See more at The Frosty Posse, or not. …
Bert & Ernie Get Some Hops
[via Common] …
The Little People Who Live Inside Your Car Get Hungry For Grease
The spot above is new work from Biscuit's Tim Godsall and DDB/Chicago. …
Continue Reading about The Little People Who Live Inside Your Car Get Hungry For Grease →
The Right SUV for the Times
When your client wins an industry award and wants to tell everyone about it, it can be a hellish assignment because sane people tend to not like chest beating ads. Thankfully, Subaru and its agency didn't fall into that trap here. …
Boxes Are For Breaking Out Of
I don't know if this is the best way to sell a new Audi Q5, but it might generate some decent click through. …
Silicon, Money & Rock ‘n’ Roll
By now, we've all heard the "Intel inside" audio cue about a million times. It's deeply lodged. Now, a new brand campaign from Venables Bell & Partners takes us inside Intel. Adfreak mentions that Ajay Bhatt, who helped develop the USB, is portrayed by an actor in the "Rock Star" ad above, but I'm not sure that matters much. Fact is, people who make highly functional things--engineers--are indeed rock stars today. …
When Your Racquet Is Fast, It Leaves Time For Other Important Things
To promote their new tennis racquet the "Speed," HEAD has teamed up with Serbian tennis champ Novak Djokovic and Berlin-based agency Aimaq Rapp Stolle to create a new online video. …
Continue Reading about When Your Racquet Is Fast, It Leaves Time For Other Important Things →
“You Get What You Pay For” Is The Wrong Argument For Starbucks
Ad Age is showing a preview of what's to come from Starbucks and BBDO/New York. Clearly, Starbucks has McDonald's and Dunkin' Donuts in their rear view mirror. "We have more traditional mass marketers coming into the coffee category and trying to commoditize it," Starbucks Chief Marketing Officer Terry Davenport said. "It's just taking brewed coffee and lattes down to a commodity level, where price is the only thing …
Continue Reading about “You Get What You Pay For” Is The Wrong Argument For Starbucks →



