
Industry happenings at Metro, Chemistry Interaction, Motion Sickness, KBR Digital and Dentsu Aegis.
Industry happenings at Metro, Chemistry Interaction, Motion Sickness, KBR Digital and Dentsu Aegis.
Mexican brewery Cerveza Cucapá has responded to Donald Trump’s wall rhetoric in the most entertaining way: by tricking the politician’s supporters into funding a fiesta.
NZ On Screen is clearly looking for a fight. To mark the 120th anniversary of the first public film screening in New Zealand, the industry body has compiled a list of the top ten Kiwi films ever made. Let the arguing commence.
Programmatic specialists across the business have been logging into the KPEX exchange and sampling what’s on offer. We chat to a few about how they’ve found the experience has been so far.
A new weekly magazine is set to hit Auckland, and it’s somewhat ambitiously targeting a demographic that doesn’t usually read print. Today, addressing an audience of ad and media folk, Bauer has announced a new free publication called Paperboy, which will from 3 November be distributed in Auckland every Thursday morning.
In a bid to woo more Australian passengers, Air New Zealand has launched a new campaign to change the airline’s perception with its neighbours across the ditch.
Skinny. Seductive. Photoshopped. These three elements have over years become the mandatory approach for the vast majority of lingerie advertising. But inclusive lingerie brands, looking to target women who have grown tired of being reminded of their imperfections are making a stand against this approach. And among those challenging the standard approach is New Zealand label Lonely, which recently released a beautiful body positive campaign for its latest collection.
Active wear, active wear, doing just about everything in my active wear. TRA’s Antonia Mann runs through some recent exercise fads and looks into what they tell us about millennials.
If you’re going to run an organisation representative of best marketing minds in the industry, then you’re going to have to show off your creative chops from time to time. And this is exactly what the Marketing Association with a recent campaign designed to draw attention to its short courses. Rather than just sending out yet another email calling on potential students to attend its courses, the industry body is instead hosting a game of Tetris on its website.
A news chief claiming that the phrase ‘quality journalism’ should be left to die was always going to spark a bit controversy—even more so when he’s brought in to replace a much-loved stalwart of New Zealand’s news scene, Mark Jennings. We chat to new MediaWorks news chief Hal Crawford about his eyebrow-raising opinion that arrived in New Zealand before he did, the challenges and opportunities of the modern media environment and his aspirations for the organisation.
The ASA recently upheld a complaint against Ssangyong, which advertised an SUV as the “best value”. This was found to be misleading to consumers and showed little sense of social responsibility. In light of this finding, we take a look at where Ssangyong went wrong to see when advertisers can legally describe a product as ‘the best’.
The New Zealand Herald is trumpeting growth across both its print and digital readerships this week. We speak to NZME managing editor Shayne Currie about how its managing print growth in a digital era.
AA Smartfuel and Countdown are each celebrating the supermarket’s joining of the AA Smartfuel programme with new TVCs that take different approaches to the partnership.
Its October, The Warehouse and supermarkets are filling with candy and pumpkin themed decorations are hitting the shelves. However, the night of dress ups and and tick or treating is still weeks away. So why have creepy clown sightings suddenly taken off around the world, and most recently in New Zealand? We take a look at the phenomenon as a PR stunt for the remake of Stephen King’s It.
KFC’s Colonel has a new, younger look to mark the return of the Nashville Hot Chicken to the menu.
First Dates New Zealand will be hitting the screen tonight and to celebrate, TVNZ has called in the help of two guinea pigs who hope to find love of their own.
The New Zealand Comfort Group has channeled Sleeping Beauty in a new campaign for its Sleepyhead Sanctuary bed range, via Special Group, in which a bed meets high fashion.
Plain packaging of tobacco products is a highly debatable topic, with some believing it will reduce smoking rates. Dow Design’s Simon Wedde shares his thoughts on the benefits and drawbacks of plain packaging.
Len Potts, the creative mind behind some of New Zealand’s most memorable ad campaigns, died peacefully at home on 5 October after a short illness, only a few days short of his 75th birthday. We remember the legend.
The New Zealand Breast Cancer Foundation and Colenso BBDO are marking October’s Breast Cancer Month with a lump that follows women around the internet until they get a mammogram.
Russia’s S7 airline has released a beautiful spot that traverses the depths of the earth to the highest of points to celebrate the ‘best planet ever’.
Our weekly wrap of good things, strange things, funny things, inspiring things and other things from inside the intertubes.
Loyalty programmes are the latest brand experience to feel some disruption, as brands collaborate or diversify. Elly Strang takes a look New World’s roll out of a nationwide clubcard, and Countdown and AA Smartfuel’s joint loyalty scheme.
It’s been over a week since Spark launched Spark Jump, an initiative to provide subsidised broadband to families in need. We chat to Spark’s GM of corporate relations Andrew Pirie about the telco’s wider social strategy, its purpose and using technology to make a difference.
Instagram ads have only been available in the local market for the last 13 months, and in that time marketers have started to identify some do’s and don’ts on the platform. Here are ten tips from the team AdRoll.
iProspect New Zealand has just added to its client list, following the win of the Les Mills International global performance digital account.
Industry happenings at FCB, 90 Seconds, Fairfax Media and Johnson & Laird.
2degrees has come out on top of Colmar Brunton’s August Ad Impact Award for its ‘Where does your data disappear to’ TVC, via Special Group and The Sweet Shop, which gets creative to explain mobile data to consumers.
Sam Aldred offers a contrarian view on the perception that Sky is simply a villainous corporate juggernaut hell-bent on keeping tier one sports exclusive.