You'd be hard-pressed to find something cuter. Budweiser's latest Super Bowl commercial, "Lost Dog," a sequel to last year's popular "Puppy Love" spot (featuring a Clydesdale horse and his rambunctious Labrador puppy companion), is already wildly popular, with more than 14 millions YouTube views since its release last week. The spot shows the little yellow Lab getting lost, then having to find his way back home to his protective pals and loving master on the ranch - though not before braving a coyote encounter along the way. "Lost Dog" is a heartwarming tale about how true friends always have your back,...
- 1/31/2015
- by Gillian Telling, @gilliantelling
- PEOPLE.com
You'd be hard-pressed to find something cuter. Budweiser's latest Super Bowl commercial, "Lost Dog," a sequel to last year's popular "Puppy Love" spot (featuring a Clydesdale horse and his rambunctious Labrador puppy companion), is already wildly popular, with more than 14 millions YouTube views since its release last week. The spot shows the little yellow Lab getting lost, then having to find his way back home to his protective pals and loving master on the ranch - though not before braving a coyote encounter along the way. "Lost Dog" is a heartwarming tale about how true friends always have your back,...
- 1/31/2015
- by Gillian Telling, @gilliantelling
- PEOPLE.com
The Budweiser Made in America festival is expanding to Los Angeles — and staying in its birthplace of Philadelphia, with two simultaneous two-day festivals set to take place this Labor Day weekend. Founding partner and curator Jay Z made the announcement from the steps of Los Angeles' City Hall this morning alongside the city's mayor Eric Garcetti, Budweiser vp Brian Perkins, Live Nation CEO Michael Rapino, L.A. City Council president Herb Wesson and United Way of Greater L.A. president/CEO Elise Buik. Budweiser Made in America will be the first festival to operate simultaneously on both U.S.
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- 4/16/2014
- by M. Tye Comer, Billboard, Andrew Hampp, Billboard
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
'Needing/Getting' video features a heavily tricked-out Chevy Sonic.
By James Montgomery
At this point, after all the treadmills, Rube Goldberg machines, dogs on Ikea furniture, choreographed dance routines, color-coordinated jumpsuits and, uh, toast, you're probably wondering what Ok Go could possibly do for their next music video.
Well, now we know the answer. In their new "Needing/Getting" video — which premiered Sunday (February 5) on MTV.com and will also be seen in a Chevy commercial during tonight's Super Bowl Xlvi — Ok Go stage a full-blown vehicular spectacular. Part Baja rally, part demolition derby, all ingenious, it features the fearless quartet speeding along a desert track, making hair-pin turns, and very nearly wrecking — all while using the car itself to bash out the tune.
The band and director Brian L. Perkins (who directed an early version of their "This Too Shall Pass" clip) used more than 1,100 homemade instruments — plus 55 pianos...
By James Montgomery
At this point, after all the treadmills, Rube Goldberg machines, dogs on Ikea furniture, choreographed dance routines, color-coordinated jumpsuits and, uh, toast, you're probably wondering what Ok Go could possibly do for their next music video.
Well, now we know the answer. In their new "Needing/Getting" video — which premiered Sunday (February 5) on MTV.com and will also be seen in a Chevy commercial during tonight's Super Bowl Xlvi — Ok Go stage a full-blown vehicular spectacular. Part Baja rally, part demolition derby, all ingenious, it features the fearless quartet speeding along a desert track, making hair-pin turns, and very nearly wrecking — all while using the car itself to bash out the tune.
The band and director Brian L. Perkins (who directed an early version of their "This Too Shall Pass" clip) used more than 1,100 homemade instruments — plus 55 pianos...
- 2/5/2012
- MTV Music News
Making Bombay Beach all started when I was looking for a music video location for my favorite band in the world – Beirut.
We were at the Coachella music festival in Indio and my friend Brian Perkins (who was dying for a “Date Shake”) took me there.
I met Benny and Mike at the beach and asked them to be in the video and we shot it that afternoon:...
We were at the Coachella music festival in Indio and my friend Brian Perkins (who was dying for a “Date Shake”) took me there.
I met Benny and Mike at the beach and asked them to be in the video and we shot it that afternoon:...
- 10/14/2011
- by Alma Har'el
- Filmmaker Magazine - Blog
Illustrations by Tavis Coburn
Advertising is on the cusp of its first creative revolution since the 1960s. But the ad industry might get left behind.
Illustrations by Tavis Coburn
Twenty creative directors, planners, media strategists, and account executives from agencies across the country are down on all fours on the floor of a 100-year-old tenement on Manhattan's Lower East Side. They are each staring down at a blank poster-size sheet of paper, contemplating their most abject fears about their careers, their livelihoods, and their future. They have reason to worry. They are, after all, in the business of advertising.
This slight three-story brick building on the edge of Chinatown has been taken over by Hyper Island, a school based in Sweden renowned for producing the most coveted digital talent in the ad industry. That school is located in an old prison on the Baltic Sea, and students are taught that...
Advertising is on the cusp of its first creative revolution since the 1960s. But the ad industry might get left behind.
Illustrations by Tavis Coburn
Twenty creative directors, planners, media strategists, and account executives from agencies across the country are down on all fours on the floor of a 100-year-old tenement on Manhattan's Lower East Side. They are each staring down at a blank poster-size sheet of paper, contemplating their most abject fears about their careers, their livelihoods, and their future. They have reason to worry. They are, after all, in the business of advertising.
This slight three-story brick building on the edge of Chinatown has been taken over by Hyper Island, a school based in Sweden renowned for producing the most coveted digital talent in the ad industry. That school is located in an old prison on the Baltic Sea, and students are taught that...
- 11/29/2010
- by Danielle Sacks
- Fast Company
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