Stop playing games.

Love these headlines. And art direction. And people who can play instruments (because I wish I could).

Agency: Rethink, Canada
Creative Directors: Ian Grais, Chris Staples
Copywriter: Keri Zierler
Art Director / Designer: Rory O’Sullivan

Via.

To shoot, or not to shoot?

Click here. You’ll thank me. Make sure you watch to the end and select an option. And get creative when you do what it asks you to do.

SPOILER: An example of really amazing advertising. Similar to Subservient Chicken, but does it one better because it actually demonstrates the benefit of the product. This is what all interactive advertising strives to be: memorable.

Better late than never?

Yesterday I was reading the usual ad blogs, and one of them clicked to Alex Bogusky’s twitter account, where his bio read, ‘I worked in advertising for 20+ years. That was fun.’

As in, Past Tense.

Apparently the rest of the Ad World knew that he left advertising for a couple of months now, but it took me by surprise.

Bogusky, if you don’t know, is something of a modern-day advertising hero. He is the B of CP+B, now one of the most well known and most respected creative agencies around.

So I look forward to hearing about his next endeavor. And when I do, I’ll try to mention it on here :)

C

Self-editing

A few weeks ago I took inventory of my current portfolio and retired an identity system I created for the San Diego Zoo in my Design and New Media course, with Professor Judy Carter.

This was the logo I made:

I got a great review on it by the professor, and the rest of the students in the class, but the more I look at it now, the more it reads, ‘a student made me’. And if a Creative Director is looking at my portfolio, they can’t see ‘student.’ They have to see, ‘professional I want to hire’. So out it went.

Well, not entirely out. It’s in my ‘needs work’ folder. I’ve tried a few different executions, but so far nothing I’m pleased enough with to include in my portfolio.

Being able to self-edit means being self-aware about your work. In my process, I need some time away from a piece before I can look at it and say, this should be better. If I am writing a short story, and I’ve been working on it day in and day out, I need to step back so I can look at it objectively. In writing and in advertising, you need to look at your work as a viewer/reader would. The way someone who isn’t invested in it would.

Coco Chanel said, “When accessorizing, always take off the last thing you put on.” This helps you avoid looking sloppy and overdone. The San Diego Zoo logo/letterhead was the weakest link in my portfolio. So it had to go.

Big on the Inside

Scrabble is my favorite board game. So maybe it’s not surprising that I love their new ads: 

Tagline: The surprising power of words.

Love it. MOUSE>CAT, SQUIRREL>FOX, and GOLDFISH>SHARK.

And such an adorable illustration style.

As written on FreshBump.com,

“Ogilvy & Mather shows off the power of words in these new ads for Scrabble. Where else could a goldfish tower over a shark, or squirrel be more powerful than a fox? On the mean squares of a Scrabble board.”

They remind me of this tee-shirt design, which apparently is the work of this talented illustrator: