Showing posts with label Ad of the Year. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ad of the Year. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 9, 2022

399. 1987 Creative Guild’s Radio Ad of the Year: PEPSODENT “Brush-Your-Teeth Crusade”

The PEPSODENT momentum carried over into the following year. After successfully hitting families with the mini-pack, PRC wanted to impress the kids and Socky Pitargue (JWT Creative Director) and company decided on a public service campaign that could pit the new toothpaste against market giant Colgate. The winning ad and the campaign were christened “The Brush-Your-Teeth Crusade”, and the idea, Pitargue says , was all about “writing a set of instructions that would be easy to remember.

Butch uy write the lengthy commercial, what he called “ang kwento ng Pepsodent,” in Pilipino, and had a gentle-voiced teacher/mommy character taking youngsters on a guided tour of their oral cavites, taking them left, right (‘kaliwa’t kanan”), up down (“taas-baba”) and around (“pa-ikot-ikot”). Uy didn’t forget to take side trips to the back of the teeth and the gums as well.

The commercial ended with a proper “Mumog-mumog, whoooosshh!” and was soon being memorized and recited by kids in public schools all over the country.

 SOURCE:  This article originally appeared on: Perfect 10, A Decade of Creativity in Philippine Advertising, pubished by the Exeutive Committee of the Creative Guild of the Philippines, First Edition 1995.  pp.72-73


Friday, June 3, 2016

63. Creative Guild's 1989 TV Ad of the Year: SARSI, 'ANGAT SA IBA' TVC 45s


SARSI, ANGAT SA IBA, 1989 Creative Guild TV Ad of the Year

“Big, brown & beautiful…”

The stunning 1989 ad of the year remains an industry classic and epitomized the kind of assignment that every creative person dreams of one day finding in his pigeonhole.”That was a fluke,” declares Nonoy Gallardo, former basic/FCB executive director and now, president of Creative Partners.

“Our clients gave us complete freedom, it was a new situation, and we were experimenting with a new sound. Serendipity talaga. There will never be another account like that again”

The account was Cosmos Bottling Corporation, an old softdrink manufacturer with such an image problem, Gallardo recalls, citing the mountains of research conducted by Basic/FCB in preparation for the five-agency bid, that store owners were actually ashamed to carry the brand. “All they remember was the SARSI with egg. The brand needed a complete overhaul.”

The overhaul began when Cosmos was newly acquired by the Concepcions, who wanted it relaunched in a big way. “Suddenly,” recalls the SARSI copywriter and now Jimenez/DMB&B creative director Teddy Catuira,”there was this brand with a heritage, but with very poor communications that wanted to go against the giants.”

It was decided early on, Catuira says, that music would be the main weapon of choice. “What better way did you have of reaching the youth?” explains Gallardo. “But if we came up with a typical Top 40s song, luma kami sa Coke and Pepsi.


Serendipity proved to be the savior because, at the same time, Katha, the organization of songwriters of which Gallardo is an active member, had been toying around with the concept of genuinely Filipino music, searching for an amalgam of influences and northern and southern  rhythms that could be considered distinctively Pinoy. They called it “Brown Music,” and Gallardo and his collaborator, composer Ryan Cayabyab, suddenly found themselves with a perfect venue for experimentation. “We took Ryan and his keyboard to the presentation.” Gallardo laughs,”and we lectured the client about the lack of dictinctiveness of Filipino music.”

Soon, a series of commercial heralding the advent of the “Bagong Tunog” was in the works, featuring independent ads that gave unique personalities to SARSI, Cheers and Pop Colas as Basic/FCB plunged into a flurry of activity. The Creative Guild chose SARSI’s “Angat sa Iba” 45 seconder as the TV Ad of the Year.

The SARSI material, Catuira says, was written in a flash---as in, about 10 minutes before Cayabyab had to put the words to music. With SARSI being “neither here nor there, east meets west,” as Catuira explains it, it was the angle of versatile superiority that ultimately drove the ad.

WATCH SARSI "Angat sa Iba" TVC here:

Director Jeric Soriano, art director Egay Oliva and the whole creative team “poured on the creativity,” Gallardo recounts, and holed up in a studio to shoot what became a colorful celebration of departure from the norm.

Swimmers and dancers leapt  joyously out of acrowd of carbon copies, while precision dancers and kabuki masks provide the uniform assembly-line backdrop for the welcome upstarts. The proposition was simple  and not too presumptuous: try this product if you’re tired of the obvious two-faced big brand monopoly—just for a change.

“Ganoon nga ba talaga?” the a capella beginning chorus questioned, “pare-pareho na lang ba?” before thumping into a vibrant and triumphant “Mag-SARSI ka para ma-iba!’ It was definitely high-gloss softdrink advertising, with a strong Filipino heart, and the audience could tell the difference immediately.

The timing was also perfect, Catuira recalls, as “there was still this post-EDSA hype about being Filipino.”  This “upsurge of nationalism.” Gallardo adds, filtered out to the rest of the industry, as other agencies and production houses cheered the team on.”Everyone was excited and everybody saw it as an industry accomplishment. They wanted to show the Hong Kong people that we were just as good at production as anybody else.

SARSI skyrocketed back into the national consciousness, reappearing in restaurants and stores. The erstwhile snooty storeowners were begiing dealers for cases of the “Bagong Tunog” softdrinks. And, Gallardo claims, the ad remains a reference for the creative advertising that did its job very well.

CREDITS:
AGENCY: Basic/ FCB
ADVERTISER: Cosmos Bottling Corporation
PRODUCT: Sarsi
CREATIVE DIRECTOR: Nonoy Gallardo
COPYWRITER: Teddy Catuira
ART DIRECTOR: Egay Oliva
PRODUCERS: Mario Sarmiento, Roby Ablen
DIRECTOR: Jeric Soriano
CINEMATOGRAPHER: Rody Lacap
PRODUCTION HOUSE: Production Village


Source:
PERFECT 10: A Decade of Creativity in Philippine Advertising, published by the Executive Committee of the Creative Guild of the Philippines, an affiliate of the Association of Accredited Advertising Agencies of the Philippines. Manila, 1995

Tuesday, March 29, 2016

52. Creative Guild’s 1994 TV Ad of the Year: AYALA CENTER, “WATERS”


Creative Guild’s 1994 TV Ad of the Year: AYALA CENTER, “WATERS”
Ace-Saacthi and Saatchi Advertising 

The Creative Guild of the Philippines turned 10 in 1994, so a big awards night was planned for its annual advertising awards. “Isa Munang Patalastas” was the theme of the much-anticipated event, held on 6 April 1995 at the Louie’s Cinema at Mile Long, in Makati.

 All eyes were focused on the Creative Guild monthly winners—Kubota “Kaibigan”, “Voices/Dances/ Strings”,Cinderella “Kaleidoscope” (Hemisphere Leo Burnett), Standard Fan “Baras”, BancNet “Kabuli”, Motolite “Tawid”, Imperial Soap “Prince” (Basic Advertising), Del Monte “AKK”,Sprite “Thought for Food”, McCann-Erickson “Santo” (McCann-Erickson), Ben Gay “Long-Lasting” (Jimenez/DMB&B). Purefoods “KC” (Lintas:Manila), Ayala Center “Waters”, Swift “Mighty Meaty” (Ace-Saatchi & Saatchi) and Kraft Chiz Whiz “Famas” (JWT).

When all the votes were cast, it was the stylish and beautifully-crafted commercial of the newly-developed Ayala Center that came out the clear winner, from Ace-Saatchi and Saatchi.

WATCH AYALA LAND'S "Waters" here:

The commercial—which had many versions-- was a virtual eye candy, featuring a lush collage of lifestyle images exquisitely photographed and presented to the bossa beat of Sergio Mendez’ “Waters of March” . It became the benchmark  for achieving the slick, premium look of high-end commercials, with high-tech cinematic effects and editing.The TV Ad of the Year for 1994 went on to win more accolades at the 13th Philippine Advertising Congress. 

 CREDITS: 
ADVERTISER:           Ayala Land, Inc. 
AGENCY:                   Ace/ Saatchi & Saatchi 
CREATIVE DIRECTOR: Melvin Mangada 
CONCEPT TEAM:    Tanke Tankeko /David Ferrer 
ECD:                          Jaime F. Santiago 
PRODUCER:            Aldrin Galang 
CINEMATOGRAPHER: Rody Lacap 
DIRECTOR:             Dante Datu 
PRODUCTION HOUSE: Filmex

Wednesday, February 17, 2016

46. 1987 TV AD OF THE YEAR: MILO’s “Gymnast Bea Lucero”

MILO'S BEA LUCERO, Ad of the Year, 1987.

MILO's Olympic Energy story began way back in 1968, when it bagged the accreditation as the energy drink of the premiere world sports competition. But actually, it was rival Ovaltine that exploited the Olympic energy angle even earlier in 1936.


 Milo, however, then a new brand, pulled the rug out from under the then market Goliath Ovaltine, by getting the sponsorship for the Philippine Olympic team. The people behind Milo even had the foresight to reserve in advance, media space for the 1972 Olympics! By the time Ovaltine realized what happened, Milo had gained much ground in the marketplace—and the sole glory of an Olympic association.

 MILO’s “overly serious” image. The campaign, “Let’s build champions” began to seem grand. Could every child become an Olympic winner?

By the 1980s, the prime account was with AMA-DDB Needham, a longtime Nestle agency. In 1983, its Executive Creative Director Bambi Borromeo had gotten worried about

 “The winning situation,” Borromeo insists, “could be as a simple as being able to complete a difficult routine, or going over an initial hurdle.” A new theme that brought the campaign closer to home was crafted and set to music—“A Milo a day…for Olympic energy!”.

 Borromeo had the additional challenge of finding a sport that has not been used in previous MILO executions. After some brainstorm, he chose the graceful discipline of Gymnastics. The agency caster scoured Manila gymnastic clubs for a possible talent and discovered the young prodigy, Bea Lucero, who had been training in the U.S. and winning age meets there.


 An approved storyboard showed the young girl flying through a full day’s schedule of school and sports, with glasses of MILO and Bea’s sensational somersaults figuring significantly in the story.

 The directorial details were turned over to veteran director, Jun Urbano, who captured Bea’s fresh face in natural moments that left the audience charmed.

WATCH MILO GYMNAST TV AD HERE:

From the opening frames, when Bea wakes up and washer her face to Trisha Amper’s voice light-heartedly singing..”I’m getting ready, getting ready…oh, boy, what a day it’s gonna be!...”, the ad sends a refreshing message, mesmerizing MILO-chugging youngsters, inspiring a new generation to be Bea Lucero wanna-bes.

 Not only did MILO sales dramatically increased with the refreshed campaign, but when it was time for the Creative Guild of the Philippines to select their TV Ad of the Year for 1987, MILO’s 60 sec.”Gymnast”, was their top choice.


 The ad also catapulted Bea Lucero to instant stardom, and Nestle Philippines showed its corporate gratitude by sponsoring Bea’s many international sports outings. The year she made the Milo commercial, she competed at the 1987 Southeast Asian Games in Jakarta and won 2 Golds—one for the prized All-Around Gymnast—and 3 Silvers.

 MILO and Bea helped create a new level of awareness for the sports of gymnastics that had never existed in the country before.


CREDITS: 
AGENCY: AMA-DDB Needham                            ADVERTISER: Nestle Ph. 
CREATIVE DIRECTOR: Bambi Borromeo           WRITER: Cynthia de Castro 
ART DIRECTOR: Roberto B. Miranda                   PRODUCER: Romy A. Esio 
PRODUCTION HOUSE: Filmex                            DIRECTOR: Jun Urbano 
FILM EDITOR: Dante de Leon

Friday, January 8, 2016

40. Commercial Discovery of 1987-88: ALICE DIXSON, Palmolive's "I Can Feel It" Girl


Creative Guild of the Philippines' Top Talent Discovery for 1987 was the refreshingly beautiful Filipina-mestiza, ALICE DIXSON, whose appearance in a Palmolive Commercial created a sensation with its signature "shoulder shrug" choreography.


Watch the 1987 Palmolive commercial here.

Born as Jessie Alice Celones Dixson on 28 July 1969 to an American father and a Filipina, Alice barged into showbiz via the beauty contest route. She first joined the quest for Reyna ng Santacruzan on "Eat Bulaga" which she won. At age 18, Dixson joined the more prestigious Bb. Pilipinas and was chosen as Bb.Pilipinas-International 1986. She went to Nagasaki, Japan to compete in the Miss International Beauty Pageant where she placed among the 15 semifinalists.


Watch her at Miss International 1986  here:

Commercial casters began calling immediately, and she was chosen along with 4 other girls for an undisclosed shampoo project, which was revealed only after they were approved. The product was Palmolive Shampoo.  Dixson was supposed to share equal billing with the other girls, but she registered so well that she was featured in the product demo--and ended the commercial with the memorable "shoulder rotation shrug" as she exuberantly sang "I can feel it!"

Dixson suddenly became a  household name in 1987 through that highly popular Palmolive TV ad, jumpstarting her showbiz career. She was cast in a TV sitcom, Okay Ka, Fairy Ko as the fairy princess, Faye, who fell for a mortal. It was just a matter of time that she transitioned to movies, even earning plaudits for  Hanggang Saan, Hanggang Kailan (1993), Sa Isang Sulok Ng Pangarap, Pangako Ng Kahapon (1994), Sana Dalawa Ang Puso Ko (1995) and Sambahin Ang Ngalan Mo (1998).

Watch Dixson recall her Palmolive commercial here

Dixson left a flourishing career to move to Canada in 1999 where she wed IT specialist Ronnie Miranda, a marriage that would last 3 years. She made a successful comeback in 2011, starring in Babaing Hampaslupa and Ang Panday II.

She co-starred with Christopher de Leon and Richard Gomez in the smash hit telenovela, Ang Iibigin Ay Ikaw (2002 to 2005). In December 2013, she pose for FHM Philippines, making her the oldest woman to cover on that men's magazine, at age 44. As of 2015, she can be seen on TV as Mia Corcuera in the local adaptation of "Marimar."


Dixson's Palmolive TV ad has since become a classic, and, in 2002, the TVC was included as one of the 25 Pilak Awardees, representing the best Philippine ad of the last 50 years--"patalastas na walang kupas".