Posts Tagged ‘tv’

Posted March 5, 2010 at 5:26 pm by Robin Yontz
One Comment

modern_family_abcRemember when it was cool to be Friends? Or when reality TV trumped real life? Maybe I’m too simplistic or even too TV-centric in my view of the world, but I have to believe that network television programming reflects how we feel as a culture. And if that’s the case, America is once again all about the family.

The reason for my supposition is the recent influx of TV shows featuring families like the critically acclaimed Modern Family as well as the all-too-real The Middle. They point to the fact that we want to see how the family is doing. Today’s families may not look like the Waltons, but like the Depression-era brood, these shows have their own unique blend of chaos, forgiveness and laughter.

Modern Family and The Middle, in particular, deal with issues so current and relevant that as a parent, I don’t feel crazy, I feel befriended. Not since the Bradys and the Partridges have I wanted a TV family to live next door. Even the newer dramas are revolving around family, case in point, Brothers and Sisters, The Good Wife and Parenthood that debuted this week.

imagesThe shows embrace their family-ness. The Modern Family website has a family scrapbook and a family tree. This week, the Hecks of The Middle went on a road trip to a spelling bee. Both show are affirming and uplifting, all while shrinking the jeans or thinking up punishment for shooting a sibling with an air-rifle pellet.

To quote The Middle’s mom Frankie Heck “People end up in places they don’t want to be because of two things, drugs or kids.” If you don’t have kids, this may seem like nothing. To those of us in the throes of it, it is our reality.

If you’d like to check out episodes, I recommend Modern Family episodes: Fears, Fifteen Percent and Fizbo. The Middle: The Bee, The Yelling or Valentine’s Day.

Both shows offer a great take on today’s moms and dads. Interested to see what Parenthood brings to the party.  Let me know what you think.

Posted January 11, 2010 at 11:40 am by Scott Scaggs
One Comment

newpizza

AdAge’s Bob Garfield doesn’t think so. But Bob seems to take pleasure in being the curmudgeon of advertising. If you haven’t seen this campaign on the air, then take a look. I’ll have to admit, this brutal honesty and self-awareness caught me off guard. Sure, I was curious to see if they really made their product better. But more importantly, I empathized with the brand. Not just the brand, but the people behind the brand. Call me naive, but I think they actually humanized the brand.

Focus group poop

We all know how it feels to have our work pooped on, whether the criticism is deserved or not. Those of us who have had our work scrutinized, misinterpreted, and rewritten by a focus group have a unique appreciation for the reaction of the Domino’s chefs as they listen to the feedback about the cardboard crust and the sauce that tastes like ketchup. Of course we can assume that these reaction shots of dejected chefs were staged for this spot, but the emotion has got to be real.

Transparency chic

Transparency is the new black. So many brands are attempting to at least look honest and accessible by letting everyone peek behind the curtain. Even our government is getting in on that action. When you go to the Pizza Turnaround website, you’ll see real time tweets about the new pizza and the campaign. It seems to be unfiltered. I saw plenty of negative comments, but the majority seem to be supportive and appreciative.

Insight that can’t be ignored

When a brand is as plagued by negativity and bad luck as Domino’s, you can’t pretend everything is fine. A “new and improved” message would have been a yawn. I think this was the only move left for this brand. And because I now feel something for them, I hope it works.

Posted June 19, 2009 at 1:32 pm by Joyce Kuo
No Comments

tv_computer_3In the days of computers going to TVs (think TiVo, DVRs) and TVs going to computers (think Hulu, Fancast), we’re seeing another phenomenon on the rise: people using their computers while watching TV.

A recent study and article posted on Ad Age not only confirmed what I’ve found myself doing more and more over the past few years but revealed that a whopping two thirds of Americans use a computer at the same time they watch TV. Not only that, but about one third of consumers reported using a computer—correspondingly, being online—50% or more of the time they watch TV.

Similar to what we discovered in the online segmentation research Trone recently conducted, these online behaviors and usage are not drawn by age. It’s not only your younger generations who are Facebook-chatting each other as So You Think You Can Dance plays in the background. Even older demographics are on their computers 36% of the time their TVs are on.

There are other various interesting bits around this recent study. For example, women are more prone to multitask with the computer and TV than men. In the table below, you can also see a breakdown of top actions performed online while watching TV. Notably, only 13% of consumers report visiting online content that’s related to what they are watching on TV.

2009-tv-comp_usage

This presents brand marketers some new opportunities and challenges when it comes to reaching and engaging consumers. The computer-and-TV multitasking behavior is just one of the many rising examples of consumers living between online and offline worlds on a day-to-day basis. As media technology advances and integrates at accelerated rates, we must not only aim to incorporate cross-platform campaigns, but unmass our messages through the growing streams of media vying for consumers’ attention.

Posted May 27, 2009 at 1:02 pm by Angi Wesson
5 Comments

I’ve been a huge fan of dvr for years.  I record about 10-12 tv shows a week, plus movies.  It’s never convenient for me to sit down and watch the shows/movies live during the week.  I’m becoming more and more intrigued, however, by Hulu.  I’ve yet to explore it, so I would appreciate any and all feedback.  I’ve heard very little about it from my peers, but have seen numerous commercials for it.  I decided to do a little research and found a few sites of interest if you’re thinking of switching from dvr.  Here are a few reasons I’m swayed to switch:  

  • Hulu is free!
  • I am sure to see the whole show.  Sometimes my dvr cuts off the last couple of minutes.
  • From my research, it sounds like there are few interruptions.
  • I don’t have to worry with programming any recordings or managing conflicts.  

I’m excited to see if this will help save me some money!  Please leave some feedback!

Posted April 29, 2009 at 4:34 pm by Scott Scaggs
No Comments

Just ask yourself three simple questions: 1)Is it interesting? 2)Is it meaningful? 3)Is it true? If it’s interesting, then the creative is doing what it should. If it’s meaningful, then the strategy is working for you too.  But finding a universal truth is just as important when creating good work.

Finding the truth.

Contrary to public opinion, truth and advertising go together perfectly well. You could even say that an ad works only if it rings true for the consumer. If your message is unbelievable, then your ad certainly fails.  But the details of the execution matter too. When something like casting, location, or dialog is a little off, people notice. They might not get your message at all because they’re too distracted by the part that doesn’t feel right and they’ll be quick to call it out.

Getting it wrong.

I hate to pick on any spot because I know how many forces can be working against you, but this Sea World spot fails on a fundamental level. They put these lofty beliefs in the mouths of kids and it makes me think they have no idea what children are really like. Have you ever heard a kid say, “I believe that fun is a renewable resource?” It fails the truth test.

Getting it right.

This Chef Boyardee spot an example of  an execution that is built on truth. Part of what makes this spot work is good acting, but the mom-dad-kid dynamic is totally believable. It all seems true to me.

Finding something true to build on doesn’t mean it has to be a traditional slice-of-life ad. In this Denny’s spot, themed “Breakfast has been taken over by the machines,” they start with the truth that machines—by virtue of not being human—are insensitive.

Try out these criteria next time you’re judging creative work. I’ll bet you find that if it’s interesting and meaningful, and it’s based on a simple truth, you’ve got a good ad.

Posted January 22, 2009 at 11:14 am by Josh Fahey
2 Comments

mad-men2

Ad geeks everywhere can stop holding their breath. Matthew Weiner finally worked out a deal with Lionsgate TV and AMC for two more seasons. Yay! Apparently it took Lionsgate a while to get over the sticker shock as Weiner was asking for 6 million dollars (4 million more than the last contract).   AMC ended up putting up some of the money to make it happen. So, with more money and a bigger budget for the show let’s hope he can deliver.  The word is, a contract was signed in time for the third season to start on time this summer.  Assuming the show progress from the first two seasons, we should start out in 1963. There are a lot of interesting things that happened in ‘63 and if season 3 is anything like season 1 and 2, national (and international) affairs will likely be a backdrop for the drama to play out.

A few things that happened in 1963:

  • Racial tensions continue to escalate. Martin Luther King Jr. delivers his I have a dream speech.
  • The US starts sending troops into Vietnam in an advisory role.
  • The pope dies.
  • President John F. Kennedy is assassinated.
  • The space race continues

As for the advertising, who knows. Maybe Don will try to sell the world on TaB.

Posted January 20, 2009 at 1:00 pm by Martin Buchanan
5 Comments

doritosThis year, Doritos brand snack chips have decided to repeat their success of two years ago by running consumer created content as a commercial during the Super Bowl. This makes everyone in an agency job nervous. I mean, if every Joe Videocam can conceive of, direct, shoot, act in and edit a 30-second TV spot, why do brands need agencies? Why not just pick up the phone and get Joe in here to fix our brand?

If you go to crashthesuperbowl.com, you can view the top five spots in the Doritos contest. The site is well crafted, easy to navigate and loaded with content. The treasure here is not just the top five, which are obviously done by truly talented individuals or companies, but the gallery of all entries submitted. Here’s where the real marketing genius lies, hundreds of films devoted to making a hero out of Doritos. The majority are amateurish, simply-not-good commercials that only exist as a testament to a brand that knows how to create not just brand loyalists, but true fanatics.

And this idea is the strategic nugget at the core of the marketing effort. Sure Doritos will air a spot on the Super Bowl that was created by an average citizen, supposedly. But it took an agency to help guide the brand down this sophisticated, media aware, consumer-centric path.

Posted January 9, 2009 at 9:00 am by Martin Buchanan
4 Comments

I’m not talking about the holidays. With the capital “H.” That event will pass this year with an unusual amount of economics-driven apathy. The wonderful time of the year I am referring to is the advertising industry’s High Holy Day, the Super Bowl. With a capital “S” and “B.”

superForgive my giddiness, but it is the best time to be in this business of advertising. Because the NFL and the networks, this year NBC, conspire to create the one must-see TV advertising event, which is wrapped up around a football championship game at the highest level of football championship games. It’s a guy fest! With beer. And beer ads. And the point is: everybody’s watching, not just guys.

So I can be at a party during the game, watching the game but talking, laughing, eating chips and salsa, and then the commercials come on and the room gets quiet. I listen as people chop off their sentences, or shush the person talking to them in mid joke, to turn and watch what major advertisers are putting on the screen for their enjoyment. And then they instantly render an opinion on the likeability of what they’ve just witnessed.

Occasionally someone will ask my opinion. But these days it seems that everyone is a marketing expert during the High Holy Day. They all know how much an ad costs for 30 seconds. Reuters has told them here. They all know what works and what doesn’t. USA Today has taught them that with their Super Bowl Ad Meter. See last year’s results here. Some even know how to do commercials themselves, as Doritos proved a couple of years ago. Thankfully, that trend remained a fad.

With all this attention, you’d think advertisers would be nervous. It’s almost as if the game comes second, and the commercials come first. With those expectations, do you dare air a mediocre spot? Do you risk your brand’s likeability and reputation and run an old spot? Or one that is judged to be inappropriate? Or simply not funny?

At $3 million a pop, it’s a risk. But for us at home, it’s the best free entertainment we’ll see on the tube. I love this time of year.

Posted January 6, 2009 at 9:10 am by mrickert
2 Comments

foot_scaleI wasn’t at work on New Year’s Day. I thoroughly enjoyed my day off lounging around the house and watching television, but I couldn’t help but notice a trend in the TV advertisements flashing up on my HDTV 3-4 times every half hour. You may have noticed it too.

Between the Mythbusters/Bones/Monk-athons there was an inordinate amount of weight loss commercials. And what timing, too! I’m sure there are millions of people around the world that made resolutions and what better time to get them interested in a new product or service.

Most of these commercials were for meal delivery services. They’ve got their target demographic: people who made resolutions but are still sitting on the couch—they want their weight loss delivered to them!

Bravo wasn’t so subtle. They just ran 14 hours of The Biggest Loser.