Everyone Hates the Venmo Ad Campiagn

lucas_has_dreams.jpg

If you’re in New York, perhaps you’ve seen the out-of-home campaign for Venmo, an app that makes it easy to send money to a friend. It features Lucas (who actually works at Venmo) staring off into space with copy that doesn’t say much.

Copy includes, “Lucas buys a round” and “Lucas uses Venmo” and “Lucas takes the stairs” and Lucas has dreams.” The ads don’t explain Venmo which in and of itself is a worthy tactic with the aim of getting people curious enough to find out for themselves.

But it would seem there is an outright wave of hatred for this campaign if you check Twitter and various blog comments.

One can, of course, argue the approach was intentional. Launch a lame campaign, get people talking about it, get free publicity. Which is exactly what’s happening.

Or, if you’re ad guy John Laramie, you might say, “Who the fuck is Lucas? I should give a fuck that Lucas likes magic? Oh wait, I like magic, so maybe I’ll like Lucas, which means then I should try Venmo? Oh my god, I ride subways too, just like Lucas! Let me go Google Venmo when I get off this train. Maybe it’s a subway app?”

Or if you’re Steve Hall who publishes Adrants, you might say, “Who the fuck cares. It’s just a stupid app. Move along people.”

lucas_has_dreams.jpg

lucas_takes_the_stairs.jpg

lucase_uses_venmo.jpg

venmo_lucas_red.jpg

Picture of Steve Hall

Steve Hall

RECENT ARTICLES

TRENDING AROUND THE WEB

I’m 77 and my wife of forty-four years started painting last spring and for the first time I’m watching her become someone I haven’t met yet, and it’s both beautiful and terrifying to realize the person you married is still arriving

I’m 77 and my wife of forty-four years started painting last spring and for the first time I’m watching her become someone I haven’t met yet, and it’s both beautiful and terrifying to realize the person you married is still arriving

Global English Editing

I’m 73 and I can touch my toes for the first time since I was twelve. Not because I became more flexible. Because I finally stopped carrying the tension of trying to be everything to everyone and my body just gradually unclenched.

I’m 73 and I can touch my toes for the first time since I was twelve. Not because I became more flexible. Because I finally stopped carrying the tension of trying to be everything to everyone and my body just gradually unclenched.

Global English Editing

I meditated every morning for three years and I was still the most reactive person in every room I walked into – and a monk in Thailand told me the problem wasn’t my practice, it was that I was using stillness as preparation for chaos instead of learning to find stillness inside the chaos itself

I meditated every morning for three years and I was still the most reactive person in every room I walked into – and a monk in Thailand told me the problem wasn’t my practice, it was that I was using stillness as preparation for chaos instead of learning to find stillness inside the chaos itself

Global English Editing

Nobody talks about the women who are sixty-five and childless not by choice but by circumstance — not because the moment never came but because it came at the wrong time with the wrong person three separate times and now the silence in their house isn’t peaceful, it’s the sound of a question that answered itself while they were still deciding

Nobody talks about the women who are sixty-five and childless not by choice but by circumstance — not because the moment never came but because it came at the wrong time with the wrong person three separate times and now the silence in their house isn’t peaceful, it’s the sound of a question that answered itself while they were still deciding

Global English Editing

Research suggests boomers who grew up in working-class homes during the 1950s and 60s developed these 8 toughness traits that most people today couldn’t survive with — and it explains why they can’t understand why younger generations ‘give up so easily’

Research suggests boomers who grew up in working-class homes during the 1950s and 60s developed these 8 toughness traits that most people today couldn’t survive with — and it explains why they can’t understand why younger generations ‘give up so easily’

Global English Editing

Adults who were praised exclusively for being ‘good’ as children often become people who have no idea how to want things for themselves because desire was never part of the identity they were rewarded for

Adults who were praised exclusively for being ‘good’ as children often become people who have no idea how to want things for themselves because desire was never part of the identity they were rewarded for

Global English Editing