As fans look forward to an exciting few weeks of rugby, Guinness launches a campaign to rally fans and show its support to the Irish Rugby Football Union (IRFU), the number one ranked male team in the world, crowned Guinness Six Nations Grand Slam Champions.
Developed by AMV BBDO, the campaign was inspired by a universal truth about being a fan: the feeling that your actions directly affect your team’s performance. It’s particularly true for Ireland fans this year, as they balance the excitement and expectation that comes with being the top ranked side.
Through social listening, Guinness and AMV identified that Irish fans’ worry that any overconfidence is going to come back to bite them. So, the creative work plays with the natural caution and self-deprecation of Irish fans by reminding, that allowing themselves to say what they could win can in fact cost their teams’ result. Whatever you do, don’t say Ireland is going to w*n. Or better, Don’t Jinx It.
This TV ad that kicks off the campaign was shot in sports-documentary style, with Ireland fans being interviewed about their hopes for the year ahead and their reflections on previous disappointments. With Ronan Keating’s “When You Say Nothing At All” playing throughout, it begins with a couple in a pub arguing over whether saying ‘Ireland was going to w*n’ cost the team a championship title once. In another one, colleagues in a local cafe persuade themselves that a few games will offer more than enough excitement.
Directed by James Rouse through Biscuit, the film in versions of 30 and 60 seconds will run on TV and social media. As part of the campaign, OOH reminding rugby fans to “not jinx it” will be placed near pubs nationwide. A series of activations across the country will also highlight past wrongdoings and get everyone supporting the Irish team in the right way this time.
In a joint statement, AMV BBDO creatives Will Brookwell and Louis Prenaud shared, “No matter what your sport or who your team is, we’ve all got too carried away and jinxed things – it’s a universal superstition that even the most skeptical of us believe to be true when it comes to sport. Heading into another enormous tournament with their team ranked #1 and previous years heartbreaks fresh in their minds, this insight has never been truer for Ireland fans. Guinness too is a huge fan of the national team, so our campaign aims to get ahead of the loose lips and remind everyone to support safely, and to never say that one forbidden thing.”
CreditsClient Diageo/Guinness Agency AMV BBDO London Nicholas Hurley, chief creative officer/creative director; Nadja Lossgott, chief creative officer; Will Brookwell, Louis Prenaud, creative team; Nick Godden, producer; Kieran O’Malley, assistant producer. Media Agency PHD Production Company Biscuit Filmworks James Rouse, director; Benji Howell, producer. Postproduction We Are Covert Sound Factory Studios Mark Hills, audio post
NHS England, M&C Saatchi UK, Director Tom Tagholm Team On PSA Highlighting The Overlooked Signs Of A Stroke
National Health Service (NHS) England has unveiled a multichannel campaign, โAct FAST,โ to raise awareness of the individual signs of a stroke and get people to call 999 as soon as they suspect they may be experiencing any one symptom. The push, which is part of the ongoing โHelp Us, Help Youโ campaign, was developed in partnership with M&C Saatchi UK.
The campaign depicts everyday situations where everything might seem relatively normal, but where thereโs the sign of someone experiencing a stroke.
A key component of the campaign is this :30--directed by Tom Tagholm of Various Films--which sets up the idea that initially, a stroke might not seem like much, highlighting key symptoms: from struggling to use a paint roller, to not being able to smile when watching TV, to slurring your speech when reading a story to your grandchild. The PSA emphasizes that time is critical, ending with the line: โFace or arm or speech, at the first sign, itโs time to call 999.โ
Jo Bacon, Group CEO, M&C Saatchi UK, said, โWe want to ensure people take action on the first symptom, rather than waiting for more conclusive signs. To help them understand that even when everything seems normal, something serious might be happening.โ
Matt Lee, executive creative director, M&C Saatchi UK, commented: โThis is important work. We wanted to explore that precise moment when your world shifts, quietly yet powerfully, off its axis during a stroke. We highlight how a tiny external moment can actually be seismicโan extraordinary gear change, framed in a really ordinary way.โ
Director Tagholm shared, โMy Dad suffered a stroke a few years ago and was saved from the worst by acting quickly, and by the work of the NHS. So thereโs... Read More