Devido ao crescimento da rejeição do público em relação aos anúncios publicitários, surge uma tendência de criar novos formatos de comunicação e novos modelos de distribuição que reduzam a imagem de “intruso” na vida do cidadão. Longe da pretensão de criticar, incentivar ou prever o futuro deste movimento, este blog é um arquivo de matérias publicadas na internet sobre esses programas, vídeos, jogos, curtas, sites, seriados, que também são conhecidos como: propaganda.

Sunday, August 20, 2006

MasterCard, Unilever Try New Long-Form Ad Format: Shorts
Aug 18, 2006 - MediaPost

IN THE LATEST EFFORT TO devise new, more engaging advertising formats, two Turner networks are offering ad-supported movie shorts backed separately by MasterCard and Unilever. On TNT, MasterCard will be weaved into a story about a high-speed adventure with a high-profile purchase using one of its credit cards. Called "Late: A MasterCard Mini-Drama," the two-minute cinematic vignette premieres during the film "Runaway Jury" on Saturday.

Then this fall on TBS, comes the Unilever-sponsored series of 65, two-and-a-half-minute shorts chronicling the life and loves of a vivacious twenty-something female. Known as "lovebites," the shorts premiere Sept. 13 after "Sex and the City."

The content dovetails with each of the networks' calling cards, TNT's drama maypole and TBS' comedy focus. The MasterCard concept was cooked up by its media agency GSD&M, while JWT's branded entertainment arm was involved in the development of "lovebites," which is sponsored by client Unilever's Sunsilk.
Turner is not the only programmer experimenting with "ad shorts." The new CW network promises minis it calls "content wraps" where sponsored stories could unfold over the course of an evening, perhaps in three installments.

The mini-movie's storyline involves a man blazing around with a pile of cash on the passenger seat. The action then includes a purchase with a MasterCard and a dramatic briefcase exchange amidst a crowd. The short ends with the TNT and MasterCard logos on the screen and the tagline "Saving the Drama" - a link to TNT's "We Know Drama" mantra.

TBS' ambitious "lovebites" 13-week series (with Paul Reiser as a producer) follows twenty-something "Katie," described as "a witty, spirited girl...going through a quarter-life crisis." Over the course of the 65 shorts, Katie's comedic exploits involve her new boyfriend Max along with her sex life, career, friends, fashion and hair -- hence the Sunsilk sponsorship.

1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

That show lovebites is hysterical, such a great advertising concept-- I just wish it was a little longer!

5:49 PM

 

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