Top 10 June Viral

The top 10 picks for June, with links to view on YouTube:

1. adidas – ‘Star Wars’ Cantina 2010, agency: Sid Lee
2. Volkswagen – The Slide (Driven by Fun), agency: Trial DDB
3. Head – Andy Murray Street Magic in London, agency: n/a
4. Iceland – Visit Iceland, agency: n/a
5. Coca-Cola Zero & Mentos – The Coke Zero & Mentos Rocket Car, agency: EepyBird
6. Orbit Gum – The Prom Date, agency: Energy BBDO
7. McDonald’s & Coca-Cola – T-Shirt Wars 2, agency: n/a
8. GMC – Dude Perfect: The Cliff Jump Shot, agency: Leo Burnett
9. Sapporo – Legendary Biru, agency: Dentsu
10. Lynx Rise – Jessica Jane Clement – Her Best Bits, agency: n/a

I’m pretty NOT impressed with this list of virals. We have a couple sellouts here… Rhett and Link did a good job communicating with their audience while pushing a professional commercial out – good job to them. Dude perfect on the other hand I was not so impressed with. EepyBird is somehow still making a living by selling out to sugar water, good for them – at least they are consistent in their delivery.

Overall it just seems like people are trying to damn hard to get it right. If I had to pick a winner – I like the Volkswagen concept, but not the video they pushed out. Sapporo took me on an adventure and Lynx was the only video I continued a click through on — I wonder why.

Until next month – get some strange.

Level 1 – Eye Trip Official Trailer

Level 1 Eye Trip Official Trailer from Level 1 on Vimeo.

Turn out, tune on, and drop in.

Skiing’s counterculture continues to buck the trends of what’s come before them- this is a worldwide documentation of ski action as you’ve never seen it presented before.

Follow the Level 1 crew as they experiment with one of the largest gap jumps ever built in Sun Valley, Idaho, hit a record snowfall in Helsinki, Finland, and harvest the vast resources of Alaska… or perhaps it’s all just a lucid dream?

Wake up, because Level 1 will take you on the visual trip of a lifetime. Come along for the ride!

Old Spice – Hello Ladies

[iDevice Link]

Thanks to Adcritic for the Full Credits
Agency: Wieden + Kennedy, Portland
Client: Old Spice
Creative Director: Jason Bagley
Creative Director: Eric Baldwin
Copywriter: Eric Kallman
Copywriter: Craig Allen
Art Director: Craig Allen
Art Director: Eric Kallman
Producer: Lindsay Reed
Executive Creative Director: Mark Fitzloff
Executive Creative Director: Susan Hoffman
Agency Executive Producer: Ben Grylewicz
Production Company: MJZ
Director: Tom Kuntz
Executive Producer: Jeff Scruton
Line Producer: Pete Vitale
Director of Photgraphy: Neil Shapiro
Editorial Company: Rock Paper Scissors
Editor: Carlos Arias
Assistant Editor: Aaron Morris
Post Producer: Juliet Batter
Post Executive Producer: Carol Lynn Weaver
Post Executive Producer: Cassie Hulen
VFX Company: The Mill
Lead Flame Artist: Ant Walsham
Flame Artist: Tara DeMarco
Flame Assists: Jodi Tyne
Flame Assists: Aaron Neitz
Flame Assists: Shane Zinkhon
Flame Assists: Gavin Camp
Flame Assists: Christal Hazard
VFX Producer: Arielle Davis
VFX Executive Producer: Sue Troyan
Music and Sound Design Company: Stimmung
Sound Designer: Gus Koven
Producer: Jack Catlin
Executive Producer: Ceinwyn Clark
Mix Company: Lime
Engineer: Loren Silber
Producer: Jessica Locke
Film Transfer Company: CO3
Colorist: Stefan Sonnefeld

Date
Jun 30, 2010

Genius.

Old Spice – I’m on a Horse

Full Credits
Agency: Wieden + Kennedy, Portland
Client: Old Spice
Copywriter: Eric Kallman
Art Director: Craig Allen
Executive Creative Director: Mark Fitzloff
Executive Creative Director: Susan Hoffman
Creative Director: Eric Baldwin
Creative Director: Jason Bagley
Art Director: Eric Kallman
Copywriter: Craig Allen
Agency Executive Producer: Ben Grylewicz
Agency Producer: Erin Goodsell
Production Company: MJZ
Director: Tom Kuntz
Executive Producer: Jeff Scruton
Line Producer: Scott Kaplan
Director of Photography: Neil Shapiro
Editorial: Final Cut
Editor: Carlos Arias
Post Executive Producer: Saima Awan
Post Production: The Mill

Date: Feb 09, 2010

Genius.

Top 10 May Viral

The top 10 picks for April, with links to view on YouTube (the link to Stella Artois “Up There” is on Vimeo):

1. Nike – Write the Future, agency: Wieden & Kennedy
2. TomTom – Behind the Scenes of Darth Vader’s Voice Recording, agency: Pool Worldwide
3. Olympus – Pen Giant, agency: DSG
4. Hi Tec – Walk on Water (Liquid Mountaineering), agency: CCCP
5. Arriva Movia – Mukthar’s Birthday – Better Bus Ride, agency: bybird/cadaver
6. Toyota – Toyota Sienna “Swagger Wagon,” agency: Saatchi & Saatchi
7. Sony – 3DTV, agency: Anomaly
8. Nissan – Urban Bowling, agency: TBWA/G1
9. Stella Artois – Up There, agency: Mother
10. Google Chrome, Speed Tests, agency: BBH

Genius:
1 – Nike kills it (again)
5 – Flash Mobbed birthday – This is the power of social media and the direction it should go.
6 – Still give Toyota props on this, but the original is better.
9 – Quite the interesting look into a skilled original talent.

What Happened Apple?

You release a new iPhone® 4 with iOS 4 that has amazing 1280x720p HD video recording capabilities — with editing… and you can’t stream the WWDC 2010 Keynote Address larger then 643x360p? Sorry Steve – you never looked so bad.

Welcome back 2003 – WTF?

Sorry if it’s just me — but when you are trying to convey new technologies like a 326ppi Retina Display on a new iPhone 4 that has a display resolution of 960×640… you might want to figure out your streaming solutions.

Does the new iPhone 4 allow me to bluetooth pair with my laptop and send sms messages from a keyboard like my T68i from 2001?

Top 10 April Viral

The top 10 picks for April, with links to view on YouTube:

1. Heineken – Men With Talent, agency: TBWA
2. Nike – Earl and Tiger, agency: Wieden & Kennedy
3. Old Spice – Flex, agency: n/a
4. Samsung – Master of Business Card Throwing, agency: The Viral Factory
5. Coca-Cola – Quest, agency: SANTO
6. Nike – The Secret Behind Nike Air, agency: n/a
7. Sony – Around the World in 80 Seconds, agency: Rapp
8. Nike – Music Shoe, agency: Wieden & Kennedy
9. Greenpeace – Give Earth a Hand, agency: n/a
10. Nestle – I Like Big Butterfingers, agency: n/a

Questions and Answers

Question:

Where does the name Coors Banquet come from?

Answer:

Nicknamed by 19th century Rocky Mountain miners, favored by President Gerald Ford and promoted in TV ads by baritone-voiced, Western-cool actor Sam Elliott, Coors’ Banquet beer is celebrating its 135th anniversary.

But the beer that started it all for Golden, Colo.-based Coors Brewing Co. wasn’t always called Coors Banquet.

It’s been through several name changes – Original Coors, for one – and went out of production during Prohibition. Yet the recipe of high-country barley and Rocky Mountain water is essentially unchanged from what Adolph Coors and Jacob Schueler first called “Golden Lager” when it debuted in 1873, said Lee Dolan, vice president of the Coors family of brands at MillerCoors.

MillerCoors is the joint venture of SABMiller and Molson Coors Brewing Co.

Richard Honack, who teaches marketing at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management, said Coors Banquet is a new brand for today’s customers, most of whom wouldn’t remember the name that Coors first added in 1936 but hasn’t been widely used for years.

“What they’re going to have on their hands is a huge customer education process of why is it called Coors Banquet,” Honack said. “It begs the question of why do it. The main reason may be to create new buzz in the marketplace.”

Reviving the “Banquet” name gives Coors something new as craft beers generate the most excitement in the marketplace.

The company says old-time miners served the beer at banquets during their precious time off, referring to it as the banquet beer.

It was known simply as “Coors” at the time of “Smokey and the Bandit,” the 1977 Burt Reynolds film whose heroes try to smuggle a truckload of Coors east of the Mississippi River. Coors wasn’t distributed nationally until 1991.

“Original Coors” was used in the 1990s, then “Coors Original” beginning in 2002. It wasn’t until last year, when the company decided to bring back the Banquet name, use packaging that borrowed from history and launch a new ad campaign featuring Elliott’s gravelly voice to evoke a timeless western spirit, that the brand started taking off, Dolan said.

“The strength of this brand is really based on the heritage,” Dolan said.

MillerCoors doesn’t release exact numbers, but Dolan said Coors Banquet has had single-digit percentage sales growth from last year. Sales had dipped in the first half of last year before the ad campaign, which sparked a “sharp upward” trend the rest of the year, Dolan said.

“This year, we’re trending in the double digits,” showing that regular, full-calorie premium domestic beers aren’t dying, Dolan said.

“Consumers respond to brands, not segments. If it strikes an emotional chord, that’s going to grow,” Dolan said.

Tiger Control

This will likely be one of the most popular ads of our time and it just dropped. Nike is featuring Tiger Woods in an advertisement with a voice over from his late father, Earl Woods.

Tiger,

I am more prone to be inquisitive… to promote discussion.

I want to find out what your thinking was.

I want to find out what your feelings are.

And… did you learn anything?

Nike.

There is going to be plenty of talk about this one. Genius.

[iPhone Link – 358 views]