| | | | | First Things First | | February 05, 2020 | By Kathryn Lundstrom |
| |
| Amazon Dating, a Spot-On Parody Site, Offers to Help You Find Love in Your Prime | |
| | The tech giant's new dating site offers up singles of all ages, at varying price points, available with free one-hour delivery for Amazon Prime members. It's a joke, of course, but it's so well done that a small part of me wasn't convinced until I found the page that spells it out: "What is this? This is a joke." The site was developed by a team of emerging talents across a range of disciplines, including freelance content creator Ani Acopian, music producer Suzy Shinn, director/animator Morgan Gruer, and developers Pasquale DβSilva and Jacob Bijani. Read more: Be sure to click the βLegalβ tab so you can fill out a vital and binding βNon-Ghosting Agreementβ to keep both parties from bailing on a date at risk of losing $50. | | | |
| |
| |
| 3 Brands That Optimized Their Super Bowl Spots by Targeting the 50-Plus Demo | |
AARP's national sales director, Peter Zeuschner, notes in an Adweek Voice piece that Facebook selected Chris Rock and Sylvester Stallone to star in its 60-second Super Bowl debut, promoting the platform's Groups feature. At ages 54 and 73, respectively, these two iconic celebrities both hail from a powerful consumer demographic: the 50-plus audience. Facebook wasn't the only major technology company to feature 50-plus stars in ads during the Big Game. In an emotional spot that some considered to be one of the gameβs best, Google featured a widower asking his Google Assistant to recount favorite memories of his wife. In a more lighthearted ad, Amazonβs Super Bowl spot starred 62-year-old Ellen DeGeneres, who promoted voice assistant Alexa alongside her wife, Portia de Rossi. Read more: If you also want to reach the 50-plus audience like Facebook, Google and Amazon, reach them where they are: online, where they are seeking products and solutions and are ready to take action. Best of the Rest: Today's Top News and Insights Ad-Tech Firm Beeswax Appoints CRO and CMOThe Agency World Picks the Best and Worst of Super Bowl 2020Pabst Blue Ribbon Names 72andSunny Los Angeles Lead Creative AgencyLinkedIn CEO Jeff Weiner Is Stepping Down After 11 YearsProtocol, New Tech Site From Politicoβs Publisher, Is Up and RunningJoan Picks Up Virgin Hotels BusinessNew OOH Agency Launches With a Strong Roster of DTC Brands | | | |
| |
| |
| | Shutterstock Puts Pop Art Spin on Oscar-Nominated Films | |
| | Whether youβre rooting for Little Women or Joker at the Oscars on Sunday, Shutterstock is celebrating all nine best picture nominees by giving them pop art makeovers. The stock image providerβs Oscar Pop poster series is back for its eighth year, spotlighting the Best Picture nominees at the 92nd Academy Awards with reimagined film posters inspired by pop artists. Shutterstock tapped nine in-house designers to create the original posters, which incorporate photos, illustrations and textures sourced from the platformβs collection of more than 300 million images. | |
| |
| |
| | Adweek Promos and Events | Whoβs Your Media All-Star? | |
| | Donβt miss the chance to submit your agencies candidates for Executive of the Year, Rising Star and Media All-Star. Submissions close on February 17th. | |
| |
| |
|
|
|