« Apr-03 | This archive, pg:  1  |  2  |  3  |  4  |  5  |  6  |  7  |  8  |  9  |  10  | Jun-03 »

Mastercard's Blow Job Ad

PUMA had one. Why not Mastercard? In a spoof of an old ad campaign called Indecent Proposal, we have a young man walking his date to the door in that cutesy and romantically awkward way when out of the blue comes, "So, how 'bout a blow job?"

Watch it here.

by Steve Hall    May- 9-03    
Topic: Spoofs



Gen X Gen Y and Millennials

If you have an interest in demographics and trends, this article takes you through the progression from Yuppies all the way up to the current generation defined as Millennials.


--------

by Steve Hall    May- 8-03    




Recommendations to Kmart for Survival

Peter over at PeterThink has a few ideas on what Kmart should do if it has any hope of surviving following it's emergence from bankruptcy:

  • Name Change

  • Become the Merchandising Mechanism for Personality Brands

  • Create Community

  • Create a "Third Place"

  • Charge a Membership

  • Partner Up

  • Embed in Local Communities
Read the details here.
--------

by Steve Hall    May- 7-03    




New Trend in Hip Hop Radio? Hindi Music?

Anil Dash mentions an email he received from his cousin in California about the increase in Hindi music in Hip Hip radio station rotation. He wonders if it is a new thing but, according to comments in his post, it has been sweeping the nation over the past few months.

This comment sums it up:

"103.5 KTU has featured artist: Punjabi MC's song, "Beware of the Boys" as the #1 song for the past week. It is not sampling the instrumental, it's the straight Punjabi Bhangra with the Knight Rider techno beat cleverly mixed in.

This isn't unusual, the affluent young Indian population has integrated itself into the gangsta-rap and Hip Hop culture more so than any other race. So seeing commercialized rappers like Jay Z ride the Indian beats to tap the desi market was only expected.

I think NY's KTU is the first radio station to play a pure Indian song, without any English voiceovers to add a (if translated) nonsensical meaning to the song.

KTU recently just finished pumping Angelo Venuto's "Tiamo", sung entirely in Italian (and remixed by the Sicilian Assassins).

If you're on Kazaa, I recommend Tiamo and Punjabi MC to anyone with an open mind.

Posted by: Rajan on May 5, 2003 04:02 AM"
--------

by Steve Hall    May- 7-03    




2003 Ellie Award Winners

The awards are filtering in right now from the American Society of Magazine Editor's National Magazine Awards ceremony at the Waldorf Astoria. So far, some winners are Slate for General Excellence Online; Conde Naste Traveler for Photography; Details for Design; Sports Illustrated for Profile Writing; The New Yorker for Reporting; and Outside for Personal Service.

Check out Ad Age's minute by minute update here.
--------

by Steve Hall    May- 7-03    




Scared of the Implications of TiVo on Advertising?

Sure, TiVo has advertisers running scared thinking all ads will be skipped. But Tom Cotton, president of DDB Integrated Solutions, in a presentation to The Yankee Group's Connected Consumer Summit, says get over it and get used to it. But..adapt or die. Advertising needs to become more compelling and slide more into the categories of advertainment and viral citing some successful examples by Budweiser's Wassup campaign and the Terry Tate spots from Reebok.

Basically, embrace the new way consumers consume and stop trying to protect the old models because the old models are just that. Old.
--------

by Steve Hall    May- 7-03    




Radar Editor Gets the Stench

Seems the new Radar Magazine is pissing people off. The magazine named Marion Suge" Knight, founder of Death Row Records, one of it's monsters and most hated people.

The article said Knight "orchestrated the 1996 and '97 slayings of rappers Tupac Shakur and Biggie Smalls . . . At a 1995 Christmas party forced [Bad Boy record promoter] Mark Bell to drink a champagne glass of Knight's urine . . ."

So what did Suge do in response to this? Allegedly, he sent an excrement filled package to Maer Roshan with this letter:

"If dey waz to comes a time, when you didin hab a dime, an you a- - is on tha street like some wurfless monkey meat, I gives you a fresh treat, Dats I know you like to eat, for my next big hit, I give you corn from my [rhymes with �hit']."

Of course, Suge denies he sent the letter and a statement from his rep said, "Suge doesn't know Radar exists. This is just silly. We have nothing to do with this."

I guess Radar is, after all. da shit.
--------

by Steve Hall    May- 7-03    




Nestle Launches New Ad Campaign

Nestle is launching a new ad campaign to introduce a line of Nestle Toll House Candy Bars. Yum! J. Walter Thompson in Chicago will handle.

The campaign will consist of television, cable and direct marketing. The spend is $22 million and the campaign is set to start September 29.

I can't imagine they will be but I hope they do taste as good as the cookies.

--------

by Steve Hall    May- 6-03    




Recommendations for the Survival of '24'

Fox's '24' has been a success. Can that success continue? Is the format still viable? What will make sense for for the next two years of the show? MediaLife's Ed Robertson has some pointers.
--------

by Steve Hall    May- 6-03    




More Talk on the Death of the :30

"PVRs are not going to go away and video on demand is increasingly going to challenge traditional television advertising," said Aditya Kishone, an analyst with the Yankee Group.

We keep hearing more and more along those lines of thinking. It's time is coming, some think.

"It's not a very rapid change. It will be years before the 30-second commercial is laid to rest, but the value of that commercial will steadily go down (sooner)," Kishone said.

TiVo, interactive television, and video on demand. All these new technologies are slowly taking a bite out of the age old :30 advertising model. Advertising will be come more user-requested than it's current intrusive nature. Marketers will have to learn that it is a conversation that needs to occur between corporate America and consumers rather than corporations shouting down from on high about their product benefits.

How about blogging? How about starting a conversation on a corporate weblog where both positive and negative are discussed? Where users of the product and the company's brand stewards actually talk to one another about the product? Where the conversation isn't sugar coated and the realities of the product and product usage benefits both sides? Sure, there's discussion groups out there now but corporations steer clear of them. The conversations are already out there. The corporations just need become active participants in those conversations because the days of talking AT people versus talking WITH people are drawing to a close.
--------

by Steve Hall    May- 6-03    




« Apr-03 | This archive, pg:  1  |  2  |  3  |  4  |  5  |  6  |  7  |  8  |  9  |  10  | Jun-03 »