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Ad of the Day: Old Milwaukee

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Hello, Davenport, Iowa! Will Ferrell wants you to drink Old Milwaukee beer, in classic American fashion.

In a somewhat peculiar move, the comedian has surfaced to endorse the brew in three videos set in Davenport over the past month—spots that are reportedly airing only locally in the Quad Cities of Iowa and Illinois. In the latest clip—a grainy, apparently viewer-recorded version of which hit YouTube last week—Ferrell begins to riff in his trademark yell on the virtues of Old Milwaukee, inspired by the spelling of Davenport's name. "D, for drinkability!" he cheers. "A, amber. Color of the beer!" Things start to fall apart around "E," and devolve into a tantrum around "P," as Ferrell throws in the towel. "I don't know how to do this!" he screams. The video then cuts off abruptly.

The two earlier skits show Ferrell fishing—by line and by hand—in the Mississippi River. Like the new spot, the earlier ones reached YouTube only as grainy recordings evidently made off a TV. But it's clear that they're all low-budget productions.

So, why is Will Ferrell doing local ads for Old Milwaukee? The company says he just loves the brand. "Will approached Old Milwaukee because he's a big fan of the beer and thought it would be fun to make the commercials, and we couldn't be more excited that he did," Bryan Crowley, the CMO of Old Milwaukee parent Pabst Brewing, told the Quad-City Times (which was just as surprised by Ferrell's move as anyone). But is Crowley being serious? Is Ferrell? Doesn't it seem possible—perhaps even likely—that this is all just an elaborate joke?

A few things suggest it might be indeed. First, an MSNBC report from 2010 indicated that Ferrell's Funny or Die site was planning to produce sketches incorporating Pabst products—as part of an effort by the brewer's new owners, the Metropoulos brothers, to revitalize a host of neglected labels. Nothing has yet appeared on Funny or Die, but these three spots could easily be seen as branded entertainment. Also curious is Old Milwaukee's recent refresh of its website and Facebook presence, which puts other grainy Old Milwaukee beer ads front and center—classic spots from the brand's history, including the Swedish Bikini Team (hailed on the Facebook page as "The Best Beer Commercial Ever"). Are the Ferrell spots supposed to hark back ironically to the brand's commercial heyday?

Adweek contacted reps for Pabst and Ferrell looking for some answers, so far without any response. If the goal was to make these spots go viral, they've had only limited success—114,000 views on the most-watched clip, which isn't exactly gangbusters these days. Still, conspiracy theories aside, the spots are amusing on their own and nicely dust off a brand that seems to have largely fallen out of the popular consciousness.

UPDATE: Daren Metropoulos, co-owner of Pabst Brewing Company, tells Adweek: "Will Ferrell approached Old Milwaukee about creating ads because he's a big fan of the brand. He was interested in developing something unique and we gave him the freedom to pursue his creative vision and produce these spots with a local vibe."

UPDATE: The plot thickens. Ferrell filmed some ads in Terre Haute, Ind., as well. They reportedly began airing this week. All four are posted below. Crowley gave the same exact quote to a paper there as he gave to the Quad Cities paper: "Will approached Old Milwaukee because he's a big fan of the beer and thought it would be fun to make the commercials, and we couldn't be more excited that he did." At the very least, the marketer is being cryptic about the nature and scale of this effort. Anyway, Toledo is obviously next.








Will Ferrell Now Making Fun of Old Milwaukee's Slogan

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We've already written about the great low-budget Old Milwaukee ads that Will Ferrell made in Davenport, Iowa, and Terre Haute, Ind. But this one, which popped up overnight, deserves a special mention—as Ferrell humorously pokes fun at Old Milwaukee's tagline of yore, "It just doesn't get any better than this." The whole campaign walks a fine line between celebrating and mocking the beer, but this spot in particular seems to err on the side of the latter—though humorously so. All of Ferrell's ads for the brand have finally gotten some attention this week (to the tune of almost 1 million total views on the Davenport ones). It will be interesting to see how far they take it. See all the ads here.

Will Ferrell Takes Old Milwaukee Road Show to Milwaukee Itself

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He went from Davenport, Iowa, to Terre Haute, Ind. And now, Will Ferrell has popped up in two new Old Milwaukee ads—in Milwaukee itself. This complicates things, since Old Milwaukee owner Pabst abandoned Milwaukee long ago, and this year actually moved its headquarters from Illinois to Los Angeles, of all places. In one new spot, Ferrell is seen shouting from the top of the old, broken-down Pabst brewery, in an area that's now being redeveloped into a hip urban enclave. "They used to make beer up here!" he shouts. "They used to make a lot of stuff here in America, and right here in Milwaukee! I think they should go back to making stuff!" Ouch—a little dig at the brand he loves so much? At least it hasn't left the country entirely. In a second spot, Ferrell is seen biking around Milwaukee, singing about how great it is. A third Terre Haute spot has also surfaced, which you can see after the jump. In other news, no one in any of these three cities apparently has the technology to upload decent versions of these ads to YouTube. Via The A.V. Club.



Will Ferrell Pitches 'Casa de mi Padre' by Doing Interviews Only in Spanish

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Has Will Ferrell gone Method on us? Nah. He's just marketing his latest flick, Casa de mi Padre, by doing interviews entirely in Spanish on English-language TV talk shows. It's the actor-comedian's 2012 version of a promotional stunt that's worked for him since he appeared in character as Nascar driver Ricky Bobby to hype Talladega Nights in the early '00s. The sometime Old Milwaukee pitchman, who stars in and produced Casa de mi Padre, has a somewhat tenuous grasp of Spanish, as does interviewer Jimmy Kimmel in the clips below. But, hey, they're trying. The subtitles definitely help. Casa de mi Padre, a parody of Mexican melodramas also starring Latino heartthrobs Diego Luna and Gael Garcia Bernal, opens Friday. Parts two and three of the interview are posted after the jump.



Will Ferrell on Old Milwaukee: 'I Just Love a Good, Crappy Beer'

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Will Ferrell has never really explained his hilariously random Old Milwaukee ads, which began airing in Davenport, Iowa, in December and culminated with a Super Bowl spot that ran only in North Platte, Neb. (There were stops along the way in Terre Haute, Ind., and Milwaukee itself.) Now, The Onion's A.V. Club tries to corner him on the issue—but all Ferrell will say is that he loves the beer. Well, he also says it's "crappy" beer, which Old Milwaukee may or may not want to hear. Here's the exchange:

     AVC: What was the context? It seems like there's some sort of broad framework for social-media promotion between Funny Or Die and Pabst.
     WF: I just love Old Milwaukee. That's my official answer.
     AVC: So it was just "It'd be fun to do a series of bad commercials"?
     WF: No, I just love a good, crappy beer.

That certainly sounds like an authentic Old Milwaukee drinker talking. Perhaps both are true—Ferrell may actually really love Old Milwaukee while also having a deal with Pabst (via Funny Or Die) to promote it. Whatever the case, it was an entertaining little puzzle. And the Super Bowl spot, in particular, was one of the best ads of the night. Via Adland.

New Leibovitz Images Show More Celebs as Disney Icons

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Two new teaser images from Annie Leibovitz's Disney Dream Portrait series have been released as a prelude to a massive magazine ad blitz coming this fall from mcgarrybowen in New York. The first depicts Russell Brand as Captain Hook about to be devoured by the crocodile. The second shows Jack Black, Will Ferrell and Jason Segel as the hitchhiking ghosts from the Haunted Mansion ride (they show up at the end to hitchhike in your car). As usual, Leibovitz manages to capture the essence of both the stars and the Disney characters they’re portraying. (You can see many of the photos from the collection on this gallery maintained by the blog Inside the Magic.) All the portraits will appear in special inserts running in a glut of magazines this fall, including Vanity Fair, Leibovitz’s old stomping grounds. Check out a behind-the-scenes video of the Hitchhiking Ghost photo shoot after the jump. Via the Disney Parks Blog.

Will Ferrell Now Making Old Milwaukee Ads for Swedish TV

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Old Milwaukee's Will Ferrell campaign keeps getting weirder, and that's not a bad thing. After airing low-budget ads in Davenport, Iowa, Terre Haute, Ind., and Milwaukee itself last year, and then doing that great Super Bowl spot that ran only in North Platte, Neb., the comedian has gone international—appearing in at least four ads now airing in Sweden, of all places. Homemade footage of the spots was uploaded to YouTube three weeks ago; Funny or Die pointed them out today. ("Sweden's Twitter account just posted this Will Ferrell spot that's only airing on Swedish television. It's the best," said the Facebook update.) In one spot, Ferrell can't stop laughing about a sign that says "Infart." In another, he's out boating with a Swedish beauty—and is actually speaking Swedish. "This is my boat. This is my woman. And this is my beer. Old Milwaukee. It's all right," he says, according to Slate, which also points out that Ferrell is married to a Swedish actress, Viveca Paulin. Ferrell's official explanation for why he's involved in the quirky campaign? "I just love a good, crappy beer." Check out the four new spots below. Next stop for this campaign: the moon.





Top 10 Commercials of the Week: Oct. 19-26

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This week, one lucky lady got George Clooney and buried treasure, Will Ferrell headed to Sweden to sell some Old Milwaukee (which isn't even sold there!), and train passengers got a chance to become real-life James Bonds. 

Many of the hundreds of TV commercials that air each day are just blips on the radar, having little impact on the psyche of the American consumer, who is constantly bombarded by advertising messages.

These aren't those commercials.

Adweek and AdFreak have brought together the most innovative and well-executed spots of the week, commercials that will make you laugh, smile, cry, think—and maybe buy.

Video Gallery: Top 10 Commercials, Oct. 19-26


Will Ferrell Will Do Anything for You, If You Just Vote for Obama

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Will Ferrell delivers the silliest and perhaps the most inspired presidential endorsement of the campaign season, donning a red smoking jacket and sporting a porny mustache as he offers to do "anything"—anything!—to get undecided voters to the polls today to vote for Barack Obama. He'll cook you dinner ("Hope you like angel-hair pasta"), help move your couch ("I've even got my own van") or give you a tattoo ("Fair warning, I do not know how to draw"). Ferrell also offers to eat "garbage, hair, human toenails, underpants." Sure, that's compelling, but I kept imagining Sarah Silverman offering to bite my toenails and eat my shorts instead. Ferrell's clip, which has topped 2 million views since it was posted on Saturday to the president's official YouTube channel, peaks around the :56 mark, when the comedian and Saturday Night Live alum strikes a sublimely stupid pugilist's stance and says, "I'll punch myself in the face. I don't care." You know, I believe he'll do that anyway, regardless of how people vote.

Will Ferrell Smooches His Way Through Another Old Milwaukee Super Bowl Ad

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Go Daddy's Super Bowl ad with Bar Refaeli and Jesse Heiman wasn't the only one to feature lots of disturbingly unlikely necking. Check out this Old Milwaukee ad with Will Ferrell, which we're told "only aired in a few small towns"—UPDATE: the towns were Sherman, Texas, Ardmore, Okla., and Glendive, Mont.—during tonight's big game. Seems Will has taken up with a middle-aged Asian woman, and the relationship is so passionate that it must be nurtured quite openly on public transport—just as he's coming home from basketball practice. It's less iconic and more peculiar than last year's Old Milwaukee Super Bowl ad, which aired in one Nebraska town, but still pretty hilarious.

Turner Adds Digital Streaming to Its Programming Plans

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True to its word, Turner unveiled a solid slate of scripted and unscripted shows at its upfront presentation on Wednesday morning, as well as a major digital initiative: TNT and TBS will stream live content to the networks' websites and by way of newly launched tablet and mobile apps. The streams will be authenticated, as part of parent company Time Warner's much-evangelized initiative, TV Everywhere.

TNT's scripted slate added a third title with an odd couple joined by fate and an ampersand: King & Maxwell (not to be confused with Franklin & Bash or Rizzoli & Isles), as well as a new show from Walking Dead creator Frank Darabont, Lost Angels. The network's reality shows looked a lot like its scripted fare, especially police show Boston's Finest. Dwayne Johnson will star in unscripted series Hero, as well.

The presentation started off with Turner boss Steve Koonin doing his usual shtick by joking around with the audience. This year, the generously-proportioned exec ran backstage and then appeared to back flip, breakdance, unicycle and juggle in an effort to impress ad buyers as body doubles emerged in padding and white wigs. Koonin stepped back on stage after the last performer, panting. "I took eight steps and now I'm winded," he cracked.

TBS, too, started its presentation on a comic note. "As many of you know, last year my company, Funny or Die, bought Turner broadcasting," said Will Ferrell in a taped short that also introduced Charles Barkley as head of the network. "You all know Charles--he's basically been running TBS for the last few years, so that won't be much of a surprise."

Ron Burgundy's Hilariously Stupid Dodge Durango Campaign Is Destined for Greatness

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The only thing better than Will Ferrell doing brilliantly stupid ads as Will Ferrell? Will Ferrell doing brilliantly stupid ads as Ron Burgundy.

As we mentioned on Friday, Ferrell has filmed some spots for the Dodge Durango as his Anchorman character ahead of the release of Paramount Pictures' Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues. Check out the first eight spots below. The first few aired on TV this weekend, and Ferrell perfects the role of comically idiotic pitchman—with help from a roomy glove box and a "worthless" horse. The ballroom spots will premiere tonight on Dancing With the Stars.

Wieden + Kennedy in Portland, Ore., worked with Funny or Die writers on the scripts. FoD's production arm, Gifted Youth, which also produced Ferrell's famously offbeat Old Milwaukee ads, teamed with Caviar to co-produce this work. This is just the beginning, too. Chrysler chief marketing officer Olivier Francois told the ANA Masters of Marketing conference in Phoenix on Friday that this is "just a little appetizer," and that Chrysler was producing another 67 videos for the Web. "It's massive," he said.

UPDATE: Dodge is now making real-time video responses to tweets about the campaign. First up, a horse explains horsepower to Ron Burgundy.

CREDITS
Client: Dodge Durango

Agency: Wieden + Kennedy, Portland, Ore.
Creative Directors: Aaron Allen, Kevin Jones, Michael Tabtabai
Copywriter: Mike Egan
Art Director: John Dwight
Interactive Art Director: Chuck Carlson
Producer: Monica Ranes
Account Team: Kyleen Caley, Lani Reichenbach
Business Affairs Manager: Dusty Slowik
Executive Producer: Corey Bartha
Executive Creative Directors: Joe Staples, Susan Hoffman
Head of Production: Ben Grylewicz

Co-Writing Company: Funny or Die

Production Companies: Gifted Youth, Caviar
Director: Jake Szymanski
Executive Producers (Gifted Youth): Chris Bruss, Dal Wolf, Josh Martin, Ryan McNeely
Executive Producers (Caviar): Jasper Thomlinson, Michael Sagol
Line Producer: Stephan Mohammed
Director of Photography: Tim Hudson

Editing Company: Arcade
Editor: Geoff Hounsell
Post Producer: Leslie Carthy
Post Executive Producer: Nicole Visram

Visual Effects Company: Method
Visual Effects Supervisor: Ben Walsh
Lead Flame Artist: Claus Hansen
Visual Effects Producer: Colin Clarry
Executive Producer: Robert Owens
Titles, Graphics: Trailer Park, W+K Motion

Color Correction: Company 3
Colorist: Dave Hussey
DI Producer: Denise Brown

Song: “Grazing in The Grass,” The Friends of Distinction

Mix Company: Barking Owl
Mixer: Brock Babcock
Producer: Kelly Bayett

How Ron Burgundy Learned to Love Dodge, and Vice Versa

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IDEA: Fictional '70s anchorman Ron Burgundy doing parody ads, which double as real ads, for a 2014 sport utility vehicle? Olivier François, who has broken the mold before as CMO of Chrysler and Fiat, was ecstatic to try it—even though he'd never heard of Anchorman and knew only vaguely of Will Ferrell.

The idea was actually born in a Fiat meeting, where then North American brand chief Tim Kuniskis proposed Burgundy as pitchman for the Fiat 500L—since the car, like the man, is "kind of a big deal." The idea died, but François finally saw the movie. And when he learned Anchorman 2 was in the works, he suggested Burgundy do ads for Dodge (where Kuniskis is now CEO) that would also promote the sequel.

"My pitch to Paramount was: Let's remind everyone how funny and great Ron Burgundy is," said François. Ferrell was game, and it was perfect timing for the 2014 Dodge Durango launch. So, Dodge agency Wieden + Kennedy got down to work with Gifted Youth, the production arm of Ferrell's Funny or Die, producing a campaign that, in humor and scope, would exceed almost everyone's expectations.

COPYWRITING/TALENT: W+K wrote the first scripts, focusing on how a local celebrity in the '70s would pitch a car made 40 years in the future.

"Once Will was on board, he really engaged and sent us back notes and new spots," said W+K creative director Aaron Allen. "We would send changes back to him. It was very collaborative, and oddly unstressful."

The first four spots broke last week, in eight versions with different jokes and punch lines. (A batch of 25 scripts produced 70 videos that will roll out over several months.) In the first ads, Burgundy raves about the Durango's glove box, can't pronounce "MPG," ridicules a horse for its single horsepower, and chases ballroom dancers away from the car.

Gifted Youth/Caviar director Jake Szymanski found W+K's scripts very funny and just kept adding to them. "We'll start with a script, but we might add five or 10 versions of a punch line," he said. "And then we'll improvise on set, yelling out other lines for Will to try."

The spots close with on-screen pitches, in black lettering backed by gold lights and trumpet music (the opening bars of the Friends of Distinction's version of "Grazing in The Grass"), for the vehicle and the movie, which hits theaters at Christmas.

FILMING/ART DIRECTION: Szymanski shot for three days—two with Ferrell, one just with the car—on two large stages at MBS Stages in Los Angeles. The first was a large circular stage with a curtain in the back and the car on display.

"We talked about doing it on a big white cyc [cyclorama]," Szymanski said. "But for this, I wanted it elegant and sleek, to juxtapose the buffoonery of Ron Burgundy."

Allen said the set had both a "modernity and a retro feel, which allowed the Durango and the character to both feel at home in the same space." (Other ads, yet to break, were shot on a second stage. "I'll just say you'll probably see him behind the wheel at some point," Szymanski hinted.)

The ads could be criticized for selling Burgundy more than the Durango, but in fact, the vehicle gets tons of screen time. "In most of my Chrysler ads—Eminem 'Born or Fire' or RAM 'Farmer'—I've had a lot of story and not a lot of car," said François. "In this work, we have a lot of car."

In any case, Francois said the campaign is about getting exposure for the Durango, not necessarily direct sales. "I don't think an ad can ever sell anything," he said. "It will never tell you everything about a car. The purpose is to grab you and drive you to another medium, which will fill you in."

MEDIA: Some ads will air on TV; all will be on YouTube.

Szymanski, who also shot Ferrell's quirky Old Milwaukee ads, said he loves the meta nature of the work. "You're deconstructing a car ad or a beer ad while still being a car ad or a beer ad," he said. "It's not anti-product, ever. It's about deconstructing the form—and a lot of the forms have been overdone in typical commercials."

THE SPOTS:

CREDITS
Client: Dodge Durango

Agency: Wieden + Kennedy, Portland, Ore.
Creative Directors: Aaron Allen, Kevin Jones, Michael Tabtabai
Copywriter: Mike Egan
Art Director: John Dwight
Interactive Art Director: Chuck Carlson
Producer: Monica Ranes
Account Team: Kyleen Caley, Lani Reichenbach
Business Affairs Manager: Dusty Slowik
Executive Producer: Corey Bartha
Executive Creative Directors: Joe Staples, Susan Hoffman
Head of Production: Ben Grylewicz

Co-Writing Company: Funny or Die

Production Companies: Gifted Youth, Caviar
Director: Jake Szymanski
Executive Producers (Gifted Youth): Chris Bruss, Dal Wolf, Josh Martin, Ryan McNeely
Executive Producers (Caviar): Jasper Thomlinson, Michael Sagol
Line Producer: Stephan Mohammed
Director of Photography: Tim Hudson

Editing Company: Arcade
Editor: Geoff Hounsell
Post Producer: Leslie Carthy
Post Executive Producer: Nicole Visram

Visual Effects Company: Method
Visual Effects Supervisor: Ben Walsh
Lead Flame Artist: Claus Hansen
Visual Effects Producer: Colin Clarry
Executive Producer: Robert Owens
Titles, Graphics: Trailer Park, W+K Motion

Color Correction: Company 3
Colorist: Dave Hussey
DI Producer: Denise Brown

Song: "Grazing in The Grass," The Friends of Distinction

Mix Company: Barking Owl
Mixer: Brock Babcock
Producer: Kelly Bayett

Ron Burgundy Really Gets in Your Face in His Latest Dodge Spot

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Dodge was taking a bit of a risk in hiring Ron Burgundy as pitchman—the ads, after all, promote Anchorman 2 at least as much as they sell any car. But the automaker must be happy with the number of times the brand and model names get uttered in Will Ferrell's latest spot for the automaker, which broke Sunday. He has a lot more to say, anyway, than he did the previous weekend in the "Get the Heck" spot, also posted below. Agency: Wieden + Kennedy in Portland, Ore.

UPDATE: Another three new spots hit YouTube this afternoon. See them all below.

Strange Ads Promote an Author Who Isn't Real and a Book That Doesn't Exist

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IFC's upcoming The Spoils of Bablyon, a comedy miniseries that spoofs serious miniseries, is based on a book that seems to be sold out in Hudson News stores around the country. The problem with keeping the book in stock, though, is that there were never any printed copies.

Eric Jonrosh (and the jig will be up when he shows up on TV and looks a lot like Will Ferrell, who produces the series along with the rest of the Funny or Die crew) is the megalomaniacal author of the book, and his persona has become the avatar of IFC's marketing for the show. "[Andrew Steele and Matt Piedmont, who wrote the series] created a character—well, we don't even like to call him a character," head of marketing Blake Callaway tells AdFreak. "We like to pretend he's real. We've written the fake book reviews. He's committed to literacy, because if you can't read, you can't read Jonrosh."

The writer's megalomaniacal streak is borne out in the ambitions of the miniseries, which appears to span a period from the 1930s to the 1980s, if the trailer (see below) is any indication. So IFC has an appropriately grandiose ad campaign, with the book-focused executions littering bookstores and branded Little Free Libraries installed in cities like Dallas and Minneapolis in partnership with that organization.

Callaway says he hopes to entice writers from the blockbuster-ier end of the literary spectrum to turn out for the show's Los Angeles premiere in January. "[James Patterson] is on our wish list," Callaway said. "Our fantasy list is to have Jackie Collins, Patterson, Grisham—we think they should turn out to celebrate their colleague."

Jonrosh has also been hard at work "reviewing" current best-sellers (especially those with movie versions) like Ender's Game—there's a certain amount of subtext to that one—in wildly inappropriate ways. The Wolf of Wall Street and Fifty Shades of Grey have also suffered his attentions.

As for the miniseries itself, Callaway said, "We're going back to the ABC marketing division of the '80s," à la Roots (which is getting a non-hilarious remake, as well). Makes sense: The show has an ensemble cast that includes unlikely names like Tobey Maguire, Val Kilmer and Haley Joel Osment, who's had something of a comeback this year between Spoils and Amazon's Alpha House.

The show, Callaway told AdFreak, will be an anthology series, like another popular cable offering. "This will kind of be our American Horror Story," he said. "Every year, we'll put another Eric Jonrosh novel on the screen." Sounds like a candidate for renewal.


Will Ferrell’s Anchorman 2 Is Changing the Way Movies Are Marketed

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In a video that will soon be making the rounds in Ireland and beyond, Ron Burgundy—as if he had been cryogenically frozen since the late ’70s—offers his congrats to Irish actor Jamie Dornan for landing the lead role in the forthcoming erotic thriller Fifty Shades of Grey.

Photo: Mark Seliger/Paramount Pictures

In the run-up to Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues, the fictional blowhard TV newsman opines: “I can only imagine it’s a charming documentary on the low-barometric pressure that often occurs in Ireland, resulting in various shades of overcast skies, as the Irish are known for having a strange obsession with their weather. I imagine this is a big win for them. So good job, boyo!” (To pick at just one of his points, in classically absurd Burgundian “expertise,” men from the Emerald Isle do not typically refer to each other as “boyo”—unless they want to accuse an Irish friend of being Welsh, that is.)

In addition to being just plain funny, the 27-second video perfectly captures the snackable, custom-made social content that is the tent pole of the film’s global campaign, led by the studio, Paramount Pictures, and digital-focused shop Zemoga but creatively masterminded by Anchorman 2’s talent. From Will Ferrell (Ron Burgundy) to Steve Carell (Brick Tamland) to Paul Rudd (Brian Fantana) to David Koechner (Champ Kind) to the folks behind the camera, it’s an all-hands-on-deck affair. “This has been the most comprehensive amount of material I’ve ever participated in,” Ferrell tells Adweek in an email. “I’m taken aback.”

Actually, Ferrell and his merry troupe are moving social media as marketing tool forward, as they get themselves up to speed with the discipline’s ever-changing argot. “I barely knew what a meme or GIF was when we started the campaign,” confesses Adam McKay, the 45-year-old director of Anchorman 2, who also co-writes the franchise with Ferrell. “But those terms starting coming out and I would be like, ‘You mean a good joke?’ To me, those are just new words for premises, tropes or riffs. The only big difference to me is the riff is now often going on a loop.”

Paramount has struck the deepest movie partnership to date with Tumblr, which represents the linchpin for a digital appeal that bristles with more social lingo than a Facebook developer’s powwow. The studio has been seeding the social media ecosystem with Burgundy’s essence at just the right pace in recent weeks, placing several of 50-plus videos and social nuggets cooked up by the Ferrell-McKay duo and content shop Jetset Studios. (Anchorman 2 hits theaters nationwide on Dec. 20.) “The concept of social media barely existed at the time of the first Anchorman,” notes Andrew Runyon, Paramount’s vp of interactive marketing. “Facebook had just been conceived a few months prior, and YouTube and Twitter hadn’t been created. But social has allowed Anchorman to live on as a film. And it makes us believe that we have something really zeitgeisty here that we can capitalize on.”

The campaign is not only very 2013 but is also a model for the future of movie marketing. It encompasses native ads on The Huffington Post, including taking over the news site’s homepage logo on Dec. 16. And in an Onion-like gag, Burgundy will take to Huff Post to pontificate for several hundred words on something, well, newsy.

Paramount has also teamed with CNN for comedic opportunities employing storylines from Anchorman 2 that fit like an Isotoner glove from the Carter administration. (The movie centers on Burgundy’s involvement in the creation of the first 24-hour news channel—Global News Network, or GNN.) The New York-based narrative is set as America transitions into the garish decade that brought us Miami Vice, Ghostbusters and massive cocaine abuse. So what if Burgundy and his network buddies end up testing Bolivian marching powder’s stimulative effects? After all, they’re going to need as much help as they can get producing news segments around the clock.

Working with Zemoga, Paramount is employing a social media-styled casting call. The talent show-like initiative, “Join Ron’s News Crew,” asks people from around the world to audition for the positions of anchor (#TeamRon), meteorologist (#TeamBrick), sportscaster (#TeamChamp) and live reporter (#TeamBrian). International bloggers have been enlisted to weigh in, posting video of the screen tests and outtakes, tweeting the bits with the appropriate hashtags. There’s no actual prize for winning—other than the 15 minutes of fame participants will reap from big-time YouTube views and social buzz. 

 

DJ Edgerton, Zemoga’s CEO, says contestants will be able to concoct Anchorman-minded personalities from scratch. “There will be characters out there that can work themselves into the DNA of the Anchorman phenomenon,” Edgerton explains. “One of the beautiful and disruptive components of social is that the cream rises to the top. The creative director doesn’t decide what’s best at the end of the day—the audience does.”

Taking a cue from shows like American Idol and The Voice, the competition will include Web voting and a panel of celebrity judges. (Paramount execs remain tight-lipped about the details.) Videos of the tryouts will be promoted via Anchorman and Ron Burgundy’s enormous Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, YouTube, Instagram, Google+ and Pinterest followings. And Paramount’s sibling pay TV channel Epix has invited Instagram users to submit videos of their best Burgundy imitations. (The winner will be invited to walk the red carpet at the New York premiere Dec. 15.)

Although so much of Paramount’s strategy revolves around user-generated content and earned social media, Facebook and Twitter ads and homepage takeovers on sites like Yahoo and MSN will bolster those elements. “Our fans have been creating content and essentially marketing for us,” says Megan Wahtera, Paramount’s svp of interactive marketing. “But it’s our job to feed the frenzy.”  

Photo: Mark Seliger/© Paramount Pictures

Indeed, the paid elements are designed to piggyback on the momentum generated by thousands upon thousands of GIFs on Tumblr—where “Ron Burgundy” and “Anchorman” have been some of the most popular search terms this year among people hunting for memes. (In one GIF, Burgundy is seen pouting in a phone booth, the text reading: “I AM IN A GLASS CASE OF EMOTION.”)

When it comes to why user-generated GIFs are a boon to Anchorman 2, the film’s marketers compare the format’s entertainment value to clips from the silent film era. Looked at another way, Ferrell essentially is the Buster Keaton of the social media age.

But it hasn’t been all fun harnessing the Burgundian social effect for Paramount’s interactive leads. “The fans, due to the nature of the Internet, are quite disparate,” Runyon explains. “So we had to collect and organize these fans from channels and discussions that are already going on about the film.”

What’s more, global-marketing issues often arise—especially given that comedy doesn’t always travel easily from continent to continent compared to other genres. “Comedy is very subject to local and cultural sensibilities,” Runyon points out. “It requires a little bit more customization.”

So Ferrell and McKay got to customizing, hatching dedicated videos for far-reaching markets like the U.K. and Australia. Besides his Irish-targeted video, Burgundy recently delivered his postelection musings on the presidential race Down Under in a 30-second video. In the vid (which drew 585,000 views), he intones: “We laughed. We cried. We became distracted by [Prime Minister] Tony Abbott’s banana hammock. [Burgundy chuckles.] I know I certainly did. And forgot a Labor Party ever existed. Good times, Australia.”

In an era in which every brand has a social-data dashboard, Paramount, Zemoga and the principals are closely watching how their videos and memes perform in real time. “We can see how the trailer and one-liners are doing, helping reveal which ones are watercooler moments,” says Wahtera. “The data allows us to see what fans are interested in, and then we can push those materials accordingly.”

Such data helped inform the Scotch Toss, a mobile game via Paramount and comedy site Funny or Die (founded by Ferrell and McKay). The game—enabled for social sharing, naturally—features 300 voiceovers by Ferrell, who, in the character of Burgundy, eggs on players to flick ice cubes into his scotch. If the player is successful, he might hear a line like: “Bull’s-eye! From that Latin ‘bullseyellius,’ which means ‘eye of a whale.’” Or miss and you might get: “Do that again, and I’ll batter your kidneys!”

“It’s really silly, addictive and stupid, which a lot of these mobile games are,” says Mike Farah, president of production at Funny or Die, a strategic partner that helped Wieden + Kennedy develop the Dodge Durango spots that have people talking—and sharing. The spot “Staring Contest” alone has garnered more than 2 million YouTube views.
 

For the Anchorman 2 push, the team is especially bullish about the movie’s Tumblr hub featuring all those GIFs—including one in which a bandana-wearing Fantana lifts weights along with the text “PUMPIN’ FOR A THUMPIN’.” As inherently social brands, Anchorman and Tumblr seem made for each other. (If Burgundy and Facebook are the same age, then Tumblr might as well be the mustachioed one’s little bro.)

“Paramount has taken a lot of our recommendations to heart, and they are blowing it out of the water,” says David Hayes, lead in Tumblr’s brands-focused department called Canvas. “It’s a studio that we are pointing to when we talk to entertainment brands.”

Hayes says Hollywood is slowly but steadily coming to employ user-generated GIFs and memes as branding vehicles. The memes may start out at Tumblr, but more importantly—and this is key—they’re often exported to Facebook and Twitter’s broader platforms. Hayes points to an effort last spring for Paramount’s Star Trek: Into Darkness as an “aha” moment. Nine animated GIFs were pieced together to create a socially embeddable poster for the latest installment in the iconic franchise.

Might GIF mashups even be the future of movie posters in a digital era? It’s possible, says Cliff Marks, president of National CineMedia, which is trying to reshape in-cinema advertising with interactive bells and whistles. “These small, chewable formats are a cool way to present your content,” he says. “And the studios are starting to make that content a focus.”

While some say Anchorman 2’s elaborate social media plan is a sign of things to come in movie promotions, still others believe the strategy could have a much broader impact. “We think product marketing is going to look more like movie campaigns in the near future, with longer narratives and more stage craft,” offers Pete Stein, global CEO of Razorfish. 

Photo: Andrew Macpherson/© Paramount Pictures.  

Guy Longworth, svp of marketing for Sony’s PlayStation Network, also thinks Anchorman 2’s long-tail social approach will inspire copycats in categories outside entertainment. “In this day and age, you really have to seed ideas,” he says. “Take how Google didn’t just come out with Google Glass. They have people who spent $1,500 to be among the first with Glass learning the product and creating content. We are increasingly thinking about taking products to market with longer-term [marketing] models.”

Anchorman 2’s social nature inspired some unusual—and highly creative—partnerships. The Washington, D.C.-based Newseum, a museum of media and journalism, partnered with Paramount on an exhibit that runs through next August. It enables visitors to interact with “#AskRon” displays with Burgundy’s answers to questions posed on Twitter. As with other elements of the campaign, Ferrell recorded the responses. “We are using the hashtag #StayClassyNewseum in our print and online ads,” notes Scott Williams, marketing vp for the Newseum. He adds that around Halloween, people were asked to share stories about themselves dressed as Burgundy, “and we got a ton of content.”

Dressing up as Burgundy on Halloween also changed the life of an enterprising Idaho sportscaster. Paul Gerke of KIVI-TV in Boise impersonated Burgundy during his Oct. 31 broadcast, nailing the character despite only three hours of preparation. Before leaving work that night, the 28-year-old saw a video of his shtick on the hugely popular sports blog Deadspin. From there, the video went viral, collecting millions of views.

“When I witnessed that, I knew it was game on,” Gerke says. “By the time I woke up the next morning, it was in USA Today, the U.K. Daily Mail, Japanese websites and the front page of Yahoo and MSN.”

Meanwhile, Gerke’s Twitter followers went from 300 to 11,000 overnight. He appeared on CNN, and NBCUniversal requested a meeting to chat about a potential gig. The quick-thinking team at Zemoga also reached out to see whether Gerke would participate in the “Join Ron’s News Crew” events, to which he agreed.

Now, thanks to Ron Burgundy, maybe Gerke will become kind of a big deal, too. Gerke is cautious. “A social media-driven world has a fickle personality,” he acknowledges. “This could all be over tomorrow.”

Ephemeral as fame can be, it’s a sure bet Anchorman 2 won’t be the last movie to employ social in a big way.

There’s definitely more social business to be had out of Hollywood, says Tumblr’s Hayes, who worked in marketing at distributor Lions Gate Entertainment before joining the social site earlier this year. Studios’ attitudes toward social media continue to evolve, says Hayes. Case in point: director McKay tweets from Ron Burgundy’s Twitter account whenever he wants to share something he thinks is funny.

Apparently, that’s pretty unusual as the movie business goes.

“With some studios, single tweets actually have to wait for approval,” Hayes notes. “But Paramount has really turned the table on that idea. Part of the splendor of a socially progressive movie campaign is that you turn some of the control over to the fans.”

And who knows? Maybe Baxter, Burgundy’s faithful pooch, can be president of the fan club. But only if he has time. Yes, the dog has a social presence, too—and a couple thousand Facebook fans to manage already.

Ron Burgundy Co-Anchors an Actual Local News Broadcast in Bismarck, N.D.

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The Ron Burgundy blitz continues. Now, instead of congratulating movie stars on landing porny roles or hawking Dodge Durangos, Will Ferrell is making your wildest dreams come true by co-hosting, in Anchorman 2 character, an actual news broadcast for CBS affiliate KXMB-TV in Bismarck, N.D.

Life may imitate art, but reality is, sadly, more boring than fiction. Burgundy, on an actual journalistic leash, is not as entrancingly dumb as the Burgundy of Hollywood fantasy. Still, try not to crack a smile when he compliments the local weatherman, or narrates a nearby parking-lot trash fire.

The gimmick may not be as brilliant or fresh as Ferrell's North Platte, Neb., Super Bowl ad for Old Milwaukee. But it's hard not not to be amused that he's back on small-town American airwaves, even though he really is everywhere these days.

See the full half-hour below. Via Deadspin.

Ad of the Day: Robert Redford and Will Ferrell Ludicrously Debate How to Help the Colorado River Delta

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Robert Redford wants to restore the Colorado River Delta, which has dried up severely over the past century, to its former lush glory through the "Raise the River" project.

Will Ferrell wants to tell him where to stick it.

Ferrell, you see, has his own plan. He doesn't want to bring the river back to the ocean. He wants to bring the ocean to the river—for the sake of the surfers.

This amusing five-minute back-and-forth between the two actors is probably the most compelling way to approach such a dry subject (figuratively and literally). There's a fun cameo by Kelly Slater, too, and Ferrell's MoveTheOcean.org site is a nice touch as well.

Nice work by Butler, Shine, Stern & Partners, with help from Funny or Die.

CREDITS
—Starring Robert Redford
Agency: Butler, Shine, Stern & Partners
Director, Executive Creative Director: Mike Shine
Senior Art Director: Joe Albert
Senior Copywriter: Jason Turner
Executive Producer, Cleaver: Richard Quan
Editor: Eddie Ringer
Assistant Editor: Dustin Leary
Producer: Meredith Ashworth
Account Executive: Alice Yom
Sound Design, Mix: Bob Edwards

Production Company: Republic Content
Executive Producers: Vince Genovese, Stephen McDonald
Producer: Vince Genovese
Director of Photography: Bridger Nielson
B Camera Operator: Dave Busse
Sound: Alex Raguini
Hair, Makeup for Robert Redford: Copper Perry
Production Assistants: Krystal Curley, Ana Livier Cortés

—Starring Robert Redford, Will Ferrell and Kelly Slater
Agency: Butler, Shine, Stern & Partners
Executive Creative Director: Mike Shine
Senior Art Director: Joe Albert
Senior Copywriter: Jason Turner
Executive Producer, Cleaver: Richard Quan
Editor: Eddie Ringer
Assistant Editor: Dustin Leary
Producer: Luke Rzewnicki
Account Executive: Alice Yom
Sound Design, Mix: Bob Edwards

Production Company: Funny or Die
Director: Ryan Perez
Producer: Katy Walker
Director of Photography: Aaron Ulrich
Camera Operator, Gaffer: Brian Lane
Production Designer: Tricia Robertson
Wardrobe: Marylou Lim
Hair, Makeup for Will Ferrell, Kelly Slater: Catherine Furness
Sound: Ryan Kaiser
Production Assistants: Ross Buran, Sean Boring

Some footage in the spot comes from the film Watershed: Exploring a New Water Ethic for the New West, which Kontent Films produced for the Redford Center. See a list of credits for that film here.

Adweek's Top 5 Commercials of the Week: March 7-14

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As winter winds down, spring fever takes over. And no one is more in the mood than Wren, the small fashion label that had the week's breakout viral advertising hit with a video showing complete strangers kissing. Hey, it breaks the ice much faster than a handshake.

Elsewhere among our top five spots of the week, Honey Maid took the Cheerios formula for supporting inclusivity and applied it to dads in a heartwarming ad and companion series of docu-videos. We've also got a great debate between Will Ferrell and Robert Redford; a duel between a world-class Ping-Pong player and a robot; and The Most Interesting Man in the World revealing more hidden talents for Dos Equis.

Watch all five ads below and vote for your favorite. And if your favorite isn't here, tell us in the comments.

7 Memorable Moments in the Dubious History of Product Placement

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Remember when you had to wait until the commercial break to be bombarded with brand marketing? Probably not, since product placement has been a Hollywood addiction since the 1980s.

Ever since Steven Spielberg featured Reese's Pieces in 1982's E.T. (after being turned down by short-sighted M&M reps), brands and content creators have embraced product placement as a sort of commercial symbiosis.

This Wednesday, we'll be tackling the issue of product placement at #adweekchat, a one-hour Twitter conversation open to all. Join us at 2 p.m. Eastern for a lively discussion of the best, worst and weirdest examples of product placement in TV, movies and video.

In the meantime, enjoy revisiting a few of the more iconic moments of product integration (some paid, some not) that have helped to shape how writers and producers weave brands into their storylines—with mixed results:

 
Superman vs. Zod vs. Marlboro vs. Coca-Cola (1980)

And don't forget the KFC box on the dashboard. This classic scene set the stage for 2013's Man of Steel, which reaped an astounding $160 million from promotional tie-ins with brands like Sears and Warby Parker.

 
Wayne's World Makes Pepsi, Reebok and Pizza Hut Part of the Gag (1992)

Looking back on this classic scene, my favorite part is that Rob Lowe never joins them in breaking the fourth wall. He seems earnestly baffled about why these two public-access TV schmucks are so into Pizza Hut and Nuprin.

 
Get Shorty's 'Cadillac of Minivans' Is Actually an Oldsmobile (1995)

At the very least, you have to appreciate the John Travolta comedy's commitment to making an awkward product placement (the Oldsmobile Silhouette) into a recurring gag. It popped up throughout the movie as character Chili Palmer's signature coolness rubbed off on the ride. The original Swagger Wagon, you might say.

 
30 Rock Brings Back the Meta Humor for Snapple (2006)

This is my favorite product placement in TV history, and I hate Snapple. So much for my chances with Cerie (whose last name, by the way, is Xerox for reasons that are never explained in the show). In addition to the TGS Show's love of Snapple, Liz Lemon also helped us see the magical splendor of products like Verizon Wireless phones.

 
Talladega Nights Really Loves Applebee's, Except for the Rats in the Cobb Salad (2006)

You can almost hear the awkward conversation as the producer had to tell Applebee's exactly how this lengthy, seemingly glowing scene set in the restaurant was going to play out. Hat tip to Adweek Twitter follower Heather Taylor for the reminder on that one. 

 
Frank Underwood Loves That PlayStation Vita (2013)

Many viewers were bemused by the House of Cards anti-hero's obsession with the PlayStation 3 and the (rarely seen on Capitol Hill) portable PS Vita. Of course, many brands make recurring cameos on House of Cards. Check out this slideshow of appearances by Apple (oh so much Apple), BlackBerry, Canon and more:

The Netflix show's creators claim they don't receive financial compensation for product placements, which are provided gratis by the brands. Discussing the PlayStation Vita mention, episode director James Foley told The Guardian,"If we use real products like people do in real life, somehow that's perceived as being forced-in product placement when it's just recording reality."

 
Hawaii 5-0 Really, Really, Really Loves Subway (2012)

This is the Citizen Kane of product placements, an achievement so gratuitous you almost have to admire it. Although I'm really not sure it makes me want a sub, much less five.

What are some of your favorites? Don't forget to join us on Twitter at 2 p.m. ET on Wednesday, Aug. 13, for a whole hour of #adweekchat dedicated to product placement.

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