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AgencyThink
A New Idea: Priceless
posted by Just A Nick @ September 16th, 2008
At the Milwaukee zoo this past weekend, I was innocently eating lunch with my family. When I saw a guy wearing a t-shirt that read “Got Freedom?”
I skipped over trying to figure out what social/political statement he was trying to make, and went straight to rage over the excessive use of the phrase “Got [insert something here]?”
Don’t get me wrong, the Got Milk campaign is arguably one of the greatest of all time. And the fact that it’s constantly parroted means that it has crossed the line into the lexicon of pop-culture slogans (it’s not just selling milk any more). That being said, can we please kill it now?! The campaign was launched in 1993!
Poor Apple has suffered the same fate with their ground-breaking iPod ads. Marketing campaigns sporting silhouettes of people dancing over brightly colored backgrounds were winning awards in Southeast Wisconsin as late as 2006! I hope the winners at least sent a thank-you note and a Starbucks gift card to the apple team atTBWA\Chiat\Day.
Maybe it doesn’t matter. Maybe “nothing is original” as someone said when I self-righteously scoffed at the notion of an award winning rip-off. But if nothing is original, where did Apple get it?
I can tell you that when brainstorming campaign concepts, being influenced by great ideas is not only acceptable, it’s necessary. Understanding conceptual trends is important, and finding ways to modify/advance those ideas in order to communicate with the right audience at the right time is what geniuses do. However, aping a concept wholesale is a cop-out. Even if it does immortalize of the influencer.
Let us marvel at the cultural impact of great ideas. Let us be influenced by them. Let us produce great campaigns. And let us never belch the phrase “Got [anything]” again.
Trends
[spoiler alert] The Jester Wins
posted by Just A Nick @ August 11th, 2008
Recently, Adverblog linked to this animation from Adobe. Be warned, it feels like the longest download of your life, but it’s worth it.
The animation, titled “Adobe Cards,” was created by Goodby Silverstein & Partners to promote Adobe’s CS3. At first, I assumed it was done completely with CS3 products. However, after some digging, I discovered it was created with Cinema 4D, which is not a part of CS3. It’s not even an Adobe product. Weird. I think they think they make up for it by linking to a portfolio site of projects done with CS3. Whew. This makes me feel a little better for including some Jackson Pollack prints in my personal portfolio.
I showed “Adobe Cards” to fellow Avicom digital art guy James and asked him about using Maya to create something like this. While he’s convinced we could achieve similar effects using Flash and Photoshop, we both think Maya is just as powerful as Cinema 4D. It would certainly be an interesting experiment.
It’s always fun to come across examples of work that are good enough to make me “wish we had done that.” It’s even more fun knowing that we could.
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