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Tracy Tuten

10 Top GEICO TV Commercials: Gecko, Cavemen, and Beyond - 0 views

  • If the phrase “an embarrassment of riches” can be applied to any advertising campaign, it can certainly be applied to the long running series of GEICO TV commercials. In the past 15 years, GEICO has made the pedestrian line “Fifteen minutes could save you 15 percent or more on car insurance” memorable through a shrewd combination of good, old-fashioned sheer repetition and one of the most prolific and varied advertising efforts in living memory. They’ve made advertising icons out of a Gecko and modern-day, still-living-among-us Cavemen, along with a veritable cavalcade of odd characters, near-celebrities, and even other consumer products. Here’s a brief sampling of some of the best GEICO TV work of the past decade, and then some. This is a completely unscientific sampling. And no googly-eyed “Kash” spots either. Just sit back and enjoy.1. Self-Licking DogThis is the proverbial “oldie but goodie.” Just the right amount of “eww” and a harbinger of things to come.2. Squirrel Hi-FiveWe always knew there was a great squirrel conspiracy. We just had no idea it went this far.3. Mrs. Butterworth“Someone’s placed a logo right over my face!” Simply classic.4. The First Gecko SpotIf not for the Screen Actors Guild strike of 1999, we may have never seen the birth of this endearing character voiced here by none other than Kelsey Grammer.5. Airport CavemanTo this day, perhaps the most enduring spot of the Caveman series. Sold lots of singles for the band Röyksopp, too.6. Into the wall"Listen, go-kart track, grocery store, those remote-controlled boats; when it comes to Mike Wallace, the story ends with me putting him in the wall."7. Butta and JamIt was this one or “Free Pie and Chips.” In the end, the Gecko’s “That’s a complete dramatization, of course, but you get my point,” puts this one over the top.8. Caveman Therapy OneTalia Shire! Brilliant casting, and who doesn’t love “My mother’s calling; I’ll put it on speaker”?9. Trust ExerciseTwo words: “Oh, dear.”10. Charlie DanielsBest of the new Robert Stack “Unsolved Mysteries” Parodies. “That’s how you do it, son.”
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    A review of our favorite Geico commercials courtesy of Miami Ad School. Videos included at the site. 
Tracy Tuten

A New High (or Low?) in the Innovation-Disruption Model - 1 views

  • A mirror hanging in the entryway of the ISP Sports office is more than just a mirror. It’s an animated billboard. The Geico gecko strolls across the top of the reflective panel touting their insurance brand. Then an ad for Pledge cleaning supplies pops up.
  • Were someone to step forward in order to lather and rinse or check their makeup, those ads would disappear offering the person a clear view of themselves and the room — just like a normal mirror.
  • It’s a bit of new technology that East Carolina University Pirate football fans will soon be accustomed to seeing. ISP, which handles the corporate sponsorships and broadcast rights for ECU athletics, partnered with a company called Mirrus this year to try out the new advertising medium, Vice President and General Manager Meghan Heinchon said.
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  • The corporate messages run on 15-second loops of video or a still image, displaying four advertisers per minute. Those can be changed by inserting a different memory card — like the type used in digital cameras and other media — into the mirror, Heinchon said.
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    Historically, advertising has worked by interrupting consumer activity and then introducing a message to continue to disrupt. The approach captures consumer attention (when it works) and aids in recall later. With social media, marketing has been more inbound than outbound with a move away from the interruption-disruption model, but a new form of out-of-home signage wants to use technology to improve on the old way of doing things. The innovation? Video mirrors from the Mirrus company. The mirrors have been installed in Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium on East Carolina University's campus - one of three universities to test the technology.   The promise is that the mirror is a mirror if someone approaches the mirror - but the potential is clearly there to interrupt activity to show an ad.  Is this a high or a low in advertising advances? Leave a comment to share your opinion. 
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    Students, tell me what you think... this is on Diigo and also on the blog.
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    found a video of this product in action: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ul7-sYNWDVQ
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    Thanks, Paul! Great addition to our discussion.
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    I think this is a new high for advertising advances. This is the one venue where we have been able to escape real time advertising and branding. This new form of out of home sinage is a innovative way to actively show ads, capture consumer attention and aid in recall after the fact. Paul, great video!
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    Who saw the mirrors yesterday? I actually felt they were not quite intrusive enough! I nearly didn't notice. Thoughts?
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    I liked them!! me and my friends were fixing hair and what-not, then an ad come on! I personally thought it was a GREAT idea.
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