Following last year’s successful Biotrue® contact lens solution campaign, Bausch + Lomb reunited with long-time digital agency partner Digital Pulp and creative partner Sweet Sadie to craft and produce a new series of “Biotruth Moments” — comically awkward moments that can occur when contact lenses tire before you do. This year’s campaign focuses on the omnipresence of screens in our daily lives, from potential dating app mismatches, to harmless-but-disruptive screen obsession mishaps, to a fantasy football misfiring.
Client: Bausch + Lomb Biotrue® MPS (Multi-Purpose Solution)
Vice President, Marketing: Chris Marschall
Senior Brand Manager, Lens Care: Jenn Troast
Agency: Digital Pulp
Partner/Chief Creative Officer: Gene Lewis
Associate Creative Director: Katherine Vidal
Account Director: Amanda McCormick
Management Supervisor: Marissa Cinelli
Account Executive: Rachel Rottenberg
Creative Partner/Production: Sweet Sadie
CD/ EP: Rachel Lederman
EP: Xavier Melendez
CD/Writer: Jay Sandusky
Director: Stephen Pearson
DP: Noah David Smith
AD: TJ Sansone
Producer: Will Tatum
Production Designer: Ryan Cooper
Art Director: Mike Blain
Wardrobe: Heather Howard
Editor: Yvette Choy
VFX: Eddie Wiseman
Sound Design: Pomann Sound, Bob Pomann and Rich Cerbini
Colorist: Matthew Rosenblum
The Undeniable Voice of Art
Creative Growth, the first organization dedicated to supporting artists with developmental disabilities, has teamed up with creative marketing company, John McNeil Studio to unveil its new brand. Representing 50 years of elevating the work of artists with disabilities within the arts community, Creative Growthโs new brand campaign includes a new identity and logo, new positioning, brand film and a redefined strategy centering on the โundeniable voice of art.โ Creative Growthโs evolved brand is at the forefront of a shift towards art that stands for the inherent reveal โ the power of artistic expression to bring understanding and connection to us all. The brandโs new expression includes unobtrusive color and design choices that purposely donโt compete with the voice of the artist and instead, serve as a container for the art to have a voice of its own. Executive Creative Director, Gerald Lewis of John McNeil Studio explains โWe needed to create a powerful, distinctive voice for the brand. But, it couldnโt compete with the voice of the artists because in the end, the art has to speak. It had to be simple, honest and genuine, in line with the mission of Creative Growth. Artists will spend 30 years making work, honing their craft and following their voice inside this space. We wanted to celebrate that. So, while the mark, the brand, is simple and honest, itโs also expansive and energetic.โ Kicking off the new brand campaign is a short film capturing the voice of artist William Scott as he walks through downtown Oakland and enters... Read More