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How zoozoo ads were made

May 16th, 2009 No comments

If you are an Indian with access to television or internet or have seen any IPL match then I do not need to tell you what the heck is Zoo Zoo. The ad campaign that has suddenly taken over the any god damn media and has become the talk over lunch, coffee, tea, date, time pass talk and even office conversations! So what is this zoozoo and how is it made, are they actual people, dummies, animations or what? If you ask me, that particular query itself has a lot of hand in the advertisement’s success as television commercial and internet viral.

First of all what is this ZooZoo? zoozoo is the new brand endorsor for Vodafone India. In 2008, Vodafone had unveiled the ‘Happy to Help’ series during the first season of the Indian Premier League (IPL). With the launch of the second season, Vodafone has given birth to the Zoozoo: a special character created specifically to convey a value added service (VAS) offering in each of the newly released commercials.

What’s interesting is that there are some 25-29 such commercials planned under this campaign, some of which are already on air. The aim is to release approximately one ad a day, to sustain interest till the end of the IPL.

Success of this campaign has been humongous! It’s fan club at Facebook already has 188,822 fans base!!

What need does zoozoo like campaign caters to, apart from publicity of the brand? Explains Harit Nagpal, chief marketing officer, Vodafone India, “We’re acquiring customers at a very fast pace, but a large number of them are unaware of the range of services we offer. I mean, ‘phone backup’, which we’re advertising now, was launched two years ago, for instance!”(well this a news to me too!- Jas)

Behind Camera – Making of zoozoo

No, they aren’t animated characters. They are human beings who were made to wear body suits. “The design of the characters is such that one gets fooled into thinking it is animation,” shrugs Rao, which was indeed the very illusion that had to be created. “In a sense, it is ‘live’ animation!” he quips, referring to the fact that it was all shot live. The films shot at 20 frames per second has made the Zoozoo’s movements hurried and comical. See the images below to know how these ads were made from people.

Ogilvy experimented with several characters and finally took its love for the term ‘egghead’ one step too far, creating characters that don the colour white (with black dots for eyes and a mouth), have heads resembling eggs, and disproportionately thin bodies.

Rajiv Rao

The idea is to tell the VAS stories in a world akin to, yet different, from humans. The creatures were then given a characterisation: they are to lead simple lives, speak a language of their own (something that sounds like gibberish), move in a certain way, and even emote like human beings, with big frowns or big grins to do the trick. The execution is almost like emoticons. “We even limited the number of emotions to be used, to keep things easy,” says Rajiv Rao, executive creative director, South Asia, Ogilvy India.

If one wishes to understand the size of this head, here’s a fact: a human head would typically reach up to the mouth level of this giant Zoozoo head. “We kept the hands and legs thin, which is why we cast women – and occasionally children – wearing the costumes,” says Prakash Varma, ad filmmaker, Nirvana Films, who has directed the commercials. The thin limbs, contrasted with big bellies and a bulbous head, all add to the illusion that these creatures are ‘smaller’ than humans. Sets were created to suit the size of the Zoozoos.

The films were shot by Nirvana in Cape Town, South Africa, with the help of a local production house there, called Platypus. Incidentally, the same combination of people also worked on the ‘Happy to Help’ series last year. When asked whether Cape Town is fast becoming a tourist spot for Vodafone and Nirvana, Varma laughs, saying, “Oh no! It’s just that we are very comfortable with the team there and know what sort of work to expect from them.”

Airtel scores over Kumble gandhigiri

January 15th, 2008 4 comments
Today’s newspapers were filled with the news of Kumble’s “humble” goodwill gesture not to press charge against Hogg. It was splashed on the main page India wide and going by the reaction of public lately, the news was nothing less than a wild fire. More than any fan or sportperson or cricketer himself (except maybe for the main characters of the story) , no one would have bitten more nails than the newspaper wallah’s and TV channel people (TRPs scored a high for it).

But if you would have seen the morning newspaper, you’d know one company that left them way behind in branding – Airtel. See the ad below, Airtel came up with the tagline Barriers brake when people talk a month back. There couldn’t have been a more apt situation for the ad insert.

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McDonald now advertising in Report Cards!

November 20th, 2007 2 comments
With the consumer mind being bombarded with so much of ad communication these days, the BTL (below the line) ad campaigns have gained quite a lot of popularity among th advertisers. Also the campaigns have started attracting the complete set of consumption chain i.e. from consumer to the decision maker. Thats why you will find ads of McDonald’s happy meals being targeted at parents in India rather than the children themselves. Positioning is that such an outing of a happy time is best enjoyed by kids with McD’s Happy Meal. To face the competetion, McD is also one company which has a high focus on BTL campaigns.

But this one may still surprise you. McD picked up the $1,600 cost of printing report-card jackets for the 2007-2008 school year in Seminole County, Florida, in exchange for a Happy Meal coupon on the card’s cover(see picture). With 27,000 elementary school kids taking their report-card jackets home to be signed three or four times a year, that’s less than 2 cents per impression.

The issue came to light last week when Susan Pagan’s daughter, Cathy, a fourth-grader at Red Bug Elementary School, brought home her report card and wanted to get a free Happy Meal because she earned good grades.Pagen told her daughter, “Our family does not eat at fast food chains,” Pagan said. “And, now I’m the bad guy.”

Pagan said she complained to school officials in an e-mail about the advertising and received a telephone call from Superintendent Bill Vogel. She said he told her that she was the only person who complained and he noted that McDonald’s offers some healthy alternatives.

The Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood is demanding that McDonald’s immediately stop advertising on children’s report cards. “This promotion takes in-school marketing to a new low,” said Susan Linn, director of CCFC and a psychologist at Judge Baker Children’s Center. “It bypasses parents and targets children directly with the message that doing well in school should be rewarded by a Happy Meal.”
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Newspaper Falls for con-artist’s fake Gucci Ad

October 25th, 2007 No comments
What would the name Switzerland ring in your mind? Is it beautiful landscapes, watches, chocolates, women, secret bank accounts or UN? Well ask Gucci and they will have different words. In what appears to be a great publicity stunt by a con artist, a swiss weekly SonntagsZeitung was called up to book the expensive full page color spread in Sunday’s edition. But that’s not it, he not only managed to get his own picture for this ad but also made whopping 60,000-Swiss-franc (about $50,000/ INR 2,000,000) bill to be sent to Gucci.

The newspaper later apologized to Gucci and told newspapers that it was trying to get the money back from the guy, but was quick to add that they didn’t rate their chances very high!

It wasn’t the first time that the mysterious model — a dark tanned, handsome man appearing to be in his late 20s — tried to sneak his way into the limelight. According to the Zurich-based daily Blick, the man attempted to book concert venues by passing himself off as Puerto Rican singer Chayanne. The paper said it narrowly avoided also being conned, but was tipped of the hoax by record company Sony BMG, which represents Chayanne.

You can see the con artist himself in this picture that spelled a dumbness doom for paper.

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