Monday, April 29, 2013

"Please Captain, not in front of the Klingons!"


The realms of augmented reality are about to become even more impressive as the first ever 'Blippable' TV ad will be aired tonight on Channel 5 for the new Star Trek film; Into the Darkness.



During "Ben Fogle: New Lives in the Wild" at 9pm, viewers will be able to engage with the interactive ad by downloading the Blippar app and holding their phones up to the  TV screen.

Who knows what will happen? All we know so far is that those who interact will be able to book tickets at their local cinema, watch an exclusive trailer and be entered into a competition draw to win tickets for the film's premier in Tokyo.

Known as "Dual Screening", this latest trend from advertisers has so far seen an impressive increase in audience participation.

The ad is to be trialled for a two-week period, before and during the film's release date, 9th May 2013.

Will viewers "engage and make it so" (Captain Picard) or will they be completely Phased?



Live Long and Prosper


About Blippar: Blippar™ is the first image-recognition phone app aimed at bringing to life real-world newspapers, magazines, products and posters with exciting augmented reality experiences and instantaneous content.  The company launched in the UK in the Summer of 2011 and will be expanding globally throughout 2013. http://blippar.com/about 

Friday, April 26, 2013

Perfect Proximity Point

Saw this pic on Richard Branson's blog of a Virgin Media outdoor campaign that ran a year or so ago and thought it was the perfect illustration of how creative and media can work together to deliver a great communication solution.




Tactical proximity messaging ..... to the point, quite literally!


Thursday, April 25, 2013

There's no place like gnome

According to @DavidTheGnome, the gnomes had been deceived by IKEA; in rehearsal there was to be strictly no hose pipes and no smashing. Sorry David, but without smashing, the sabotage would have been endless, and after all, it's time for a change.




The latest IKEA ad humorously sends out the message 'say no to gnomes' after war is declared by the introduction of new garden furniture designed to improve outdoor space. Clay minds think alike and the gnomes, who shall not be moved, turn the garden into a battlefield; fighting against the concept of new trends. There was only ever going to be one winner. 

This week we've named IKEA's "Time for a Change" ad as our #PureAdOfTheWeek. Although the ad has received mixed feelings from viewers, we think it is absolutely brilliant, completely original, has a fantastic narrative with a twist at the end and sends out a very clear message. This ad could have been a full feature length movie. Forget alien or zombie invasions, gnomes seeking justice against IKEA with fishing rods, porcelain beards and bad attitudes; Tarantino is missing a trick. Congrats IKEA!

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Latest Gems : #PureAdOfTheWeek

We're spoilt for choice this week as there are plenty of great ads to choose from .... so we are posting 3 ads and will take a straw poll in the office and decide the ultimate ad victor at the end of the week.

1) IKEA - Time for Change

 
 

2) LG ELECTRONICS - Stage Fright



2) COMPARE THE MARKET - Rock

http://www.brandrepublic.com/news/1179677/



No big explanation ... we'll let the ads speak for themselves and report back later this week with our outright winner.



Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Love it or Hate it



The latest print ad from the Guardian harmlessly conceptualises the binary nature of Thatcherism with the "love it or hate it", instantly recognisable household brand, Marmite.


Promoting Posy Simmond's take on Margaret Thatcher's life in this Saturday's Guardian newspaper, like it or lump it, this ad is astuteness in the form of modest simplicity. 

The tag-line “one woman, a nation divided” smartly sums up the controversy caused by Thatcher’s death in a brilliantly ambivalent nature; no institutional opinion, just a reflection of a dichotomous society designed to promote the nature of the print supplement.

Congratulations to the designers at BBH London and The Guardian Newspaper, your ingeniously facile print ad has been awarded with Pure Media’s latest #PureAdOfTheWeek. We look forward to reading the article this weekend. 

Monday, April 15, 2013

Synergistic media and creative


Great use of a media format by Virgin Trains ... running their latest campaign on liveried trucks communicating the tactical benefits of travelling by train vs road.


 
Simple, bold creative utilising high impact transport media formats on relevant road environments running even more relevant messaging!

 
Excellent additional creative synergy - with the strapline - FLY  Virgin Trains - emphasising the direct message as well as making reference to the mothership airline brand.
 
 

Friday, April 12, 2013

Drum Roll Please...

...introducing PureMedia's #PureAdOfTheWeek!

That's right! We're always keeping our eyes peeled, on the look-out for the most ingeniously expressive work from the comms industry. 


So, every week we'll be highlighting the most prolific use of advertising space, screaming messaging techniques, productions that you simply can not ignore or just down-right smart ads.  


And what better way to start than with a veteran in the field...




Old Spice is bringing back the soap bar! 


With its classic humorously irreverent style fuelled by masculine contemporaneity and the added touch of an incredibly informative jingle, you wouldn't expect anything less than a brilliant new ad for the launch of a brilliant new product. 


Congratulations Old Spice, your creation has been awarded Pure Media's first #PureAdOfTheWeek

Tuesday, April 02, 2013

April Fool - Who Nose?


Plenty of April Fools throughout the media sphere yesterday ... from Metro referencing a load of historic April 1st stories from the past, that didn't actually ever happen- through to Virgin Atlantic commissioning a fleet of new aircrafts with full glass bottom fusilages and Barclaycard's contactless payement dog collars for pets to pay.

Personal favourite was the 'Google Nose' spoof ...... well executed and believable enough to convince many of the potential sensory search system.