На информационном ресурсе применяются рекомендательные технологии (информационные технологии предоставления информации на основе сбора, систематизации и анализа сведений, относящихся к предпочтениям пользователей сети "Интернет", находящихся на территории Российской Федерации)

World of Advertising

64 подписчика

The 'Camp Gyno' Girl Is Back in a Remarkable Trailer for Her Father's New Book

You remember "Camp Gyno," the 2012 viral video for tampon subscription service Hello Flo in which the first girl to get her period at summer camp becomes a tyrant, dispensing products and advice like she's dealing drugs.

The star of the ad, Macy McGrail, was a big part of its success. (It has almost 10 million views to date.

) She had just the right mix of adorable menace, and made the character hilarious and memorable.

Well, now McGrail is back in another interesting ad - an almost three-minute-long, impressively cinematic trailer for a book called Surviving Middle School, which her father, Dave McGrail, has published as a kind of entertaining guide book for 4th to 7th grade girls.

Watch the trailer for below. It's quite well done - interesting trailers for books are still pretty rare, after all - and features McGrail playing future versions of herself after she's gone down the wrong path, apparently beginning with poor decisions in middle school.

Dave McGrail tells AdFreak the idea for the trailer came from Tommy Henvey, an executive creative director at Ogilvy & Mather in New York and a relative of his wife's, at a Christmas party last year. Henvey enlisted other talent, including Tim Wilson at Friendshop!, who served as director and editor. "I was drawn to the idea not just to sell the book but also as something fun that Macy and I could do together," McGrail says of the trailer.

A cast and crew of about 30 filmed in five locations in Brooklyn in September. All of the actors, including Macy, are SAG-AFTRA, with one exception - Dave himself makes a cameo as the father in one of the final scenes.

The book itself "evolved from a journal I was keeping for Macy, some writing just for fun, and the fact that I wanted to convey the important message that choices matter," McGrail says. "It is about the empowerment that comes with making tough decisions."

The book is "interactive," much like the old "Choose Your Own Adventure" books, with choices that lead in different directions (e.g., "Turn to page 43" or "Turn to page 45"). The book addresses real-world issues, including a number of technology-based issues - like Instagram, phones/privacy and online plagiarism.

"Though some of the issues - bullying, dieting, cheating - are serious, the narrative is light, with a good dose of humor," says McGrail. "I hope the unique tone and format of the book captivates young readers and spark discussion on how to navigate tricky middle school issues."

Source: http://www.adweek.com/

Картина дня

наверх