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Opinion | Features
Woz not great
In this guest post Tony Prysten argues that the thousand dollar price of seeing out-of-touch Apple co-founder Steve Wozniack on his Australian tour was a waste of money.
This week, for the cost of two iPads (yep, two) I went to the Woz Live conference in Melbourne. I was not impressed.
What the hell is transmedia?
From advertising campaigns to online video series, the term ‘transmedia’ gets quite the work out. But what does it actually mean? Cathie McGinn trawls the media landscape for a definitive definition.

Transmedia, all media and multiplatform are terms often used interchangeably when referencing modern storytelling techniques. Yet, depending who you speak to, there are distinct differences between them.
According to industry experts Encore spoke to, the key elements that define transmedia can be summarised as follows: platform, time, audience, adaptation, and creative collaboration.
Innovation is the remedy for the ailing magazine industry
With magazine circulations plummeting, FHM closing and rumours rife on future ownership of ACP Magazines, Paul Merrill says the only way forward is launching new titles.Eight years ago in the UK, nearly a quarter of all magazine sales came from magazines that were less than four years old. In Australia, the figure was slightly lower, but still significant. Today, the situation is very different. For a start there are so few new magazines. Yes, Masterchef briefly flared, and Top Gear made an initial impact. But Grazia and Alpha fizzled, and now ACP has shelved their plans to launch Elle.
More than a game: broadcasting the Olympics
The 2012 London Olympics will be the biggest televised sporting event of our time. Brooke Hemphill discovers the logistical challenges and technical requirements of producing the event.
From July 27 to August 12, the Australian media will go sport crazy as the Games of the XXX Olympiad, aka the 2012 London Summer Olympics, unfold. The games will be the most televised sporting event of our time as broadcasters look to master every manner of technology at their disposal.
The Voice - Australia's best example yet of social TV
I am an addict of Channel Nine’s hit show The Voice. Such is the extent of my addiction I seriously think my housemate might kick me out of our apartment for the semi-frenzied yelling and tweeting that ensues in our lounge room each time the show airs.It’s the first time in almost three years that such disagreement has resulted in less than civil behaviour towards one another, and it’s made me think it might be a microcosm of the large volume of online debate about the show and, correspondingly, an explanation for its success as a social TV experience.Why brands are the US Army - and culture jammers are the Viet Cong
In this guest posting, Dave Burgess, who painted ‘No War’ on the Sydney Opera House, claims that ‘amoral’ advertisers have copied his idea.
Culture jamming is a 28-year-old term coined by the San Francisco-based band Negativland, who declared that the ‘Studio for the cultural jammer is the world at large’.
Branded content is dead. Long live branded content
In this guest posting, Anthony Freedman argues why branded content is making a comeback.
A few short years ago, probably concurrent with the advent of the PVR, a new term emerged within the marketing communications industry; branded content. This was really synonymous with advertiser funded TV shows where programming was created by brands and deals struck with networks to broadcast them.
There were varying degrees of success with this model.
Shock advertising: 30 ads that would give Australia's ad watchdog a coronary
Is shock an underused weapon in Australian advertising, asks Robin HicksToday, Sydney agency The Cabana Boys used an image of a mouth sewn together to shock people with the idea that problem gamblers lie to conceal their habit. Is it the most disturbing image ever? No. Will it get banned by the Advertising Standards Bureau? No. But it did make me wonder why shock is not used more often in Australia – and not just by charities and government bodies. (WARNING: NSFW)
The making of ratings blockbuster The Voice
Jason Mountney goes on the set of Channel Nine’s talent search series, The Voice, to see how the format, based on an international franchise, has come together. What ingredients have gone into making this certified hit that’s rated more than two million viewers on three consecutive nights?
Mike Goldman has one of the toughest jobs on the set of the Nine network’s new talent show, The Voice. He not only has to narrate the show, but also keep the audience from losing their enthusiasm as they realise shooting TV programs takes a lot longer than the one-hour bursts they see in their lounge rooms. A lot longer.
Nine problems stopping The Global Mail from getting an audience
While it’s a shame The Global Mail has failed to make an impact on the media landscape, the signs have been there for some time.I love the concept of a well resourced, philanthropically-funded independent news site. Anywhere in the world, that’s a rare and wonderful thing. In Australia even more so. So I hope that Grame Wood gets to see his investment make a difference.
And I have no inside info on whether Monica Attard’s sudden departure is linked to the site’s failure to find an audience so far.
Regardless, here are nine areas they can easily start to address:
Journalism’s new model?
Does the launch of philanthropically funded news site The Global Mail signal a new era for journalism or is the model destined to be a passing fad, asks Cathie McGinn in this article first published in Encore magazine.With little fanfare, philanthropically funded news site The Global Mail launched in February this year.
The online-only title received a generous five-year funding commitment from businessman Graeme Wood, founder of accommodation website wotif.com, who donated $15million.
Five things that make a great suit
In this guest posting, Gareth Collins argues that the role of a great account manager is to make the work betterI’m surprised at how many suits I meet who don’t know their role in the advertising business. The question ‘what does an advertising account manager or director do?’ is frequently met with answers such as project manager, relationship manager, plate spinner or go between … and those are the nice ones.
Success is judged on the ability to manage a process, be strong administratively and get stuff done. And while a good suit needs to do all of these things brilliantly, if these are the traits that define a great suit, then I’m in the wrong job.
What the hell is transmedia?
From advertising campaigns to online video series, the term ‘transmedia’ gets quite the work out. But what does it actually mean? Cathie McGinn trawls the media landscape for a definitive definition.
Transmedia, all media and multiplatform are terms often used interchangeably when referencing modern storytelling techniques. Yet, depending who you speak to, there are distinct differences between them.
The top seven...most patronising pieces of communication
Sometimes brands have big ideas. Sometimes marketers get so caught up with a grandiose idea that instead of finding engaging ways to sell breakfast cereal, they start to believe their own rhetoric. And sometimes it’s just lazy marketing. Here are my top seven inadvertently patronising pieces of communication…
1) Last night thousands of women gathered in Sydney’s Centennial Park to take part in She Runs the Night, an event created by Nike.
TV audience measurement – why big isn’t always beautiful
In this guest post, Chris Walton argues that the media industry needs to take a new approach to TV tradingThere has been a significant amount of coverage recently about how successful The Voice has been. Indeed, audience figures of 2.6m+ people are very impressive these days. Based on reports, this is apparently double the size of audience that Nine was hoping for in the lead up to the programme launching.
Murderer strips dead girl to wear her jeans in short film for Billycock
Aussie denim label Billycock has launched a short film in which a girl removes a pair of jeans from a person she has murdered to wear them herself.
The film ends with the slogan, ‘Denim worth dying for’.
Jai Films, the production company behind the film, confirmed that TV networks had been approached, but they had declined to run the film because of its strong content. The film is intended for cinema and the internet.
The video was directed by Jared Beekhuyzen. Jai Films created the film from concept to completion; no ad agency was involved.
Billycock plans to run an ad suitable for TV in the new year.
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Comments
14 Nov 11
2:23 am
Why would TV networks run a branded content short film reglardless of it’s content?
What a strange phonecall that would’ve been.
14 Nov 11
2:31 am
Ah…..that’s the best thing ever
14 Nov 11
2:43 am
Since it’s all from the Killer’s perspective, shouldn’t the tagline be “Denim Worth Killing For”?
14 Nov 11
2:44 am
Since it’s all from the Killer’s perspective, shouldn’t the tagline be “Denim Worth Killing For”?
14 Nov 11
2:45 am
Very nicely shot and a nice conept to boot
14 Nov 11
2:58 am
Predictable and transparent. “Let’s make a video that’s sooooo controversial the networks refuse to show it, then watch it go viral.” Nicely shot though.”
14 Nov 11
3:21 am
Really!!…that’s just irresponsible!
14 Nov 11
3:27 am
Now there’s an idea – get Tropfest to have a branded content section.
Serious this time.
14 Nov 11
3:53 am
I have never seen so may visual cliches in a pair of size 8 jeans. Predictable, boring and obviously designed gain public and media notoriety. I just hope this blog doesn’t achieve that outcome.
14 Nov 11
4:15 am
Great video. I do not think there was any intention to gain media notoriety.
Simple / effective, great concept. Well done to all involved.
14 Nov 11
4:33 am
What’s the message here….? Only low life desparates, who can’t afford to pay for a so-so pair of jeans, will commit a serious crime to steal them from a dead person. That’s about as dumb as they get!!
Jack
14 Nov 11
4:49 am
Denim worth dying for makes sense to me….. Jeans so good it’s worth dying just to wear them!
14 Nov 11
4:57 am
Sorry – but that tagline makes no sense.
14 Nov 11
4:53 pm
Fails various reality tests which would have made it so much better. eg Girl carries body bag – which has nothing in it – even a size 8 super model weighs more than that. Victim had no signs of cause of death. Some bruising or blood would have helped. End scene of multiple bodies a nice touch but surely they would have been in shallow graves at early stage of decomposition. Just sayin’.
Overall though I like. PS nice choice of car.
14 Nov 11
6:25 pm
Morbid, perverse stroking of their own egos ….or worse
14 Nov 11
7:01 pm
Extremely irresponsible. Can’t believe its allowed
14 Nov 11
9:42 pm
We need more ads like this… Genius!
14 Nov 11
10:58 pm
“Talent hits a target no one else can hit; Genius hits a target no one else can see.”
Nothing original here, sexing up murder, death meh, was hitting the seek bar by 0.40, Jeans look OK on the girl tho.
15 Nov 11
12:06 am
Whoever is above. You clearly do not know what you are talking about.
15 Nov 11
11:05 am
Do you really think that Billycock could afford to afford to run a 2.18 minute spot on TV even if stations had that unusual media length? Billycock? More like poppycock.
15 Nov 11
12:58 pm
Weird. Great photography, but the tag line makes no sense at all, as noted above. The Tropfest idea (also above) is a good one- it’s the only place I could see this wroking (and then only if the tagline is changed). In my (admittedly limited) experience however, commecials are 15, 30 or 60 seconds long, not 3 minutes. They’re hoping for adjectives in the press like “edgy” “gritty” and “brave”. Genius? Haw haw. I reiterate though- photography was lovely to look at. The concept though- that made me feel very very ill.
15 Nov 11
3:17 pm
made you feel ill? continue liking your conventional formulae of commercial work. The tagline makes complete sense. Think outside the box there John. Might take you a while but you will get there.
15 Nov 11
4:00 pm
Gee, thanks anonymous. I will continue liking what I like, and thinking any way I like. But thanks, I was low on vitamin douche, and you’ve topped it up.
15 Nov 11
4:47 pm
Its alright John. You take care now.
15 Nov 11
5:03 pm
Nothing is more obvious than a bunch of agency people defending their own work on a blog. Learn from it guys and move on.
16 Nov 11
12:24 pm
Both gross and inaccurate. Women are so not the ones who go around killing! The probability in real life is very low, so why do we have to keep watching TV, movies and ads that depict women as killers.
I hope this ad is reported to the Advertising Standards Board.
16 Nov 11
1:29 pm
S are you saying that if this was a male doing the killing then it would be accurate and therefore OK in your books? I hope you get reported to the Life Standards Board. That’s one of the best looking butts I’ve seen in a while and I would be totally OK with her taking my jeans off, dead or alive.
24 Nov 11
4:51 pm
I saw this Ad Billycock it’s totally taken me into your story. Thank you’re JAI film for that fabulous and breath taking advertisement, those pants were great as want to buy them. I hope we’ll see more of you’re guys to make even more greater ADS to enjoy.