bar.

That word is "ShottaSoCo," which the liquor brand hopes will become a commonly used, roll-off-the-tongue way of saying "shot of Southern Comfort." W+K partnered with Next Media, the Taiwanese animation company known for its quick turnaround on videos about current events, on the new ads, which feature strange and surreal plots clearly meant will amuse millennials. (W+K turned the scripts over to animators and let them interpret the scenes in their own way.)



The first five ads don't skimp on the word ShottaSoCo, either. In fact, it's practically the only dialogue we hear. Future spots may respond quickly to breaking current events, putting Southern Comfort in the news mix.

Old Spice's Pitchman Battle Heats Up as Terry Mocks Isaiah's Signature Line

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Not many brands could pull off a campaign that escalates the weirdness in each new spot. But anything can happen in an Old Spice campaign, and transforming Terry Crews into an angry woodpecker is just one of the loony things in the brand's latest effort. 

Earlier this summer, Wieden + Kennedy launched its latest Old Spice work, pitting the brand's two pitchmen against each other. In a battle for consumer hearts—and dollars—the men are squaring off against each other to help consumers match their personalities to the right scent.



Crews' and Mustafa's differing personas make the competition fun, as they lay their version of charm on thick. And of course, getting to see Crews' take on Isaiah Mustafa's "Hello ladies" is a delightful quirk of this particular effort. 

Wieden + Kennedy Waxes Metaphorical in First Full Campaign for Verizon

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Verizon recently surprised many in the agency world by signing Wieden + Kennedy as its newest creative partner without launching a formal review. And this week, after introducing a sleeker logo, America's leading wireless provider debuted "Better Matters," the first full campaign from the agency.

The theme of this work is ambitious and suggests only Verizon can fully deliver on "the promise of the digital world." Its central analogy, illustrated with a series of colorful metaphors in a dozen ads from W+K's creative team, holds that a higher-quality network leads to a better quality of life, especially when it comes to everyday convenience.

One scene in the first ad highlights a frustrated man whose wireless connection "only works in one corner of the house." The message is clear: Verizon's product is simply better than its competitors.

Regarding the launch spot, Wieden + Kennedy creative directors Aaron Allen and Jason Kreher told Adweek via email, "Everyone in this category has invented a claim to make it sound like they are the best. But when you are the leader like Verizon is, you have the opportunity to talk to people on a higher level. It was important to us to rise above the bickering of this category and stand for something bigger."

The next set of :30 ads elaborates on that theme with an assortment of self-described experts, who let consumers know exactly how a "better" network operates compared to inferior rivals.

In "Scuba," a French instructor compares the flow of wireless data to that of oxygen through a series of tubes. (Note the all-important "do not attempt" disclaimer.)

Next, a woman who may be a little too passionate about her juicing hobby elaborates (in her own unnerving way) on the benefits of Verizon's 100 percent LTE or "long-term evolution" technology.

In the following spot, an unnamed high schooler joins forces with Spandau Ballet to compare Verizon's ultra-reliable network to the untouchable magnetism of ultimate 80s couple Corey and Samantha, who always seem to attract attention without even trying.

Another spot invokes Wall-E in answering an eternal question: What is a cartoon door without a group of animated, lemming-like humanoids trying to squeeze through it?

Following that star turn, the campaign uses several other inanimate objects and a paper lizard in a series of :15 spots.

First comes the abnormally large basketball hoop.

An hourglass can also do the job with a little help from its archenemy, the cylinder.

What better way to explain how data (or, in this case, liquid) moves most effectively from one point to the next by traveling in a straight line than with a crazy straw?

The next take is particularly topical given McDonald's newfound dedication to cage-free eggs.

Just like this lizard and its paper tail, Verizon always has a backup generator ready in case things start to go wrong.

Finally, as if to cover all possible bases, the campaign turns to two star athletes for their own versions of the operative metaphor.

Backup Saints quarterback Luke McCown brings a new perspective (literally) to the smartphone experience, while Texans defensive end and Men's Health cover model J.J. Watt keeps working hard, even when no one can see him doing it. If a tree falls in the forest, J.J. Watt definitely makes a sound.

The larger claim—which is impossible for anyone with a pulse to miss—is that Verizon's network allows for a more unencumbered flow of data than those of its competitors. With Sprint focusing on price as a differentiator and AT&T releasing ads to highlight its recent merger with DirecTV and its efforts to curb the texting-while-driving epidemic, Verizon hopes that this message will resonate with consumers who rely on that all-important wireless data in almost every moment of their lives.

The new campaign and logo are part of an extended attempt to plot the present and future course of a company that would like to be all things to all people, including AOL members. Svp of brand creative marketing Melissa Garlick says, "Instead of trying to talk to different types of people all at once, we found a dozen different ways to explain how Verizon has a better network, and why better matters."

Creative directors Allen and Kreher echoed that message, telling Adweek, "The challenge was explaining some pretty dry facts in a way that would resonate." The varied nature of this campaign "ensured that production would be a huge challenge, but it resulted in a ton of good work that helps Verizon stand out from the competition."

The ads above are not W+K's first work for Verizon. Some of the agency's spots released earlier in the summer—like this one starring a very sad dog—focused more on the economics of Verizon's service package. But the "Better Matters" campaign will be the client's most notable marketing effort, with ads airing during this fall's biggest events including NFL and college football games throughout the coming season.

While Verizon still includes mcgarrybowen, which created recent wireless campaigns starring James Franco, on its agency roster, Wieden + Kennedy's tenure as the company's lead creative partner effectively begins with this campaign.

CREDITS

Client: Verizon   
Title: "Better Matters"  
 
Agency: Wieden + Kennedy Portland
Creative Directors: Aaron Allen, Jason Kreher   
Copywriter: Alex Romans, Nathaniel Lawlor   
Art Director: Tim Semple, Ruth Belloti   
Producer: Hayley Goggin, Endy Hedman   
Strategic Planning: Amber Higgins, Anibal Casso   
Media/Comms Planning: Kelly Muller, Kelsey Dean   
Account Team: Trish Adams, Diana Gonzalez, Marcelina Ward   
Business Affairs: Anna Beth Nagel, Laura Caldwell   
Project Management: Liza Robbins   
Executive Creative Directors: Joe Staples / Mark Fitzloff   
Head of Production: Ben Grylewicz 
Production Company: Arts & Sciences   
Director: Matt Aselton   
Executive Producer: Marc Marnie   
Line Producer: Zoe Odlum   
Director of Photography: Toby Irwin 
Editorial Company: Joint Editorial   
Editor: Tommy Harden   
Post Producer: Jen Milano   
Post Executive Producer: Leslie Carthy 
VFX Company: The Mill   
2D Lead: Robin McGloin   
2D artists: Scott Wilson, Alex Candlish, Jeff Langlois   
Lead Design+Animation: Justin Sucara   
Senior Executive Producer: Sue Troyan   
Pr VFX Producer: Kiana Bicoy   
Production Coordinator: Jillian Lynes
Composer: Alison Ables  
Sound Designer: Noah Woodburn
Mix Company: Eleven  
Mixer: Jeff Payne  
Producer: Suzanne Hollingshead 

Title: "Door," "Lizard," "Egg"

Agency: Wieden + Kennedy Portland
Creative Directors: Aaron Allen, Jason Kreher  
Copywriter: Claire Wyckoff (Door, Lizard); Matt Skibiak (Egg)  
Art Director: Chuck Carlson (Door, Lizard); Nicole Blauw (Door, Lizard); Nate Nowinowski (Egg)  
Producer: Jennifer Hundis, Felicia Glover  
Strategic Planning: Amber Higgins, Zack Jerome  
Media/Comms Planning: Kelly Muller, Kelsey Dean  
Account Team: Trish Adams, Diana Gonzalez, Marcelina Ward  
Business Affairs: Laura Caldwell (Door); Anna Beth Nagel (Lizard, Egg)  
Project Management: Liza Robbins  
Executive Creative Directors: Joe Staples / Mark Fitzloff  
Head of Production Ben Grylewicz Production Company: Buck  
Director: Ryan Honey (Door, Lizard, Egg); Kevin Walker (Door); Gunnar Pettersson (Lizard); Jenny Ko (Egg)  
Executive Producer: Maurie Enochson  
Line Producer: Matt Squires (Egg)  
Director of Photography: Jonpaul Douglass (Egg)
Editorial Company: Buck  
Editor: Buck  
Post Producer: Emily Rickard  
Post Executive Producer: Maurie Enochson
VFX Company: Buck  
VFX Supervisor: Doug Wilkinson (Door, Lizard, Egg); Alex Dingfelder (Lizard)  
VFX Producer: Emily Rickard
Music+Sound Company: Mutato + LIME   
Composer: Mark Mothersbaugh  
Sound Designer: Rohan Young  
Song: "Blissful Driving Experience"  
Producer: Natalie Montogomery
Music+Sound Company: Pivot  
Sound Designer: Rohan Young  
Producer: Susie Boyajan/Guy Amitai
Mix Company: LIME  
Mixer: Rohan Young  
Producer: Susie Boyajan  

Title: "Backup QB," "Juice," "It Couple," "Scuba"

Agency: Wieden + Kennedy Portland
Creative Directors: Aaron Allen, Jason Kreher 
Copywriter: Brooke Barker (Backup QB, Juice, It Couple); Alex Romans (Scuba) 
Art Director: Susan Land (Backup, QB, Juice, It Couple, Scuba); John Dwight (Scuba) 
Producer: Shannon Worley 
Strategic Planning: Amber Higgins, Zack Jerome 
Media/Comms Planning: Kelly Muller, Kelsey Dean 
Account Team: Trish Adams, Diana Gonzalez, Marcelina Ward 
Business Affaires: Teresa Lutz 
Project Management: Liza Robbins 
Executive Creative Directors: Joe Staples / Mark Fitzloff 
Head of Production: Ben Grylewicz
Production Company: Imperial Woodpecker
Director: Stacy Wall
Executive Producer: Doug Halbert
Line Producer: Terri Shafirov
Director of Photography: Ellen Kuras
Editorial Company: Rock Paper Scissors
Editor: Grant Surmi
Assistant Editor: Ben Reesing
Post Producer: Ashley Bartell
Post Executive Producer: Angela Dorian
VFX Company: a52
Lead Flame Artist: Andy Bate, Stefan Gaillot
Flame Artist: Matt Sousa
Flame Assistant: Gabe Sanchez
Post Producer: Zach Wakefield
Music+Sound Company: Original music by Human
Producer: Jonathan Sanford
Music+Sound Company: tonefarmer
Composer: Jimmy Harned
Producer: Liz Higgins
Sound Company: Lime Studios
Sound Designer: Dave Wagg
Assistant: Adam Primack
Producer: Susie Boyajan
Mix Company: Lime Studios
Mixer: Zach Fisher
Producer: Susie Boyajan
Assistant: Kevin McAlpine    

Title: "Hourglass," "Basketball," "Straw"

Creative Directors: Aaron Allen, Jason Kreher
Copywriter: Claire Wyckoff, Alex Romans (Straw)
Art Director: Chuck Carlson, Nicole Blauw, Robbie Rane (Straw)
Producer: Jennifer Hundis, Erin Goodsell, Felicia Glover
Strategic Planning: Amber Higgins, Zack Jerome
Media/Comms Planning: Kelly Muller, Kelsey Dean
Account Team: Trish Adams, Diana Gonzalez, Marcelina Ward
Business Affairs: Anna Beth Nagel
Project Management: Liza Robbins
Executive Creative Directors: Joe Staples / Mark Fitzloff
Head of Production: Ben Grylewicz
Production Company: Hornet
Director: Lernert & Sander
Executive Producer: Hana Shimizu
Line Producer: David Marks
Director of Photography: Aaron Platt
Editorial Company: Hornet
Editor: Anita Chao
Post Producer: Desiree Stavracos
Post Executive Producer: Hana Shimizu
VFX Company: Hornet
VFX Supervisor: Arman Matin
VFX Producer: Desiree Stavracos
Music+Sound Company: PIVOT, Barking Owl
Composer: Pivot + Barking Owl
Producer: Guy Amitai
Mix Company: LIME
Producer: Susie  Boyajan

Title: "The Network of J.J. Watt"

Agency: Wieden + Kennedy New York
Executive Creative Directors: Mark Fitzloff, Joe Staples
Creative Directors: Sean McLaughlin, John Parker
Creative Directors: Aaron Allen, Jason Kreher
Creative Directors: Stuart Jennings, Caleb Jensen
Copywriter: Eric Helin
Art Director: Erwin Federizo
Head of Content Production: Nick Setounski
Broadcast Producer: Orlee Tatarka
Digital Producer: Mutaurwa Mapondera
Print Producer: Kristen Althoff
Print Traffic Coordinator: Shane Thompson
Studio Manager: Jill Kearton
Brand Strategist: Marshall Ball
Account Team: Trish Adams, Samantha Wagner, Kristen Herrington, Jasmine Cogdell
Media Director: David Stopforth
Communications Planners: Courtney Bernstein, Kelsey Dean
Project Manager: Alex Doomany
Broadcast Traffic Director: Sonia Bisono
Broadcast Traffic Manager: Carolina Hernandez
Business Affairs Managers: Patrick O'Donohue, Lindsey Timko
Production Company: Arts & Sciences
Director: Matt Aselton
Executive Producer/COO: Mal Ward
Executive Producer: Marc Marrie
Line Producer: Zoe Odlum
Director of Photography: Ulrik Boel Bentzen
Editorial Company: Arcade Editorial
Editor: Jeff Ferruzzo
Post Producer: Lauren Cancelosi
Editorial Assistant: Mark Popham
VFX Company: The Mill
VFX Flame: John McIntosh and Molly Intersimone 
Producer: Clairellen Wallen, Georgina Castle
Telecine Company: The Mill
Colorist: Fergus McCall
Mix Company: Sound Lounge
Mixer: Glen Landrum
Music: Able Baker

Nike Recreated the Toga Party From Animal House With Famous University of Oregon Alumni

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This one goes out to all the Ducks fans—but all you really need to appreciate it is to have liked the movie Animal House.

Nike celebrates its deep ties to the University of Oregon in a new, feel-good ad—featuring a horde of notable alumni (mostly sports stars, but also Modern Family actor Ty Burrell and ESPN anchor Neil Everett)—that recreates the famous toga-party scene from the 1978 National Lampoon classic.

Heisman Trophy winner Marcus Mariota, now playing as a quarterback for the Tennessee Titans, arguably has the best role, standing in for John Belushi as resident guitar smasher.

But Otis Day and the Knights, who anchored the original scene with a performance of "Shout," reprise that role in the commercial, perfectly setting the tone. (The band, originally a fiction created for Animal House, ultimately ended up touring in the wake of the movie's success, fronted by actor DeWayne Jessie.)



Wieden + Kennedy Portland created the spot, which clocks in at almost five and a half minutes—thanks in large part to the extensive freeze-frame credits, another stylistic nod to the movie (and a necessary exercise for viewers who haven't memorized the history of one college's sports heroes).

Nike released the spot to coincide with Saturday's college football game in Lansing between the Oregon Ducks and the Michigan State Spartans, who edged out the visiting team 31-28. But the ad is anything but a wasted effort, acting as a standalone paean to Nike's long history with the college.

One of the brand's two co-founders, Phil Knight, ran at the University of Oregon. The other, Bill Bowerman, coached track and field there for 24 years (including Knight). Designer Tinker Hatfield—perfectly described in the clip as the guy who created the shoes you're wearing—was a pole-vaulter at the school.

In other words, it's inside baseball, but a nice way for a huge global brand to celebrate its local heritage and make itself seem more down to earth in the process. And while Animal House also happened to be largely filmed in Eugene, where the University of Oregon is located (including scenes at the school itself), the film's pop culture clout is broad enough to draw in a wider audience beyond its cornucopia of parochial trivia.

Or, if you want a shorter route down that rabbit hole, you can start here.

Wieden + Kennedy Tells the Entire History of the Internet in a Single Long-Copy Print Ad

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The call for entries for the 20th Annual Webby Awards had to be special. So, the organizer—the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences—got 20 Webby winners to create their own versions of it, inspired by the theme "The Internet Can't Be Stopped."

Wieden + Kennedy, NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Big Spaceship, Code & Theory, Google, Facebook, National Geographic and Pitchfork are just a few of the companies participating. You can check out the submissions from W+K, NASA, Big Spaceship and Code & Theory below.

Click images to enlarge.

Wieden + Kennedy:

NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory:

Big Spaceship:

Code & Theory:

A new work will be featured on webbyawards.com each week, with an interview explaining it. (NASA's JPL is the first to do so, here.) The creators will also take over the Webby Awards social accounts to explain their take on the theme.

"We are honored to be celebrating this significant milestone in Webby Awards history with the enthusiasm and creativity of these 20 visionaries who have played an integral role in shaping the last 20 years of the Internet," said David-Michel Davies, Executive Director of The Webby Awards. "We are excited to share their thought provoking perspectives and designs surrounding the Internet's impact on our daily lives."

Ad of the Day: Bond Gets a New Sidekick in W+K's Entertaining Swan Song for Heineken

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Another day, another James Bond movie, another dapper chase scene of a Heineken commercial—but with a new kind of hero.

Daniel Craig bookends this new 90-second, high-octane ad—from Wieden + Kennedy Amsterdam and MJZ director Tom Kuntz—promoting both the beer brand and the Nov. 6 release of Spectre, the next film in the 007 franchise.

The commercial's format harks back to the 2012 Skyfall tie-in, when a case of mistaken identity found a Heineken "Man of the World"—basically your everyday Bond—deftly evading villains who thought they were pursuing Craig.

This time, the innocent who's unwittingly swept into the action is an equally dextrous woman, who seems perfectly at home getting dragged along behind Bond's speedboat on water skis, carrying a tray of lagers and using her feminine wiles to run the evil-doers into rocks. She also tries the old hat-throwing trick, in a cheeky nod to Goldfinger's Oddjob (or perhaps an even more subtle reference to Austin Power's ineffectual shoe-chucker).



Still, at its heart, it's consistent with Heineken's core advertising theme for the past five years—ridiculously slick dudes having a blast and charming beautiful women all over the world—as well as its target (guys who fancy themselves such).

This is W+K Amsterdam's last effort for Heineken, and it will be a fitting end to the gangbusters approach if the brand changes strategic course as it shifts to its new agency Publicis. At this point, the lines between Bond and Heineken's own character seem deliberately blurred to the point of being indistinguishable.

But it's still good fun.

CREDITS
Client: Heineken
Senior Marketing Director Global Heineken Brand: Gianluca Di Tondo
Global Heineken Communications Director: Sandrine Huijgen
Heineken Communications Manager: Jules Macken
Global Sponsorships Director: Hans Erik Tuijt

Spot: "The Chase"

Agency: Wieden + Kennedy Amsterdam

Executive Creative Director: Mark Bernath, Eric Quennoy
Creative Director: Faustin Claverie, Thierry Albert
Art Director: Faustin Claverie
Copywriter: Thierry Albert
Head of Broadcast Production: Joe Togneri
Broadcast Producer: Jaime Tan
Assistant Producer: Stijn Wikkerink
Planner: Nick Docherty
Group Account Director: Jordi Pont
Account Director: Jonah Dolan
Account Manager: Elianne Vermeulen
Project Manager: Stacey Prudden
Business Affairs: Michael Graves

Production Company: MJZ
Director: Tom Kuntz
Director of Photography: Benoit Debie
Production Designer: Robin Brown
Producer: Chris McBride
Executive Producer: Debbie Turner

Editing Company: White House Post
Editor: Russell Icke
Edit Assistant: Stephen Dunne

Audio Post: 750MPH
Sound Designer/Mixer: Sam Ashwell

Music
Artist/Title: "The Hell Raisers" by Syd Dale
Label: KPM
Publisher: EMI Music Publishing Benelux
Additional Musicians: Pandit Dinesh – Percussion; Andy Mellon - Trumpet

Postproduction: MPC London
VFX Supervisor Dan Sanders
2D Team David Filipe, Toya Dreschler, Ed Taylor
3D Lead Amir Bazazi
3D Team Fabio Santoro, Adam Leary, Arttu Koskela, Rune Mansson,
Telecine Mark Gethin
Producer Paul Branch


Yoplait and W+K Made the Hangriest Yogurt Ads Yet, Starring Dominic Purcell

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For Yoplait, Wieden + Kennedy has moved on from Phoebe Neidhardt to Dominic Purcell, getting the actor to subvert his tough-guy image ... and become "A Man of Yogurt."

In two new ads (four more are on the way), Purcell extolls the texture and flavor of Yoplait's Greek yogurt. When we think of ideal yogurt pitchmen, the guy who played Dracula in Blade: Trinity and Lincoln Burrows in Prison Break isn't the most intuitive choice, but that's the point. After seeing a billion yogurt ads with grinning middle-aged women having a giggle about digestion, some variety is welcome to the category.



The humor in these spots relies on hearing Purcell—who looks like he fights people in bars for money—say words like "tum-tum" and joke about his naturally menacing face (without looking like he's joking). It is funny, but a little unsettling, too.

We can't be the only ones who want to get the locks changed when he describes Yoplait Whips as "a little fluffy cloud in my mouth."

"Where the most fun came in was when you took what makes Yoplait Greek 100 so unique—its great taste, its unique flavors and its light and fluffy texture when it's whipped—and applied those softer, gentler attributes to our tough guy," Karl Lieberman, creative director at W+K, says on the Yoplait blog."Suddenly, this man of pure intensity gained a lighter, softer side that made the whole thing pretty funny and interesting in our minds. We talked about various potential 'tough guys' for the campaign, but Dominic was inevitable."

Credits below.



CREDITS
Client: Yoplait

Agency: Wieden + Kennedy, Portland, Ore.
Creative Directors: Karl Lieberman / Eric Baldwin
Copywriter: Shaine Edwards
Art Director: Matt Carroll
Producer: Ben Grylewicz
Strategic Planning: Angela Jones / Carly Presho-Dunne
Media, Communications Planning: Zenith Optimedia; W+K Media
Account Team: Ken Smith / Kelly Quinn
Business Affairs: Anna Beth Nagel
Project Management: Carolyn Domme
Executive Creative Directors: Joe Staples / Mark Fiztloff
Head of Production: Ben Grylewicz

Production Company: Anonymous Content
Director: Mark Romanek
Executive Producer: Eric Stern
Line Producer: Paul Ure
Director of Photography: Robert Hardy

Editing Company: Joint Editorial
Editor: Steve Sprinkel
Post Producer: Lauren Pullano
Executive Post Producer: Leslie Carthy

Visual Effects, Titles, Graphics: Joint Editorial
Visual Effects Supervisor: Alex Thiesen
Flame Artist: Pilon Lectez

Music, Sound Company: Extreme Music
Sound Designer: Noah Woodburn

Ad of the Day: W+K's Grand New Delta Spot Is Very Poetic, and a Bit Unsettling

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This new Delta commercial from Wieden + Kennedy in New York spends 45 of its 60 seconds staring at the ground, yet it's the most high-concept airline ad in a while.

It's also either quite inspiring or a bit dismaying, depending on your level of comfort with airline ads that focus on the actual terrifying physics of giant machines hurtling along at great speeds. It aims for the former, naturally, but leans toward the latter at the outset, as Donald Sutherland intones, in a gravelly voiceover, "What's happening here is not normal."

That's a bit of a funny line to open an airline commercial, even if Sutherland quickly follows it up with the disclaimer, "It's extraordinary." And the rest of the poetic voiceover—combined with visuals that are hectic and claustrophobic until almost the very end—doesn't exactly lighten the mood.

Later, in another part of the voiceover, Sutherland takes stock of a Delta jet furiously in motion—"291 people, 350 tons, 186 miles per hour"—and then suggests, bluntly, "There is no stop in us. Or you. Only go." That's meant to be a good thing, though it risks conjuring imagery of not being able to stop—and might have you pining for one of W+K's famously inventive safety videos for the same carrier.



As a grandiose mini manifesto, though, it works well enough—saluting Delta's indomitable spirit and its passengers' sense of adventure. And if it overreaches here and there—e.g., comparing today's travelers to "the pioneers … in canoes and covered wagons, with wild eyes and big-fevered dreams"—it sure beats focusing on the reality of today's air travel.

The visual approach is pretty brave, too, and unique—not showing a single airplane—even if it's not totally clear why it took two directors (Smuggler's Adam Berg and Joost Van Gelder) to shoot it. The first half of the spot almost evokes space travel, as the close-up of the runway lines flying by gives a sense of lifting. The final shot is lovely, too, bringing a calmness to what's been a bit of a bumpy ride.

The sound is notable, as well—a deep roar that pulsates more and more quickly as the plane gathers speed, making the spot even more intense (which is plenty engaging, though for the reasons mentioned above, doesn't always feel entirely pleasant).

This work is part of the "Keep Climbing" campaign but takes a slightly new direction to show how Delta enables the pursuit of opportunity, connecting flyers to great experiences, adventures and opportunities in the world.

Just, you know, buckle your seatbelt first, and be willing to help in case of an emergency.

CREDITS
Client: Delta Air Lines
Spot: "Take Off: Why We Go"

Agency: Wieden + Kennedy, New York
Executive Creative Directors: Jaime Robinson and David Kolbusz
Creative Directors: Eric Helin, Erik Norin, Sean McLaughlin and John Parker
Creatives: Eric Dennis, Molly Jamison
Head of Content Production: Nick Setounski
Broadcast Producer: Cheryl Warbrook, Nick Setounski, Kristen Johnson
Brand Strategist: Sam Matthews
Account Team: Liz Taylor, Meghan Mullen, Lauren Smith
Business Affairs: Sara Jagielski, Keri Rommel, Sonia Bisono, Andy Hume

Production Company: Smuggler
Director: Adam Berg, Joost Van Gelder
Director/DP: Joost Van Gelder
Partner: Patrick Milling Smith
Partner: Brian Carmody
Executive Producer: Shannon Jones
Head of Production: Andrew Colón
Producer: Leslie Vaughn

Editorial Company: Cosmo Street
Editor: Mark Potter
Producer: Maura Woodward

VFX Company: MPC
VFX Lead Flame: Marcus Wood
Senior Producer: Armand Weeresinghe

Sound Studio: Sonic Union
Sound mixer: Steve Rosen

Nike Salutes the Last-Place Marathon Finisher in Ad That's Like a Sequel to 'Jogger'

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Nike has assembled the same creative partners behind the famous 2012 "Jogger" spot—ad agency Wieden + Kennedy and Park Pictures director Lance Acord—for its latest running ad, which makes a very similar point: that anyone can be a runner if they just start running.

Acord even uses a similar technique—a slow backward tracking shot—in the new ad, titled "Last," which is set on a marathon course where the final stragglers are just jogging through, trampling on a bed of crushed paper water cups and dodging the pedestrians who've already begun to reclaim the road.

Adweek responsive video player used on /video.

"Last" is a very different spot than "Jogger," though—both bigger and smaller in scope. Bigger because it's not just about running but about marathon running. ("You are not a runner," says the female voiceover. "You are especially not a marathon runner. But at the end of this, you will be.") Smaller because "Jogger," starring a very overweight kid, was clearly and starkly provocative, while "Last" is much more lighthearted.

The soundtrack here is "Every Little Bit Hurts" by Aretha Franklin from 1964. The spot points to nike.com/running and promotes the Nike+ Run Club, which democratizes running by serving runners of all ability levels.

CREDITS
Client: Nike
Spot: "Last"
Format: :60/:30
Launch Date: Oct. 11, 2015, North America TV

Agency: Wieden + Kennedy, Portland, Ore.
Global Creative Directors: Alberto Ponte, Ryan O'Rourke
Interactive Director: Dan Viens
Interactive Producer: Evelyn Loomis
Global Executive Producer: Matt Hunnicutt
Writer: Heather Ryder, Darcie Burrell
Art Director: Patty Orlando
Producer: Shelley Eisner
Associate Producer: Julie Gursha
Strategic Planning: Henry Lambert
Business Affairs: Anna Beth Nagel
Account Team: Alyssa Ramsey, Marisa Weber, Molly Rugg
Executive Creative Directors: Mark Fitzloff, Joe Staples

Production Company: Park Pictures
Director: Lance Acord
Executive Producer: Jackie Kelman Bisbee
Executive Producer: Mary Ann Marino
Line Producer: Caroline Kousidonis
Director of Photography: Lance Acord

Editorial Company: Rock Paper Scissors
Editor: Angus Wall
Post Producer: Angela Dorian
Post Executive Producer: Angela Dorian

VFX Company: A52
VFX Supervisor: Pat Murphy
Flame Artist: Pat Murphy
VFX Producer: Michael Steinmann
Titles/Graphics: Just Do It+ Nike title cards – Artwork from Patty Orlando

Music+Sound Company: Walker Music/Barking Owl
Composer: Edited track
Sound Designer: Michael Anastasi
Song: "Every Little Bit Hurts" – Aretha Franklin Album "Running out of Fools" 1964
Producer: Sara Matarazzo/Abbey Hickman, Walker / Kelly Bayett, Barking Owl

Mix Company: Eleven Sound
Mixer: Jeff Payne
Producer: Dawn Redmann

Two Top Creatives Stepping Down at Wieden+Kennedy After Short Tenures

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Wieden+Kennedy's newest executive creative director is leaving the agency after less than eight months.

Jaime Robinson, who joined the independent shop's New York office in March after serving as a cd and ecd at San Francisco's Pereira & O'Dell for more than six years, is stepping down along with her creative partner and fellow ecd David Kolbusz, who started working at Wieden in 2014.

The agency's global ecd Colleen DeCourcy will partner with managing director Neal Arthur to serve as interim executive creative director in their absence, according to a statement from the agency.

"Jaime and David have decided to leave to pursue other opportunities," DeCourcy said, "They contributed a great deal to the office and the work. We'll miss their ideas and energy, and we wish them the best."

Prior to joining Pereira in 2009, Robinson was an associate creative director at EVB and a copywriter at TBWA\Chiat\Day's San Francisco office. Kolbusz joined Wieden+Kennedy after spending nearly four years with BBH London and serving as a group creative director at San Francisco's Goodby, Silverstein & Partners.

Regarding their replacements, Wieden's president Dave Luhr says, "Colleen will work closely with Neal as his creative partner to run the New York office. We will be announcing a permanent ecd for the office imminently."

Wieden + Kennedy New York Names New Creative Leader After 2 Big Departures

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Less than a week after its top two creative leaders announced that they would be stepping down after relatively short tenures, Wieden + Kennedy New York named its newest executive creative director in an internal promotion.

Karl Lieberman, who has been with the indie agency's Portland office since 2008, will relocate to the East Coast to lead its creative team in Manhattan. 

Last week, W+K announced that both David Kolbusz (a veteran of BBH London and Goodby, Silverstein & Partners) and Jaime Robinson (formerly with Pereria & O'Dell) would be leaving their roles after tenures of a year and a half and less than eight months, respectively. One day later, the reasons behind one of those departures became clear as Droga5 named the British-born Kolbusz as its new chief creative officer in London. 

That move followed the August hiring of Grey veteran Bill Scott to serve as CEO of Droga5 London as the agency aims to strengthen its U.K. operations after shuttering its sole office in founder David Droga's native Australia.

When the announcement first broke, a Wieden + Kennedy spokesperson told Adweek that global ecd Colleen DeCourcy would partner with New York managing director Neal Arthur to fill the roles vacated by Kolbusz and Robinson—but that interim period was far shorter than some may have expected.

Lieberman joined W+K Portland as a copywriter in 2008 and was promoted to the creative director role two years later after working with some of the agency's best-known clients. During his time with Wieden he has contribued to such campaigns as Procter & Gamble's 2012 Olympics effort "Thank You, Mom," which went on to win an Emmy. Other work includes multi-platform campaigns for Nike, Old Spice, Target and Facebook, among others;

Lieberman has also served as creative director for the agency's ongoing KFC campaign starring a "reinvigorated" Colonel Sanders after the agency won the account (which had been with FCB for a decade) in Februrary.

Before joining W+K, Lieberman served as both a copywriter and art director (a rare feat in the ad world) at TBWA\Chiat\Day New York, Mother New York and Euro RSCG/Havas, where he co-created Dos Equis' iconic The Most Interesting Man in the World.

Regarding the promotion, Arthur says, "Karl is a creative force, and the perfect person to take the reins of this office during an exciting point in its history."

DeCourcy adds, "We are fortunate that the planets aligned to bring him back to New York."

Liberman tells Adweek: "Things have been great in Portland. I loved my bosses, my partner, our team, our clients and my home. I'm assuming this promotion is a clerical error, but I'm just going to go with it."

This is not the only recent dramatic change for Wieden + Kennedy. In a move that surprised many in the agency world, Bud Light shifted its $350 million account from BBDO to the shop's New York office in July just over three months before parent company AB InBev announced its decision to merge with chief rival MillerCoors.

Weight Watchers Has Finally Found Its New Agency Partner in Havas

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After ending its short-lived relationship with Wieden + Kennedy in early 2015, top diet brand Weight Watchers has chosen Havas Worldwide as its newest creative agency partner after an extensive review.

Weight Watchers' svp of marketing, Maurice Herrera, told Adweek, "We have engaged Havas Worldwide in the U.S. to develop work for a winter 2016 advertising campaign aimed at driving member recruitment and bringing to life our new program innovation." He added, "We chose Havas based on their deep strategic insight and an ability to develop a broad range of creative work in a highly collaborative manner."

Sources confirm that the review, which was announced in March, continued throughout the summer. The final two candidates were Havas and The Martin Agency.

The company's decision to switch shops followed W+K's "If You're Happy" campaign, which aired during Super Bowl XLIX and framed dietary challenges as a matter of psychological and behavioral compulsion while reminding consumers that "Our relationship with food is complicated. Weight Watchers is here to help with the hard part." The work marked a dramatic departure from previous U.S.-based campaigns.

Weight Watchers has been reconsidering its marketing options since it dropped Wieden, which took over for McCann without a review in April 2014 just as the brand announced that it would be moving away from its long-term focus on celebrity spokespeople like Jessica Simpson and Jennifer Hudson. (Weight Watchers has often run more emotionally resonant campaigns in international markets.) After parting ways with W+K, the company turned to New York's DiMassimo Goldstein to run its spring campaigns, but at the time, spokespeople emphasized it wasn't an agency-of-record relationship and that the search for a lead creative partner would continue.

The 2015 review also followed a major executive change at Weight Watchers, as North American president Lesya Lysyj, who worked with Wieden + Kennedy in her previous job as CMO of Heineken USA, departed. Before leaving the company, Lysyj told reporters about her plans to shift toward more positive messaging in an attempt to regain lost market share. At the time, she said, "We looked like every other offering out there so we really had to change how we are communicating to customers," positioning the W+K work as an example of the new approach.

Weight Watchers marks the second recent big-name win for Havas, which picked up Kmart's business last month. The agency has also made several additions to its leadership team this fall: It signed former BBDO New York ecd Toygar Bazarkaya to serve as its chief creative officer for the Americas, rehired Matt Howell as its global chief digital officer and promoted executive creative directors Jason Musante and Israel Garber after hiring new group creative directors to work on the Dos Equis and TD Ameritrade accounts, among others.

Weight Watchers declined to elaborate on the scope of its relationship with Havas beyond Herrera's remarks and did not provide insight into the direction of coming campaigns. An agency spokesperson deferred to the client for comment.

According to Kantar Media, Weight Watchers spends approximately $150 million on measured media each year, with a budget of $65 million for the first half of 2015.

Nike Welcomes Winter With Epic, Star-Studded, Two-Minute 'Snow Day' Commercial

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After last year's brutal weather, folks in the Boston area might not be screaming "Snow day!" quite as exuberantly upon the arrival of this winter's first big storm. But New England Patriots hero Rob Gronkowski seems to have no problem with snowflakes as he headlines this epic, two-minute cold-weather commercial from Nike—ushering in the season of flurries, frozen feet and star-studded neighborhood Snow Bowls.

More than 20 pro athletes turn out for the ad, from Wieden + Kennedy in Portland, Ore., and Biscuit Filmworks director Steve Rogers. And no matter their actual sport, they all seem to be playing Winter Olympians for the day—if things like snowball fighting, snow-plow jumping and needlessly shattering lots of frosted glass could be Olympic sports.

In the end, they line up for a football game—fittingly, as the ad will get its first airing Thursday night during the Patriots-Dolphins game. (In fact, the pecking order of celebs here seems inspired by that very game, with Dolphins defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh being the first character Gronkowski encounters in his SportsCenter-like neighborhood, where only by pro sportsmen and women seem to live. Never mind that it's actually 70 degrees right now in Foxborough, Mass., where tonight's game will be played.)



The spot pushes Nike's Hyperwarm baselayer of workout apparel. And in fact, kicking off winter with a tribute to the Hyperwarm line is becoming something of a tradition for Nike. This spot is more straightforward than last year's, though, which was more theatrical and featured Chris O'Dowd as a weatherman of sorts, hyperbolically describing the effects of cold on the human body.

All the typical Nike energy and humor are there in the new spot, although it must be said that the constant falling snow obscures the athletes a bit and maybe dulls the impact somewhat. (These would be first world art director problems.)

Along with Gronk and Suh, the ad serves up Odell Beckham Jr., Le'Veon Bell, Eugenie Bouchard, Antonio Brown, Elena Delle Donne, Marlen Esparza, Paula Findlay, Lauren Fisher, Paul George, A.J. Green, Draymond Green, Luke Kuechly, Sydney Leroux, Carli Lloyd, Marcus Mariota, LeSean McCoy, Ben Roethlisberger, Eric Weddle and Steven Stamkos.

Also check out the behind-the-scenes video, which features many of the athletes reminiscing about their favorite snow day memories.



CREDITS
Client: Nike
Project: North America Cold Weather | "Snow Day"

Agency: Wieden + Kennedy, Portland, Ore.
Creative Directors: Chris Groom, Stuart Brown
Copywriter: Brock Kirby
Art Director: Lee Jennings
Producer: Jeff Selis
Agency Executive Producer: Matt Hunnicutt
Designers: Edgar Morales, Seth Shelman
Studio Manager: Alicia Kuna
Motion: Sarah Gamazo, Jeff Ackley, Oliver Rokoff, Adam Sirkin
Color/Retouching: Frazer Goodbody, Saskia Thomson
Art Buyer: Grace Petrenka
Digital Production: Patrick Marzullo, Ben Oh, Evelyn Loomis, Jenna Simon
Digital/Social Strategy: Reid Schilperoort
Strategic Planning: Andy Lindblade, Brandon Thornton, Reid Schilperoort
Media/Comms Planning: Daniel Sheniak, Reme DeBisschop, Lisa Feldhusen, Natalie Welch
Account Team: Karrelle Dixon, Corey Woodson, Shinya Kamata
Project Manager: Andrea Nelsen
Business Affairs: Amber Lavender
Head of Production: Ben Grylewicz
Executive Creative Directors: Mark Fitzloff / Joe Staples

Production Company: Biscuit Filmworks / Revolver
Director: Steve Rogers
Executive Producer: Shawn Lacy/Holly Vega/Dana Balkin
Line Producer: Jay Veal
Director of Photography: Alwin Kuchler
1st AD: Craig Owens

Editorial Company: Joint Editorial, Portland
Editor: Peter Wiedensmith
Assistant Editor: Dylan Sylwester
Post Producer: Jen Milano
Executive Producer: Leslie Carthy
Operations Director: Mary Zuleger

VFX Company: The Mission
Lead Flame: Joey Brattesani
Animation Director: Piotr Karwas
On-Set Supervisor: Michael Gibson
VFX Producer: Diana Cheng
Managing Director: Michael Pardee
Executive Producer: Ellen Turner

Music+Sound Company: Joint Editorial
Sound Designer: Noah Woodburn
Song (if applicable): The Payback

Mix Company: Joint Editorial
Mixer: Noah Woodburn
Producer: Jen Milano

Production Company: Zach King Vines, Los Angeles
Director/Editor: Zach King
Producer: Jadon Gauthier

Photographer: Gary Land
Production Company: Avenue 53
Producer: Greg Broussard


Danny McBride Soars in W+K's Brilliantly Bizarre Music Video for Southern Comfort

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If anyone can help make "ShottaSoCo" a word people actually say at bars, it's Danny McBride. Or rather, a flying version of Danny McBride who repeats the word endlessly, over a pulsating beat, while circling the globe—birdlike in a custom-made wing-tux—in Wieden + Kennedy's amusingly ludicrous new music video for Southern Comfort.

The video, which combines real-life McBride with the Taiwanese animation that the brand has been into lately, was directed by Jody Hill—who of course previously teamed up with McBride on HBO's Eastbound & Down. And it turns out McBride is an authentic brand ambassador. "I'm a huge fan of Southern Comfort! It's been my go-to for years," the actor says in a statement.

In the video, he takes a rather circuitous route to meeting a lady friend at the bar, cruising at 35,000 feet as he barks "ShottaSoCo" at the empty void below—eventually drawing the attention of President Obama, whose security team has apparently spotted McBride on the radar. But rather than being a security threat, Danny is apparently just excuse for everyone, including the commander in chief, to party.



The whole thing is part of Southern Comfort's ongoing efforts to burn the word "ShottaSoCo" into your brain. The brand hopes it will become a commonly used shorthand way of ordering a "shot of Southern Comfort" at bars. And this new song, recorded by the Detroit Grand Pubahs, should help in that regard.

"The idea was to spread a word: 'ShottaSoCo.' Make that word catchy and hopefully get it stuck in your head. It was designed to be a multi-use phrase, including a great song that people actually might get some enjoyment out of," says Jimm Lasser, creative director at W+K New York. "Music is an awesome way to do messaging. It is something that can move with people, rather than the type of engagement that requires you to go to a screen."

"Danny McBride is truly the perfect ambassador for us," adds Lisa Hunter, brand director for Southern Comfort. "He genuinely loves Southern Comfort, and his personality perfectly aligns with our everyday mantra, 'Whatever's Comfortable.' We know there's no one better to pioneer the ShottaSoCo movement."

The single is available on Spotify,Vevo and in bars, starting today.

See more short clips featuring McBride below.



CREDITS
Client: Southern Comfort

Agency: Wieden + Kennedy, New York
Executive Creative Directors: David Kolbusz and Jaime Robinson
Creative Directors: Jimm Lasser and Caleb Jensen
Copywriter: Luke Sacherman
Art Director: Rick Jacques
Associate Producer: Lisa Delonay
Senior Producer: Alison Hill
Account Team: Brandon Pracht, Toby Hussey, Katie Hoak & Kerry O'Connell
Project Manager: Cory Chonko
Digital Strategist: Tom Gibby
Head of Production: Nick Setounski
Photographer: Rick Jacques
Art Producer: Ali Berk
Business Affairs: Justine Lowe, Sara Jagielski

Production Company:  Caviar
Director: Jody Hill
Executive Producer: Michael Sagol and Kim Dellara
Line Producer: Luke Thomlinson-Clark
Director of Photography: Kenneth Seng

Editorial Company: Arcade Edit
Editor: Geoff Hounsell
Post Producer: Fanny Cruz
Post Executive Producer: Sila Soyer and Nicole Visram
Editorial Assistant: Samuel Barden

Animation Company: Next Media Animation
Producers: Eric Chang and Jessica Wu

VFX Company: Timber
Managing Partner/EP: Damian Stevens
CDs / Partners: Jonah Hall and Kevin Lau
Executive Producer: Chris Webb
VFX Lead Flame: Brian Shneider
Digital Effects Supervisors: Nick Hiegel
Nuke Compositor: Rachel Dunn, Daniel Raschko, Joe Zaki, Robert Williams, Eddie Martinez & Aaron Singer
AE Artist: Michael Loney
Flame Assist:  Jason Giamarra, Brandon Harden & Jeff Schulman
Producer:  Lauren Loftus & Tita Poe

Mix Company: Sonic Union
Mixer: Steve Rosen
Sound Designer: Steve Rosen

Song: "SHOTTASoCo"
Artist: Detroit Grand Pubahs

Title Design
Partner Company: Joint
Senior Producer: Michelle Carman
Designer: Dustin Bailey

BTS Editorial Co.
Partner Company: Joint
Senior Producer: Michelle Carman
Assistant Editor: Stephen Nelson
Assistant Editor: JB Jacobs
Motion Graphics Director : Yui Uchida

 

Squarespace Taps Anomaly for Pop-Culture Boost and a Return to the Super Bowl

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Seeking a bigger brand profile and a permanent place in the cultural consciousness, digital publishing platform Squarespace has selected MDC Partners' Anomaly in New York as its lead creative agency.

"With more people than ever looking to create their unique online brand, we're hoping to capture even more attention by launching a fully integrated campaign across all channels, with the highlight being Super Bowl 50," said Squarespace founder and CEO Anthony Casalena.

This will mark the brand's third consecutive big-game appearance. Squarespace's commercial for Super Bowl XLIX this past February was orchestrated by independent Wieden + Kennedy New York, and focused on an album of sounds, meditations and stories recorded by Oscar-winning actor Jeff Bridges. The brand's first Super Bowl foray, the year before, featured Internet memes personified, and was created in-house.

Anomaly is no stranger to adland's biggest creative showcase, having crafted Budweiser's puppy spots that topped the USA Today Super Bowl Ad Meter in each of the past two years. (We learned this week that Bud's SB 50 output won't feature the cuddly Labrador pup.)

Anomaly, which added the assignment following a competitive review, will leverage "cultural tentpole moments" such as the Super Bowl as part of its broader campaign strategy for Squarespace. Karina Wilsher, CEO and partner at Anomaly New York, said 2015 and 2016 represent "an incredible time in the business' life-stage. It's an opportunity to accelerate their leadership position and help define their next chapter."

That mandate moving forward includes business and media strategy in addition to creative. Media buying remains in-house. All told, Squarespace spent slightly more than $25 million on domestic ads last year, and about $15 million through the first half of 2016, per Kantar Media.

The Web hosting, design and publishing space appears to be heating up. Just two weeks ago, GoDaddy, which competes with Squarespace in some sectors, and has been a Super Bowl mainstay, tapped TBWA\Chiat\Day as its first global creative partner.

U.S. Agency of the Year: BBDO Was 2015's Unstoppable Creative Juggernaut

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We don't know what's going to happen, but we know it's going to be interesting." That quote from BBDO New York chief creative officer Greg Hahn embodies his agency's approach to an ever-growing range of work.

For BBDO, Adweek's U.S. Agency of the Year, it also summarizes a time defined by perseverance under pressure, collaboration between teams and a philosophy global creative chief David Lubars sums up in three words: "Good, fast and cheap."

What prepared the Omnicom network to adjust to the rapid-fire changes that frustrate so many of its peers? "I don't think it was just one thing," BBDO New York president and CEO John Osborn tells Adweek. This year "was a tale of multiple stories and a resiliency that is testament to the character of the people I work with every day."

It was this sense of doubling down on strategy that allowed the agency to quickly recover from the loss of America's biggest beer brand and the end of one of its longest client relationships. BBDO's U.S. operations ended the year on a tear that included winning the world's largest fast-food marketer and toy store chain and creating head-turning campaigns characterizing its focus on "The Work, The Work, The Work."

(Be sure to check out our gallery of 10 hilarious and touching ads that helped BBDO earn its honor as the year's top U.S. agency.)

That work led to a total of 24 Cannes Lions and 20 Clio Awards for BBDO's U.S. offices, among other honors. (BBDO was also named Agency of the Year by the American Advertising Awards and BtoB Magazine.)

Lubars believes that the industry nurtures "an unhealthy obsession" with accolades, even as his agency continues winning them. "We focus on doing something really great for the client that's going to help them … and by the way, it will win awards if you do it right," he says.

The network's success in 2015 ran counter to an industry narrative pitting large "traditional" agencies against younger, presumably more agile "boutique" shops. "BBDO shouldn't feel like a big corporate established agency," says Hahn. "It should feel like a little nimble startup that just happens to have some massive clients and resources."

BBDO does indeed have some massive clients, including new accounts added this year like Subway, Priceline, Bacardi, Toys R Us, Barbie, Bose, Abbott Diagnostics and Humana.

Here's the story, of a brand named Snickers

Perhaps no work better illustrates BBDO's creative scope across brands, teams and platforms than what it did for confectionary parent brand Mars this year. "The work is scaled from Super Bowl to street art, with each piece designed specifically for its medium," Hahn says.

The year started strong with the Brady Bunch-themed Super Bowl spot for Snickers starring Danny Trejo and Steve Buscemi, which revitalized the 4-year-old "You're Not You When You're Hungry" campaign. As Hahn notes, other work for the candy brand ranged from a spoof of the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue to a shape-shifting mural created in collaboration with New York's Colossal Media, an out-of-home activation that "vandalized" urban-planning mistakes with Snickers tags and a stunt in which influential gamers pranked thousands of followers on social platform Twitch by playing like the amateurs they once were.

"[The campaign] illustrates the power of a great idea," says Mars global CMO Bruce McColl. "We just celebrated our 20th year with BBDO, and the reason the relationship is so strong is that they are applying that caliber of work to all their brands." He cites the agency's nostalgic campaign for Extra gum, "The Story of Sarah and Juan," and its teaming with WPP's MediaCom, which won the Mars planning account last December. "The collaboration has delighted all of us, particularly because they are from two different networks," he says. "They don't feel threatened; they feel empowered to bring in additional viewpoints."

The business, the business, the business

"When unfortunate things happen, we have two options: bury our heads in the sand or move forward," Osborn says.

The news wasn't all good for BBDO in 2015. It didn't face any challenges as huge as the loss of Chrysler in 2009, but two big clients did go elsewhere. Procter & Gamble completed the consolidation of its shaving brands with Grey in May, then in July, Bud Light made its fourth agency switch in less than two years, picking Wieden + Kennedy as its new creative shop, despite the success of EnergyBBDO's Pac Man-themed Super Bowl spot.

While the losses were disappointing, insiders say the network achieved a 70 percent success rate on pitches. "All of these wins came in a rolling thunder sort of way," Osborn says, ultimately representing more than $1 billion in business, enabling BBDO's U.S. ops to increase revenue by 5 to 7 percent in 2015.

Beyond its wins, the agency expanded existing relationships with clients like AT&T, Bayer and Mars. BBDO New York also created its first campaign for Pepsi in more than seven years, following decades of iconic ads featuring the likes of Cindy Crawford and Michael Jackson.

Better, faster, stronger

"The era of four 13-week media periods is over," notes Lubars. "There will always be tent-pole projects like the one we did for Snickers for the Super Bowl, but the constant stream of content has to be just as good but cheaper. It's like organized chaos ... it's messy and sloppy, but that's how the magic happens."

Lubars' approach to creative efficiency is not a new one, but this year saw those principles applied on a holding companywide scale as Omnicom combined the production studios at its three biggest New York agencies (BBDO, DDB and TBWAChiatDay) to create a single entity called eg+. Its goal: ensuring more rapid turnaround on content-based campaigns. Osborn summarizes the new model: "Data informs communications strategy, which informs content development, which informs production, which then gets executed and distributed in media, which goes back around the loop and informs what we do as a follow-up."

This year, BBDO also strengthened its focus on data as a way to test messages and creative concepts. As evidence of this shift, Osborn points to the hiring of Tina Allan as head of data solutions and Julian Cole as head of communications planning in New York, along with the promotion of Crystal Rix from group planning director to evp and director of business development and the integration of BBDO Atlanta's analytics practice across all its North American offices. "We've definitely gotten a bit more methodical in 2015," says BBDO Atlanta president and CEO Drew Panayiotou. He compares the data team originally created for AT&T to "a cross between McKinsey and Marketshare," adding, "We are looking at how to maximize our creative impact" rather than simply optimizing media spends.

Rix's new role epitomizes this approach. "The real-time nature of the business has taken planning and strategy from something that happens at the beginning and the end of a campaign to something that's happening continuously," she says. "When we pitch, we have to reflect that new reality in the stories, strategies and work we present to clients."

That focus has also changed the nature of the work BBDO produces. "Twenty years ago, there was a hard BBDO style," says Lubars. But that's no longer the case as the new, data-driven shop is both more collaborative and more flexible creatively. "Today, what typifies us is surprising and delighting," he adds. "We're like the invisible hand from the client to people."

There's an increased focus on recruiting creatives who bring their own perspectives. "The age of the prima donnas is over," Hahn says. "We want people who are creators, not just creatives. They have the idea, but they also figure out the way to make it happen." Adds Lubars: "Simply developing great work isn't enough. It has to be work that isn't just distributed, but that people actively seek out and pass on."

Bringing back Barbie for 2015

One key example of such "sticky" content arrived this fall after Mattel tasked BBDO San Francisco with a challenge that has frustrated marketers for years: refreshing its iconic Barbie brand for a newer and more skeptical era.

Richard Dickson, president and COO at Mattel, says his company performed an "exhaustive" review but ultimately chose BBDO because "they felt like an extension of our internal team from the beginning and authentically integrated themselves into the thought leadership on the brand."

"Collaboration" and "seamless" are words that often come up in conversations with BBDO execs and clients. Both apply to "Imagine the Possibilities," a digital-only debut for Barbie that got more than 16 million YouTube views in less than two months while renewing interest in the brand. Dickson praises the campaign for "articulating the brand's deeper purpose."

BBDO San Francisco CEO Jim Lesser explains the underlying strategy: "We always try to come with an opinion, but our real strength is our ability to listen. We spent a lot of time listening to the Mattel team about what was right and what was not with any given concept."

"When it comes to collaboration, geography means nothing," Lesser adds. "The Mars team in Chicago works with the Mars teams in New York and San Francisco, so if we need to borrow team members we can do so seamlessly."

Barbie wasn't the only brand that turned to BBDO to redefine itself. "We have been partners [with BBDO] for 90 years," says GE CMO Linda Boff, adding, "I sometimes say they know us better than we know ourselves." Boff, who became GE's marketing chief in September, has continued her predecessor Beth Comstock's efforts to cast the manufacturing giant as "a digital industrial company"—facilitated, in part, by campaigns like "What's the Matter With Owen," in which a newly minted GE employee tries to help friends and family understand what he does for a living. Says Boff: "We have gotten a great reaction to previous work, but this one is through the roof. It's resonating with people and making GE more relatable."

In the months ahead, BBDO will continue the strategies that made this such a banner year. While New York remains the flagship office, the next 12 months will see major campaigns out of Atlanta (Toys R Us), San Francisco (Barbie, Wells Fargo), Chicago (Wrigley, Ziploc) and Minneapolis (Hormel, Skippy). Chris Thomas, former CEO of BBDO Asia, Middle East and Africa, who was promoted to CEO of the Americas this year, stresses the importance of that cross-office collaboration: "BBDO New York has set a high bar for decades. What is wonderful to see is the other U.S. agencies raising the creative bar for their clients with their own brilliant work that touches people, is rich in insight, challenges convention and fights prejudice."

BBDO Minneapolis president and CEO Neil White says his office will focus more on earned coverage born of PR outreach on campaigns like Hormel's Spamerican Tour, which featured food trucks and celebrity chefs. The Minnesota office has also begun to collaborate with international teams on Skippy, which became a global brand after being acquired by Hormel in 2013. "Not many of our competitors have that kind of reach," he says.

But the guiding principle for BBDO in the year to come will be its insistence on facing challenges head-on. As Lubars puts it, "One good thing about our people is that we're easily bored. We have a culture that's open to the new and not stuck on things."

Adds Osborn: "We are our own toughest critics. We never want to settle."

(Gallery: 10 Hilarious and Touching Ads That Show Why BBDO Was Our Agency of the Year.)

This story first appeared in the Dec. 7 issue of Adweek magazine. Click here to subscribe.

W+K Amsterdam Wants You to 'Give a F*ck' About the Refugee Crisis This Holiday

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Wieden + Kennedy Amsterdam is dropping more than a few F-bombs this holiday as it launches "Give a F*ck," a charitable platform designed to connect the creative community with social causes—beginning with the refugee crisis.

To launch the initiative, the agency asked more than 60 artists from all over the world to create and donate artworks that represent or feature "a f*ck." In all, they've produced more than 100 one-off or limited-edition artworks in varying mediums, which W+K is selling to benefit Proactiva Open Arms, dedicated specifically to saving refugee lives at sea.

The artists include New York documentary filmmaker and street photographer Cheryl Dunn, Amsterdam-based cartoon boomer Troqman, London-based photographer Sophie Ebrard and Spanish illustrator Jorge Lawerta.

You can buy their art at letsgiveafuck.org.



"As creative people, it's easy to feel powerless in the face of human tragedy," says Blake Harrop, W+K Amsterdam's managing director. "We wanted to find a way to enable people in the creative community to have a positive impact on social causes, so we decided instead of the usual ad agency Christmas card we'd spend our energy on launching this platform instead. We've been overwhelmed by the generosity and support the idea has received from artists around the world."

Check out some of the art below. 

Wieden + Kennedy's Bizarre, Mysterious Call for Entries Kicks Off the 2016 Andy Awards

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BBDO global chief creative officer David Lubars recently told Adweek the agency world has an "an unhealthy obsession" with awards. But even the most cursory glance around the industry will tell you awards shows are here to stay. If anything, they're more prominent than ever—many agencies have at least one full-time employee whose primary job is to manage the year-round application process.

Agency creatives and executives accept these events as a crucial part of the business landscape—as long as organizers deliver their kudos with a knowing smirk. This is advertising, after all.

For more than five decades, the Advertising Club of New York's International Andy Awards have recognized "the brave process of creativity" by gathering a jury of influencers to weigh in on the year's best work. The 2016 event will be chaired by Wieden + Kennedy partner and global co-executive creative director Colleen DeCourcy, and it continues the tongue-in-cheek traditions of years past with a call for entries video purporting to showcase "The Best Commercial of the Year So Far."

Who is the protagonist in this strange "commercial" whose identity is obscured by grime and the limitations of language? What literal or metaphorical role might he play in the ad industry, and how does his presence relate to the Andy Awards? W+K would rather not say.

"We're just poking fun at the clichés, the classic tricks that are worn out," DeCourcy told Adweek. "The message is: Do something new. Stop caring about the wrong things. Have some fun."

Advertising has long been an industry prone to self mockery, and this year's Andy Awards continue that tradition, even though it's not quite like other such elbow-rubbing affairs. "The Advertising Club of New York has become a kind of second home for a lot of creatives in this business," said DeCourcy. "We pick our juries, we run our process, we we meet up and work together on events for young and diverse creatives, and we give a lot of our time throughout the year thinking of ways to make this business better for us all."

DeCourcy added, "The Andys is an incredible act of collaboration. It's run by and for creative people." On that note, W+K has also created a microsite for the event that functions as an ongoing curatorial effort by agency creatives eager to show their best faces to the jury, which this year includes top creatives from such shops as BBDO, FCB, Deutsch, McCann, Anomaly, Walton Isaacson and Barton F. Graf 9000.

Best.andyawards.com promises to deliver "the perfect interactive experience," which means visitors can leave their own fingerprints on the site by embedding videos, images, GIFs or audio tracks. "This site is a pure interaction," reads the copy on the site. "It is an amorphous, intelligent being."

Gina Grillo, president and CEO of the International Andy Awards, said, "This year, we wanted to include creatives, inventors and innovators in the Andys CFE launch, sharing an entirely new platform from which people could be brave."

Beyond the Wieden + Kennedy work, this year's awards includes several firsts. The 2016 winners list will include separate categories for Typography, Art Direction and Corporate Social Responsibility, the practice in which clients turn to agencies to remind the world that the marketing game isn't just an endless search for revenue. This year, the Andys also partnered with corporate sponsor Amazon to make sure every hard-working person involved in a winning campaign could receive a 3-D printed statue.

As DeCourcy put it, "The Andy Awards isn't Advertising's Got Talent. This show is run to celebrate what we do and lovingly push each other further."

So what makes an Andy winner?

"The best litmus test is did a group of people put their skills, their reputation and their brand on the line to get to a great idea and get it made?" DeCourcy said. "That's what gets an Andy."

May the best ideas win.

Credits
Client: ANDY Awards  
Project Name: Beat the Best and Win an ANDY  
Agency: Wieden + Kennedy New York
Executive Creative Directors: David Kolbusz, Jaime Robinson, Colleen DeCourcy  
Copywriters: Howard Finkelstein, Andrew Jasperson  
Art Director: Grant Mason  
Interactive Art Director: Andre Poli  
Head of Content Production: Nick Setounski  
Producer: Orlee Tatarka  
Account Team: Jacqueline Ventura  
Business Affairs: Sara Jagielski, Tana Prosper  
Director of Technology: Charles Duncan  
Executive Interactive Producer: Jonathan Percy  
Sr. Interactive Producer: Jen Vladimirsky  
Technology Lead: Alex Maiorov  
Lead Experience Designer: Kate Bauer  
Front End Tech: Joe Zhou  
Creative Technologist: Craig Blagg  
Project Management: Cory Chonko, Ava Rant
Production Company: Caviar Content  
Director: Hugo Stenson  
Executive Producer/MP: Michael Sagol  
Executive Producer: Kim Dellara  
Line Producer: Tova Dann  
Director of Photography: Jac Fitzgerald
Editorial Company: Joint Editorial  
Editor: Lindsey Houston   
Post-Producer: Stephen Schmidt  
Post Executive Producer: Michelle Carman  
Editorial Assistant: Stephen Nelson
VFX Company: Caviar Content  
VFX Supervisors: Terry Huynh  
VFX Flame Artists: Arnold Aldridge
Colorist: Dave Jahns
Mix Company: New North Sound 
Mixer: Brandon Jiaconia  
Sound Designer: Alison Ables  
Producer: Alex Thiesen 
Artist: Alison Ables  

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