Shopping Mall Claims Holidays Are NOT About Spending Money

CltCCN_YltdCardCarol72_1.jpg

Last night during Merry Christmas, Charlie Brown!, Charlie complained about the flagrant commercialization of Christmas. If creatives ever felt the way he did, they’re probably well over it out of professional necessity. I know I am, and I just blog here.

Adding to our jaded perspective of how things operate in Ad Land’s warped universe, Cherry Creek North — a high-end shopping mall, mind you — worked with CULTIVATOR ADVERTISING & DESIGN/Denver to launch The Yuletide Project. Its goal is to remind holiday shoppers that the holidays are about more than frequent wallet molestation.

Each (charming! adorable! candy-striped!) Yuletide Project print/banner ad suggests ways to lift spirits without spending any dosh. Variants:

o “Invite a crowd of people to catch snowflakes on their tongues.” Hey, that happened on Charlie Brown last night, too. Sally (I think?) was all, “Needs sugar.”
o “Write a holiday greeting on a snow covered car window.” Aww. That’d make a really cute TV spot.
o “Stick a holiday bow on someone’s back.” You mean like a human Lexus?
o “Change your ringtone to your favorite holiday tune.”

The pieces end, somewhat antithetically, with “Find the reason for the season at Cherry Creek North.” Wait — could that “reason for the season” be more stuff in exchange for my money? They’re sure as hell not airing a free nativity play.

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