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Singapore agencies cry foul against Ogilvy's "scam" Cannes winners!

Singapore agencies cry foul against Ogilvy's "scam" Cannes winners!
Good news for Upper Worli, we don't seem to be the only nation caught with our pants down on scam ads, the latest to be honoured with this distinction is Singapore. And this scandal involves as many as four Cannes Lions!

Local agencies are pissed off at Ogilvy & Mather, Singapore bringing home such significant awards for its God and Guinness campaigns § with the legitimacy of both being brought into question. The "God" print ads produced for evangelical church group Love Singapore took two Gold Lions for public awareness work.
Using modern messages from "God" in white lettering upon a plain black background, the ads are entirely derivative of an original US campaign that won Silver in the 1999 New York Festival. The ads were later published as a book. Ogilvy's claim that the Cannes jury was fully aware of this fact is dismissed as "utter rubbish" by DDB Singapore's President and Executive Creative Director Tim Evill, "because it would not have won a Gold in that case. And they certainly did not (declare) that when it won in the Asian Advertising awards". The Gold and Silver won for Guinness "What's on your mind?" print ads, have been similarly attacked regarding the ads' true client. Although originally conceived for Guinness, it has emerged since the awards were announced that the ads were neither approved nor paid for by Guinness's distributor in Singapore, United Stout Marketing.
Local pub chain Gaelic Inns now claims it was the true client, according to Managing Director Ian Crowhurst. "In real terms, we became the client once Guinness didn't take it any further," he says. "We paid for it and everything."

But even here there is confusion because the chain of bars did not pay for all the ads that appeared, including shots of white foam atop black drink that, on closer inspection, prove to be suggestive body shots. "To say it was an oversight to enter the ad with Guinness as the client (as Ogilvy claims) is ridiculous," says Mr Evill. "If those ads had been entered under Gaelic Inns, they would have been more obviously picked up as scam."

Angry, at least four agencies are rumoured to be boycotting this year's local Creative Circle Awards (CCA's) because Ogilvy Executive Creative Director Andy Greenaway, who was also on the press and poster jury at Cannes, will be chairing the judging committee.

Greenaway, however, has this to say: "It's a shame that other agencies seem determined to undermine our achievement. We've brought home three Golds and a Silver from Cannes and all we've had are attempts to discredit us. There was some confusion over the Guinness ads, as the work was conceived under a different job number, but we've changed that now."

Bob Isherwood, Chairman of this year's judging, and Worldwide Creative Director for Saatchi & Saatchi, says:"We are doing everything we can to stamp out scam ads and if that means rescinding awards, then we'll do that."
He says the Guinness ads were being investigated and that if evidence was produced that the God ad is a scam, that would be looked at too.

Take a bow India, we seem to be inspiring the world.

briefonline.com


Average: 4.5 (2 votes)

I find it hilarious that Cannes Lions - who spent most of the spring drumming up PR on the fact that they will not let scam ads enter (anymore) - award a rip-off campaign without batting an eye, and are had by another scam ad yet again.

Cannes knows who butters its bread. It will not bite the hand that feeds it..and other metaphores.

Maybe someone should set up an awards show specifically for the best of scam ads.

Niel French is undoubtedly the Father of Scam ads.

As creative head of O&M, it is natural that under his stewardship, scam ads would be encouraged.

There is a fine line between work done for genuine small clients who take huge risks and approve edgy work and scam ads.

The fallout of all this is that work done for small clients will be seen as scam ads and be rejected by juries everywhere.

And to think that at one time David Ogilvy said his agency was staffed by "gentlemen with brains."

It never ceases to amaze me, that agencies actually think no-one will notice. The truth is out there, and there's always a Fox Mulder willing to dig it up. Or an ex-terminator.

I think someone has said that about Niel French before.

How so? The only 'scam ad' I know of that he did was the campaign for a beer that went totally against all market research at the time. It was dark when people wanted light, it was high in alchohol when people wanted low alco. And so on.
A brilliant campaign later - people were asking for this beer at bars - and eventually a breweryclient had to fess up and make the stuff. The point of the campaign was to prove that rsearch proves nothing. And as that - the campaign was a sucess, for it's client - the agency itself. How scam? Or are you reffering to other sets of ads?

I think they did. It's called the Cannes Lions. ;-)

He did so many more scam ads than that campaign.

Since you actually *can* be anonymous here - why don't you spill the beans enterily and back that statement up with some facts, heresay or at least, a well fleshed out opinion with some examples. We would all love to know.

"He did so many more scam ads than that campaign."
Great! NAME THEM! For which (pretend) clients? What did they look like? what were the headlines? Did they win anything? Might we have seen them? I'm with DB here - spill the beans Mr not only anonymous, but also very quiet and cryptic...

Actually Mr French himself has had scams win awards before... He did a campaign for an eatery called Yet Con Chicken Rice, hardly the kind of client who can afford placing a full colour ad in the papers...let alone a three ad campaign... clearly a scam. (i'll try and look for an image of the campaign.)

anyway... the beer ads that you were talking about would be the the XO Beer campaign. Its client: Singapore Press Holdings (national news publisher) The brief: To promote newspaper advertising to the local ad industry. every single cliched notion abt beer advertising was broken. They even created a fake beer brand. Everybody was talking abt the campaign and everyone was clamouring for a bottle.... proving that you don't need a multi million dollar TV campaign to sell really. anyway, they finally let the cat out of the bag on April Fools with a big bash to supposedly launch XO Beer. A brilliant campaign with little or no marketing research that sold "beer", that sold newspaper advertising

more on this and other ads in "Cutting Edge Advertising" - Jim Aitchison

Yes, thats the one I was thinking of. :) Got no books here and forgot the client, only remembered that they were breaking all the rules of beer ads presisly to prove a point.. (then, that I forgot the point was that newspaper ads being successful place to launch something well... that speaks on another matter ..)

according to Asiaweek these ads were banned. Quote:

God Ad Gets Hell

Meanwhile, in Singapore they've banned God. A series of television and print advertisements created by Ogilvy & Mather for the multi-denominational Churches of the Love Singapore Movement have been banned by the government. The Broadcasting Authority says religious advertising of any sort is not allowed, but O&M's Eugene Cheong says that's not so; other non-Christian religions are allowed to advertise.

Also, these are the US lines that I remember (mainly because someone just sent to me in an email - perhaps this is the first "viral" ad?):

Tell the kids I love them." - God

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