Showing posts with label new era. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new era. Show all posts

Sunday, September 25, 2011

The Spot: Trash Talkers Alec Baldwin and John Krasinski trade insults in an episodic slugfest for New Era

watch all six ads, including today's finale

GENESIS: After airing a single ad with Evan Longoria last year, New Era—the maker of official MLB-licensed baseball caps—wanted something more episodic that would stay fresh over the long 2011 baseball season. When a plan to use Charlie Sheen imploded, ad agency The Brooklyn Brothers suggested a series about the rivalry between the New York Yankees and the Boston Red Sox. The idea was to have new 60-second ads coincide with each of the six scheduled series between the clubs, from April to September. "The thought was to find two überfans to represent the rivalry and have them go at it throughout the season," says agency co-founder Guy Barnett. Red Sox fan John Krasinski agreed to take part, and he brought in Alec Baldwin, a Yankee fan. The agency signed an all-star director, too, in Super Bowl and celebrity-ad veteran Bryan Buckley (himself a die-hard Red Sox supporter).

COPYWRITING: The agency drafted scripts, but Krasinski started from scratch with current and former Office writers Charlie Grandy and Mike Schur. "John sort of knows advertising, so he's like, 'I want to do something like the Larry Bird-Michael Jordan ads,' " says Buckley. "I'm like, 'Wow, that's old school. How do you even remember that?' " Krasinski delivered rewrites within a week. As Hollywood writers and friends of the actors, Grandy and Schur were able to dial up the scripted insults "in ways that perhaps advertising people can't, or wouldn't dream or dare to," says Barnett. The series opens with Krasinski and Baldwin trash talking over the phone, and then escalates to various pranks and even a thrown punch. In the final commercial, which rolled out Thursday morning (the teams begin their final series of the regular season on Friday), the pair are forced to watch baseball together at Krasinski's place, as Baldwin has burned his own house down while lighting Sox tickets on fire in the penultimate spot. Let's just say it ends messy.


ART DIRECTION: Buckley shot in black and white, because that's the essence of the rivalry—no gray areas. It was also a different look from the actors' sitcoms, and fresh for the category. (Baseball spots usually bask in the beautiful greens of the field, or are gritty and chopped up.) "I shot Ellen DeGeneres in black and white years ago for AmEx," Buckley says. "People sometimes say black and white doesn't work for comedy, but it actually can, believe it or not."

FILMING: Most of the footage was shot in a building on New York's Upper West Side on one day in April and another in July. A few pickup shots were captured in Los Angeles. "We did four or five episodes that first day," Barnett says. "We moved cameras up and down floors. The level of talent was so great that you didn't need to do a lot of takes."


TALENT: "The scripts were pretty tight, but John would embellish and improvise on things," says Barnett. Baldwin, meanwhile, stuck religiously to the scripts, working off a teleprompter, as he does on 30 Rock. "He uses it as a tool," says Buckley. "He'll zero in on where he wants his pauses and jokes, and get his timing right to the second." For the "912" spot, Baldwin had to jump up and down, and as he did so, the ceiling began to crumble in the apartment below. As the crew murmured to each other, Buckley told Baldwin what was going on. In his trademark gruff whisper, the actor replied: "It's too late to put a condom on now, isn't it?"

SOUND: Both actors have comically epic sports-anthem ringtones, but otherwise there's no music. "We wanted the natural soundtrack of game announcers to play behind them," says Barnett.

MEDIA: The ads have aired two or three times during each Red Sox-Yankees game—regionally on the local sports nets, nationally when the games are on Fox or ESPN. They've also blown up online. "It moves outside advertising," says Buckley. "It's like programming, like its own little show. You have all that emotion of the rivalry. But even if you didn't know about the rivalry, they're so searing toward each other, it's just funny." The ads have had an impact in the dugout, too: Derek Jeter is reportedly a fan.

THE LATEST SPOT:


THE REST OF THE SERIES:

CREDITS:
Client: New Era
Agency: The Brooklyn Brothers, New York
Writers: Charlie Grandy, Mike Schur
Production: Hungry Man
Director: Bryan Buckley
EP/Managing Partner: Kevin Byrne
Line Producer: Mino Jarjoura
Director of Photography: Scott Henriksen
Editing Company: Big Sky Edit

Monday, August 30, 2010

JAY-Z X NEW YORK YANKEES X NEW ERA

                            


NEW YORK – Get your New York Yankees hats here — with a Jay-Z logo.


The hip-hop mogul is teaming up with his favorite baseball squad on co-branded clothes that will be sold exclusively at Yankee Stadium beginning next week. All the items, from baseball caps to T-shirts and hooded sweat shirts, will feature Yankees and Jay-Z logos.

In a news release Thursday, the Yankees said the attire was created to commemorate the first official concerts at the new Yankee Stadium on Sept. 13 and 14, when Jay-Z and Eminem will co-headline.

The shows mark the second half of their "Home and Home" tour, following joint performances at Detroit's Comerica Park on Sept. 3 and Sept. 4.

The new merchandise will be available at Yankee Stadium from Aug. 30 to Sept. 14.


Posted by Matt "The Mayor"

Monday, July 19, 2010

FITTED FOR A CHAMPION :: NEW ERA X MUHAMMAD ALI




50 years ago on September 5th, 1960, a 18 year boy old from Louisville Kentucky brought home the gold medal from the summer games in Rome. His name was Muhammad Ali.

To celebrate this great moment in history by one of the greatest athletes of our time New Era introduces the Capture The Flag cap. Part of the proceeds will go to the Muhammad Ali Center. We can all be champions!!!! BE GREAT TODAY!

“Champions aren´t made in the gyms. Champions are made from something they have deep inside them - a desire, a dream, a vision.” - Muhammad Ali

Sunday, April 18, 2010

WOMEN IN MARKETING & ADVERTISING

JULIE GREENWALD
President :: Atlantic Records

SHANTI DAS
Former Executive Vice President :: Universal Motown
Founder of R&B Live

BONNIE GARCIA
CEO of Market Vision
SLYVIA RHONE
President :: Motown Records - Executive Vice President :: Universal Records
MARVET BRITTO
The Britto Agency
JEN YU
FORMER ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING MANAGER :: NEW ERA FITS
CURRENT DIRECTOR OF MARKETING :: AKOO CLOTHING

SHANTE BACON
FORMER DIRECTOR OF MARKETING :: DEF JAM RECORDS
CEO :: The 135th STREET AGENCY

Friday, March 19, 2010

SMALL WORLD FT. LUDACRIS "MR. MAGNIFICENT"



This was another proud project that I was apart of. I was able to incorporate my relationship with New Era Fits with an artist I was managing. Small World of Disturbing Tha Peace Records. We had a great time shooting this video. A learning experience.