Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta itunes. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta itunes. Mostrar todas las entradas

lunes, 24 de febrero de 2014

Educar jugando y con humor... negro



Hay muchas maneras absurdas de morir. Quizás a nadie se le ocurre comer pegamento o tener a una serpiente venenosa de mascota, ni mucho menos dar con un palo a un oso o quitarse el casco en el espacio, pero sí que hay muchas personas que todavía siguen saltándose la barrera del paso a nivel, colocándose al borde del andén del metro o caminando entre las vías del tren, por eso la empresa ferroviaria de Australia MetroTrains decidió crear una campaña para concienciar sobre estos riesgos innecesarios, con una web, un vídeo y una app.
 
El vídeo ya ha sido visto en You Tube más de 73 millones de veces,  fue creado por McCann Melbourne quien encargó esa pegadiza música al compositor Ollie McGill aunque en iTunes aparece como Tangerine Kitty.



Pero no solo se aprende con un vídeo, así que han creado una app primero para iPhone y luego para Android, con 15 minijuegos en los que puedes intentar salvar a los personajes del vídeo.

Una lección de cómo hacer una campaña de concienciación evitando decir lo que se tiene que hacer sino creando una experiencia multimedia en la que participar y divertirse.
¿Puedes dejar de cantar la canción? 
Ollie McGill,

We've all had that moment of guiltily chuckling to ourselves when someone falls over in the street. But this ad will have you happily humming away while cute cartoon creatures suffer horrible, painful deaths.
The adorable little characters are here to serve as a warning to the rest of us in this morbid music video/ ad. They are burnt, eaten, poisoned and blown up as the three-minute track happily croons along to their messy demises.
An ever-growing chorus of chopped, mangled and mutilated critters dance away as the song tells listeners not to: "set fire to your hair, or poke a stick at a grizzly bear". Which is all great advice, but do we need it? Surely nobody is stupid enough to "keep a rattlesnake for a pet, or sell both your kidneys on the internet".
Well, sadly, there are people who need these warnings. The clip is a safety warning from an Australian rail company. Melbourne Metro Trains released this catchy little ditty, which is actually a very serious warning about the dangers that surround rail travel.
Towards the end of the song, after watching idiots play catch with wasps' nests and invite psycho killers into their homes, the song gets to its very serious message.
"Stand on the edge of a train station platform, drive around the boom gates at a level crossing, run across the tracks between platforms, they might not rhyme but they're quite possibly the dumbest ways to die."
The cutesy indie-pop track was put together by some of Melbourne's most famous musical talent. Written by Ollie McGill, keyboardist from The Cat Empire and sung by Emily Lubitz of Tinpan Orange, the pair released the track on to iTunes as Tangerine Kitty.
The ad campaign was devised by McCann Melbourne and has won nearly 6.7 million views since it was launched just fours days ago. The whimsical warning has become an online hit, spreading across Facebook, Twitter and the blogosphere, earning nearly 659,000 shares and becoming the most shared video of the last 24 hours.
It might seem obvious that you shouldn't eat super glue or take your helmet off in outer space, but people take unnecessary risks around trains everyday. Let's hope viewers remember the warnings from this cheerful tune.
- See more at: http://mememachine.viralvideochart.com/blog/2012/11/19/so-many-dumb-ways-to-die-a-really-fun-way-to-advertise.html#sthash.EswxPXMO.dpuf
We've all had that moment of guiltily chuckling to ourselves when someone falls over in the street. But this ad will have you happily humming away while cute cartoon creatures suffer horrible, painful deaths.
The adorable little characters are here to serve as a warning to the rest of us in this morbid music video/ ad. They are burnt, eaten, poisoned and blown up as the three-minute track happily croons along to their messy demises.
An ever-growing chorus of chopped, mangled and mutilated critters dance away as the song tells listeners not to: "set fire to your hair, or poke a stick at a grizzly bear". Which is all great advice, but do we need it? Surely nobody is stupid enough to "keep a rattlesnake for a pet, or sell both your kidneys on the internet".
Well, sadly, there are people who need these warnings. The clip is a safety warning from an Australian rail company. Melbourne Metro Trains released this catchy little ditty, which is actually a very serious warning about the dangers that surround rail travel.
Towards the end of the song, after watching idiots play catch with wasps' nests and invite psycho killers into their homes, the song gets to its very serious message.
"Stand on the edge of a train station platform, drive around the boom gates at a level crossing, run across the tracks between platforms, they might not rhyme but they're quite possibly the dumbest ways to die."
The cutesy indie-pop track was put together by some of Melbourne's most famous musical talent. Written by Ollie McGill, keyboardist from The Cat Empire and sung by Emily Lubitz of Tinpan Orange, the pair released the track on to iTunes as Tangerine Kitty.
The ad campaign was devised by McCann Melbourne and has won nearly 6.7 million views since it was launched just fours days ago. The whimsical warning has become an online hit, spreading across Facebook, Twitter and the blogosphere, earning nearly 659,000 shares and becoming the most shared video of the last 24 hours.
It might seem obvious that you shouldn't eat super glue or take your helmet off in outer space, but people take unnecessary risks around trains everyday. Let's hope viewers remember the warnings from this cheerful tune.
- See more at: http://mememachine.viralvideochart.com/blog/2012/11/19/so-many-dumb-ways-to-die-a-really-fun-way-to-advertise.html#sthash.EswxPXMO.dpuf
We've all had that moment of guiltily chuckling to ourselves when someone falls over in the street. But this ad will have you happily humming away while cute cartoon creatures suffer horrible, painful deaths.
The adorable little characters are here to serve as a warning to the rest of us in this morbid music video/ ad. They are burnt, eaten, poisoned and blown up as the three-minute track happily croons along to their messy demises.
An ever-growing chorus of chopped, mangled and mutilated critters dance away as the song tells listeners not to: "set fire to your hair, or poke a stick at a grizzly bear". Which is all great advice, but do we need it? Surely nobody is stupid enough to "keep a rattlesnake for a pet, or sell both your kidneys on the internet".
Well, sadly, there are people who need these warnings. The clip is a safety warning from an Australian rail company. Melbourne Metro Trains released this catchy little ditty, which is actually a very serious warning about the dangers that surround rail travel.
Towards the end of the song, after watching idiots play catch with wasps' nests and invite psycho killers into their homes, the song gets to its very serious message.
"Stand on the edge of a train station platform, drive around the boom gates at a level crossing, run across the tracks between platforms, they might not rhyme but they're quite possibly the dumbest ways to die."
The cutesy indie-pop track was put together by some of Melbourne's most famous musical talent. Written by Ollie McGill, keyboardist from The Cat Empire and sung by Emily Lubitz of Tinpan Orange, the pair released the track on to iTunes as Tangerine Kitty.
The ad campaign was devised by McCann Melbourne and has won nearly 6.7 million views since it was launched just fours days ago. The whimsical warning has become an online hit, spreading across Facebook, Twitter and the blogosphere, earning nearly 659,000 shares and becoming the most shared video of the last 24 hours.
It might seem obvious that you shouldn't eat super glue or take your helmet off in outer space, but people take unnecessary risks around trains everyday. Let's hope viewers remember the warnings from this cheerful tune.
- See more at: http://mememachine.viralvideochart.com/blog/2012/11/19/so-many-dumb-ways-to-die-a-really-fun-way-to-advertise.html#sthash.EswxPXMO.dpuf

viernes, 29 de julio de 2011

Si tu target está ocupado, ayúdale a estar más ocupado




En verano es difícil llegar a un target denominado padres. Entre las vacaciones familiares y las vacaciones escolares de los hijos, los padres no paran. Así que en Volkswagen han hecho suyo el concepto de si no puedes con el enemigo, únete y se han unido a los planes familiares con la aplicación gratuita Guía KidsOut en iTunes y en Android Market realizada por Gigigo. Una gran idea que ofrece geolocalización para ofrecer los planes cercanos, realidad aumentada, permite crear una agenda de fin de semana...
Borja Marinas, socio director de Gigigo, nos cuenta “junto con Volkswagen, hemos hecho una clara apuesta por los contenidos de valor e innovación tecnológica en aplicaciones de entretenimiento al incorporar realidad aumentada en Kids Out de Volkswagen. Estamos viendo como más y más marcas apuestan por desarrollos tecnológicos que les permiten conectar con su target y comunicar los valores de su marca en soportes tecnológicos”. 
Gracias a @javier_hdez por mostrármelo.

jueves, 13 de enero de 2011

Persiguiendo el pixel



Intel nos muestra las nuevas capacidades de su segunda generación de procesadores en este persecución multiplataforma que pasa por facebook, iTunes, YouTube, Microsoft Office y Creative Suite de Adobe. La red y la publicidad vuelven a encontrarse.

La idea no es nueva, es una persecución clásica de película, la realización mezclando distintas plataformas tampoco lo es, pero hay que reconocer que tiene ritmo y está muy bien hecha.

La agencia americana Venables Bell & Partners ha creado un catálogo de las capacidades del producto de lo más trepidante. Gracias a Ads of the world por mostrármelo.

domingo, 19 de diciembre de 2010

Una app que lleva el museo a la calle





Cada día encuentro una nueva aplicación para iPhone y cada día me sorprendo de lo buena que es la idea. Está claro en qué están trabajando ahora las grandes mentes creativas. En este caso es El Museo de Londres el que lleva su inmensa colección de arte y fotografía al iPhone para que unida a la realidad aumentada y a la geolocalización nos permita caminar por Londres formando parte de su historia. Una experiencia única creada por  Brothers and Sisters. Museum of London: Streetmuseum se puede descargar gratuitamente en iTunes. Gracias a My Modern Met por mostrármelo.

lunes, 26 de julio de 2010

iviagra

¿Será por el gran éxito de ventas de Viagra? ¿Será porque la palabra sexo es la más buscada en google? ¿Será porque sólo pensamos en eso? Será, será, por lo que sea, pero los problemas de disfunción erectil también llegan al iPhone con una curiosa aplicación. El Fire up your sex drive desprende ultrasonidos que  ayudan a los cuerpos cavernosos a alcanzar la óptima circulación sanguínea, o eso dicen sus creadores, y así mejorar la vida sexual.
Está a la venta en itunes por 2,39 euros y ha sido ya probada por 580 hombres y el 77% asegura que funciona.
¿No decían que las microondas de los móviles nos fundían las neuronas?
¿O será precisamente por eso que esta aplicación funciona?
¿Voluntarios para probarlo? Yo desde luego que no. Así que este post se queda en simplemente teórico. Temo por mis cuerpos cavernosos de mujer.