Thursday, December 10, 2015

Mountain Dew brings back Mtn Dew Pitch Black on Facebook

via Food Bev

Mountain Dew has made the cult classic Mtn Dew Pitch Black available to consumers once again for three days, exclusively on Facebook.
Mtn Dew Pitch Black was first released in October 2004 as a Halloween limited edition flavour and was brought back in the summer of 2011 as part of the brand’s Back by Popular DewMand programme. As Mountain Dew explained, it has gone dark ever since.
But now the brand has marked the drink’s return with a giveaway competition, offering consumers the chance to win one of a limited number of packs.
Mountain Dew launched a campaign offering fans the chance to enter the Mtn Dew Pitch Black sweepstakes for a chance to win a free 15-pack case of the beloved beverage. A number of fans who visited the brand’s Facebook page and explained why they wanted a case of Pitch Black using the hashtag #WeWantPitchBlack were rewarded with a prized pack. There was one chance to enter for each of the three days of the sweepstakes, and in total 1,050 lucky fans were selected to win a case of Mtn Dew Pitch Black.
“Best day ever,” wrote on entrant upon being informed that they’d been selected to receive one of the limited edition packs. “Oh. My. God,” added another.

Wednesday, December 9, 2015

Crystal Pepsi Is Back, But You Have To Win It To Sip It

via Huffington Post

Good news, '90s kids: Crystal Pepsi is back in all its clear, caffeine-free glory. 
But don't rush to the grocery store just yet. You'll have to win your soda, as Pepsi is giving away 13,000 six-packs of Crystal Pepsi in a special sweepstakes
The competition -- and the party -- is really heating fizzing up. 
You may remember Crystal Pepsi as the short-lived soda that disappeared from shelves in 1993. Pepsi hinted at the drink's return in June, when competitive eater Kevin Strahle started a social media movement asking for a comeback. 
Now that time has come: Nostalgic soda-seekers can enter the Crystal Pepsi sweepstakes by joining the free Pepsi Pass program and using the Pepsi Pass app. (You have to earn points to enter the sweepstakes, but don't worry: You'll get a hefty sign-up bonus when you start using the app.)
Entries will be accepted on Dec. 10 and 11, with Crystal Pepsi packs shipping out to 13,000 winners around Dec. 24. 
What a merry Pepsi-mas that would be.

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

PepsiCo Creator Division Develops Immersive Creative Experiences

via Food Dive


Dive Brief:

  • For the past 18 months, Creator has been PepsiCo North America Beverages' in-house division tasked with devising innovative ways to use immersive experiences to foster engagement with consumers.
  • Creator debuted the Pepsi Art Dome, developed for PepsiCo by digital animated art site Likuid Art, at the Voodoo Music and Arts Experience in New Orleans on Halloween weekend. The 40-foot dome was an interactive art experience that was "raining lights and color on an audience sprawled out on couches," and "The 18 minutes of extrasensory chill-out culminates in swirling blue and red color whisps that coalesce into the Pepsi logo," according to Fast Company.
  • The staff at Creator search for emerging trends in a variety of spaces, from sports and entertainment to technology and lifestyle, and then cultivate those concepts via artistic collaborations between PepsiCo brands, artists, and corporate partners.

Dive Insight:

"Creator is about transformation in marketing, how we embrace risk, deploy disruptive technology, and connect with consumers in new and different ways," Seth Kaufman, CMO for PepsiCo North America Beverages, told Fast Company. "Consumers are on multiple devices. Creator helps us stay on the leading edge of culture and break through the clutter. In today’s crowded communication landscape, connecting with consumers is hard, so we look for things like that to tap into their passions."
With the Pepsi Art Dome, PepsiCo and Likuid Art were careful to not create an explicit commercial for the company but to build something that seamlessly integrated with the rest of the festival's art pieces. They used only "subtle branding towards the end," Chris Saunders, Likuid Art's creative director, told Fast Company. 
What's also unique about Creator is that it tends to act more like a startup itself rather than a division of a major corporation, wherein the staff are constantly experimenting, learning, and updating each idea that comes their way.
"For a Fortune 50 packaged goods company, that’s a massive shift and a great way to think about innovation—seeing something, learning from it, putting something out into the market, learning from that experience, and making it better the next time," Kaufman told Fast Company. "We’ll take what we did at Voodoo, which was incredibly successful, build on it, and the next thing we put into the marketplace will be more effective."
The Pepsi Art Dome was the first of three installations that PepsiCo will launch in partnership with Live Nation Entertainment. The next will be at Farmborough Festival in New York in June.

Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Whole Neighborhood Learns Sign Language to Surprise Deaf Resident in Samsung Ad

via AdWeek
Samsung Turkey has launched a website with a video call center for the hearing impaired, and it's announced it with quite the stunt.
In the video below, titled "The Most Emotional Surprise of the Year," we follow Muharrem, a hearing-impaired man, through his morning routine. A month of preparation (including sign language training) and many cameras later, Muharrem goes through the city and is greeted by people who can communicate just like he does.

Watch the long form here.

It ends with Muharrem approaching a large screen, with a woman signing to him "A world without barriers is our dream as well." She announces the video call center for the hearing impaired, and then the "gotcha" moment happens.
Lot of tears. From Muharrem and maybe a viewer or two.

Friday, November 20, 2015

Pepsi Is “Ready To Go” With Jussie Smollett As Their #NextPepsiArtist

via Vibe

Jussie Smollett (L) and Lee Daniels (R) on set of their Pepsi commercial in New York City.

From its record-breaking television ratings to its star-studded celebrity cameos, it’s evident that America has found its newest guilty pleasure in FOX’s popular series,Empire.
Like a nosey neighbor in a real-life soap opera, viewers are satiated with weekly doses of drama and scandal, mixed with meme-worthy scenes that are bound to make their way into tomorrow’s break room conversation. Although the show’s plot inspires tweets and GIFs that consistently ascend #Empire to the peak of trending topics, the Lee Daniels-co-created show undeniably fuses hip-hop and pop culture in a way that makes it hard for any of its infections songs to not stick in your head.
This same addiction has carried the first season’s debut soundtrack to the No. 1 spot on the Billboard “R&B/Hip-Hop” album chart, taken the Lyon brothers to award show stages and garnered the attention of the food & beverage conglomerate, PepsiCo.
“We’re excited to be working with Empire – the hottest show on television today,” said Adam Harter, Vice President of PepsiCo Consumer Engagement.
CREDIT: FOX
“At Pepsi, we’re always looking to create new experiences that will impact pop culture. Our partnership with Empire will allow us to reach and invite fans to have fun with us and their favorite TV show this season.”
This season, Pepsi serves as not only the official beverage sponsor, but also as the latest partner to seamlessly integrate its brand in a musical way. On Wednesday (Dec. 2), the official commercial for Jamal Lyon’s chosen track will not only appear during an episode of Empire, but also in real life in conjunction with Pepsi’s #NextPepsiArtist campaign.

Following in the footsteps of icons like Michael Jackson and Beyonce, Jussie Smollett is next up to star in the “Next Pepsi Artist” musical visual directed by the one and only Lee Daniels:
“Pepsi let me do my thing,” shared Daniels. “It’s not an experience that’s been experienced by the regular Pepsi commercial viewer before.”
Despite experiencing one of the most pinch-worthy moments of his life and career, Smollett is aware that although he’s now among some of the most influential artists in pop culture, it takes more to truly arrive in this game called entertainment:
“There are three things that happen where you know you’re on your way,” points out the actor. “Having a No. 1 album, winning a Grammy and doing a Pepsi commercial.”
What will bring the core of this campaign to life is the beat-thumping EDM-influenced record, “Ready to Go,” produced by hip-hop producer/music veteran Swizz Beatz. The South Bronx-native, who has contributed to the success of over 300 albums sold worldwide, admits the collaboration couldn’t have happened without Lee Daniels reaching out. But he also credits sharing a positive vibe in the studio with Smollett:
CREDIT: Patrick Harbron/FOX
“‘Ready to Go’ is Jussie’s graduation,” addsSwizz Beatz. “Just when you thought it couldn’t get any bigger for him, he’s ready to go to the next level. There’s always another level to go to.”
During Wednesday night’s episode, Pepsi subtly integrated a rep, who presented the campaign opportunity to the Empire team, noting that “Music is a part of Pepsi’s DNA. It has a long history of getting behind emerging artists and partnering with iconic stars.” And this is just what the global brand has continued to do effortlessly over the years.
“I salute Pepsi for investing into this situation, because we need more of this. I think he’s a great choice. His energy fits the brand. It’s not over-aggressive, but it’s right there in the middle.”
There are two more episodes until the Dec. 2 premiere of the lively Empire commercial. Could Jamal Lyon go on to be “music’s new icon”? Possibly so and the show’s home network, FOX, just might be on to something. We’ll all just have to wait until Pepsi finally adds more icing to this addictive television series cake.

Thursday, November 19, 2015

Burger King brings back 90s hit soda Surge in a new way

via Fox News

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Frozen Surge is an icy twist on the 90s cult favorite soda. (Burger King)
Surge, the citrus-flavored soda that disappeared from store shelves in 2002, is making a comeback by Burger King in a cool new way.
The burger chain is selling Frozen Surge, a slushy version of the bright green beverage that was pretty much Coca-Cola's version of Mountain Dew and which amassed a cult-like following. 
“The popularity of Surge has stood the test of time, and the overwhelming demand from fans drove our decision to bring it back,” said Bobby Oliver, director citrus brands, Coca-Cola North America said in a statement. “We’re expanding the signature taste and distinctive color of Surge to frozen form and making it available to the masses.”
Surge was first introduced to the U.S. by Coke in 1996, but as sales started to slump in the early 2000s, the company pulled the green soda from stores.
In 2014, after a group of friends started The Surge Movement, a guerilla campaign dedicated to bringing back the soda, Coke brought it back. 
The Movement’s Facebook page drew over 300,000 likes from Surge fans around the world and, after a successful reintroduction via Amazon.com, Coke began reintroducing the soda in limited markets across the U.S. earlier this year.
Frozen Surge went on sale Nov. 16 and will only be available at Burger King restaurants.

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

The Hundreds x Pepsi Collection

via XXL Magazine

The Hundreds
The Hundreds presents the release of the limited and exclusive The Hundreds x Pepsi 

collection, which is set to drop in the days to come.


Since its inception, Pepsi has left more than a just taste in the world’s mouth, but a legacy 

that defined and documented generations. The Hundreds set out to recreate Pepsi’s 

advertising campaigns—from the ‘40s through the 2000’s and even a future Pepsi Perfect 

ad from Back to the Future II, they’ve recreated the memorable photos with the help of 

model Denise Schaefer.
The Hundreds
The Hundreds
The Hundreds x Pepsi collection will be available at The Hundreds’ flagship locations

selected retailers, and in the The Hundreds’ online shop on Friday, Nov. 20.

Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Budweiser Pulls Puppies From Super Bowl Ad Plans

via AdAge

Budweiser is putting its Super Bowl puppies back in the doghouse.
The cute little critters -- which have played a key role in Bud ads for the past two Super Bowls -- are sitting out the the 2016 game and might never come back. Because as cute as they are, the puppies apparently don't sell beer. So Bud will deploy a more product-focused approach for Super Bowl 50.
Still, fans of the brand's iconic Clydesdales can rest easy. The horses, which mingled with the puppies in the ads, are coming back.
"While the puppy's story line won't be reprised in February, the Budweiser Clydesdales are icons of the brand and will most certainly make an appearance," Jorn Socquet, U.S. VP-marketing for A-B InBev, said in a statement to Ad Age.
He added: "Budweiser aired two very different spots in last February's Super Bowl, and we learned that content focused on the quality of our beer was most effective in generating sales. Starting with our 'Brewed the Hard Way' ad in last year's game and throughout 2015, our marketing has featured a bold, confident voice that speaks directly to Budweiser drinkers, and sales trends have improved as a result. We'll continue this tone in Super Bowl 50, and we're excited to explore new creative territory."
In an article published by Bloomberg last week, Mr. Socquet said that while everybody loves the puppies, "they have zero impact on beer sales. Those ads I wouldn't air again because they don't sell beer."
Bud's two Super Bowl puppy ads were by Bud agency-of-record Anomaly and were directed by Jake Scott.The spots garnered plenty of social media buzz. In a story published in advance of the 2015 Super Bowl, Ad Age declared Bud the pre-game victor after the "Lost Dog" ad -- which was released before the game -- drew nearly 31 million views.
The "Brewed the Hard Way" ad, which was not released before the game, took a hard-hitting approach that proudly declared the nation's third-largest beer as a "macro" brew. The spot generated plenty of buzz on its own -- especially within the beer world -- for taking shots at fruity micro brews and beer geeks. Bud is "brewed for drinking, not dissecting," the ad declared.
The campaign, which is also by Anomaly, has continued this year but has focused more squarely on Bud's credentials without making comparisons to crafts. 

Thursday, November 12, 2015

WATCH: Kyrie Irving is back as Uncle Drew in latest Pepsi spot

via Fox Sports

Kyrie Irving is back as Uncle Drew.
 
Pepsi
Kyrie Irving appeared in a series of Pepsi spots as Uncle Drew, an old man who impressed on the court with the way he could get buckets.
It's been two years since the last episode appeared, but we finally have a new one that features three new characters -- only one of which is easy to recognize.

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Face-Off: Auto Brand Leverages Sports Sponsorship with Virtual Face Painting App

via Contagious.io
To promote its sponsorship of 100 US collegiate sports teams, car brand Nissan has created an app that allows fans to virtually paint their faces with their team colours. The Diehard Fans app lets users choose from a selection of designs, which represent nearly all the 100 collegiate teams covered in the sponsorship deal.
To use the app, football fans pick their school from a list and hold up their smartphone to scan their face. They can then swipe through a selection of painted looks in their team colours, which are layered onto their faces via augmented reality. Users can then share their look via social media, messaging apps and email. The designs were created by hand-painting them on human models and then digitally remastering them.
The app is being promoted with an online film featuring former Pittsburgh Panther player Tony Dorsett and Ohio State’s Troy Smith (see above).

Friday, November 6, 2015

How Sprite Drove More than 2 million Snapchat Views in Just a Few Days

via Digiday

A new campaign for Sprite that puts Snapchat codes on its cans in Brazil has received more than 2 million views in just a few days, according to the agency behind the campaign. The company shipped millions of cans with the Snapchat logo slapped on the side, along with scannable images that act like QR codes that lead consumers to other accounts on the messaging app.
The campaign started with 15 different Snapchat codes printed on cans, connecting to Web celebrities and other local notables. The ad stars are sharing Sprite-related stories on Snapchat, which have now been viewed 2.3 million times in two days, according to the people behind the effort. (View counts on Snapchat do not necessarily reflect total audience, because often the same person watches a clip more than once.)
“Sprite has a young audience in Brazil, a very young audience,” said Felipe Simi of CUBOCC, the agency that helped create the Sprite Snapchat tie-up. “We are talking about Gen Z, not even millennials anymore.”
sprite2
Brazil to Snapchat: ‘I like the Sprite in you’
If the initial performance is any indication, users should be prepared for a surge in friends.
“Coca-Cola is a really powerful medium in Brazil,” Simi said. “And the can has this huge distribution.”
It might be strange to think of cans as a medium, but that’s what Sprite is doing, considering that 40 percent of the desired young audience isn’t watching TV, Simi said. Snapchat is now reaching close to 200 million people globally, and tens of millions of them visit daily, he said. The youngest generation considers it the No. 1 app for their media consumption, according to his agency’s research.
Almost 500 people have sent their Snapchat codes to Sprite’s website in the past two days, Simi said. The company will decide which accounts get to be printed on actual cans, clearly vetting to limit any scandalous outcomes.
This is not the first time Sprite has leaned on Snapchat for marketing. Its agency, Wieden+Kennedy New York, set up a pop-up retail location in New York this summer, and people nearby were offered special filters to put on their Snapchat photos.
Snapchat is becoming a force in millennial-and-younger marketing, mostly on the back of these special experiences. Some in the ad world are not sold on whether it can scale the idea into a business that demands advertiser money like Facebook does. Also QR codes generally have been a flop in the U.S. after receiving a swell of initial hype years ago, according to ad industry observers.
“Stickers, overlays on photos, and those kinds of custom filter overlays, that’s more interesting,” said one ad agency source with ties to Sprite and Snapchat, who didn’t want to be identified.
Snapchat recently sold its first Sponsored Lens, which is an animated filter, for the movie “Peanuts. Users could tap their screens, and the animated lens would pop up on top of their photos to be shared with friends.
The Sprite campaign also relies on Snapchat personalities, just like campaigns often rely on YouTube or Vine celebrities. In this case, Sprite went for accounts run by people and artists popular in Brazil, including PC Siqueira, Pyong Lee the Magic Korean, graffiti artist Chivitz and skater Dwayne Fugundes.
Snapchatters with influence constitute an area that a number of brands see potential in, because they see a way to get their content in front of Snapchat users in a way that is typically less expensive than direct sponsorships.

Thursday, November 5, 2015

Pepsi Plans New '1893' Soda

via Ad Age

PepsiCo will launch a new soda brand called 1893, which is an apparent reference to the birth year of a predecessor to Pepsi-Cola known as "Brad's Drink."
A PepsiCo spokeswoman confirmed the launch of 1893 to Ad Age but provided no further details. The company in August filed a trademark application for the phrase "1893 From the makers of Pepsi-Cola."
The launch appears to be part of a recent strategy by the cola giant to create more premium cola brands to complement the mainstream Pepsi brand. Pepsi in late 2014 launched a new brand called Caleb's Kola that is made from cane sugar, kola nuts from Africa, spices and a hint of citrus. The cola is named for Pepsi inventor Caleb Bradham.
Mr. Bradham ran a drug store in New Bern, N.C., where he created a beverage called "Brad's Drink" in 1893 that was made from sugar, water, caramel, lemon oil, nutmeg, and other natural additives, according topepsistore.com, which is an online store affiliated with the "Birthplace of Pepsi."
The birthplace site is in New Bern and is owned and operated by the Minges Bottling Group of North Carolina. "Brad's Drink" was renamed Pepsi-Cola in 1898.
The North Carolina History Project gives this account of the history of the cola:
The druggist invented the beverage not only to keep patrons but also to improve their health. Wanting to have a soft drink without the narcotics so frequently used in others, Bradham experimented with various combinations of juices, spices, and syrups. His customers most liked his vanilla, rare oils, and kola nut extract-combination. Bradham believed this particular product aided digestion and had no harmful effects (then it had no caffeine). The formula was soon nicknamed "Brad's Drink."
The launch of 1893 comes as Pepsi and other soda marketers deal with a long-term decline in soda consumption. Speaking last year about the Caleb's launch, PepsiCo CEO Indra Nooyi said "people still love the cola taste -- it's just lost some of its cool factor and I think products like Caleb's are bringing back some of the cool factor."
PepsiCo also recently confirmed a new line of craft sodas called "Stubborn Soda" that will be sold at fountains at select foodservice accounts.