HBO Eases DVD Gift Selection With ‘Good Gift Seeker’

hbo_gift_seeker.jpg

To help move DVDs of its series and to make it easier to select a Holiday gift for that special someone, HBO has launched The Good Gift Seeker. Created by Atmosphere BBDO, the microsite asks people to select who they need a gift for, the personality type of that person and that person’s hobby. Once that info is provided, the Good GiftSeeker selects the HBO series DVD that best matches the intended recipient. It’s fairly straight forward. After all, there’s only so many ways to move DVDs.

Picture of Steve Hall

Steve Hall

RECENT ARTICLES

TRENDING AROUND THE WEB

9 phrases a woman starts using when she has quietly made peace with not being happy — and stopped expecting anyone around her to notice

9 phrases a woman starts using when she has quietly made peace with not being happy — and stopped expecting anyone around her to notice

Global English Editing

Psychology says adults who sabotage relationships right when they get serious aren’t commitment-phobic — they’re operating with a nervous system that learned in childhood that closeness is the most dangerous moment, right before abandonment or punishment arrives

Psychology says adults who sabotage relationships right when they get serious aren’t commitment-phobic — they’re operating with a nervous system that learned in childhood that closeness is the most dangerous moment, right before abandonment or punishment arrives

Global English Editing

Psychology says the loneliness most common among boomer women in their 60s and 70s isn’t about being alone — it’s about having spent forty years being so thoroughly defined by their usefulness to others that when the usefulness diminished they discovered they had no very clear idea of who they were outside it, and that specific kind of lostness is one of t

Psychology says the loneliness most common among boomer women in their 60s and 70s isn’t about being alone — it’s about having spent forty years being so thoroughly defined by their usefulness to others that when the usefulness diminished they discovered they had no very clear idea of who they were outside it, and that specific kind of lostness is one of t

Global English Editing

Psychology says the people who become genuinely happier in their 60s aren’t the ones who added the most to their lives — they’re the ones who became ruthless about what they removed, who understood that at this point the subtraction is almost always more valuable than the addition, and who stopped treating their time and energy as things available to anyone who asked

Psychology says the people who become genuinely happier in their 60s aren’t the ones who added the most to their lives — they’re the ones who became ruthless about what they removed, who understood that at this point the subtraction is almost always more valuable than the addition, and who stopped treating their time and energy as things available to anyone who asked

Global English Editing

Behavioral scientists found that people who arrive at their late 60s with no close friends didn’t lose them through any single rupture — they lost them through the cumulative weight of a hundred small deprioritisations, each completely reasonable, each leaving the friendship slightly thinner, until the connection was so attenuated that neither person could quite remember the last time it had felt real

Behavioral scientists found that people who arrive at their late 60s with no close friends didn’t lose them through any single rupture — they lost them through the cumulative weight of a hundred small deprioritisations, each completely reasonable, each leaving the friendship slightly thinner, until the connection was so attenuated that neither person could quite remember the last time it had felt real

Global English Editing

Psychology says adults who take hours or days to respond to texts aren’t disorganized or avoidant — they’re operating with a nervous system that treats every notification like an urgent demand that requires a perfectly calibrated response

Psychology says adults who take hours or days to respond to texts aren’t disorganized or avoidant — they’re operating with a nervous system that treats every notification like an urgent demand that requires a perfectly calibrated response

Global English Editing