The Edge of Now.
Aug 2 / 2:47pm

Playing Pianos and Practising Ping Pong for social good

Playme

You might remember seeing something last year about Pianos in streets. The Play Me Play Me I’m Yours / The Street Pianos Project with Artist Luke Jerram  placed pianos on city streets around the world for members of the public. London, New York, Sao Paulo, Barcelona, Belfast. Here's a video:

The project not only saw people adopt pianos:

but also artists and musicians take the opportunity to leverage them for their own creative output:

Now It might seem pretty random, and it probably was for many people walking past any one of those pianos at the time. But there's a method to this randomness. It has a purpose, and that's to get people active or at least create peoples awareness of becoming involved in arty stuff. In it's British leg, the participatory arts organisation known as Sing London, was behind the event. Now they've gotten involved in something as equally playful and participatory as this.

Which leads me to why I started writing this in the first place. It came in the form of a tweet from Londoner @aimeeford

Which I noticed this morning. It is refering to the recently launched series of events Ping! London: which is seeing Ping Pong tables popping-up all across London. It's message?  Stop whatever you're doing and play sport.

Ping
Here's a video from the launch:

 

Now the Ping! project has only just started, I know. But it has started with a really good combination of randomness, play, relevance and timeliness.

What I feel is so good about this concept is that it does it in a way that is both timely (by capturing the imagination of the public in the lead up to the 2012 Olympic games) and is timely in a locally relevant way ( inspiration that without a doubt bounces quite naturally off this infamous drunken speech about whiff-whaff by the much loved London Mayor Boris Johnson.)

This gets me thinking. If unlikely situations provide us with the best of stories, what could be more engaging than bringing that to people as some sort of ambient event, something that gets people to engage and interact with your message in a common social space?

Not to mention the fact that it involves the pop-cultural novelty of ping pong itself. Which I hope (and I'm sure so do they) will ignite a whole new craze for table tennis in London itself, enough so that Public Ping Pong becomes pop-cultural hit, at least, resurging it's popularity on the social web.

When you think about it that way, it really is a little bit of genius. The fun factor makes it a piece of co-communication. Everyone is involved  - everyone participates in the message, or the story that they are trying to get across to the public about Pianos or Ping Pong: that is, arts or sports...

If that's the case, inviting engagement - in the form of real life participation - and injecting a bit of fun is perhaps the key way you can really get your message accross. It's probably square one of social media and is what I think is at the core of social creativity.

Forget the kind of media - the real medium is the people involved and what their feeling while they are involved in it. Are they having fun?

What both of these examples does is that it gets people involved in a piece of creative communication for a social cause that might otherwise be ignored. And in the best scenario it encourages them to have fun and share it with others, by word of mouth, social networking, mobile or video.

That's probably why when it comes to communicating a social message, live acts are really effective in getting people's attention.

It shows how participation can prove irresistable when you hand the tools to play with over to your community to own themselves.

Ping! London is the result of different groups and organizations coming together. From non profits like the English Table Tennis Association and Sing London to the creative agency karmarama and Yahoo.

What both Pianos and Ping Pong appear to have in common is pretty simple. Play. That's what makes it irresistable for people to become involved, making them both the medium and the message for each project. By making participation playful, interaction - both social and creative - becomes a co-creative social experience.

 

 

May 15 / 5:35pm

Why I love to hate the google job experiment.

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Anyone who has worked in advertising for a while will talk about that moment when you come across a piece of work that kills you in it's genius simplicity and creativity. Anyone of those people will tell you to sit up and take notice of one of those moments. This is definably one of those for me. Perhaps my first since I started working as a junior creative. And I'll tell you why.

As a young creative I haven't had much chance to feel that but I think this is one of those for me. It's one of those things that I look at and think a: shit that is f-ing genius. b: I wish I'd done that and c: I hate that guy.

It's genius because it takes a really funny insight about people at the top of the creative ladder - and twists it, taking that creative approach to solving a really valid problem - how to get yourself in the door of a top agency in an industry notoriously difficult to get into.

The story starts as follows. A guy called Alec Brownstein wanted a Job in advertising. So he ran a Google Adwords campaign for the names of some of the worlds best creative directory in Gerry Graf, David Droga, Tony Granger, Ian Reichenthal and Scott Vitrone.

The campaign had a message: “Hey, David Droga, Gooogling yourself is a lot of fun. Hiring me is fun, too.” with a link to his website to let the creative directors contact him.

To add to the pain, Alec landed a job at Y&R New York, and won two Gold Pencils and a Clio. Grrrrrrr

It just goes to show that even something as mundane as google adwords is enough to get you noticed. There are probably other creative uses of google adwords and / or facebook ads out there but this is certainly the best I have heard of. Not only does it scream killer simplicity it also pulls that off with wit and attitude too. At little cost whatsoever. It's definately one of the things that you look at, well at least I look at with extreme envy.

Filed under  //  advertising   cool   direct   google   job experiment  
Jan 17 / 9:48pm

extreme gaming with an epson projector

How do you get gamers to buy in to the fact that Epson HD projectors promise to take gaming to a whole new level? Well take one guy and strap a playstation to his back, an HD projector to his front and make him run around town finding the opportunity to play on whatever surface of whatever he can. As Twentysix a digital marketing agency from the UK decided to do.

The result is a truly mad viral campaign that looks like a helluva lot of fun.

Filed under  //  digital   direct   gaming   jencorbett   marketing   viral