The end of the line?

 
Really interesting article from Nick Gill in last week’s Campaign. Especially the bit about how the notion of fragmentation between digital agencies and so-called traditional ones is no longer a workable one. Of all his predictions for the year ahead for creativity, it was this one which struck us as the most interesting:

 
‘I hope that agencies labelled ‘traditional’ will get the opportunity to take more of their ideas into the digital space, and that digital agencies will get the opportunity to do the big idea and not just spend their time bringing another agency’s brainchild to life.’

 
There’s always been this perceived hierarchy between ATL and ‘other’ agencies. Traditionally, non ATL creative teams would ‘inherit’ an idea which they’d then asked to do something with in another media or format. So much so that the opportunity to originate a ‘Big Idea’ from scratch was a rare one.

As a result, there used to be a kind of snobbery about which side of the line you sat. Maybe there still is. Either way, in this sense, the ‘big idea’ is awarded such an elevated status that it’s always reminded me – in darker, tangential moments – of Plato’s Theory of of Ideas and his allegory of the Cave. Perhaps I’m wrong and philosophy has no business in Advertising, but it got me thinking. If you’re not familiar with the Cave thing, here’s a quick recap (with a little help from Wikipedia):

“The Cave is where Plato imagines a group of people who have lived in a cave all of their lives, facing a blank wall. The people watch shadows projected on the wall by things passing in front of the cave entrance, and begin to ascribe forms to these shadows. According to Plato, the shadows are as close as the prisoners get to seeing reality… The philosopher is like a prisoner who is freed from the cave and comes to understand that the shadows on the wall are not constitutive of reality at all…”
 

The interesting thing about it is that the people in the cave only ever see a glimpse, or shadow of the great Ideas above in their ‘true form’. Of course, in an ‘ideal’ world, an idea should be an idea, whatever the media. But, (Tongue firmly in cheek) this cave image could be an amusing way of looking at on this perceived difference between ATL and BTL. Of how it must feel to never be able to originate ‘the big idea’ – and to always have the much smaller budget, metaphorically scraping at the ‘shadows’ on the walls.

Do BTL creatives still feel like this? There was a lot of debate in an old Scamp entry that seemed to suggest there was some feelings of inferiority/superiority on either side. “It’s definitely true that we letter writers have an inferiority complex the size of Soho towards ATL-ers,” wrote ‘Real Men Write Long Copy’ a while ago. 
 

But these days some might say that this perceived ‘line’ is now more of a dotted one. Not only are the major ATL agencies doing great digital work – AMV’s Take the knife, BBH’s Break the Cycle, and VCCPs Meerkat online campaign to name a few. But the digital agencies are also winning major ATL work. Glue has 3 and The Green Party, while Anomoly swooping Sony off Fallon sent ‘shockwaves’ through the industry if the forums are anything to go by. 

Glue’s recent work for The Sun has kind of broken the rules. The iPhone spoof viral ended up being so well received that the client asked for it to be put on TV. And coming in a few weeks there are some films for The Sun which were briefed as MPUs, but have now been booked for TV space. Both of which lead the creative director Seb Royce to coin the phrase, ‘it’s gone TV’ (as opposed to viral, ba doom ching).

So maybe this whole line thing is dissolving. Maybe it’s as archaic
as Mr Plato himself, and the hierarchy is slowly levelling
out? Either way, as Nick Gill puts it, ‘whatever happens in 2010, the sun will continue to rise.’ (Or not, if this winter is anything to go by)
 

More Fringe Highlights (and Missing Highlighters)

 

Earlier readers of this blog may recall the confessions of our lever-arched kleptomania. So when Matt Harvey (the stand up poet) read out his amazing poem Works Perks I couldn’t believe how bang on the nail it was. It’s all about the dangers of getting a little carried away when you’re in the stationery cupboard…

But his poem’s not just about pens and pritt sticks. Something bigger underpins it which is a little haunting… for those days when you wonder if your life is drifting away in the monotony of office life, which Joshua Ferris also explores in ‘Then we came to the end’. I just love the bit ‘I take these reams… you take my dreams’. ‘ You take the best part of my month. I take this hole punch.’ Brilliant. It’s a bit like the literary equivalent of Martha Tilston’s Artificial.
 
It’s not printed in his brilliant book ‘The Hole in the Sum of my Parts’, but happily he sent it to me, so I’m reproducing it at the end of this blog.

Other Edinburgh highlights were the dance group Circa at the Assembly Rooms. I never really get that excited by Circus shows, but this is really contemporary dance blended with circus skills with a very sensual, poetic feel that leaves you uplifted but melancholy at the same time. Truly the most captivating dance show I’ve ever seen, and the standing ovation suggested everyone in the room felt the same. Circa are from Australia but if they’re ever in the UK again I can’t stress enough how you have to go and see them.

Also I have to mention the unendingly surreal Mr Paul Foot. There is no other comedian on the circuit like him – he’s mad, surprising (in a spontaneously dry-humping a giant teddy bear kind of way), and he thrives on audience awkwardness. Among his many shows in Edinburgh this year was his meanderingly hilarious Bed Time Story, which took place at 2pm in the Pink Bus – an eclectic double decker stuffed with art and nostalgia (above). He’s definitely an acquired taste, and as such Paul Foot doesn’t have fans, he has connoisseurs. Check him out here.

And now back to a less bonkers type of comedy, with a subtle (and I wonder if intentional) tribute to adland in the last line.

‘Works perks’… by Matt Harvey
 
…it’s just a little thing,
I wouldn’t call it pilfering
Or petty theft. I took one, yes
But look – there are so many left.
I’m in on time. I smile, work hard.
Why should my conscience twitch or flinch?
Each working week you take a yard,
So why begrudge me my half-inch?
 
You take the best hours of my day
What do you give me? Take-home pay.
I’m so tired I can hardly speak
You take the best days of my week.
You take the best weeks of my month
I take some paper, this hole-punch.
You take the best months of my year
I take this swivel-chair. Oh dear.
You take the best years of my life…
… a laminator for the wife
 
So now please look the other way –
I need my little takeaway
To give myself a token raise
To supplement my take-home praise
 
Some get to meet celebrities
Or go on junkets overseas
I’m simply taking some of these –
Some paper clips, some folder files
A pritt stick, stapler, carpet tiles
Some tippex, a waste-paper bin
This thing for putting thingies in
This ream. Okay this box of reams
This laptop…
…well, you take my dreams
 
How did ever come to this?
My perky chirpy perquisites
Have been turned into exhibits –
These trinkets I gave house-room to:
Exhibits ‘A’ to ‘W’
Don’t ask what reason or what rhyme
Drove pretty me to petty crime
Nobody’s perfect
I guess it built up over time
Because I’m worth it
 

The Breakfast Club

On the day when the great John Hughes, director of one of my favourite films sadly passed away, Nat and I went to the Campbell Lace Beta Breakfast Club for Campaign bloggers and commenters. It was great fun, the food was delicious and we learned many things.

One, that you don’t need a fancy sign above the door to open an agency. Two, that Campbell Lace have a row of awesome little thinking pods, where, once installed, you’re on full display to all Carnaby shoppers while you brainstorm. And three, that ‘thumbs up’ and ‘double thumbs up’ are now back in fashion – according to fellow ex-BBHer, Mark Threlfall (pictured in action).

Thanks very much for having us guys. Nice to meet you in person!

And good to put a face to a name with Campaign’s Colin, our long-suffering web-editor, who has been there for us in times of techno-mares for over a year now (6th pic down on the left).

 


P.s. Does Barry Manilow know that you raid his wardrobe?