Tag Archive for 'youtube'

Wario shakes YouTube › Excellent media use

23
Sep
08

wii.jpg

Seriously one of the smartest online ad I’ve seen in a while. The most amazing is that all the elements on the page are still functional even after they’ve been stacked at the bottom!

Tip hat: Alexandre MOUQUET, FullSIX Paris

Gimme more pork and beans

05
Sep
08

Weezer’s video of the song “Pork and Beans” is all about Virality. And it is viral itself, because it gathers just about every YouTube superstar out there and if you are one of the millions of people who saw these blockbusters, you will find it funny. You can download the video here if you’d like.

Go stupid, go crazy seems to be the moto. This is the kind of stuff that either impresses us or makes us laugh, not done with actors but with real people. The formula seems to work with either spontaneous or enacted videos.

Viral videos are a consequence of the liberation of the web, which began with the creation of free platforms that allowed the mass creation of written, composed, filmed, photographed work. Today’s users spend millions of hours viewing stuff other people uploaded. Maybe it is just a matter of human nature. We like to laugh at crazy stuff, at the ridicule. We even laugh at our own mistakes and life’s bloopers.

This is an ever growing spiral of user-generated information, and it’s getting better. Users are finally seeing what they really want and the one way information flux era is behind us.

And this is helping the Web in becoming more like us and a better place to hang around.

Say it with links: Jimmy Hendrix, Ultimate Google, Rubik’s Cube and a lot of AJAX

03
Sep
08

say it with links

If you are a webdesigner and can’t find inspiration tonight, here a list a “100 beautiful blog design” gathered by hongkiat.com. I call it a complete list covering the importance of a great web interface: colors, font, attractive logo, text alignment, effective navigation, inspiratio, etc.

This link will be more appropriate for the developer, here James Lao build a script that helps you building an Ajax powered Shopping cart. You can download the source codes or just demo it if you are curious.

If you like the iTunes coverflow, and want to reproduce it on your site. On this site, you will find 10 great javascript sources to download. Those scripts are light and very nicely done.

Okay, i was really bored during Labor Day weekend… i was looking a site where it could explain how to solve a Rubik’s Cube. Once you get it, you can impress your co-workers on Monday.

This link will be very useful for the Google fanatics. If you want to become the ultimate Google user, this complete list of tips and tricks will make your life easier.

And to finish, if you are nostalgic, Youtube stores an awesome compilation of artistic videos of the greatest moments in Art (with the A Capitale). So to make sure you click this link, you will find John Coltrane performing ‘My Favourite Things’, Ella Fitzgerald duets with Dinah Shore, Oasis and Madonna’s first live performance, Jack Kerouac reading from On the Road! And more!

“Small” improvements, great opportunities

27
Aug
08

New features in YouTube and Flickr enhance user experience and open new possibilities for advertisers.

In YouTube, for instance, now we can create stories with multiple plot choices, just like Samsung Canada did in a brilliant way (see above clip). Hats off for them for pioneering!

In Flickr, adding notes to pictures is pretty easy, and now advertisers can scan photo streams in search of images featuring their products, thus enhancing product placement and providing info on those products, prices and links to specific company website areas about that specific product, one step away from conversion!

So, it’s time to rewrite the chapter on online advertising. Now we all can explore the possibility of having still or filmed interactive catalogs on at least these two major Internet properties.

Drop your cable subscription!

11
Aug
08

Mad Men (Emmy’s favorite this year, and also mine), Family Guy, It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, The Office, The Daily Show, The Colbert Report, Monk, Arrested Development, The Simpsons, Saturday Night Live and more great shows available on Hulu as full episodes, full-screen, in some kind of HD, with very limited commercial breaks. And even some great movies like Requiem for a Dream, Sideways, Lost in Translation… I’m addicted.

I guess that makes about a bit more than half of the US American online video consumers happy:

pop.gif

Hulu, a joint venture between NBC and News Corp. offers full-length shows and movies but also popular clips to snack on, YouTube style.

PS: Probably only available if you live in the US of A, sorry guys.

Viral Videos - Time And Space

01
Aug
08

I came across this video on my Podcasts and I have to be honest - I loved it. I just couldn’t understand why. As you know, viral takes many forms on the online world, but two specific forms have been growing in a substantial rate - the “experience”-driven viral video and the contraption viral video.
How can we define each? For starts, the “experience”-driven viral video are videos such as the one I posted first. Like this we have the picture-a-day videos, for example, who’ve had quite some air time on Youtube. They range from face pictures to show the evolution of man in age, pictures of pregnancy to show the baby’s growth or pictures of the weight loss attained in a determined number of days. The main focus of these videos is simple - shortening time (and distances, in some cases). By displaying the changes / experiences / experiments of certain user, always accompanied by a really emotional song, spawning a considered time span, virality on these types of videos is attained by displaying a concept so difficult to percept on a daily-basis - how time affects us all.

Contraption viral videos are quite reminiscent on the Looney Tunes Coyote Acme contraptions. The father of this type of contraptions is Rube Goldberg, a North-American cartoonist with a big talent for creating systems that do really simple tasks in really complicated ways. These contraptions are usually comprised by a never ending complex system, made with common or uncommon items that via a small impulse are all activated in a methodical and studied path. They usually serve such purposes as switching on a light or creaming an egg (Cadbury’s free advertising anyone?). What is the interest with these types of videos? Well, not only are the systems a display of skill from the users who create them, as they are a display of applying complexity to mundane tasks that everyone take for granted. And they’re funny to watch!
So marketeers, how does this relate to you? Simple - you want to do viral videos? Then think on two concepts - time and chindogu. Always consider time as a corner stone of your campaigns - how to apply the fear of aging to your brand and how to turn it emotional. And the chindogu principal is always a good method to not only exercise your creativity, but also a method into finding the solutions towards problems that your consumer might have.

#: Is your brand ready to stream itself?

29
Jul
08

mustang.jpg

UPDATE: On August 15, 2008 The Trendwatch received a cease and desist letter from the lawyers of a company named Fricken, which states that Fricken owns a trademark for the term ‘brandstream’ so that neither The Trendwatch nor Fullsix are allowed to use that term. I’ve edited the post accordingly.

According to a Universal McCann report, content consumed outside of websites has increased by 153% in the last 9 months. Furthermore, 53% of online users are consuming content outside of a publisher’s site (using widgets, RSS readers, social networks and mobile devices). A pretty good example is Ford’s Digital Snippets: YouTube videos, images from Flickr, extensive usage of tags, RSS…

Just by looking at what’s happening in our (new gorgeous) Fullsix office in New York, we’re helping four of our biggest clients to dive into this. And most of the other ones are convinced that they should develop their own content outside of their brand site. So based on this very unscientific poll, I would say that YES, brands are ready!

Do you sometimes promise yourself that one day, soon, you will stop working in marketing/advertising?

28
Jul
08

Do the events and characters depicted in this hilarious video look familiar? Yeah, me too.

Sell out your family, do some product placement on YouTube

30
Jun
08

Sprint, the US cellphone network, launched today a pretty hilarious campaign that gives you the opportunity to ruin your precious video on YouTube to advertise Samsung’s new Instinct phone. Twenty bucks to make for the first 1,000 participants and $10,000 for the winner. A brilliant and shameless exploitation of user-generated content.

via Creativity’s blog.

How Youtube taught me how to repair my VCR.

16
May
08

Following my last article concerning the upcoming generation, I’ve decided to dedicate smaller insights into each of the items pointed out. I will start with no specific order. Let’s first approach New Media Entertainment and the educational process in the new generation.
When we mention NME, we mean the new culture vehicles and entertainment centers that are growing as a fundamental source of information and trend setters for the upcoming generation. More specifically, let’s talk about three examples – Youtube, Podcasts and Videogames. Continue reading ‘How Youtube taught me how to repair my VCR.’




The TrendWatch:


The TrendWatch is the collective postings of some of the FullSIX Group’s designers, strategists, and consultants on new media and marketing trends. It is meant to be an impromptu think-tank, and is a way for us to share theories and beliefs about how we think communication and connectivity is evolving.

We work for The FullSIX Group; a leading full service marketing agency with digital DNA. From our 15 international offices with over 600 employees, we constantly embrace and encourage innovation to make integrated marketing and communication campaigns that are more accountable and efficient for our clients.


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