Archive

Tag Archives: beirut

Screen Shot 2013-04-22 at 3.52.46 PM?????????????????????????????????????????????

Beirut Designers’ Week and a beneficial confusion

By Admin I: in the land of grandiose schizophrenia, everything is split between a hypothetical reality and a dose of underground, you know the usual split between classes, economically and culturally. This time the split is within one design field, and it all started when someone decided to copycat a whole event, but redirect it to fit the mindset of a Zaitunay Bay clientele (sorry but I have to mention how irrelevant is that alternative word for Zaytouneh).

So Beirut Design Week (the official version that we reviewed last year 01 02 03) proved successful; the week was going crazy, full with events, talks, workshops and more. The other sign of success is this year’s copycat, Beirut Designers Week. Let’s bluntly state it: you, whoever you are, cannot rip off a name, confuse people and do an event for this city’s ‘tantes Ashrafieh/Verdun’ audience, because as stated in your press release on Ragmag’s website: “What truly distinguishes Beirut Designers’ Week is its unique setup on the lower promenade of Zaitunay Bay with stands placed between the restaurants and the cafes, ensuring maximum visibility to our exhibitors”. DESIGN CANNOT EXIST BETWEEN CAFES, IN AN OUTDOOR MALL. IT CANNOT *gets a knife and kills himself*

So, dear wannabes, design goes a bit beyond stands at the bay, hand-crafters exhibiting their pinterest-stolen bags and ribbon-cutting ceremonies. Last year, ‘The MENA design research center’ struggled financially and logistically to organise a week that managed to show real design (still, we had to bash them). Those efforts should not by any chance open wide doors for an event that lacks the very basic elements of a successful design week, starting from the amateur poorly made visuals, the location, the press release and the mere fact that it’s a hasty plagiarised identity all in all.

The ‘real’ BDW13 will take place from June 24 till June 30.

BR is boycotting the ‘made in Taiwan’ version, because all we need is less hypocrisy.

BR:  Guys, when we first started this blog, we had two main goals: to make a change of whichever kind (as absurd as ‘change’ can get), and to grow; this growth kept happening, with us, with you as audience and will start happening on the level of quality posts. No no no, don’t get me wrong, we will not quit the super fun cynical posts, we will not stop bashing whoever deserves to quit his ‘creative’ job, but every once and a while, BR will be taken to a new dimension, by ‘Daniel Drennan’, originally Lebanese with a background in design and a ‘controversial’ experience in design education. (Sorry for the description Daniel, but we both agree that ‘design thinker’ bullshit, is umm.. bullshit). 

Daniel, we’re sure our readers will be as happy to have you with us, and we’re super thankful for this enriching contribution.

BR: Packaging a revolution, selling democracy 

Originally written during February 2007.

Brand America:

Of False Promises and Snake Oil

By Daniel Drennan: On the streets of Beirut, a vernacular of graffiti, political posters, cloth banners and stenciled portraits of leaders and martyrs — and the effacement thereof, whether intentionally or through natural causes — produces a lively debate. Various individuals and groups effectively claim existence, label their territories, as well as write and re-write their histories — Lebanon has no one history. I refer to this as a “debate” because of this back and forth, of placement and replacement, which lies in stark contrast to the monologue that rises above buildings and highways, the one-way beaming of high-priced messages as represented by billboards and advertising space.

Recently, these two “conversational” spaces have mixed, if not melded — with corporate messengers vying for equal footing with straightforward political, theological and economic discourses. On closer inspection, however, they are unequal: messages moving from the street upwards have a rebellious aim; those moving from the ad space down have a much more sinister source.

Independence ‘05

On March 14, 2005, a large percentage of the Lebanese population hit the streets of Beirut, protesting Syrian domination of its political and economic infrastructures. The demonstrations, which arose after the assassination of Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri, coincided with the almost immediate emergence of “Independence ‘05” banners, stickers and other merchandise like flags and hats. Designed collectively by some of Beirut’s top ad agency talents, the red, white and green logo soon appeared everywhere [see Fig. 1]. Not missing a beat, the U.S. State Department renamed the locally known Intifada of Independence as the Cedar Revolution, and for a brief time, to the outside world at least, it seemed that Lebanon was going down the road paved by other “branded” revolutions, such as those in Georgia and Ukraine also underwritten by American NGOs.

The manufactured logo’s invasion was striking during those first weeks of co-opted activism, its pre-packaged message disseminating rapidly through the streets. Eventually, Syria withdrew its troops, and by the time Christmas arrived, Dar an-Nahar (the publishing arm of an-Nahar newspaper) came out with a glossy coffee-table book documenting The Beirut Spring — complete with a kit of patriotic artifacts — almost as if to say, yet again: “Mission Accomplished!”

For the past two years, however, a series of bombings, assassinations and all-out warfare has redefined those original ideas of “Independence” and has led to the surreal situation where the absence of dialogue on the governmental level is contrasted by an endless stream of mediated messages.

Since Israel’s war against Lebanon last summer, these different levels of discourse — street and ad, local and global — have scrambled for prominence. Advertisers, mostly banks, plastered the country with ads touting their role in rebuilding; Johnnie Walker, among many others, made reference to the destruction of the country’s infrastructure in both its imagery and ad copy [see Fig. 2]. The line between advertising and public expression often blurred: billboards for General Michel Aoun’s Free Patriotic Movement featured “hand-drawn” orange checkmarks, only to be rivaled by huge “homemade” banners — mostly featuring Condoleezza Rice as purveyor of bombs for Lebanese children or as schoolmarm to Prime Minister Fouad Siniora — draped across buildings downtown.

Likewise, in Dahiyeh, the southern suburbs, another advertising campaign had taken shape, startling in its assimilation of these “designed messages” and distance from the insular iconography and Arabic-only statements formerly seen on the ground. Aimed at international journalists, it documented the wholesale destruction of entire neighborhoods with a retort of victory — Nasr min Allah or “Divine Victory” — playing on the name of Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, the leader of Hezbollah. These banners, in French, English and Arabic, and featuring other messages such as “The New Middle (B)east,” were hung from every building even remotely left standing [see Fig. 3].

The political dialogue that should have been taking place on a national and international level has been reduced to empty sound bites by agencies such as Saatchi & Saatchi and H&C Leo Burnett, which made sectarianism its target in a new campaign for al-Mujtamah al-Madani (Civil Society). The first run of print ads featured personalized objects like mailboxes, doctors’ office signs and license plates, identifying not only names and numbers but also sect affiliation, a commentary on the factional system that governs all aspects of Lebanese life [see Figs. 4-5].

In corresponding television spots, actors representing other countries proudly declare, in their respective languages: Je suis francais, and “I am an American” [see Fig. 6]. Yet the Lebanese claim: Ana SunniAna Shi’iAna Dirzi, and Ana Marounieh, not Ana Lubnani (“I am Lebanese”). Shots ring out, and our Lebanese protagonists are left with their heads hanging in shame [see Fig. 7]. The ads seem to blame the Lebanese population itself for its “backwards” nature instead of blaming the outside political and economic forces that have long imposed those divisions, and offer an ignominious, orientalist cliche that is absurd in its reduction and shamefully outdated in its casting of a blond-haired, blue-eyed man as the American. Are Americans not multicultural? Do they not take pride in their own hyphenated identities?

Another advertising project reminiscent of the “Independence ‘05” campaign appeared as well, featuring “martyr” Christmas trees, trilingual billboards and mobile ad trucks animated by live actors, broadcasting the message: “I love life” [see Fig. 8]. The slogan is offensive in its equation of the Shi’a of Lebanon as, culturally speaking, “lovers of death.” Further research revealed it to be a campaign sponsored by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and reflective of other U.S.-sponsored initiatives in Ukraine and Africa.

In this world of meta-communication, the reality of the situation becomes increasingly obfuscated. What the West interprets as a clash of civilizations is really about class differences — the haves and the have-nots, capital and labor, the first world and the other four-fifths of the planet. Seen through these advertising campaigns, “America” and “Democracy” — and by extension, free-market capitalism — become simply a product to sell, a brand to push, and logically (and cynically), advertisers have been hired to do the job. The greater problem for the pushers of the product is that the peoples of the world have grown wise to the pitch — especially when those pushing this local variant of the global “brand,” Saatchi & Saatchi, are simultaneously working on the rebranding of Israel, to create a “narrative of normalcy” after the war this past summer.

“You say you want a revolution…”

In the past, brand identity was based intrinsically on the notion of an untarnished image. Trying to sell something that was below par was once considered hucksterism; salesmen thereof were seen as peddling snake oil. So ingrained is this accepted notion of pushing a lie that it is part of American folklore and imbedded in its culture, seen in everything from tall tales and The Music Man to the infomercials of Ron Popeil.

As free-market capitalism progressed, this marketing evolved, and at a certain point (as No Logo by Naomi Klein points out) the product ceased to matter. A brand name represented not so much the product itself — sneakers, clothing, perfume, and now, democratic society — but the lifestyle pushed by the company whose logo decorated the product’s exterior. Nike, Gap, Calvin Klein, and now, America — a brand ready for export.

Today no one is sufficiently outraged when images of radical icons are licensed to pimp products (postmortem): think Dr. Martin Luther King for Alcatel and Cingular; William S. Burroughs for Nike. No one gets upset when the environmental movement is effectively stifled by the co-opting of environmentalism as a marketing sales point; when former outlets for the expression of anger by marginalized groups are turned into revenue streams; when “Revolution” by the Beatles is heard in a Nike ad; when AIDSand breast cancer are used as marketing ploys.

And so it follows that no one in the West is fazed by the simplistic notion that a country as incredibly complex as Lebanon, with its millennia of history, should be reduced to its people’s religious differences. Present-day America lives vicariously through the democratic movements of other countries and a projected sense of universal wellbeing that is ever harder to find at home. For just one example, the falling Berlin Wall became the backdrop for the false concept that all ideals of democracy emanate from the U.S., and, furthermore, that advertising is a proper venue for the dissemination of this ideal.

Now, the concept of a “revolution” beneficial to Lebanon is ignored unless it can be used as a feel-good device for Western democracies to perceive themselves as having played a part in the country’s “independence” which, in fact, goes back half a century; the inaction of these countries this past summer paints a completely different picture in terms of their intentions. Whereas here in Lebanon the battle is still being played out (literally and figuratively), the bigger picture is much more serious — and horrifyingly more disastrous — for those of us living on the periphery of global capital’s various expansionist projects.

Countering the Lie

This empty brand identity, the Lie, is betrayed when a demonstration (seen as pro-U.S.) is painted as a “Cedar Revolution,” while the more recent, broader-reaching demonstrations are called “a pro-Syrian/Iranian threat” and an attempted “coup d’etat.” As stated by economist Samir Amin in the book Obsolescent Capitalism, the only political Islamic groups in this region targeted by American opprobrium — Hezbollah and Hamas — just happen to be those that are anti-imperialist in nature; they also happen to be democratically elected. In his article “Mid-point in the Middle East?” Tariq Ali concurs: “Western enthusiasm for rainbow revolutions stops, as is to be expected, when the color is green.” Similarly, South American countries, overturning the pro-imperialist governments that replaced their former democracies, are perceived as “threats” to this new world order, when in fact they only threaten the given economic status quo. Why aren’t their “democratic revolutions” celebrated and advertised?

The Lie, as marketed by Leo Burnett (et. al.), goes back to Woodrow Wilson, who, when the Ottoman Empire was carved up among the post-War imperial powers, stated in his Twelfth Point: “… the other nationalities which are now under Turkish rule should be assured an undoubted security of life and an absolutely unmolested opportunity of autonomous development.” Security of life — sounds catchy. But we didn’t get it then, and despite the current ad-based efforts to convince us of the contrary, we don’t see it on our horizon now. Furthermore, when foreign policy goals of globalizing entities in the region explicitly state their desire to continue to “carve up” Arab countries into more manageable ethnic or religious cantons, these calls to difference hidden behind anti-sectarian messages can be seen to be even more loaded, as well as more lethal.

In response to the advertisers, designers and cultural sign-makers selling “Democracy,” opponents have spoken back by sending up the original ads themselves, thus forcing an uninvited dialogue. In Dahiyeh, those Arabic posters stating “We want to live” now include (in simulated spraypaint) “… in tents” (referring to the ongoing protest downtown); and “I love life” is now followed by “in colors” (referring to the multi-colored representative rainbow of all of Lebanon’s political parties).

Some intrepid activists have added their own messages to the mix, such as “I [heart]Aishti” (both a reference to the local chain fashion outlet and aish, the Arabic root for “to live”) and “I [heart] Capitalism” [see Figs. 10, 11]. When those who craft the ad campaigns circulate jpegs of the opposition posters [see Fig. 9] with copy that reads “We want to live … in tents” and labeled “They hate life,” we begin to see the vested and invested interest(s) in these message battles. Quoting Samir Amin once again:

The ideological discourse designed to rally public opinion in the central Triad [the United States, Japan and Europe] has been revamped to focus on a ‘duty to intervene’ in the name of ‘democracy,’ ‘national rights’ or ‘humanitarian considerations.’ But whereas the cynical instrumentalization and double standards involved in this discourse seem evident to people in Asia or Africa, Western public opinion has fallen in with it as enthusiastically as it did with the discourses of earlier phases of imperialism.

The visual creators and designers of this “ideological discourse” of ad campaigns currently running in Lebanon today should consider the ethical ramifications of their efforts, which focus on the purely reductive surface level and are representative of an unproven, and therefore unknowable, base ideology (although we can theorize about what is driving it); compared to, say, a political group with a stated political agenda. The fabricators of the larger discourse behind the ads should know that their message, and their media, are seen for what they are: shills for snake oil.

The bleak cynicism of message makers and the powers they serve — simultaneously blaming the Lebanese for sectarianism while playing to the segregationist, if not “anti-other,” sentiments of a subsection of the Lebanese population; claiming one revolution while condemning any other; placing economic blame on the current opposition movement while fronting an economic reality that will plunder the country; harping on the concept of Lebanon as a unified nation while fomenting discord that would render the nation asunder; working for the destroyers of Lebanon as well as “for” the destroyed — approaches something deeply and darkly Orwellian, especially when using words such as “love” and “life.” There is a huge difference between wanting to live at the expense of others and wanting to live a dignified existence. In light of events this past summer, it can be stated that the current influx of cash to pro-American NGOs, state militias and advertising campaigns is just a continuation of the aggression recently suffered by Lebanon.

Paul Rand stated: “Design … is also an instrument of disorder and confusion. Design for deception is often more persuasive than design for good; seduction is one of its many masks.” Those pushing the current discourse in Lebanon should not be surprised that it should thus be unmasked; that much of the world outside of their frame of reference is no longer buying their line, their lie, or their lifestyle; and that the Revolution, when it comes, will not be to their liking.

Daniel Drennan, originally from Beirut, returned to Lebanon eight years ago, worked as an assistant professor in the Department of Architecture and Design at the American University of Beirut, and is currently the Graphic Design Department coordinator at the American University of Science and Technology. He maintains a website at http://www.inquisitor.com/, which includes a diary of the summer war on Lebanon. This essay was originally published by AIGA  and The electronic intifada and is republished with the author’s permission. 

Byblos Bank and the little push!

By admin NK: Once again Byblos Bank strikes us with another beautiful ad promoting its Personal Loan, and this year the bank’s advertising approaches are getting quite better with each campaign.

A typical love story between two classmates, yes, it may seem cliche, but who wouldn’t fall for this all over cuteness? Putting “cuteness” aside, I admired so many things in this ad: first, the cast was chosen pretty well, no brats trying to act childish cute (hint: the typical Lebanese Nido frenchie kid); second, the simplicity AND the cliche (It’s one of those ads that gets to you and you can’t help it even if you’re a cliche hater) and finally the fact that it has nothing related to a bank! They chose to showcase a literal personal story to promote their personal loan offer.

And what I personally find more awesome is that FP7 chose an approach that is not directly related to the brand image, but the brand essence (again, the kids). As I mentioned before, campaigns that use emotional approaches always tend to show a fake “I’m here for you, people” feeling, yet this time it’s better coated with “sometimes all you need is a little push”.

Bank promises might be tricky to work with, because you can easily fall into the trap of a fake hypocrite trying so hard to sell you something; Byblos Bank took on a whole ‘effortless’ looking work, adding this ‘little push’ that bank ads should have.

Good job and looking forward to sequels of this concept, that will feel somehow ‘cut’ if it doesn’t go further.

Almaza_yasa4Almaza_yasa3Almaza_yasa2Almaza_yasa1

Almaza, what have you done?

By Admin Nk: You might wonder who’s responsible for this design chaos: well its the collaboration between YASA (Youth Association for Social Awareness) and LASIP (Lebanese Association for Sports Injuries Prevention) with Almaza. I mean, before we begin with the campaign’s crucial criticism, have you seen the website of both NGOs? How about their previous campaigns? I guess I won’t judge, I mean..It’s hard to hire good designers and web developers these days (sarcasm intended).

I admire the use of Lebanese slang language, really, but have you read those sentences? I felt like some street guy talking to me (in other words, “wozze” language). What about the “italic” and Microsoft Word Arabic font? It’s hideous and I wouldn’t have been able to read it if I was driving. The illustrations are priceless: first we see a badly vectorized car, on another one we spot an over used hideous smiley face placed at the corner, a so-called “sketchy” sketch of a seat belt and finally a bullet completely out of style and concept. And no, let’s not hide behind the NGO sympathetic budget excuse, any agency would do free work for NGOs as they’re considered award magnets by excellence.
After all this, all I can think about is “why why why would Almaza do this to themselves”. Almaza has always been known for its funny, creative, super fun Lebanese ads (Almaza light commercial not included). Even if it’s a collaboration with YASA, can’t you like, do something about that?! Seriously, what’s going on people?

 

 

TBWA\Raad\Lebanon Promising newness

By Admin I : So TBWA\Raad has finally landed in Lebanon despite the financial challenges  and the huge recession that this field is suffering form. Lebanese creatives are losing their regional jobs, and foreigners are leading this very intended war against the Lebanese presence in the regional agencies; but yes. We are no longer the most creative hardworking people around, and yes, we can become a bunch of useless junkies overrating themselves, though I’m only sure of one thing: we can still restart, from inside out, from local reaching the regional, and TBWA\Raad should play that leading role adding to the very very minimal competition in this cluttered Beiruti market, after several wins abroad.

 

Speaking of TBWA\Raad’s regional wins, the level is quite promising being one of the most consistent performers year-on-year in the Lynx, the Cristals and even Cannes. The agency is relatively young but managed to score quite high (no, this post is not sponsored, we wish!!)

TBWA’s refurbished presence (after splitting the affiliation with RizkGroup) is taking a quite casual approach focusing on the personal interaction between staff and audience and hinting ‘accessibility’ through a set of fun videos and an active facebook page.

A group having fun is always better than a pretentious multinational. Anticipating some buzz you guys!

Design entrepreneurship: joking, right?!

By Admin I: Well, being honest, this topic started during the latest Beirut Design Week, after a talk by Tashkeil that started inspirational and ended irrelevantly hypocrite.

Tashkeil defines itself as a network or platform reintroducing designers in the Middle East as active creative stakeholders in the global arena. They aim to revive the region’s heritage as an eclectic center for design, art, architecture and culture in hopes of reducing Designers’ migration to other locations.

Fancy, glam and glitters, doesn’t work. Why?

The good intentions are there, true, but the showcased examples such as Nivine Maktabi for example, or the other ‘daddy has a packaging factory’ came too exaggerated, while ‘struggling‘ to become entrepreneurs came highly doubtable. Successful design experiences in Lebanon, if not in the region, are a result of a smart business approach or an inherited legacy, not of a good design process. ‘Design’ stops when entrepreneurial efforts take place, which is exactly what happened with Rana Salam, Nada Debs, Elie Saab and others, even reaching Zaha Hadid. Design in those cases became a reproduction of success, an auto-tracing routine that’s not evolving. Still looks good, still appeals to the audience but totally lacks design as an experimental growing practice.

Let’s get real you guys, ‘design entrepreneurship’ is the latest ginormous lie, right after ‘visual communication’ and ‘problem solving’. it’s just the recent glam title to hide an inferior presence, because being who we are, stupid business people / good designers is not enough to brag about.

Let’s leave design to designers and business to business people because there’s one single way to improve the field and it mainly evolves around awakening a passive audience, educating receptors and cutting our design trallalaaa crap.

Let’s welcome back admin R y’all! She’s back from the hypothetical coma to rock again!

Le Charcutier Aoun and ‘real’ insights

By Admin R: What to do with a mainstream client, a supermarket chain that drained mainly all advertising approaches to make people believe that they could win a fortune just by grocery shopping? Go to ‘fun’! Well, ‘fun’ definitely went downhill in the previous ‘Le charcutier’ campaigns, ranging from the cheesy to the vulgar, getting gradually better with their latest versions “paying bills” and “back to school”.

It is important that humor appeals to the target audience so they identify and react; otherwise, it is just useless! Well, in Le charcutier’s case, it’s indeed comic and amusing but most importantly ‘insightful’. Memac Ogilvy illustrated the critical situation of the Lebanese society in a humorous way along with the key to their hard financial circumstances. We all suffer from the ‘moteur bills’ haunting every house while every family is really struggling with the painful schooling fees.

‘Le Charcutier’ is launching a promotional campaign, offering 300,000,000 LBP, playing the ‘awwh’ sympathetic role showing social responsibility (blabla, bullshit), marketing all the way!

The ads are well executed, the cast was funny and the exaggeration came spot on *starting to write my own ‘how to get away from moteur bills’ already!*

Finally, the tagline “fi nes byefeljouk w nes byeferjouk” came smart and true, taken from the Lebanese casual lingo, addressing the right audience, the right way, even though the concept could’ve been taken much further, and not only relating it to money (go a bit lateral guys!)..

Wait! What?! 300 000 000 LBP damn it now I’m obliged to shop there, I’m getting married soon you know! (You don’t have to care, pfft)

Credits:

Brand Agency: Memac Ogilvy
Production House: Wahm Productions
Director: Amanda Abou Abdallah

“SHOW US YOUR TYPE is a project about type and cities.
We started this project to provide a creative platform for designers to share their talents and explore cities from a different perspective.”

Show us your type /// Beirut

By Admin I: I’ll try to be clear and brief this time; when those posters came online, they kind of confirmed what we know but keep denying: we cannot design! And by ‘design’ we’re not really hinting the cliche definitions of ‘problem solving’ or ‘visual communication’. Design should do what societies have been doing since ages: finding means of communication emerging from their own cultural attributes (yes, i just invented that, but it works, at least to me and my alter ego).

We cannot design simply because we cannot culturally communicate our beliefs and thoughts, and that was very clear looking at the submissions for ‘Show us your type’, and I’m here talking about both Lebanese and international posters. Why?! Because local submissions – in general – lacked the core of the subject: INSIGHTS. Most of Lebanese submissions came from shallow perceptions of Beirut (the tires, rooftops, cityscapes…) and lacked a true reach for what Beirut really reflects. Only Maajoun’s submission came to visually reflect a cultural aspect of what looks like a blend  between religious stained glass and Islamic Arabesque, in what is visually one of the most interesting looking posters I’ve seen since quite a while (and yes we have to mention those guys in every post, go die if you don’t like it!)

A poster by 44flavours also depicted cultural aspects, even if designers don’t really identify with ‘our’ city, meticulously done illustrations, and a very engaging visual treatment. Wael Morcos did quite a good job on the visual and conceptual level, in a work that diffuses a certain cultural feel through mere abstraction while the rest looked unfinished, hasty and very few showed potential.

Our personal selection is displayed above while the whole set of submitted posters can be found here

Cheers to a failing/falling chain of cultureless Beiruti Design!

‘Masha3′ taking action

By Admin I: And here’s another amazing righteous cause that you agencies can adopt and make it your next award magnet; or not! Masha3 is a group of people of similar interests who joined hands to fight for public property, challenging a corrupt authority manifesting in ‘solidere’, that years ago took over the capital and other private properties and left more than 135,000 Lebanese with a major financial loss.

What we’re discussing here is not the cause itself, but how a CSR campaign can be done collectively and only by joining creative forces: designers and artists from different background contributed to the event, such as the very interesting posters by Rena Karanouh that follow the same feel of the previous ‘horsh Beirut’ visuals. When a city suffocates both visually and economically, and when people lose work, properties and houses for a financial monster, someone has to react: Lara Balaa – co-founder of Maajoun – worked on a minimal animation using pictograms, a visual language associated with information design and directly related to economy and business reports; the video answers a very blunt question showing the mediocrity of solidere’s actions; cynical, light but every effective.

An event at St.Georges Beirut (the only place still fighting to exist independently) was organized as well, with a fusion of art, design, music and other creative collaborations showing a solid ground that huge investors should really fear (not true, we know, but we love giving attitude!)

After the event, everyone went for a shopping break at the souks and drinks at Uruguay street (not really, they’re all poor hipsters) but let’s say protesting is not always the best solution if we all end up encouraging ‘solidere’ financially in a way or another. (Let’s boycott, it’s always cool!!)

Credits:

Marwan tahtah (Photos)

Lara balaa (Video)

Rena Karanouh (poster design)

Jana Traboulsi (Graffiti)

Brofessional Review welcomes its newest Admin ‘nc’!

 

 

 

Admin nc is an art director leading an advertising career with a huge bundle of issues: his maturity and hair are still refusing to grow!! A weirdo seeking fun in every creative process, handling a wide spectrum of interests and constantly pretending to be a merman (male version of mermaid) with so much hate to ALL CAPS.

 

Mazda’s selling strippers

By Admin nc: Sex: the oldest trick for turning heads! This summer Mazda chose to scratch “trendy-elegant” out of its brand positioning profile seeking blunt sex!

Well dear Mazda fellas, this cannot last! (not the sex); Your trashy naked lady could have been looked better on a stripping pole trying to sell condoms; this ad of yours hung on the Zalka highway only gets us excited to drive faster to skip looking at the cheap visual. Such a shame for lowering the standards of creative sexism (whether you believe in it or not) in advertising to zero.

Let’s give the art direction its share of the review! When I first saw the layout I thought they are selling feminine products or renting women (no offense, well it’s pretty offensive anyways), as I barely saw the car, which is a dramatic change in Mazda’s approach: they usually sell cars, but apparently the offers alone are not turning heads anymore!

Being harsh or not, is not a concern here, this attitude is only because we know you could do better such as the old showcased campaign: ”go topless”, where sex connotations were well toned and elegantly used to generate the right amount of buzz.

Back then strippers were busy doing their regular job!

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 201 other followers