New Work 2011
April 12th, 2011Inspiration!
April 16th, 2010Here are three links that have me thinking. The first is a great resource for discovering new ideas and thinking in the world of art and design. The other two are links to a designer that does amazing hand lettering, as well as an illustrator that creates incredible compositions from nostalgia. Enjoy.
www.abduzeedo.com
www.kareemrizk.com
www.chrispiascik.com
Jeremy
Bowl Fever
December 7th, 2009New spots for the Roady’s Humanitarian Bowl feature the Boise State Vocal Jazz Ensemble, the Bishop Kelly High football team, and their head coach, Lee Leslie. Donahoe Pace and NxNW Production.
Building Sales with Social Marketing
November 3rd, 2009Ran across an article on Retail Solutions Online a few weeks back. Great examples of companies with their thumb on the social pulse.
- Check out online T-shirt retailer Threadless on Twitter — twitter.com/threadless. With more than 1.2 million followers opting-in to receive its 2-4 tweets per day, can you imagine how effective this $6 million company’s Twitter promotions are? Begin following your peers and competitors and study their moves closely. You’ll see many of them on Facebook’s Fan Pages, which are represented nicely by the Victoria’s Secret effort at facebook.com/vspink. The company does an excellent job creating the perception that its Facebook fans are “insiders” with exclusive access to promotions, discounts, and information, and that “exclusive” circle is fast approaching 1.5 million fans.
GM’s bold, necessary & new PR move.
June 5th, 2009I saw a commercial tonight for GM. It is on youtube. Check it out.
An immediate example of this new age of transparency appeared as I watched tv this evening. GM, as we all know is currently in a state of transition, metamorphosis, migration, or in less delicate terms bankruptcy. It’s not a pretty picture but a necessary one. Sentiments surrounding US automakers haven’t been good for a while now but it seems like there is an upside to the economic fiasco we’re in the midst of.
GM is owning it. It’s a bold move but it’s probably all they have left at this point. They are gripping with both hands and thrusting their bankruptcy up over their heads in hopes of reshaping public opinion. Let’s hope that they can accomplish all they say they will. It seems daunting but one of the steps toward recover from any severe problem, so I hear, is acceptance. So here’s to GM. May they steadfastly go forward on their road (pardon the pun) to recovery.
GMreinvention.com
Here’s the website GM setup to accompany the new public relations push. Very clean and loaded with social media connections. I’m sure they though long and hard about how they were going to go forward. This speaks very highly of the power of social media.
-Andrew
Summer Staycation
June 5th, 2009You don’t have to pay big bucks to enjoy a relaxing summer vacation this year. Staycations (“vacation” and “stay out bankruptcy”?) are becoming more and more popular as Americans try to save cash while keeping the summer fun dial set at to-the-max.
For many years, people thought they had spend a lot to fully exploit their time off. The truth is, stacations are proving that having fun is as simple as renaming the boring things we do. This is all much to the joy of local libraries, museums, and public pools across the country. Or as I call them – reading adventure zones, journeys through time, and beachside resorts.

Ryan's Fists of Fury c/o Chicago Trib.
After making, and losing, a bet regarding the hometown of fictional O.C. character Ryan Atwood (embarrassing on multiple levels), I ran across the summer staycation lineup for Chino, CA (Ryan’s hometown. Not Chico, as popular opinion may assume). Chino’s Fred Aguiar Month at the local museum, The Kiwanis Concert Series, and “Seniors at the Square” all make my trip to the water park (slip-n-slide) look a little pathetic.
I know Idaho has a lot to offer; I love Boise, too, but I’ve done it all. So, I’m thinking a staycation to Chino may be in order. After all, I can’t just stay in Boise all summer. California here I come!
Shih Tzu Happens
June 5th, 2009——->Crisis Communications for Social Media
What happens when you get bad press during this age of social media? This article has some good ideas. Mainly, I think we need to react as quickly as possible, and don’t hide our heads hoping it will go away. It won’t, and it could grow into a monster. React with honesty, sincerity and humility. Shih Tzu happens, and even though you may not always come out smelling like a rose, you’ll probably recover, and learn some valuable lessons from the experience.
-Tom
Wandering wonders regarding The Wonder Years
May 31st, 2009
The boy wonder himself, Kevin Arnold
I’ve been on a journey lately. I wouldn’t necessarily call is one of a spiritual nature but close. I was fortunate enough to come across a bootleg copy of The Wonder Years. The entire series. Every. Single. Episode.
This is epic and not only because the show was a phenomenal depiction of adolescence to the extent that it was awarded a Peabody award in 1989. This is epic because it is a unicorn among television relics. The digital compilation of every episode of The Wonder Years does not officially exist. Unlike most long-running popular American TV sitcoms, The Wonder Years has still not yet been released on DVD as official season box sets due to the cost of securing the music rights.
So beloved was this show that someone went to the trouble to create a menu and place each and every mesmerizing hour in all their VHS static and hiss sequentially. This is why it’s epic.
What does this have to do with advertising? Directly, not a whole lot. I found a particularly interesting factoid the other day while perusing Wikipedia though. And I quote:
The title of the show is adapted from a once widely-shown television commercial for Wonder Bread, in which viewers were urged to nourish their children with the product through their adolescence (“Wonder Years”).
How exactly this advertisement was to be the name of my favorite TV series is still under investigation. I wonder if there are studies out there surrounding the subliminal effects of this “coincidence”. Are there lingering effects. Is the character of Kevin Arnold generic enough to earn the more modern title of “white bread”. Are there subliminal ties to Wonder Bread consumption? Did Wonder Bread see sales gains during the broadcaset tenure of the series? Again, I quote:
The story is narrated by an older, wiser Kevin (voiced by Daniel Stern), describing what is happening and what he learned from his experiences in an alternately nostalgic and ironic tone.
Now that sounds like Wonder Bread to me. Nostalgic and ironic. Oozing with pre-adolescence; wholesome yet not entirely what could be accurately considered as food. Delicious and satisfying all while being a caricature of what’s real.
One thing is for sure. I notice that there was a huge missed opportunity for product placement. I never recall seeing a single loaf. In this new era of reality programming and painfully obvious, forceful product exposure I’m glad I never did. Or maybe I was proselytized to every time Joe Cocker began the intro? If that was the case I applaud the subtlety.
We’re watching television differently these days, folks. What are we missing? Is it better? I wonder.
-Andrew


