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Shelter – House of Cards advert
Leo Burnett has created a new campaign to highlight the work done by UK housing charity Shelter featuring 500 posters on the London Underground, online and direct mail to back up the TV spot.

Google – Chrome advert
The first video publicity for Google Chrome, a cute stop motion advert from Japan.

The Natural Confectionary Company – Mini Movie Maker
The mini movie maker is a great online transition for the brand from the very popular TV campaign.

Wiberg – Ace of Mace
A fun little game build by four students at the University of Applied Sciences, Salzburg/Austria. Manipulate the hand to flick the piece of mace around the obstacle course-style levels. Beautiful graphics, a responsive physics engine and a highly intuitive interface create an outstanding gaming experience.

By: Albion | Category: | No Comments yet »


Wallace & Gromit

WALLACE What do you say Gromit lad, since we’re down in the big smoke collecting our BAFTA award shall we drop in on our old mates at Albion?

GROMIT [Blank look]

WALLACE You remember lad, the advertising folks we visited in November to give them a sneak preview of ‘A Matter of Loaf and Death‘.

GROMIT [Sniffs]

WALLACE No need to be like that, lad. I know you’re not keen on commercialism, but times are hard. Man cannot live by bread alone, eh Gromit?

I think we should drop in on them – show them the ‘Making of’ film and some other stuff the Aardman lot have been up to. After all they are in the Tea Building. Right up our street eh?

GROMIT [Resigned shrug]

WALLACE That’s the spirit lad. Show these Londoners that we’re no mugs. Ha, ha, do you get it Gromit? Tea Building? No mugs?

GROMIT [raises eyes heavenwards and shakes his head]

WALLACE Oh well, please yourself lad, please yourself.

By: Albion | Category: Slacking | 1 Comment »


Kellie, one of our digital designers, emails us all links to her favourite digital marketing ’stuff’ of the week every Friday afternoon. Here’s what she rates this week:

Coca Cola – Heist
This beautiful advert for Coca-Cola was unveil at the Super bowl on Feb 1st.

Pong Clock
Pong Clock is a limited edition of 400 clocks which tells the time in hypnotic arcade style. The clocks have already sold out but you can download the screensaver for Mac and PC!

Google – Latitude
Google Latitude was launched on Wednesday for Android, Windows Mobile, BlackBerry and Sybian operating systems and will be out in the next iPhone update. Latitude basically that allows you to locate your friends on a map on your mobile or on a computer once they accept your invitation. There is much controversy surrounding this new location-sharing service as it could be a gift to stalkers, prying employers, jealous partners, and obsessive friends. Latitude will have major opportunities once Google opens up the API, think about integration with Facebook!

Smirnoff – It Started with a Mule
The experience site from Smirnoff takes to back to LA in 1940 on a journey to save the sexy gal Ginger Beer.

By: Albion | Category: Thinking | No Comments yet »


Just keep clicking this button:

Cornify

Sparkly unicorns and rainbows. Done.

By: Albion | Category: Slacking | 1 Comment »


So the Competition Commission has gone and done it, and killed off Project Kangaroo.

Our first reaction when we heard the CC’s preliminary judgment was ‘how stupid’. Who wouldn’t want what Kangaroo was planning to offer – free catch-up, and archive of top shows across decades of BBC, ITV & C4 programmes? And who wants to have to visit many different websites (or worse download many different applications) to watch TV on the web? You don’t have to have different TVs for BBC, ITV, C4 etc.

So to us this seemed like while the CC were preventing a monopoly, and avoiding a theoretical and technical price fixing scenario, in the process they were actually denying consumers’ choice. Or worse handing a bye to the US-owned Hulu to steam in and charge for what previously would have been free (well, free at the point of use).

But over the last couple of months, other parts of the story have emerged, and have caused us to change our minds.

Project Canvas is another cross-broadcaster initiative to put web TV in Freeview set-top boxes, bringing the iPlayer and other services, to the living room in a way that normal people might use. And it sounds like it is open from the start, providing a platform anybody (?) will be able to access.

To us, this means one of two things will happen:

  1. iPlayer will become the default platform for getting web video onto those set-top boxes. Someone (the BBC Trust, the CC) will make the BBC open up the iPlayer to other content providers. It’s easy to put Flash video on the web; the trick is making it scale. And why should the viewing public have to pay for that again?
  2. The opportunity of Project Canvas distribution will incentivise content providers to unify around a common set of web video standards, and the content will be set free of any particular destination, so we can just watch what we want without having to learn how to use multiple sites / apps.

Which will be A Good Thing, and we’ll still get the service we so yearn for as consumers. Maybe even a better version.