Showing posts with label viral spot. Show all posts
Showing posts with label viral spot. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Ð is for Ðogecoin - Dogecoin viral adv

Dogecoin is an open source peer-to-peer cryptocurrency, favored by Shiba Inus worldwide. dogecoin.com The Dogecoin Foundation is a venture designed to help empower community spirit and improve the user experience. We are not a steering committee that decides and guides the fate of dogecoin, we are simply a conduit and escrow service for projects that help the community and which would not otherwise generate a financial reward for the creator. You can support DOGE coin like a BOSS

Friday, March 26, 2010

varal ads: Get your butt seen



Get your butt in gear and join Buttmob, which will take place March 31, 2010. It will be the biggest gathering of butts ever seen on Facebook - and it's for a good cause.

Ogivly for COLORECTAL CANCER ASSOCIATION OF CANADA

www.getyourbuttseen.ca

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Levi Strauss Scores Viral Gold With Back-Flipping Jeans Clip

The hottest video on YouTube right now showcases a handful of agile hipsters effortlessly hopping, leaping and even back-flipping into their jeans.

Amateur videos of friends performing such stunts are common enough on YouTube, but this video is the work of professionals.

"We didn't want to overtly brand it as Levi's," said Erica Archambault, head of public relations at Levi Strauss, who confirmed Friday that the company is behind the viral video. "We wanted people to discover it on their own."

The acrobatic "Guys backflip into jeans" video (embedded, right) was created to promote Levi's line of zipperless, button-fly jeans.

First uploaded Monday, the video has clocked a staggering 1.4 million views this week, garnering it YouTube's coveted "most viewed" spot. It's the kind of viral hit that ad agencies and their clients have been cooking up ever since Burger King scratched out an internet hit with its subservient chicken website in 2004.

Levi Strauss worked with San Francisco-based advertising company Cutwater to produce the video, which was shot in March.

The amusing, eye-popping stunts seen in the two-minute short were done by a troupe of performers who relied on their break-dancing skills to catapult themselves into the jeans.

Archambault insists no special trickery was used during shooting. Each performer wore silk boxers and used heavily starched jeans to help complete the trick.

The video snagged a red flag by Gawker writer Nick Douglas, who pointed out Thursday that the video bore a striking resemblance to a viral video of a guy catching sunglasses on his face. That video, similarly posted anonymously on YouTube, was eventually revealed to be a marketing clip by creative teams Cutwater and Feed Company for <span style="font-weight:bold;">sunglasses company Ray-Ban.

Monday, July 23, 2007

Carlsberg viral spot!

Carlsberg and mentos (video)





AD Mathieu Cuvelier
CR Romain Pergeaux
director: wokprod

Friday, July 6, 2007

Wayne Rooney Nike Total90 Laser viral spot

The ad, for the new Total90 Laser boot, was shot at Nike's US headquarters in Oregon and shows Rooney drawing a target on to the screen of a camera, before jogging 50 yards away with a ball at his feet.

After juggling with the ball, Rooney drills it back at the camera, hitting the target with pin-point accuracy... and the camera falls to the ground under the weight of his fierce shot.