Archive for October, 2007
The World’s Coolest Dental Clinic
Friday, October 5th, 2007Perhaps it struck me as brilliant because I was just at the dentist, but how incredibly cool is this place. A dental clinic in Berlin. No cold, clinical setting. More to look at while in the chair than the pinpoint holes in the ceiling tile. If more clinics considered design and atmosphere, it could go a long way towards making the dentist visit less dreaded.


Via Coolhunter
The 10,180-square-foot clinic (called KU64 after its Kurfürstendamm address) is located in Berlin and was designed by the hot firm, GRAFT, the same people that were behind Berlin’s new super lifestyle Hotel “Q”.
The incredible design makes you feel like you’re in an A-list Hollywood members bar – certainly not the usual ambiance associated with utilitarian spaces like this one which houses eight dentists. The cocoon like spaces are filled with light, creating an elegant sense of flow and space. It makes even a session of root canal seem inviting.
Arnold focus groups “1984″; finds it dreary
Thursday, October 4th, 2007
Via Adverganza
What would’ve happened if Apple’s classic “1984″ was focus grouped? Arnold found out, by asking people who’d apparently never seen the spot how they’d change it—and it involved putting Apple logos on the t-shirts of the huddled masses, and the recommendation that the spot: “Use real people, preferably without gas masks. Make fewer references to Nazism” and so forth. Only one focus group member thinks the spot should be produced at all. Arnold produced this as the intro film to the Boston Ad Club’s Hatch Awards, which were held last night, but that’s incidental.
Play Doh Sony Spot
Thursday, October 4th, 20072.5 tons of play doh. 3 week shoot in the streets of New York. 40 animators. Amazing stop action animation. Wow!
Onslaught goes too far
Wednesday, October 3rd, 2007I applauded the Dove campaign for real beauty. As a woman and professional. I admire brands with the guts to take a stand. And cheered on their efforts to reach 5 millions girls by 2010 with “feel good about yourself messages” as part of the Self-Esteem Fund. I’m all for loving yourself and feeling comfortable in your own skin despite flaws. As a mother of two teenage daughters, how could I not admire a company standing for self-esteem?
BUT…with the latest film, “Onslaught”, they went too far and lost credibility with me. Celebrating and promoting the concept of self esteem and inner beauty is one thing. Encouraging you to “talk to your daughter before the beauty industry does” is a worthwhile message. But doing it in such a hypocritical and arrogant way is another.
Dove doesn’t stand alone. It’s part of a larger company and consumers know it. Even my 15 year old knows it. Regardless of whether or not people see this as a powerful creative spot (I don’t think it has near the power of the original), using the attack approach against the industry begs the question… do they honestly believe that people will see Dove as “above it all”? When they are in fact part of a large marketing driven company [Unilever] whose own brands have and continue to perpetrate the “beauty industry” images that play right into our insecurities. The same type of images that they use in the film as examples of the exploits.
There’s such irony in the fact that on Unilever’s own site they play to our insecurities in order to hype their beauty products. Like how you can get “Oscar-worthy hair” just like Nicole Kidman, Posh Spice and – oh yeah – Paris Hilton. And let’s not forget that Unilever is a major manufacturer of skin-whitening creams marketed in India (playing to a stereotype that, the lighter your skin, the more beautiful you are). And what about Axe body spray, whose sexist and stupid ads as well as the “humilidating” show, Game Killers, on MTV this year (a production of Axe spray) doesn’t exactly send the message that the Onslaught spot does.
Unilever wants it both ways. To be hero AND benefactor relative to our insecurities. And that’s hard to reconcile.
Are they embarrassed?
Wednesday, October 3rd, 2007I admit it. I watched the premier last night of Cavemen. It’s was less horrible than I thought it would be, but by no means great. But the real surprise to me…where was Geico? How could they not air a single commercial in the show? Hummmmmmm




