2009年5月11日 星期一

2009年5月7日 星期四

product ads history- CHANEL N'5, part5


...to the beach scene brights of sandy yellow and dark sky blue, proving CHANEL N°5 is perfect for any location.


Canadian actress and fashion model Estella Warren stole the show for CHANEL N°5 in 1999 in this sensational photograph by Jean Paul Goude.



Pretty in pink: here's Estella again for CHANEL in 2000.



In 2004, it was Nicole Kidman's turn to become the face of CHANEL.
The Academy Award-winning Australian actress starred in a campaign of television and print ads with Rodrigo Santoro, directed by Moulin Rouge's Baz Luhrmann to promote the fragrance during the holiday seasons of 2004, 2005, 2006, and 2008.


In 2009, French actress Audrey Tautou is the new star of CHANEL.

It is so lucky for me to find the advertising history of CHANEL N°5, as it has been a classic. all of its ads are so classy and they can show the style of print ad design at that moment too. It is a really good study I think. Moreover, it find my 2 favourite actress Nicole Kidman and Audrey Tautou as the spokeperson. I love the brand even more!!

product ads history- CHANEL N'5, part4


Here she is clutching the fragrance for the 1996 campaign...

...And epitomising sexy and sensual on a chaise longue.
In 1997, four pictures from a silkscreen print by Andy Warhol were used to promote the fragrance, each in different colours.
From the sensual evening hues of black and mauve...

...to the fresh countryside shades of green and blue...

product ads history- CHANEL N'5, part3

English supermodel, actress and icon of Swinging Sixties London, Jean Shrimpton became the face of CHANEL's 1971 campaign.
Possessing some of the gamine features that also made a huge success of the younger Twiggy, Shrimpton (nicknamed 'The Shrimp') appeared on the covers of Vogue, Harper's Bazaar, and Vanity Fair magazines.

Two-time César Award-winning, BAFTA Award-nominated and Academy Award-nominated French actress Catherine Deneuve became the face of CHANEL N°5in 1972.
Deneuve earned worldwide recognition for her portrayal of beautiful ice maidens for directors including Luis Buñuel and Roman Polanski.


Here's Catherine again in 1973, photographed by Richard Avedon for CHANEL.



In 1993, French actress and fashion model Carole Bouquet took the helm for CHANEL. You may also recognise Carole from her role as the Bond girl Melina Havelock in For Your Eyes Only.


product ads history- CHANEL N'5, part2


French fashion model Marie-Helene Arnaud became the face of CHANEL in 1961.
The poster reads: 'Even your most discriminating customers are never 'just looking, thank you' when they see your prominent display of CHANEL N°5 perfume. Now as always display CHANEL and you'll sell CHANEL. The reason: Every woman alive loves CHANEL N°5.



Academy Award-nominated and Golden Globe-winning American actress Ali MacGraw became the face for CHANEL N°5 in 1966.
This poster for The Spell of CHANEL for the Bath reads: 'Go ahead. Give in. Feel the silkiness of CHANEL N°5 Oil For The Bath. Let CHANEL After-Bath Oil Spray whisper over your skin. Then exhilarating splashes of Eau de Cologne and a soft cloud of Bath Powder. This is the spell of CHANEL N°5. Eau de Cologne, from 3.50. Oil For The Bath, 3oz, 5.00, 6 oz, 10.00. After Bath Oil Spray and Bath Powder 5.00 each.'

American supermodel Lauren Hutton, famous for her roles in An American Gigolo and Once Bitten, became the face of CHANEL in 1968.


The beautiful American swimsuit model, Cheryl Tiegs, is photographed by Jerome Ducrot for CHANEL in 1969.

product history- CHANEL N'5, part1


The woman behind it all: Mademoiselle Chanel looks up towards her first - and most iconic fragrance - CHANEL N°5.
Lithograph by Sem, 1921.


Here Coco Chanel is pictured in her flat at the Ritz Hotel in Paris, 1937. This is the first piece of advertising to be featured in Harper's Bazaar for CHANEL N°5.
The poster reads: 'Madame Gabrielle Chanel is above all an artist in living. Her dresses, her perfumes, are created with a faultless instinct for drama. Her Perfume N°5 is like the soft music that underlies the playing of a love scene. It kindles the imagination, indelibly fixes the scene in the memories of the players.'


At the end of the war: American GIs are pictured here outside the CHANEL store on Rue Cambon in 1945. Could they be looking for a little something to take back home to their wives and girlfriends?




American model and actress Suzy Parker worked with the greats in her film career, starring opposite the likes of Cary Grant and Fred Astaire.
Parker became the signature face of Coco CHANEL in the 1950s and Coco herself became a close confidante, giving her advice when it came to men and money, as well as creating numerous CHANEL outfits for her.
Parker was the first model to earn $200 per hour and $100,000 per year.

2009年4月16日 星期四

Controversial Adverts


Dolce & Gabbana - Same-sex kissing? Guaranteed to draw objections. The ASA received 89 complaints about this TV ad which showed a brief kiss between two men. Complaints about its general suitability were not upheld although the regulator decided that it should not be shown around programmes aimed specifically at children.


Pot Noodle - A man meets mates in a bar, trying to conceal a large brass horn he has in his trousers. Cue numerous puns and sexual innuendo ending with the slogan: "Have you got the Pot Noodle horn?" Over 620 objectors refused to see the joke. Complainants said the ads were tasteless and offensive however the ASA decided that the commercial was fine for post-watershed broadcast.


Mazda - In these commercials, mannequins are aroused by a driving experience. The advert concludes with a voiceover saying: "The all new Mazda 5. Surprisingly stimulating". The ASA received 425 complaints from viewers who felt the ads were demeaning to women. However, the ASA said the ads humorously presented the absurd notion that an inanimate object could be turned on in the first place. The complaints were not upheld.


Crazy Frog - The ubiquitous Jamster ads drew 298 complaints in 2005 for a variety of reasons. The commercials were annoying, the frog's genitalia was visible and the adverts, which appealed directly to children, did not make it sufficiently clear that in buying a single ringtone, mobile users would be subscribing to a long-term contract. The ASA ordered that a post-9pm restriction be applied to the ads in future.


Fanta - Incurring the wrath of parents everywhere was this commercial showing a number of people drinking and then spitting out the soft drink. The ASA received 272 complaints from those concerned about the effect on children's manners. It agreed that some might copy the practice and a post-9pm restriction was applied to the adverts.

Famous Advertising Slogans



Heineken: 'Refreshes the parts other beers cannot reach' - 
For over 30 years, this was Heineken's main advertising slogan in the UK until the campaign ended in 2005. Memorable ads include the My Fair Lady spoof; after a sip of Heineken, a posh woman is transformed into a Cockney: "The wort-ah in Ma-jork-ah don't taste like wot it ort'ah!" Genius.


Orange: 'The future's bright. The future's Orange' - Advertising agency WCRS created the Orange slogan and its hugely successful advertising campaign. Put simply, this is the phrase that made a brand…



Smash: 'For mash, get Smash' - Simple but extremely funny, clever series of adverts for a particularly unappetising product. It featured Martians rolling around laughing at people on Earth going to so much trouble for mash instead of just using Smash. The iconic strapline followed at the end.


Nike: 'Just Do It' - Dan Wieden, co-founder of agency Wieden+Kennedy, coined the now-famous slogan for a 1988 Nike ad campaign. It continues to be Nike's primary strapline today.

2009年4月14日 星期二

Famous Advertising Slogans


Frosties: 'They're grrrrrrrreat!' - Tony the Tiger has been linked to this cereal since it was first introduced in America back in the 1950s. Since then, generations of kids have heard him on the TV adverts.


Milk Tray: 'And all because the lady loves Milk Tray' - The concept owed more than a nod or two to James Bond. The Milk Tray man leapt from a moving train, plunged from a speedboat, jumped from a helicopter etc - just to give his girlie chocolates. The ads and the slogan disappeared in 2003 (probably due to political correctness). The new line? 'Now with extra mmm and ahh!' It'll never catch on…


Carling: 'I bet he drinks Carling Black Label!' - Hugely popular from 1989 onwards, one of the most memorable in the series was a spoof of classic Brit war flick The Dam Busters. In the ad, a German guard turns goalkeeper and 'saves' each of the bombs. The classic punchline followed his amazing feat.


Coca Cola: 'The real thing' - Without a doubt, this is my favourite ever Coca Cola advert; it's also one of their best and most iconic. Launching the slogan the company would use throughout most of the 1970s, 1971's 'Hilltop' featured a multi-racial cast and a song which became known as I'd Like To Buy The World A Coke. Re-recorded by The New Seekers as I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing (in Perfect Harmony), it became a worldwide smash.


Controversial Adverts



Quorn - 
A young girl threatens her brother with a fork if he eats her Quorn: "Touch my food - feel my fork," she says. The ASA received 181 objections; complainants said the advert was irresponsible and condoned bullying but the watchdog disagreed. It felt the adverts were a light-hearted portrayal of family life and the complaints were not upheld.

Carphone Warehouse - Remember the ads purporting to offer their broadband service 'free forever'? The commercials drew 145 complaints from customers and competitors. At the time, John Petter, chief operating officer at BT Retail said: "A service costing more than £250 a year, with a £29.99 connection fee, a £120.00 annual rural surcharge [for those without access to a qualifying exchange] and premium rate helpdesk simply isn't free." The ASA agreed and judged the advert misleading.



Kellogg's - The ASA received 96 complaints about this Crunchy Nut ad featuring a man riding a dog. Objectors claimed it portrayed cruelty to animals. Kellogg's said the ad was clearly surreal and that no dog was actually ridden during filming. In addition, the advert was scheduled after the watershed and included an on-screen warning telling viewers not to try the stunt at home. The ASA agreed with Kellogg's and the complaints were not upheld.


French Connection - The ASA received 127 complaints about this advert; it featured two women exchanging kicks and punches, culminating in a kiss. Apparently, the idea was to symbolise the competition between fashion and style. The ASA decided that the fight was highly stylised and did not glamorise violence. They also said that the kiss was fine and as the advert was being shown after the watershed, the complaints were not upheld.



KFC - Believe it or not, this is currently the most complained about advert in UK TV history. It got 1,671 complaints and it doesn't have sex, violence or bad language. Hundreds of parents were annoyed at the depiction of workers singing with their mouths full of KFC in 2005. However, the ASA decided that the ad wouldn't undermine the teaching of good manners and the complaints were not upheld.


2009年4月13日 星期一

Famous Advertising Slogans


L'Oréal: 'Because you're worth it' - L’Oréal's famous advertising slogan was formerly 'Because I’m worth it'. It is currently 'You're worth it' and the list of celebrities pushing products includes Penelope Cruz, Andie MacDowell and Aishwarya Rai.




Mr Kipling: 'Exceedingly good cakes' - For well over 30 years, Mr Kipling's cakes, pies and baked goods have been branded with the slogan 'exceedingly good'. It's a campaign that has been 'exceedingly' successful.



Audi: 'Vorsprung durch Technik' - What does it mean? It's German for advancement through technology (or head start through technology…something like that). It has been used by the Audi marque since the 1970s.




Budweiser: 'Whassup!' - Just some guys hanging out, drinking a bud and saying 'whassup' to each other. A simple premise that spread like wildfire across the world; in the early noughties, everyone was saying 'whassup!' to each other (Thierry Henry even made it part of a goal celebration). It remains one of the most spoofed and referenced ads of recent times.

Controversial Adverts 2




Oasis - Intended for a long run, viewers were supposed to be deciding the fate of Cactus Kid and his girlfriend via a tie-in website. However, 32 complaints to the ASA in 2008 were enough to nix the campaign. The watchdog upheld objections that the ads condoned teenage sex and suggested Oasis, made by Coca-Cola Great Britain, was a substitute for water. Coca-Cola told the ASA that the campaign was removed from reality, used edgy humour aimed at its target audience and was not intended to be offensive.



Heinz Deli Mayo - This advert depicted 'mum' as a Robert De Niro-type character. As the brand fell foul of Ofcom's guidelines relating to products that are high in fat, salt and sugar, it had an 'ex-kids' restriction meaning that it couldn't be shown in or around children's programming. But that didn't stop around 200 complaints from viewers who deemed the smacker between the two men offensive and inappropriate. After less than a week on air, Heinz withdrew the ad in June 2008.



Trident Chewing Gum - In 2007, 519 complaints were received about this 'mastication for de nation' advert. Those who objected said the ad played on a negative stereotype. It featured a minstrel-like man speaking in a faux Caribbean accent. The ASA decided the adverts did not incite racial discrimination but acknowledged that some viewers had been unintentionally offended.



Department Of Health - The 'get unhooked' advert, aimed at getting people to quit smoking, was 2007's most complained about TV commercial. It prompted 774 complaints due to the fish hook pulled through the cheek of the smokers portrayed on screen. Those who complained said the adverts were offensive, frightening and distressing. The ASA upheld some of the complaints.




MFI - Families feel so at home in the stores that they start having arguments. That was the thinking behind these commercials for the now-defunct furniture giant; it drew 217 objections in 2007. The ASA upheld complaints about one of the adverts because it showed a woman slapping her husband across the face for leaving a toilet seat up. It did so on the basis that the slap could be seen as condoning violence.