Hungry Man named #1 production company; Beacon Street leads music houses
With the culmination of the year’s industry awards marked by the recent announcement of 2022 ONE Asia Creative Awards winners, Leo Burnett Chicago maintained its top spot in the Global Creative Rankings 2022, which incorporates results from all of The One Club for Creativity’s leading global, regional and local awards shows.
The global benchmark report is a complete ranking of agencies, brands and individuals based on points earned from their winning entries in The One Show 2022, ADC 101st Annual Awards, Type Directors Club TDC68/25TDC competitions, ONE Asia 2022, and The One Club Denver, San Diego, and Miami chapter awards programs. In addition to the global list, rankings for specific regions and countries can be viewed by using dropdown menus.
Leo Burnett Chicago’s stellar performance is largely based on wins for “The Lost Class” on behalf of Change the Ref. The office achieved the top spot in the mid-year release of the Global Creative Rankings in May 2022 at the conclusion of last year’s Creative Week, and maintained the position after the full-year’s points were totaled for all One Club global, regional and local shows.
Agency participation in the regional and local shows helps networks and holding companies with their global rankings. This was illustrated in 2022 in the strong showing in the just-announced ONE Asia Creative Awards by Ogilvy offices in Bangkok, Gurugram, Kuala Lumpur, Melbourne, Mumbai, Singapore, Sydney, and Tokyo, which helped propel the brand to the top agency network spot in the final 2022 ranking, and moved WPP from third place to first for holding companies.
“This 2022 Global Creative Ranking is truly comprehensive, for the first time encompassing more global, regional and local awards competitions than any other source,” said Kevin Swanepoel, CEO, The One Club for Creativity. “As the industry’s foremost global nonprofit organization for the creative community, The One Club is in a unique position to provide this definitive measure for global creative excellence.”
Highlights of the combined Global Creative Rankings 2022 are as follows:
Agency Rankings:
- 1. Leo Burnett Chicago
- 2. The New York Times Magazine New York
- 3. Area 23 New York
- 4. Ogilvy UK London
- 5. L&C New York
- 6. Ogilvy Mumbai
- 7. Special New Zealand Auckland
- 8. alma DDB Miami
- 9. Serviceplan Germany Munich
- 10. Dentsu Webchutney Bengaluru
Independent Agency Rankings:
- 1. L&C New York
- 2. Special New Zealand Auckland
- 3. Serviceplan Germany Munich
- 4. Mojo Supermarket New York
- 5. GUT Sรฃo Paulo
- 6. Rethink Canad
- 7. Zulu Alpha Kilo Toronto
- 8. Jung von Matt DONAU Vienna
- 9. Innocean Worldwide Seoul
- 10. COLLINS New York
Brand-Side Agency Rankings:
- 1. Google Devices & Services Creative Team Mountain View
- 2. Google Creative Lab New York
- 3. draftLine AB InBev Colombia Bogotรก
- 4. 4creative London
- 5. Spotify In-House New York
Brand Rankings:
- 1. Google
- 2. Apple
- 3. Cadbury
- 4. Dove
- 5. VICE World News
Non-Profit Client Rankings:
- 1. Change the Ref
- 2. Motor Neurone Disease New Zealand
- 3. Girls Who Code
- 4. The Columbia Journalism Review
- 5. WWF
Brand Parent Company Rankings:
- 1. Unilever
- 2. Mondelez
- 3. AB InBev
- 4. PepsiCo
- 5. VICE Media Group
Production Company Rankings:
- 1. Hungry Man Los Angeles
- 2. Suitcase Productions New York
- 3. The Post Office Auckland
- 4. Carbo Films Venice, CA
- 5. Active Theory Los Angeles
Music & Sound Company Rankings:
- 1. Beacon Street Studios Venice
- 2. Agosto Lima
- 3. JSM Music New York
- 4. Jamute Sรฃo Paulo
- 5. Hefty Sรฃo Paulo
Agency Network Rankings:
- 1. Ogilvy Group
- 2. Leo Burnett Worldwide
- 3. Publicis
- 4. DDB Worldwide
- 5. FCB
Agency Holding Company Rankings:
- 1. WPP
- 2. Publicis Groupe
- 3. Omnicom Group
- 4. Interpublic Group
- 5. Dentsu Group
Country Rankings:
- 1. United States
- 2. United Kingdom
- 3. China
- 4. Germany
- 5. Canada
Region Rankings:
- 1. North America
- 2. Europe
- 3. Asia Pacific
- 4. Latin America
- 5. Middle East & Africa
Highest Ranked Work:
- 1. “The Lost Class” by Leo Burnett Chicago for Change the Ref
- 2. “Piรฑatex” by L&C New York for Dole Sunshine Company and Ananas Anam
- 3. “Real Tone” by Google Devices & Services Creative Team Mountain View for Google
- 4. “David’s Unusables” by Special New Zealand and The Post Office, both Auckland, for Motor Neurone Disease New Zealand
- 5. “The Unfiltered History Tour” by Dentsu Webchutney Bengaluru for VICE World News
Global College Rankings:
- 1. ArtCenter College of Design Pasadena
- 2. School of Visual Arts New York
- 3. Brigham Young University Provo
- 4. Filmakademie Baden-Wรผrttemberg Ludwigsburg
- 5. Berghs School of Communication Stockholm
The Global Creatives Rankings for individuals, who are listed at the agencies where they worked when the winning entries were produced, are as follows:
- Creatives overall (tie): Caleb Dewart, executive producer, Leo Burnett Chicago; Mino Jarjoura, executive producer, Leo Burnett Chicago
- CMO of the Year: Fernando Machado, Activision Blizzard
- CCO of the Year: Fred Levron, worldwide creative partner, FCB Global; global CCO, Dentsu International
- ECD of the Year: Sam Shepherd, Leo Burnett Chicago
- GCD of the Year: Eduardo Tavares, Area 23 New York
- Creative Director of the Year: Jason LaFlore, Leo Burnett Chicago
- Art Director of the Year (tie): Katie DiNardo, Leo Burnett Chicago; Sofia Gahn, Leo Burnett Chicago
- Copywriter of the Year: MacKenzie Hart, Leo Burnett Chicago
- Designer of the Year: Ky Lee, Special New Zealand Auckland
- Director of the Year: Bryan Buckley, Hungry Man Los Angeles
- Illustrator of the Year: Sean Hannaway, Leo Burnett Chicago
- Photographer of the Year: Neil DaCosta Portland
- Typographer of the Year: Eve Steben, This Is Studio London
- Freelancer of the Year: Igor Bastidas New York
First-Time Feature Directors Make Major Splash At AFI Fest, Generate Oscar Buzz
Two first-time feature directors who are generating Oscar buzz this awards season were front and center this past weekend at AFI Fest in Hollywood. Rachel Morrison, who made history as the first woman nominated for a Best Cinematography Oscar---on the strength of Mudbound in 2018--brought her feature directorial debut, The Fire Inside (Amazon MGM Studios), to the festival on Sunday (10/27), and shared insights into the film during a conversation session immediately following the screening. This came a day after William Goldenberg, an Oscar-winning editor for Argo in 2013, had his initial foray into feature directing, Unstoppable (Amazon MGM Studios), showcased at the AFI proceedings. He too spoke after the screening during a panel discussion. The Fire Inside--which made its world premiere at this yearโs Toronto International Film Festival--tells the story of Claressa โT-Rexโ Shields (portrayed by Ryan Destiny), a Black boxer from Flint, Mich., who trained to become the first woman in U.S. history to win an Olympic Gold Medal in the sport. She achieved this feat--with the help of coach Jason Crutchfield (Brian Tyree Henry)--only to find that her victory at the Summer Games came with relatively little fanfare and no endorsement deals. So much for the hope that the historic accomplishment would be a ticket out of socioeconomic purgatory for Shields and her family. It seemed like yet another setback in a cycle of adversity throughout Shieldsโ life but she persevered, going on to win her second Gold Medal at the next Olympics and becoming a champion for gender equality and equitable pay for women in sports. Shields has served as a source of inspiration for woman athletes worldwide--as well as to the community of... Read More