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‘chewing is believing’ says Adweek of our Stride gum campaign

Stride in adweek
There’s a nice piece in Adweek about our new work for Stride gum. Here’s what it says:

Idea
For years under JWT, Stride was “the ridiculously long-lasting gum.” Wieden + Kennedy in London, which took over U.S. ad duties in December, felt that positioning had lasted a bit too long—that the product benefit had been encroached by rivals. W+K decided to explore the emotional benefits of gum instead. “We chatted to a load of gum chewers,” said creative director Sam Heath. “A common theme was how gum gives you just a little boost of confidence, a little nudge to be more comfortable, more ‘yourself’ in any situation. It’s a little bit epic in that way. It helps you be a little more epic sometimes, and I suppose the gum is itself a little piece of epic-ness.” W+K’s first spot for the brand, directed by Traktor, illustrates the new tagline, “A little bit epic,” by showing a guy in a coffee shop who panics when his ex-girlfriend walks in. After popping a piece of Stride and having some ludicrous daydreams about how he should approach her, he handles the situation with aplomb.

Copywriting
The agency wrote many scripts but liked the tension of the ex-girlfriend scenario. “We loved the idea of focusing on small, believable wins,” said Heath. “A tiny stick of Stride isn’t going to help you win the day, get that new job you’ve always dreamed of. That felt like ad land. But a little stick of gum might just give you the presence of mind to be normal and uncomplicated the moment you bump into your ex.” The dialogue is mostly in voiceover—it could be the guy’s thoughts or possibly the gum talking. “Hey, isn’t that the girl who tore out your still-beating heart?” the voice says as the girl walks in. The voice wonders how the encounter will go, anxiously cartwheeling fromromance to horror to camp scenarios, based on old movie-genre stereotypes. “We loved the idea of the voiceover kind of spilling over, being carried away and uncontained,” Heath said. “We tried to keep that stream-of-consciousness feel to the writing and find a way that words and pictures could riff off each other.” In the end, the guy suavely opens a door for his ex and says calmly, “Hey.” With a smile, she echoes his reply and leaves. Streamers and confetti fly as the voice speaks the on-screen tagline.

Art direction/filming
The spot has a washed-out, vintage look to it with poppy elements. Heath describes it as “bubblegum David Lynch or Mad Men on acid … warm and nostalgic but with a twist of bright-colored pop-culture surreality.” The fantasy scenes are humorously imagined period pieces. “We went spinning with immaculate mustaches and flailing limbs through ’20s silent films, made a brief splashdown in ’50s B-movie land and then rampaged through dodgy ’80s Wall Street, Working Girl blockbusters,” said Heath. The shoot took two days in and around Universal Studios in Los Angeles. Traktor brought “a sincere love of film, a bottomless sense of humor, a winning way with actors, synth-pop-littered iPod playlists and boundless energy,” Heath said.

Talent
The agency wanted a “puppy-dog vulnerability from the guy, but he didn’t want to come across as a loser,” said Heath. The girl “needed to feel a little out of reach for him but also down-to-earth enough for you to buy that they might actually have been together.” The voiceover is a different male actor who had “the right amount of nervous energy.”
Sound/media Cartoony sound effects reflect the hero’s emotions—an arrow hitting a target as he stirs the heart shape in his cappuccino foam, or a 10-pin bowling strike as he pops the gum in his mouth. “We tried to find sound effects that were wrong but right,” said Heath. “It was all there to try and make each little moment of the story feel as epic as possible.” The spot is running on television and online.

spitalfields in days gone by

1985 ChristChurch

Christ Church, seen down Brushfield Street 1985.

These beautiful photos of our neighbourhood in Spitalfields are from the excellent Spitalfields Life blog, where many more can be found.

They were taken by Philip Marriage, a former resident, who photographed the area regularly from the '60s onward.

It's fascinating to see the similarities and the changes, many of which have happened in the just the seven years we've been based here.

Brushfield 1985 (2)
Brushfield Street again.

Brushfield 1985
And again, with the market on the left.

Brushfield 1990
Brushfield Street, 1990.

Fournier
Fournier Street, 1985.

Hanbury tour
This looks like the Jack the Ripper walking tour, Hanbury Street.

Hanbury umbrella 2
Umbrella manufacturer, Hanbury Street, 1985.

Hanbury umbrella
Umbrella manufacturer, Hanbury Street, 1985. (That's Rosa's caff next door, only recently replaced by Poppies fish and chip shop.

Thanks to Spitalfields Life for these pics – hope you don't mind that we reposted them.

If you're interested in the old buildings of the area, I can also recommend the BBC documentary 'Ours to Keep: Incomers", which is currently available to view on iPlayer. First transmitted in 1985, this film looks at the decaying Georgian houses of London's Spitalfields, the work of local enthusiasts who were (in 1985) carrying out restoration work, and the clash between the preservationists and other, less well-off residents. The house on Folgate Street belonging to Dennis Severs, who is featured in the film, is now a kind of art exhibit/museum that is open to vistors. More info here.

Screen shot 2012-06-17 at 20.26.25

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