Posts Tagged ‘Advertising’

Oil Advertising

Tuesday, January 3rd, 2012

We were thinking recently how pathet­ically wimpish current oil ads have to be. Gone are the days when you could sell lubricant with hot cars and hot babes. Post BP oil slick,and taking envir­on­mental realities into consid­er­ation, it’s not partic­u­larly surprising that oil companies are managing their image with kid gloves.

So, commer­cials for oil are packaged with tweeting birds, and laced together with a sting of pure, green air. We thought we’d dig up a couple of gems to show you how it wasn’t always neces­sarily so.

Here, for example, Mobil use a whacked out, hyped up Charles Manson lookalike to publicise their product, presumably to make the far-​​reached spin that using their brand of lube will chill you out.

This South African Castrol ad, meanwhile, straddles the hard-​​edged line between xenophobia, homophobia and the cherished boorishness of the Boers…

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Its pretty hard to unravel the semiotics of this animated beauty from India (below). There’s bullets, murder, mayhem and other fun stuff that seem to be equating the performance aspects of Castrol lube with moving faster than a speeding bullet. We love the Bollywood steez, whatever it all means…

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Peugeot 205 GTi

Tuesday, September 27th, 2011

Now, we were just going to tweet this but after having looked at this clip a few times, we’ve decided it’s worth at least a daily. In fact, we think we could devote an entire magazine the boldness and vision of where this ad is coming from.

Firstly, not only do they manage to drop a real, living breathing 205 GTi from a genuine Hercules, they then manage to get the pilot to risk his neck (and a few gazillion Francs worth of transport aircraft) by skimming the surface of the tundra.

What we love also is the vaguely amused expression on the face of the GTi jockey (making a passable impression of a low-​​rent James Bond, of course), as he negotiates the falling cluster bombs to make it without being too late for his date.

Remember folks, this was way, way before CGI came and changed the ad game forever. This stuff actually happened. No really. Well the fighters (are they Mirages?) may have been stock footage, but you catch our drift.

And that was a partic­u­larly good car. We want to buy one. Now.

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BMW: Joy

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011


image via The Always Gentleman

Car companies obviously spend a hell of a lot of money on ad campaigns.

As close watchers of the various ways that car makers seek constantly to reinvent themselves we were of course excited about BMW’s recent JOY campaign (vaguely fascist connota­tions notwithstanding).

It was a bold, top to bottom bit of marketing rather than a simple piece of rebranding. The JOY in BMW was injected in every way the brand was repres­ented; from the colours of their vehicles through to the tone of voice adopted by dealership receptionists.

But it occurred to us also, that they could done a similar job as the HD edit below, in an image as simple as the one above.

The message, after all is simple. You can have fun in your BMW car. The b&w air shot seems to say everything you could ever want to say.

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New Fiat 500 Campaign

Thursday, January 20th, 2011

Spanish agency Leo Burnett Iberia have come up with an inter­esting, colourful print campaign designed to hammer home the message that consumers can design their own cinquecento.

Brazilian Illustrator and Art Director Bruno Nakano has created a series of spreads with pictorial associ­ations that each go back to the charac­terful image of Fiat’s prodigal child.

The strapline is clever too:

Fiat 500: Add something, change everything. Customize yours at Fiat.es

Progress is Beauty

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

In terms of marketing, cars are not quite as much of a blank page as soft drinks. They have corporeal presence. They stick around – sometimes for decades. Over the span of their useful lives, they come to occupy the popular consciousness peren­nially as pop music and vocal affect­a­tions of news anchormen. But despite their non-​​negotiable presence and imper­meable reality, the marketing of a brand and the models within its range are forever fluid. What a certain make of car comes to represent in one era will almost certainly be trans­formed within the lifetime of a single vehicle. When you cross continents, the complexity gets deeper. Witness for example, this ad for the Volvo Amazon from America in the early 1960s.

In its casual misogyny the ad is something that Don Draper and his acolytes on Madison Avenue would have been more than proud of. All that talk of women being automot­ively challenged whilst domin­eering their husbands’ finance and aspiring ultimately to the lofty heights of furniture and fur coat aquistion. The thought that that sort of aesthetic could sell Volvos is hard to get your head around. Particularly in light of this recent French TV ad for the C30.

The whole ethos of the campaign is fragrant with a colourful, pre-​​credit crunch frivolity and inclus­iveness. But those days are over. Open any magazine or switch on any TV for the next year or so and the car ads you do see will be reeking of worthiness and screaming about engin­eering solutions to envir­on­mental problems. Look closely. There’s not much frivolity out there. The current trend, rather, is exemplified by the 2009 campaign for Audi A4. Progress is beauty. It’s basically a subtle evolution of the classic strap “Vorsprung Durch Technik”. We couldn’t agree more.