Canada’s Family Literacy Day Gets Big Media Push

family_literacy_day_Mag_Drive.jpg

ABC Canada and Honda have teamed to promote Family Literacy Day on January 27, 2009, an annual event which encourages families to read and learn together. Toronto-based zig created the marketing materials for the event this year, including children’s activity books for libraries and schools, event planning guides for Honda dealerships, radio spots, posters, billboards, print ads and ambient advertising.

Over 50 media outlets will donate media to the campaign. And there’s a lot of creative to see:

Ambient:
“What’s down here?”
https://ourideas.org/creatives/FLD/ambient/Whats_down_1.jpg
https://ourideas.org/creatives/FLD/ambient/Whats_down_2.jpg
“Who’s this guy?”
https://ourideas.org/creatives/FLD/ambient/Who_is_this.jpg
“How high can frogs leap?”
https://ourideas.org/creatives/FLD/ambient/Wall.jpg
“Why are hot dogs called hot dogs?”
https://ourideas.org/creatives/FLD/ambient/Hot_Dog.jpg

Print:
“Why are clouds fluffy?”
https://ourideas.org/creatives/FLD/Magazine/FLD_Mag_Clouds.jpg
“Why do we drive on the right side of the road?”
https://ourideas.org/creatives/FLD/Magazine/FLD_Mag_Drive.jpg
“What are 6 ways to get rid of vampires?”
https://ourideas.org/creatives/FLD/Magazine/FLD_Mag_Vampires.jpg

Radio:
https://ourideas.org/creatives/PR/FLD/radio/bear_mauling/
https://ourideas.org/creatives/PR/FLD/radio/glug_glug

Picture of Steve Hall

Steve Hall

RECENT ARTICLES

TRENDING AROUND THE WEB

Psychology says people who triple-check that they locked the door aren’t paranoid — they’re carrying hypervigilance learned when home security was genuinely their responsibility and a single mistake could have serious consequences

Psychology says people who triple-check that they locked the door aren’t paranoid — they’re carrying hypervigilance learned when home security was genuinely their responsibility and a single mistake could have serious consequences

Global English Editing

Psychology says people who constantly steer every conversation back to themselves aren’t narcissists — they’re operating from a deep belief that their experiences are the only currency they have to offer in relationships

Psychology says people who constantly steer every conversation back to themselves aren’t narcissists — they’re operating from a deep belief that their experiences are the only currency they have to offer in relationships

Global English Editing

Psychology says the reason lower-middle-class people always overpack for trips isn’t anxiety — it’s a form of contingency thinking developed by people who grew up in households where forgetting something wasn’t a minor inconvenience but a problem with no budget to solve

Psychology says the reason lower-middle-class people always overpack for trips isn’t anxiety — it’s a form of contingency thinking developed by people who grew up in households where forgetting something wasn’t a minor inconvenience but a problem with no budget to solve

Global English Editing

The people who genuinely light up a room aren’t always the loudest or the funniest — they’re the ones who make you feel like what you just said actually mattered, and that kind of attention is so rare now that it feels almost shocking when you receive it

The people who genuinely light up a room aren’t always the loudest or the funniest — they’re the ones who make you feel like what you just said actually mattered, and that kind of attention is so rare now that it feels almost shocking when you receive it

Global English Editing

The loneliest boomers in retirement aren’t those who live alone — they’re the constant critics whose families still show up out of obligation but have emotionally detached years ago

The loneliest boomers in retirement aren’t those who live alone — they’re the constant critics whose families still show up out of obligation but have emotionally detached years ago

Global English Editing

Psychology says people who keep reading the same book over and over aren’t stuck — they’re returning to a version of themselves preserved in those pages, from a time when their inner life felt richer than their current daily routine allows

Psychology says people who keep reading the same book over and over aren’t stuck — they’re returning to a version of themselves preserved in those pages, from a time when their inner life felt richer than their current daily routine allows

Global English Editing