Grown Up Thinking

Archive for the ‘Entertainment’ Category

Tidbits In The Ad-Mosphere: What We’re Loving Right Now


1. Smelling Like A Monster: With over 4.1 million views in just 6 days this adorable rendition of the Old Spice Man, brought to you by Grover, is a huge hit for Sesame Street fans of all ages.

2. Blimp Badge: Conan O’Brien’s comeback show on TBS is approaching, and east coast dwellers have a chance at unlocking a unique Foursquare badge for the occasion. If you see the giant orange CONAN blimp overhead make sure to check in!

3. Buying Starbucks for Friends through Facebook: As the 100th My Starbucks Idea this Facebook application allows users to reload the Starbucks cards of their friends. A great way to surprise, celebrate a birthday, or to pay that debt you owe…

4. Diesel Sneakers: Buyer beware. These shoes are “Not made for running. (Great for kicking asses).”

5. Instagram iPhone App: This wildly popular photo app allows users to morph their casual photography into amazing images, and share with friends in the process. Tapping into our egos, it also aggregates the most popular photos – challenging all 100k+ users to get their snapshots noticed.

6. Skype 5.0 Hearts Facebook: Remember when the social(media)ites were predicting a Skype/Facebook mash-up as part of Zuck’s big announcement? Well the new groups took that crown, but the functionality of connecting Skype with Facebook has arrived anyway!

7. Total Eclipse of the Heart Literal Version: I just always love this and wanted to remind all readers that it exists.

How To Make Your Summer Sponsorships Epic

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This article appeared as part of MediaPost’s Engage:Teens Publications. To read the original post, click here.

So here is my report not from the sidelines, but from the mud pits of Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival in Manchester, Tenn. I was only there for 36 hours of it, but had enough time to party with festival children, see some killer bands perform, participate in the festival revelry and witness some brands in action.

In my eyes, event sponsorship is all about heightening the consumer’s experience. I hope for the sake of our industry, that corporate culture has graduated from thinking signage and logo placement equates to consumer retention and interest.

The true play for a brand in the event activation space is to elevate the event goers’ experience by ultimately conveying that the brand understands what the consumer is going through. Once a brand understands and connections to the consumer’s emotional event experience, they can effectively add real value as a sponsor.

Additionally, event producers don’t have the time to offer every amenity, every perk, every nice-to-have since they are focused on the entertainment and general production needs. I’m sure every festival producer says, “That’s a great idea; maybe we’ll get to it next year.” Four years later, it’s still a great idea but hasn’t been executed. This leaves a huge opportunity for brands to elevate their activations.

A quick snapshot of Bonnaroo to properly set the stage: four days of music and mayhem on a 700-acre farm in the middle of nowhere. There is no escaping the festival grounds. The average teen I spoke with drove 8+ hours and stayed in a basic camp tent with minimal amenities. Most didn’t have a basic fan in their tent and it was insanely hot. Bonnaroo isn’t an event; it’s a cultural movement comprised of loyal adventure seekers, with approximately half of 100,000 attendees being teens and college-aged.

Click here to read more of Doug’s experience at Bonnaroo 2010, and how some brands got it right.

What Will Your Company Look Like When Millennials Call the Shots?

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Find out in our just-launched white paper in partnership with Intrepid, titled Millennial Inc. Following a six-month joint international research study, the paper explores what the Millennial-led company will look like when Millennials take charge.

Closely observing the way Millennials would run an organization and develop and market products brings to light the challenges marketers are currently having in reaching this demographic. By taking note of how Millennials would reach and impact themselves, the white paper is a much needed how-to guide for making the changes necessary to survive and thrive in the new socially-connected, fully transparent world.

Millennial Inc explores nine core themes across three main areas of the business and concludes with the 10 Core Principles that the Millennial Led Business Will Follow. What are they? Download the whitepaper at millennialinc.com and find out.

What We’re Loving: Monday Edition

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1. EasyJet Holiday Planner: eCommerce through Facebook, with the ability to plan trips with your buddies at the click of a button? Now this is really #nextlevel.

2. Let’s Colour Project: Paint brand Dulux creates an international outreach program to transform communities with color. It’s the kind of fuzziness that warms the very cockles of my creative soul.

3. 6 Foundations of Great Digital Creative: Brilliant slideshow, and a primer for both brands and budding creatives alike on developing better digital.

4. Foursquare Fueling Local Culture through TV: Pop Up Video is kindasortalmost back thanks to a partnership between Foursquare & VH1 (via TechCrunch).

5. CR Annual on the iPhone: Some of the year’s best work in the palm of your hand. Many thanks, Creative Review.

6. Note & Point: Stunning presentations that inspire even the most jaded (ahem) Powerpoint-phobes.

And a few #MusicMonday tunes to love:

“Forgotten Place” by Brooklyn hotties/hotshots Cruel Black Dove. Directed by Emmy-nominated director Noah Conopask.

“Die By the Drop” by Dead Weather. Deliciously art directed. A veritable feast for the eyes and ears.

Keeping Up With the Joneses, and Their Clients

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No matter the budget, when brainstorming for a client the eager minds at Mr Youth always start by thinking BIG. We toss around ideas of wild, dream executions to introduce or promote a brand, imagining that money is no object. (“Let’s send one person from every single country to the 2010 World Cup!” or “Let’s build the world’s largest piñata!” –don’t laugh, it’s been done! Well, sorta.)

Typically, reality sinks in quick and we regroup to develop a program that has the same strategic and creative chutzpah our client wants, but that fits more in line with their proposed budget and timeline– to sparkling and dynamic results, no less!

Derrick Borte’s new film, The Joneses, presents a concept that sounds as far-reaching as some of our initial wild and crazy marketing ideas. Embed a fake, envy-inducing family into a wealthy, materialistic neighborhood, outfit them with all of our clients’ newest and hottest products, and get them to get their “neighbors” to want it all? GENIUS… maybe.

The concept here is compelling on a few levels. We know for a fact that consumers trust the opinion of their family, friends (and in this case, neighbors) more than any claim a company itself can make. The Joneses may have something to say about how far some brands are willing to go to get you to buy what they’re selling. Is this an example of word-of-mouth gone too far? Are you swayed by strategic product placement as much as some brands are hoping you are?

Watch the trailer and let us know:

Glee Gone Wild: Social Media Done Right

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An hour-long high school dramedy series that’s a musical? Let’s face it: Glee initially had everything going against it. Time will ultimately tell, but skeptics be damned. This year’s Golden Globe winner for Best Comedy Series turned out to be a runaway hit that has yet to lose steam as it heads into the second part of its freshman season. Above all, the show’s writing is top notch by melding a perfect blend of edgy dark humor and a lot of heart. The talent of the young cast is undeniable. And Jane Lynch turns anything into comic gold. But producers were faced with some tough challenges right from the start. How to get people to actually tune in? Enter social media and a relatively risky gamble on an aggressive interactive marketing campaign.

First of all, Fox chose to debut the pilot episode months before its actual season debut in order to capitalize on its 20+ million captive audience from American Idol. They then utilized the down time to really gain traction online by engaging with their most passionate fans (or ‘Gleeks’). Currently, @gleeks has a nearly 50,000 person following on Twitter and almost 2 million fans on Facebook. Mix that with its very own YouTube channel with exclusive content, PR-worthy appearances (Oprah!) and even nationwide mall performances. Yep, everyone’s all abuzz over the little show that could.

Blurring the line between fan and fiction even further, Glee has since launched a national casting campaign for new characters to appear on the series. Fox also recently released an interactive “hypertrailer” allowing viewers to click and “fan” the show’s cast members on Facebook, who also participate live on-air in weekly re-run episodes (or “Tweetpeats”) much like the cast commentary on today’s DVD and Blu-ray discs.

So what’s so significant about Glee’s marketing strategy, anyway? At its core, it is truly a niche show. But a very enthusiastic niche crowd at that. And Glee is giving that very core audience exactly what they want: access and interaction. At a time when studios are shuttering unauthorized playback of content and guarding creative copyrights like a fortress, this show is practically shooting it across America through a t-shirt cannon. Whether it be the show’s music content (consistently charting week after week on iTunes) or capturing that “underdog” spirit in everyone, Glee has succeeded in truly crossing all media types, including a forthcoming iPhone/iPad app. That makes it one of the very first scripted shows to actually achieve results in reaching out to a young, digital audience with significant viral success. That’s definitely a social media coup to be gleeful about. I, for one, am proud to be a Gleek. Who’s with me?

Glee resumes its season on Tuesday,  April 13 on Fox.

Bloody Good Teasers for HBO’s True Blood

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The award-winning vamp series “True Blood” has been one of my favorite guilty pleasures from HBO in recent years. It’s funny, sexy, artfully done (Shout out to Digital Kitchen for their amazing opening title work, btw) and yet it’s deliciously trashy all at the same time. I was really impressed with the last two seasons’ marketing campaigns which included fun tie-ins with Mini Cooper and Harley-Davidson. The series managed to generate significant buzz while maintaining an artsy niche appeal. Season 3 (coming in June) has just kicked off its 12-week poster campaign and it does not disappoint. The Alan Ball-helmed series has carved a significant presence for itself in the social media realm with over a million fans on Facebook while actively engaging with their 60,000 (and growing) followers on Twitter. Kudos, for sure, but there is something beautifully “old school” in their newest teaser campaign: smart and eye-catchingly awesome posters that simply demand your attention. It’s both simple yet disruptively brilliant. Stay tuned as they roll out a new poster each week–all unrelated aside from trying to “glamour” you into tuning in on June 13th. I’m definitely thirsty for more.

Ga Ga Oo La Product Placement!

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We all know that product placement is nothing new. It’s a multi-billion dollar market that spans across television, movies, music, sports and more. Whether it’s the Coca Cola cups on the American Idol judging table or the food on top of Joey and Chandler’s fridge in Friends, product placement is everywhere all the time. Sometimes it’s subtle and plays in to the storyline of a movie or TV show; other times it’s more obvious. In Lady Gaga’s case, it’s on the screen and in your face, and she doesn’t care if you like it or not.

She’s known for her eccentric outfits and imaginative performances. In fact, being over-the-top is what made Lady Gaga so famous. Now the artist is starting to be noticed for the blatant product placement in her music videos. And with over 50% of brands using branded content for awareness-based marketing, she is a marketer’s dream come true. In fact, Lady Gaga is the only recording artist to reach 1 billion video views across all online video platforms – perhaps making her blatant product placements the most valuable in entertainment history! According to Neilsen AIG, product integration is more likely to drive brand recall than other forms of advertising, so if all goes according to plan, I’ll never make a sandwich without thinking of Lady Gaga, and I’ll never see Lady Gaga without wanting a sandwich.

Maybe when I finish eating I’ll take a picture with my Poloroid camera, upload it on to my Beats laptop, listen to some tunes on my Hearbeats headphones and call my friend on my Virgin Mobile phone. Why? Because Lady Gaga made me do it.

What To Do When You’re “Over” Chat Roulette

chatrouletteIn the fuzzy afterglow of the Chat Roulette frenzy of the past few weeks, I find myself thinking “what’s next”? Lucky for me, I don’t have to spin my wheels on that brain buster quite yet as two similar sites have already distracted me with their unique interpretations of the random chat craze:

RandomDorm connects college students on the prowl for some dorm-to-dorm interaction (only those with a .edu address need apply).
MyChanceRomance Billed as the “fun way to find love”, MyChanceRomance is a dating site with a Hot-Or-Not mentality that’s bound to give you an inferiority complex.

Not ready to move on from the original just yet? Don’t fret. It’s  still alive and well, even spawning it’s own Chat Roulette Missed Connections site (which I can assure you is comic genius in its own right).

Twitter Turns Four, World Says Thank You

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Happy Birthday, Twitter! As we reflect on four years of compacting our thoughts into 140 characters, social media pulse point Mashable.com is asking readers how Twitter has changed their lives, by using the hashtag #thankstwitter4. Sifting through the 140 #thankstwitter4 tweets that Mashable chose to highlight got us well-connected folks at Mr Youth thinking about what we’d like to thank Twitter for. Here’s just a smattering of our grateful gospel:

@courtneyc: #thankstwitter4 helping our generation fuel the biggest text-based fundraiser in history via the @RedCross

@laural:  For the information I learn from everyday #thankstwitter4

@kennyh:  #thankstwitter4 forcing me off my butt on #lazysunday by showing me what all my friends are doing

@jennaa:  #thankstwitter4 the most hilarious trending topics – i.e. #myfuturehusband & #dearfuturewife

@ericab:  For celebrating pithier wordsmithery #thankstwitter4

@ericab: (and for @ShitMyDadSays) #thankstwitter4

@alexisd: #thankstwitter4 giving me a place to voice all of those random thoughts that come to me on my commute to and from work

@manisham:  #thankstwitter4 helping me get hundreds of clicks a day on manishainmanhattan.com!

@laural:  For all the new friends and business contacts I have made #thankstwitter4

@giancarlop: #thankstwitter4 making human interactions, thoughts, and feelings searchable. (sorry to get all heavy on you)