Category Archives: News

The BLF’s Newest Latest

BLF at ATT

Our friends over at the Billboard Liberation Front have posted their latest improvement.

The fun doesn’t stop there. An excerpt rom the BLF’s press release:

The Billboard Liberation Front today announced a major new advertising improvement campaign executed on behalf of clients AT&T and the National Security Agency. Focusing on billboards in the San Francisco area, this improvement action is designed to promote and celebrate the innovative collaboration of these two global communications giants.

“This campaign is an extraordinary rendition of a public-private partnership,” Read on…

Hats off to the BLF! And if you haven’t seen it already, be sure to check out their difinitive Art and Science of Billboard Improvement how-to article.

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Google Adwords Judo

A reader named Greg emailed with a firefox plugin he wrote that, instead of blocking ads, automatically clicks on all Google Adwords for you. As Greg explains:

It is incredibly simple, it simply clicks on adsense advertisments as you surf. You don’t get any money for that, but it is like giving money to every site you visit.

It could really impact the trust advertisers have in all ‘cost per click models.’ And it could easily be extended to any other advertising network. And best of all, I do not see legal reason that could stop me or anyone to have this extension active while I surf. (I can click where ever I want !)

I love hackers.

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James Howard Kunstler on Public Space

In this video James Howard Kunstler picks apart urban development in the United States, getting a few laughs in the process. In talking about creating “places that people care about” this struck me:

“The public realm is the physical manifestation of the public good. And when you degrade the public realm you will automatically degrade the quality of your civic life and the character of all the enactments of your public life and communal life that take place there.”

He also refers to a good public space as an activated space like an “outdoor public room” where “people just go because it’s pleasurable to be there.”

So when public spaces are peppered with guerrilla advertising – legal or not – how does that make for a great room? How does advertising in public space contribute to the manifestation of the public good?

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On Propaganda Today (NYC)

Where The Truth Lies

Where the Truth Lies: A Symposium on Propaganda Today
Friday February 15th, 2008
The Graduate Center
City University of New York
365 Fifth Avenue at 34th

Speakers include: David Brancaccio, Milton Glaser, Maro Chermayeff, Stephen Duncombe, Sam Ewen, Stuart Ewen, Jeffrey Graham, Julia Hobsbawm, and Eugene Secunda.

As the presidential race shifts into high gear, Americans are inundated with propaganda. Where does truth end and “spin” begin? Madison Avenue veterans and other media experts offer some perspective in Where the Truth Lies: A Symposium on Propaganda Today, presented by the School of Visual Arts (SVA) in cooperation with the PhD Programs in History and Sociology of the Graduate Center, City University of New York (CUNY).

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Urban Visions Panel at CCA (SF)

San Francisco Arts Commission Art on Market Street Program presents

San Francisco Urban Visions Panel led by artists (and Anti-Advertising Agency members) Packard Jennings and Steve Lambert at California College of the Arts (CCA) in San Francisco.

talk-announcement-500.jpg

Co-sponsored with CCA’s Graduate Fine Arts Program and Livable City

Date: Monday, February 4, 2008 at 7 PM
Location: Timken Lecture Hall at California College of the Arts
1111 Eighth Street in San Francisco.
The event is open to the public and free of charge
Read More »

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…The greatest love of all

Reality TV has never been anything but a guilty pleasure for me. In high school I shunned my friends for watching the first season of Survivor and at home, if someone walked in on me watching The Real World I would change the channel as quickly as possible. But like it, secretly like it, or not, reality TV is a stronghold in American entertainment today, and is, most frequently, about encouraging conformity, competition and “survival of the fittest.” But what about those who aren’t “the fittest?” Read More »

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Light Criticism in ModArt Europe

Light Criticism was mentioned in a ModArt Magazine, along with the GRL, Jason Eppink, and Krzysztof Wodiczko. The story is called “Windows and Wallpapering: Questions about Art, Technology and Poetic Interference” by Elizabeth Haines and you can read most of it at the F@ Lab site.

ModArt

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Monsieur Chop Chop

While Packard and Steve were dreaming of an awesome future on the bus stops and billboards of San Francisco, someone else was dreaming up much bloodier situations on the bus stops and billboards of London! An anonymous graffiti hero known as THE DECAPITATOR has been liberally choppin’ off heads, or at least, covering up the heads with bloody neck stump illustrations, from gratuitous ads down on the streets that Banksy made famous. Instead of spray paint and stencils, it appears the Decapitator is using some awesome Photoshop skills and wheat-paste.

Robespierre would be proud.pimmsdecap1.jpg

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Arguing From Both Sides

Sao Paolo’s Billboard Ban is about to have it’s first birthday. The ban went into effect and remains, despite threats of multiple lawsuits and cries about the loss of (corporate) free speech issued this time last year. For example:

But advertising and business groups regard the legislation as injurious to society and an affront to their professions. They say that free expression will be inhibited, jobs will be lost and consumers will have less information on which to base purchasing decisions. They also argue that streets will be less safe at night with the loss of lighting from outdoor advertising.

“This is a radical law that damages the rules of a market economy and respect for the rule of law,” said Marcel Solimeo, chief economist of the Commercial Association of São Paulo, which has 32,000 members. “We live in a consumer society and the essence of capitalism is the availability of information about products.”

Strong words. And that bit about the safety lighting provided by advertising? Perhaps desperate words from an industry clinging to it’s grip on public space.

Yet a few months later Sao Paolo’s lack of advertising became a selling point in this commercial for British Movie Channel, Sky Movies. I love this commercial – I would just change the ending a bit.

Yes, freedom from advertising can be bought through a premium movie channel, but we still can’t avoid advertising in public space. Unless you live in Sao Paolo.

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Packard Jennings in NYT

AAA member, Packard Jennings, who worked on the Bus Stop Ad Project, had a project on the front page of the New York Times on monday. The article discussed shopdropping and referenced the Anti-Advertising Agency’s shopdropping workshops for the PeopleProducts123 project.

Update: Here’s some tv news coverage, with our friends from the Center for Tactical Magic:

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Our Brands, Ourselves

Thanks to R.Walker, I came across the following post by Paul Lukas, who’s excellent ‘zine, Beer Frame, I discovered in my first year of college. Paul puts together some compelling arguments for keeping logos off team sports uniforms and in doing so, brings up some other interesting ideas about commercialism and our culture. His latest project, Uni-Watch, “deconstructs the finer points of sports uniforms in obsessive and excruciating detail” – the internet is an amazing place isn’t it? – Steve Lambert

Corporate Flag.jpg

Two Sundays ago, Bryan posted this photo and complained about all the ACC logos visible therein. This led to a lengthy back-and-forth in the comments section about logo creep — mostly about swooshes and other maker’s marks, not about conference logos. The discussion, which I did not take part in (I was at a bar watching football and caught up on the comments later), featured several arguments and analogies that I hear again and again regarding logo creep — arguments that are, frankly, way off-base. Some similar arguments came up yesterday regarding Michael Jordan’s taped-over Adidas logo.

As you all know, I hate logo creep and see it as a symptom of a much bigger problem (i.e., the encroachment of advertising into public space). I know some of you feel differently, and I also know that to a certain extent this is generational: I grew up in an era when there were no manufacturer’s logos on uniforms; many of you have grown up in an era when such logos are ubiquitous. But even if we disagree on whether logo creep is a problem, we can at least try to keep the debate on a logical plane and not make straw man arguments or apples/oranges comparisons.

With that in mind, I’m going to try to address many of the arguments that came up two Sundays ago, along with some other arguments I frequently hear. I know some of you are tired of this topic, but you’ll have to deal with it for one more day — I wanted to get all my thoughts on the matter in one place, and that place is here.

Read More »

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Charlie Brooker’s 10 Biggest Cocks in Advertising

Yes, “Cock” is in the headline. I never said this was a family blog.

A friend just sent these two bits of simple genius. You probably don’t want to watch this too loud at work, depending on where you work. I can’t make any sense over what the BBC does and doesn’t bleep. Also the hysterical laughter might be disrupting to your co-workers.

The 10 Biggest Cocks in Advertising

The 10 Biggest Cocks and She-Cocks in Advertising:

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Marketers, the Military, and Me

You may have heard already about the A&E billboard beaming audio to the street in New York City. A speaker mounted above the billboard sends ultrasound waves from 7 stories up to a specific location below. Because it’s highly directional, for people outside the target area it’s hardly, if at all, audible. Here’s a demonstration video made by the marketing company:

The “Audio Spotlight” technology has been written up in Gawker (who’s writer was thoroughly creeped out), AdAge, and as the subject of tech pieces in many media outlets. It was only WFMU that made the connection with military technology.

Having just watched the 2nd episode of Jon Ronson’s BBC Documentary, Crazy Rulers of the World (pt1 on google video or torrent all 3 parts) based on his book The Men Who Stare at Goats, this directed audio technology was fresh in my mind. Here’s that clip – the audio stuff kicks in at 45 seconds:

Now before you start connecting the dots, the Audio Spotlight was developed at MIT in Boston, while the LRAD (Long Range Acoustic Device) seen in the Ronson video was developed by American Technology in San Diego. But they do essentially accomplish the same thing.

Without sounding like the conspiracy nuts Ronson features in his books, I do find the overlap with military techniques and advertising techniques noteworthy, if not amusing. Quite simply both parties are interested in “affecting behavior” as American Technology’s website puts it. And what kind of world do we live in when the same techniques used in “PSYOP” missions and “Detainee Operations” (see American Technology’s site) are used to promote television shows about ghosts?

One of the things I personally find fascinating is how people justify bringing new forms invasive advertising into the world. The inventor, Joe Pompei, who in video appears to be a well-meaning 30 something, sees this as a solution to noise pollution. He claims, “the whole idea is to spare other people.” I think he’s right. In cases where loudspeakers broadcast sound in every direction, needlessly, the audio spotlight is the solution hands-down. But that’s not the case with the A&E billboard. The A&E billboard introduces audio to an environment that had none – but supposedly it’s ok because it’s not blasting in every direction. Just one.

In response to criticism about just how creepy it is to have advertising messages more or less beamed into your head in public space, Pompei had this to say, “There’s going to be a certain population sensitive to it. But once people see what it does and hear for themselves, they’ll see it’s effective for getting attention.” What? Oh Joe, you’re right, they don’t understand. Once those complainers realize that it’s “effective at getting attention” then they’ll see.

Actually Joe, the problem is it already got their attention.

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Postcards from Our Awesome Future

Bart Image

Packard Jennings and I recently asked architects, city planners, and transportation engineers, “what would you do if you didn’t have to worry about budgets, beauracracy, politics, or physics?” Ideas from these conversations were then merged, developed, and perhaps mildly exaggerated to create a series of 6 posters for the San Francisco Arts Commission’s Art on Market Street Program (official press release, archive of past posters).

Check out the posters online or on Market Street in San Francisco through March 14th 2008.

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Facebook Business Solutions

Emily’s been working on a piece about Facebook’s creepy Beacon software (you probably heard about it in the news). But in the midst of the controversy Facebook has taken the marketing of social networking profiles to a whole new low with facebookbusinesssolutions.com. Did they think we wouldn’t notice?

It starts with Facebook Surf and goes downhill from there:

Facebook Surf
Keep track of your potential customer base by closely monitoring the web pages they visit on a daily basis. Utilize this information by combining it with Facebook Social Ads to then market your product directly to specific users who may be interested.

What will it take for people to finally stand up and say enough? Perhaps Facebook Recycle:

Facebook Recycle

Thanks to Dan Provost and friends at InternetFamo.us. P.S. We have bridges for sale.

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