Favorite Commercial
After I viewed most of the Ads (new and old) I picked Apple’s 1984 Mac Ad as one of the greatest, even though the budget was $900,000, one of the most expensive advertisements in television’s history. This ad was the birth of Apple; Steve Jobs thought that it would generate a buzz for the Macintosh without even featuring the product itself, this was a genius idea from one of the greatest thinkers ever. The storyboard was amazing, from hundreds of men listening to Big Brother on a huge screen to the model running into the room and destroying the screen with a baseball bat and freeing the men from Big Brothers grasp.
I read online that the response to the ad was so strong that Apple bought months of ad time on ScreenVision, a company that sold ad time in movie theaters. Some owners reaired the ad for months after Apple’s contract ran out with ScreenTime because they were so enamored with the commercial. Great ad and great concept.
Carlton Draught – Big Ad Commercial
Carlton Draught, the Australian beer. The Big Ad is a larger than life commercial.
This ad was a genius idea by George Patterson and Partners (Young & Rubicam) of Melbourne, Australia. Big Ad parodies the visual style of battle sequences used in notables movies like Lord of the Rings, the story is about two battle teams. In the end one group looked like a man and the other as a pot of Carlton Draught beer. The ad was catchy, interesting, musical, very dramatic with a touch of humor in it.
This was considered an expensive ad, but it entertained people, and the ad took 7 months to launch. The agency used viral marketing techniques to promote the ad before it was broadcast on television. A half a million people watched the ad on the web. Within 24 hours after release, the “Big Ad” had been downloaded 162,000 times; two weeks later, it had been seen by over one million viewers in 132 countries making it the biggest viral Australian beer launch in history.
The “Big Ad” has since received over 30 awards globally. But it was reported that given its popularity, it didn’t increase the shareholder value to match the hype and popularity.
Enjoy “The Big Ad”