Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Eau de Whopper anyone?




“A tasty little present for men - Burger King body spray
by Hadley Freeman


Still can't think what to get him for Christmas? Socks don't seem to cut it any more? Fret no longer because Burger King is here to help.

The mass purveyor of grilled meat is offering, for a limited time, something even better than their usual piles of beef patties. This week, American men were given the chance to smell like their favourite meat snack with the launch of Flame, Burger King's contribution to the perfume market.

The company describes Flame as "the scent of seduction with a hint of flame-broiled meat".

Astonishingly, this elixir costs a mere $3.99 (£2.65). By contrast, one of its competitors, Chanel No 5, for example, costs more than $80.

Flame, a body spray for men, was launched this week online and in a selection of US stores, the list of which can be found on the perfume's website, which is named, appropriately, firemeetsdesire.com.

There, prospective buyers are greeted with what sounds like a melange of Barry White music and an interactive spray can which does not, disappointingly, emit a ray of French fries but morphs into a photograph of scented candles.

Burger King - or "the King" as the company's website refers to it - is not the only celebrity perfume on the market this Christmas.

Kate Moss, for one, will no doubt be putting up a stern fight with her Velvet Hour scent. But the model will surely struggle against a fragrance that has such a noble history: "The Whopper sandwich is America's favourite burger," the website boasts.

"Flame by BK captures the essence of that love and gives it to you. Behold ... now you can set the mood for whatever you're in the mood for." As long as that mood involves meat, presumably.”

(credit: The Guardian)

Monday, December 08, 2008

A case of East Imitates West...Imitating the East.

Keffiyeh Brings Colorful Clash to Beirut

The iconic black and white keffiyeh, or Arab headdress, famously donned by late Palestinian president Yasser Arafat has hit the streets of Beirut in a rainbow of colors -- much to the chagrin of older Palestinians.

Stylish youngsters, both men and women, can be seen in the city's chic cafes and restaurants sporting red, blue, pink, brown and purple versions of the keffiyeh.

Western and Arab tourists are also snapping up the hip item. The trend, however, is seen by many here as an insult to a symbol traditionally linked to the Palestinian cause.

"These colors aren't for us... it's nonsense, it's a fashion show," said Salim Ali Kayd, 74, who has been a Palestinian refugee in Lebanon since 1948, when Israel was created.

"The keffiyeh stands for a person's honor and manhood. It was a rite of passage to wear one upon reaching the age of 18," he added explaining the customs of his generation.

Others like him living in the narrow alleyways of the Shatila refugee camp on the outskirts of Beirut are also upset that their national symbol has become a fad.

"Yasser Arafat used to wear it for a reason. It means something," said Kalthoum Ghandour, a 45-year-old Palestinian doctor living in Lebanon.

"It was what the revolutionaries wore to conceal their identity," she added. "This is our revolution, our symbol.

"This trend distorts our heritage."

Shops in Beirut's diverse Christian and Muslim neighborhoods are selling the bright-colored items imported from Syria, Thailand and China.

A backlash against the trend has spread to college campuses in Lebanon, where Facebook groups have sprung up called "
Palestinian scarf: Understand it or don't bother wearing it!" and "I refuse to let the keffiyeh become a high fashion statement."

This is not the first time the keffiyeh has been co-opted by others. The garment has come in and out of fashion, with youths in the 1960s and 1970s wearing it as a sign of revolt or sympathy with the Palestinian cause. The scarf has also become a signature item for anti-war activists.

While the latest trend may be more accessory and less ideology -- the keffiyeh's powerful symbolism continues to resonate, and not only among Palestinians.

The issue grabbed headlines in recent months when the
Dunkin' Donuts chain came under fire for an online ad that featured an American celebrity chef wearing a paisley patterned scarf that some mistook for a keffiyeh.

The ad was pulled after a conservative U.S. commentator complained that it promoted jihad.

The U.S. clothing store Urban Outfitters this year also stopped selling colored versions of the keffiyeh because of controversy.

"They used to wear it around their necks and now they are wearing it around their waists. What's next?," said Haitham, 28, a Palestinian refugee who did not reveal his last name.

Dana, 25, said she recently purchased a blue version of the keffiyeh and maintains that the garment carries no political symbolism.

"I used to wear the white one when I would go to protests in college," she said. "These ones are a pure fashion statement.

Some young Palestinians, however, are proud to see the craze gather steam.

"I have about 10 of them... The keffiyeh belongs to us no matter its color. I am happy they have become popular," said Ahmed el-Hassan, 22.

(credit: AFP)

Wednesday, December 03, 2008

What ad people forget is that...


good to keep in mind for your next creative presentation when the client demolishes yet another idea.

(Painting by Harry Simmonds)


Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Banksy Defends His Guerrilla Graffiti Art

"Even though artwork by the British graffiti artist Banksy is popular with celebrities such as Angelina Jolie and Christina Aguilera, some regard the artist's street works to be vandalism, pure and simple. On Oct. 23, the Council of Westminster in London ordered the removal of a 23 ft (7 m) Banksy mural — reportedly his largest work in central London — claiming that it encourages graffiti.



In an exclusive statement to TIME, the mysterious guerrilla prankster has responded to the council's decision. "I don't know what next door is complaining about — their building is so ugly the 'No Trespassing' sign reads like an insult," the statement reads, referring to Royal Mail, a tenant of the building that has sought the mural's removal. In light of several other recent controversies over Banksy's outdoor works, this removal is further indication of the challenges that can arise when a famous artist uses private property as his canvas..."

(credit: TIME)

Friday, October 24, 2008

Woman arrested for killing virtual reality husband...what's next?!

"A 43-year-old Japanese woman [who] killed her online husband's digital persona has been arrested on suspicion of hacking, police said Thursday.

The woman, who is jailed on suspicion of illegally accessing a computer and manipulating electronic data, used his identification and password to log onto popular interactive game "Maple Story" to carry out the virtual murder in mid-May, a police official in northern said on condition of anonymity, citing department policy...

...She has not yet been formally charged, but if convicted could face a prison term of up to five years or a fine up to $5,000..."

(credit: CNN)

Sunday, October 05, 2008

Snail Mail proves that 'slow' has value

"How Slow?: In making Real Snail Mail we asked ourselves 'is there a space in our speed obsessed world for a service that takes time?' Overwhelmingly, the answer has been YES! We are now asking ourselves the more interesting question 'how slow?' With emails stacking up at an astounding rate we will soon be bringing more snails into service to cope with demand.

How it works
: Our snails are equipped with a miniaturised electronic circuit and antenna, enabling them to be assigned messages. Your message is collected from a despatch centre at one end of their enclosure. Once associated with the tiny electronic chip on the snail's shell your message will be carried around until the snail chances by the drop off point. Here more hardware collects your message and forwards it to its final destination."

(credit: RealSnailMail)

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Should Ben & Jerry's use breast milk?

PETA thinks so :) But don't run to your nearest Monoprix or Tesco's yet.

New threat to dairy farmers – ice cream with mother's milk

Animal rights group urges use of human breast milk

By Rachel Shields
Sunday, 28 September 2008

Ice cream maker Ben & Jerry's is known for its eccentric flavours – phish food, cookie dough and cherry garcia – but its marketing department would be hard pushed to find any takers for a stomach-churning proposition to make ice cream with human breast milk.

The suggestion comes from an animal rights group which is urging the firm to use milk from nursing mothers instead of cows.

While the idea is enough to provoke shudders of revulsion from your average ice cream lover, dairy farmers reacted angrily to the stunt yesterday, claiming that the group is undermining the dairy industry.

But the animal rights group Peta claims that breast milk would be "better for both consumers and cows", pointing out the nutritional benefits of breast milk and highlighting the animal welfare concerns over dairy farming.

In a letter to Ben & Jerry's co-founders Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield, it cites the example of chef Hans Locher, who recently announced that he will be serving soups and sauces made from 75 per cent breast milk in his Swiss restaurant. Mr Locher posted adverts in local villages appealing for donors, offering a rate of £3 per 14 ounces (398ml) for their milk.

"Using cows' milk for your ice cream is a hazard to your customers' health. Dairy products have been linked to juvenile diabetes, allergies, constipation, obesity, and prostate and ovarian cancer," wrote Tracy Reiman, executive vice president of Peta.

"Animals will also benefit from the switch to breast milk. Like all mammals, cows only produce milk during and after pregnancy, so to be able to constantly milk them, cows are forcefully impregnated every nine months," wrote Ms Reiman.

While co-founders Mr Cohen and Mr Greenfield are famously environmentally and ethically aware – they established a "Climate Change College" which encourages grass-roots action on climate change, and go by the slogan "Milking happy Cows, Not the Planet" – they baulked at the suggestion. "We applaud [the group's] novel approach to bringing attention to an issue, but we believe a mother's milk is best used for her child," said a Ben & Jerry's spokesperson.

And then there is, as Mr Locher found, the problem of supply. As 50 per cent of each 500ml tub of ice cream is made from milk and cream, finding enough human milk to sustain production of Ben & Jerry's would be a challenge.

The suggestion that cows' milk has a detrimental effect on health provoked anger this weekend among dairy farmers, who have been hit by falling prices and the increasing popularity of non-dairy alternatives such as soy milk.

"Dairy foods have been in the diet for thousands of years," said Dr Judith Bryans, director of the Dairy Council. "The reality of chronic diseases is that they are an interaction between genes, the environment and the diet, and these negative stories about dairy are a misrepresentation of science."

(credit: The Independent)

Tuesday, September 02, 2008

Google's irresistable Chrome?


Google has finally entered the ring into the browser match through its launch of Chrome today. The announcement was made through a comic book specially drawn up by Scott McCloud (best known for Understanding Comics - which I high recommend). Chrome will be available to download in Beta from the Google blog.

(credit: Google blog)

Thursday, August 21, 2008

"Fight Club was the beginning"


I don't think there's a simple explanation for what pushes people to gather and ruthlessly brawl like something out of MadMax's Thunderdome. But I do like Tyler Durden's insightfully shrewd monologue in Fight Club: "We've all been raised on television to believe that one day we'd all be millionaires, and movie gods, and rock stars. But we won't. And we're slowly learning that fact. And we're very, very pissed off."

In LA, they must be very, very pissed off. And that all comes to boiling point twice a year at a fight club created by the Dog Brothers where combatants from all over meet up to kick, bite, elbow and draw blood from their opponents.

Their credo says it all really:
"No judges, no referees, no trophies. One rule only: Be friends at the end of the day. This means our goal is that no one spends the night in the hospital. Our goal is that everyone leaves with the IQ with which they came."

So if anyone's in the mood for destroying something ''beautiful'' (like a pretty boy's face) you know where to go now.

(credit: Reuters)

Monday, August 04, 2008

In Saudi, a soap opera is seriously shaking things up


Can a soap opera be so successful that it not only attracts millions of viewers every night, but also double the number of Saudi tourists to Turkey and push jealous husbands to spike the divorce rate? "Noor" is a Turkish soap opera that has taken the Arab world by storm. And in the super conservative kingdom of Saudi Arabia, that storm is magnified.

Read on:

"A Turkish soap opera featuring an independent fashion designer and her amazingly supportive and attractive husband is emptying the streets whenever it's on and has more than doubled the number of Saudis visiting Turkey this summer.

Millions of people -- especially women, apparently -- are tuning in nightly to find out whether the couple will stay together or be torn apart by jealousies and old flames.

But "Noor," the story of a multi-generational, upper-class Turkish family, has also sparked a backlash. The show has become the subject of angry Friday sermons in this strict Islamic kingdom, and the country's chief cleric recently issued a fatwa calling it "decadent" and sinful to watch

"Noor" has had such a deep influence because, unlike American or Mexican soap operas broadcast here, it is about a Muslim family living in a Muslim country. The show is also dubbed in an Arabic dialect, not classical Arabic, which makes it easier to understand and feels more intimate to viewers. And then, there's that husband.

The blue-eyed, blond Muhannad, played by Kivanc Tatlitu, a 24-year-old Turkish actor and model, is tall, handsome, romantic, respectful and treats his wife, Noor -- the title character -- as both a love object and an equal.<

"Saudi women fantasize about what they're lacking," said Amira Kashgari, an assistant linguistics professor at King Abdul Aziz University who writes about social issues for al-Watan newspaper.

"They are almost obsessed with this show because of the way he interacts with and treats his wife."

click here to continue article


(credit: Washington Post)

Tuesday, July 01, 2008

War on the menu in Beirut - literally



"At Buns and Guns you can order a 'Kalashnikov' sandwich from a bullet-shaped menu, prepared by chefs in military fatigues with the roar of explosions as background music."

(credit: Reuters)

Sunday, June 01, 2008

Dunkin' Donuts and ''hate couture''

''Dunkin' Donuts and politics go together like … Well, they don't, and that seems to be the problem of late. First, the doughnut franchise served as a hideout for Lebanese Army troops and a CNN correspondent when violence erupted in Beirut last month. Then this week the company found itself smack dab in the center of more political tumult. A recent ad by the doughnut giant was deemed dangerous by a handful of conservative bloggers because of its potential ties to the Arab world. The bloggers went on the attack when they saw spokesgal Rachael Ray wearing what they felt was a kaffiyeh, or Arab headdress, as a neck scarf.''

(credit: Newsweek)

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Telescope links London to....New York???


What do you get when you mix Victorian invention with modern-day technology and an eye for art? Would you believe, an underground telescope allowing Londoners to wave hallow to New Yorkers walking their dogs? As of today, a new contraption called ''the Telectroscope'' is open to the public following ...well, years of digging underneath the Atlantic to connect the two cities? "Spectators who step right up will have a real-time, life-size view across the pond 24 hours a day." Sound incredible? That's because it is, in a way. Read more to get the full story. It's a brilliant mix of art and storytelling. Good fun.

(credit: NYT)

Saturday, May 10, 2008

Switching lanes


You know that split second when you're waiting for an ATM machine or in traffic where you consider switching lanes? As far as decision-making goes, that has to be one of our more irrational processes. A new study in the Journal of Consumer Research looks specifically at why we switch lines at the grocery store. They found out that our decision is linked to our tendency to compare ourselves to the unfortunate people in line behind us. As someone who stood in line for close to 5 hours to see the Sistine Chapel, I can definitely relate.

Sunday, April 06, 2008

Pangea Day



Will let the video do the talking. Mark your calendars.

Monday, March 31, 2008

The LadyBag feels with you

As Carrie says, “I'm thinking balls are to men what purses are to women. It's just a little bag, but we feel naked in public without it” (Sex and the City).

I don't know about it being a 'little bag' but these LadyBags deliver a few things way beyond anything that man's anatomy ever could. The LadyBag is a new concept in purses that not only has emoticons that light up according to your mood, but also reminds you when you've forgotten your cell phone or your keys!


The picture shown above might just be the PMS emoticon. Not sure. Thoughts?

(credit: LadyBag Project)

Friday, March 28, 2008

When rabbits melt...



...it makes for good art. The music is perfect.

Saturday, February 23, 2008

''Total Sale'' during Belgrade riots


A video of two young women looting during the latest rioting in Belgrade has fast become a hit on YouTube. The women, running amok, go on a free ''shopping spree'' grabbing handbags and Adidas shoes and clothing from the swankiest stores...sometimes in their teeth - all the while filmed by an amateur cameraman. I post this video to highlight what I find to be an intriguing aspect of human behaviour when social order breaks down - people remain brand hungry. Definite potential for a dissertation. hmmm.

(source: Reuters)

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

An entire apartment in a box

Inside this box, is an armoire, a desk, a height-adjustable stool, two extra stools, a six-shelf bookcase, and a bed with a mattress! Click here to see more pictures and a video of how this award winning design by Marcel Krings & Sebastian Mühlhäuser works.

(credit: Treehugger.com)

Monday, February 11, 2008

No red roses for Saudi


A few days ahead of Valentine's Day, the Saudi authorities have banned red roses and any other scarlet coloured items from being sold at florists and gift shops across the country. I always thought the whole rose thing was a bit overdone anyway. This could possibly encourage couples to seek out more creative ways of expressing their undying lurve for one another.

Alternatively, you could just buy a dozen white roses and spray-paint them red. ''A'' for effort?

(credit: Reuters)

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Adidas' Marathon Boost - how cool is this?!


"The 2007 adidas Auckland Marathon had 11,000 runners determined to reach their impossible. With the finish line 42 kilometres away, they needed more motivation. At the 17 km mark, they got 50 knots of it from a custom built, hurricane fan created by TBWA Whybin Auckland. Exhausted runners opted in to the adiBOOST lane and were pushed from behind by a massive blast of air. Giving them a much-needed second wind to power them through to the finish line."


(credit: TBWA\Whybin Auckland)

Monday, January 14, 2008

IKEA, take me home with you


Over the weekend, I probably wasn't the biggest fan - considering it took me 4 hours to put together some bed slats I bought. But someone just sent me the link to IKEA's new website on dream kitchens, which is just absolutely incredibly crafted. It really is worth taking a look to see how they brought everything to life - and I'm so not a kitchen person, but my jaw dropped. I thware.

Thursday, January 10, 2008

"The Decapitator"


A street-artist going by 'The Decapitator' is having a field day in London. As his pseudonym suggests, his signature mark involves a guillotine and some gory humour applied to a variety of posters around town - cartoon characters are not spared.

(credit: The Decapitator)

Monday, January 07, 2008

Packing tape art


I can make a seriously jumbled-up mess with sticky brown packing tape. This artist from Kiev, Ukraine uses that same tape to create some really nice pieces of art. It's only a matter of time before 3M or Scotch make an ad out of this...

Saturday, January 05, 2008

Dentists win Lacoste crocodile logo battle






"Two dentists have won a second legal battle with French fashion giant Lacoste over the right to use a toothy crocodile on the sign outside their surgery, the government trademark body said on Thursday.


Dentists Dr Simon Moore and Dr Tim Rumney said they chose a crocodile for their logo because the reptile is famous for having a mouth full of teeth.

But Lacoste argued that the dentists' sign was too similar to their own emblem, a green crocodile that adorns millions of polo shirts around the world."

(source: Reuters)