Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Hello, Cleveland.
Monday, November 29, 2010
"Our ally, Hu Flung Pu."
In a recent interview, Sarah Palin stated, "we gotta stand with our North Korean allies." Clearly this potential GOP Presidential candidate needs to brush up on geopolitics. I might suggest some simple mnemonics.
North Korea -- Naughty
North Korea -- Not Friends
Or, North Korea -- No
But I think this grizzly mamma might feel more comfortable with simple visual graphics. If questioned, she could use the same technique to answer any questions about our involvement in Vietnam.
(you can also see it here: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rich-siegel/palin-geography-101_b_788490.html)
Tuesday, November 23, 2010
Monday, November 22, 2010
The Third Coming
Thursday, November 18, 2010
Call of Duty: Dog Ops
In 1982, a scientist on vacation in the Caribbean happened upon an abandoned rum distillery. This is shocking on several levels.
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Lucy Bouls
Tuesday, November 16, 2010
Ninja, my ass
The digital inmates have taken over the asylum. I'll give you a good example. And try not to burn any bridges in the process.
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Spark it up
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
Please spare me
Tuesday, November 9, 2010
The Lovernator
Monday, November 8, 2010
From the lucrative world of publishing
I live with my wife, two teenage daughters, a retriever mix named Nellie and two goldfish, who for the purposes of this article, I will assume are also female. As the lone Y chromosome carrier in the household, it’s my job to take out the garbage. If I don’t take the cans down to the curb, the cans simply do not get down to the curb.
You may be asking what any of this has to do with TV, broadcasting, advertising or promos. But, I suspect those of you in creative roles can spot the stretched metaphor from a mile away. As a copywriter with more than 20 years experience, I’ve gotten quite accustomed to taking out the trash. And by that I mean the creative brief.
I still make my living writing for ad agencies, clients, cable networks, digital boutiques, etc., so I’ve got to tread lightly here. I don’t want to bite the hand that feeds me and keeps my fridge stocked with Blue Moon.
But the truth is, most creative briefs I see are neither creative nor brief.
An agency planner once told me, “You can’t expect the kind of creative strategic brilliance like the ‘Got Milk?’ campaign on every brief.”
Is that so? I’ll have to employ that method of managed expectations on my next creative presentation, “You can’t expect great creative on every assignment. Here’s my invoice.”
What about brevity?
Years ago, a dozen or so freelance teams were assembled to rebrand a major car manufacturer. It was, we were told, to be a milestone campaign. A clean break from the past. A blank slate on which we would be free to rewrite automotive and advertising history. What creative person would not be excited by that kind of opportunity?
“As soon as we receive your signed NDA,” said the agency creative administrator, “we’ll email you the 109-page briefing document.” She was not kidding. It looked like the blueprint for an Iranian nuclear facility. There was more clarity to the Pentagon’s plan for victory in Afghanistan.
The best brief I ever got wasn’t a brief at all. It was just a guttural insight from Lee Clow, who said, “People think of TV as a sanctuary.” From that, the ABC “Yellow” campaign was born.
I don’t know how to solve the garbage in/garbage out phenomena. But I do know if we want the work to get better, the briefs have to get better. They have to get simpler. Shorter. More visceral. And they have to stop rehashing the same ideas over and over and over again.
That reminds me, I have to take out the recyclables.