Hast Thou Forsaken the Hopes and Dreams of Thy Patron Stork?

stork-baby.jpg

Monster.com’s “Your Call is Calling” campaign has been a buzzkill since launch, particularly against CareerBuilder’s darkly funny “Start Building.”

But “The Stork” — a :60 spot by BBDO, NY for Monster — begets a bit of greatness.

You know that “What hath God wrought!” look your parents give you when you talk about what you do for a living? Apparently storks do it really well. Two hours later, we’re still wallowing in quiet shame.

Jokes aside, the ad left us with a sense that there’s magic and meaning in what a person chooses to do with his life. It’s melancholy, well-timed and worth the watch.

If you didn’t get it, or found the spot confusing, chin up; you are well-defended.

Dissatisfied with a certain yawning transition, Bob Garfield called the ad “monstrously flawed” and, in his comment section, did his best to make those who did get it feel decidedly single-celled. (It was probably the convoluted hepatitis comparison.)

Way to win ’em, Sally Sunshine.

Picture of Steve Hall

Steve Hall

RECENT ARTICLES

TRENDING AROUND THE WEB

Long practice appears to reshape attention from the inside out

Long practice appears to reshape attention from the inside out

Hack Spirit

Mindfulness begins long before peace: it begins with learning to stay

Mindfulness begins long before peace: it begins with learning to stay

Hack Spirit

The fire at a Zen monastery is a reminder that Buddhist teachings are meant to be lived, not admired

The fire at a Zen monastery is a reminder that Buddhist teachings are meant to be lived, not admired

Hack Spirit

Oxford’s expanding mindfulness research reflects a deeper shift in how inner life is being understood

Oxford’s expanding mindfulness research reflects a deeper shift in how inner life is being understood

Hack Spirit

In a distracted age, learning to notice may be a form of self-protection

In a distracted age, learning to notice may be a form of self-protection

Hack Spirit

As social media’s emotional cost becomes harder to ignore, a quieter inner life is starting to look radical

As social media’s emotional cost becomes harder to ignore, a quieter inner life is starting to look radical

Hack Spirit