Category Archives: News

Poster Boy Interview

via public ad campaign – which is kicking ass lately.

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You + Scenic America = Legal Precedent?

Have you or someone you know been affected by a digital billboard visible from your home? Ever been in a car accident due to the distraction of a digital billboard on the highway? If so, please contact Kate DeAngelis at (deangelis at scenic dot org). Scenic America is looking for a defendant they can assist. Scenic promises that the commitment will be minimal – in fact her words were “they do not need to do anything or pay any money.” The permit for the billboard must have been issued after October 1, 2007.

Scenic America does great work so please contact Kate if you can help!

By the way, if you’d like to get involved in removing illegal billboards in New York, don’t forget about illegalbillboards.org.

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Profits and Prophets

Mantis: Profits and Prophets

Mantis: Profits and Prophets

Mantis, from Wooster Collective (thanks Marisa)

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Photoshopped advertising

They’re all retouched…

via flickr

from epoxy on flickr

see also – our post on Detouch

(Thanks Kelli)

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Online Ad/Promo/Content Map

ad promo content map

Ironically, from an article titled 10 things that won’t survive the recession

via “The Triumph of Bullshit” on Tumblr

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Mixed Messages

stock crash

14th Street, New York City, January 8th.

I keep hearing of more and more billionaires killing themselves.

End times…

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“The Dog Dies” all over Los Angeles


via TomorrowMusuem via via Cinema Blend

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More Bad Calls from the NY MTA

The New York MTA, in collaboration with CBS Outdoor, wants to cover the windows of subway cars with advertising. This story at the NYTimes Cityroom blog is peppered with rationalizations from the MTA. Here’s one of my favorites:

“[T]ransit officials say that advertising revenue is not the main motivation for the program.”

(Transit officials, not CBS Outdoor.)

They say the primary motivator is “to reduce what officials call ‘scratchiti,’ or scratched graffiti on the windows…. Scrachitti is a major vandalism problem in the subways, costing the system more than $2.5 million a year to replace the glass and covering it with protective Mylar”

So the MTA would like to replace one form of graffiti with another, from Coke. The result is essentially the same, messages which cover the windows. Except the MTA has an aesthetic leaning toward the imagery of Coke as opposed to a few scratches that read “ZERO.” The Coke ads would be on every window and cover the windows entirely. Which is more obtrusive?

This must be the least creative, most ironic way of dealing with the “scratchiti problem” I can imagine. The MTA seems to be bending over backwards to find new ways and new excuses to work with outdoor advertising companies.

Paul J. Fleuranges, a spokesman for New York City Transit, said the agency hoped that the film, called Scotchcal, would cut down on the frequency of scratchitti.

Graffiti is all about innovation! The Scotchcal can be written on and torn off the same way the vinyl ads in the subway station are right now. The only silver lining is that Poster Boy will have a new forum and material to work with.

What can you do?

Railfan is encouraging riders to email the MTA and let them know what you think – this is a pilot program after all. (I suggest mailing them your junk mail as well.) He suggests emailing the above image, as the MTA didn’t quite get it at first.

What else? We can demand a moratorium on new public advertising as was done in San Francisco last year.

But but but, the city is broke!

“But the city is broke and this is a way it can make money,” you might be thinking. As I’ve mentioned before, advertising creeping into more public spaces should be off the table as a way to generate revenue. Overwhelming public spaces with advertising decreases livability – Times Square is fun to look at, but no one wants to live there. The city can do plenty that will increase revenue while increasing livability by increasing fines for illegal advertising and finally enforcing billboard regulations as well as increasing parking meter rates to raise $5 billion, just as an example.

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YouTube – 80s Estonian Meat Commercial

This comes via Merit Karise a professor of media in Estonia who says this is “the best commercial ever made.” I’ll admit, it does have a way of sticking in your head.

The YouTube user who uploaded it explains, “An intense meat commercial from Soviet-era Estonia. I’m told that the words “beef” and “chicken” are what is repeated throughout.”

YouTube – 80s Estonian Meat Commercial

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DeBeers attempts sleazy take down of parody ad

As you probably heard, on November 12th a group of artists and activists unveiled a “Special Edition” of the New York Times dated “July 4th, 2009” and outlining the end of the war in iraq, a national tax base for schools, and free public universities, among other things. In addition to the print paper, an online version has been posted at http://nytimes-se.com.

The South African Diamond conglomerate, DeBeers, has complained about the below ad (gif version) appearing on the nytimes-se.com website.


Certainly one wouldn’t expect DeBeers to be pleased; they’ve tried to separate themselves from the blood diamond problem for years (an angle the parody ad actually plays on).

However, the ad is, to quote the Electronic Frontier Foundation’s Corynne McSherry “a clearly parodic ad on a clearly parodic website.” But in an attempt to sidestep the First Amendment and other legal protections for parody, DeBeers is trying to intimidate the domain name registrar into shutting down the nytimes-se.com domain name. It’s already a stretch, as DeBeers has no connection to the nytimes-se.com name, which may be why they didn’t use the standard protocol of the Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy and went straight to bullying the registrar.

The nytimes-se.com domain has effectively been put at risk by DeBeers overreaching. The Electronic Frontier Foundation has stepped in and responded to DeBeers’ complaint, and informed the registrar of it’s rights. We’ll see what happens…

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NY Times Prank

This is why we’ve been a bit quiet lately.


New York Times Special Edition Video News Release – Nov. 12, 2008 from H Schweppes on Vimeo.

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The Great 2008 Political Ads That Weren’t Political Ads

Better do this before tomorrow. These are some of the favorites I’ve seen in the past few months. Post your favorites in the comments…

From Jon Winet’s Electoral College project (now on Add-Art):

Best inadvertent No on Prop 8 in California video (wait for it)

Gay Scientists discover the Christian Gene

Batman for Mayor – the posters

Batman in the Debates

Just because you saw it already doesn’t mean it’s not great; Wassup 2008

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Hey guess what?

There’s a national election today. What? A hundred other websites didn’t tell you?

P.S. Bring your book in case there are lines.

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Drunk Depressed Penguins

Right… so the penguins are loosing their habitat, so what is the solution? DRINK!

Denial and commerce: it is the American way.

Absolute Cooling

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We are not an advertising agency

I get a few emails a year from people asking us for rates. I know it says “Advertising Agency” in the name, but some people just don’t read any further. I suppose I should be honored that our parody of the industry gets past some people. Usually I ask them to have a closer look at the site and make sure they have the right person. Most never write back. Some politely apologize. This one seemed a little stressed and got really mad…

From: Stephanie Tate
Subject: From AAA Contact Form: Ad rates
Date: Thursday, October 23, 2008, 4:54 PM

Hello,
Can you please send me your ad rates for street teams?
Thanks,
Steph

From: Steve Lambert
Subject: Re: From AAA Contact Form: Ad rates
To: Stephanie Tate
Date: Thursday, October 23, 2008, 5:04 PM

please look at our site a second time.

Home

Steve

—————————-
Steve Lambert, CEO
the Anti-Advertising Agency

From: Stephanie Tate
Subject: Re: From AAA Contact Form: Ad rates
To: Steve Lambert
Date: Thursday, October 23, 2008, 7:41 PM

The page keeps crashing. Can you just tell me your ad rates? I don’t have time for these little games.
[note: there were no other reports of problems with the site]

From: Steve Lambert
Subject: Re: From AAA Contact Form: Ad rates
To: Stephanie Tate
Date: Thursday, October 23, 2008, 8:24 PM

I really think you need to better understand what we do. You’ll learn you’re actually wasting my time.

Steve

—————————-
Steve Lambert, CEO
the Anti-Advertising Agency

From: Stephanie Tate
Subject: Re: From AAA Contact Form: Ad rates
To: Steve Lambert
Date: October 24, 2008 6:19:40 PM EDT

Wow! Well, for your information, it isn’t clear on your website what you offer and I was looking for clarification not arrogance. I can’t believe you had the nerve to speak to me like that. EXTREMELY UNPROFESSIONAL! I would never work with you. Good bye!

From: Stephanie Tate
Subject: Re: From AAA Contact Form: Ad rates
To: Steve Lambert
Date: October 24, 2008 6:23:15 PM EDT

Don’t bother responding to my previous email, you have been blocked. Thanks for nothing!!! You have wasted my time!!

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