Creativity Top 5: February 14, 2012

Antonio Ortiz

Antonio Ortiz has always been an autodidact with an eclectic array of interests. Fascinated with technology, advertising and culture he has forged a career that combines them all. In 1991 Antonio developed one of the very first websites to market the arts. It was text based, only available to computer scientists, and increased attendance to the Rutgers Arts Center where he had truly begun his professional career. Since then Antonio has been an early adopter and innovator merging technology and marketing with his passion for art, culture and entertainment. For a more in-depth look at those passions, visit SmarterCreativity.com.

What is Love?

The Jubilee Project is celebrating Valentine’s Day as Generosity Day, a day of sharing love with everyone. Let’s make the day about love, action and human connection, because we can do more than just cards, chocolates and flowers. 

Antonio Ortiz

Antonio Ortiz has always been an autodidact with an eclectic array of interests. Fascinated with technology, advertising and culture he has forged a career that combines them all. In 1991 Antonio developed one of the very first websites to market the arts. It was text based, only available to computer scientists, and increased attendance to the Rutgers Arts Center where he had truly begun his professional career. Since then Antonio has been an early adopter and innovator merging technology and marketing with his passion for art, culture and entertainment. For a more in-depth look at those passions, visit SmarterCreativity.com.

Critical Thinking: A Field Guide In 6 Short Films

Australia’s TechNyou has created a six-part short film mini-course on critical thinking. Althougth intended for young students it is perfect for inquisitive minds of all ages. The series is written by Mike McRae and James Hutson, who also directed and did the animation, and is funded by the Department of Innovation, Industry, Science and Research of the Australian Goverment. (How great is that? And why does the US not have a Department of Innovation?) Additional educational resources, including a teacher’s guide, are available through their website

Part 1: A valuable argument.

Part 1 of the TechNyou critical thinking resource. The resource covers basic logic and faulty arguments, developing student's critical thinking skills. Suitable for year 8-10, focused on science issues, the module can be adapted to suit classroom plans.

Part 2: Broken logic.

Part 2 of the TechNyou critical thinking resource. The resource covers basic logic and faulty arguments, developing student's critical thinking skills. Suitable for year 8-10, focused on science issues, the module can be adapted to suit classroom plans.

Part 3: The man who was made of straw.

Part 3 of the TechNyou critical thinking resource. The resource covers basic logic and faulty arguments, developing student's critical thinking skills. Suitable for year 8-10, focused on science issues, the module can be adapted to suit classroom plans.

Part 4: Getting personal. 

Part 4 of the TechNyou critical thinking resource. The resource covers basic logic and faulty arguments, developing student's critical thinking skills. Suitable for year 8-10, focused on science issues, the module can be adapted to suit classroom plans.

Part 5: The gambler’s fallacy. 

Part 5 of the TechNyou critical thinking resource. The resource covers basic logic and faulty arguments, developing student's critical thinking skills. Suitable for year 8-10, focused on science issues, the module can be adapted to suit classroom plans.

Part 6: A precautionary tale. 

Part 6 of the TechNyou critical thinking resource. Transcript can be found here: http://technyou.edu.au/fun-stuff/videos/video-transcripts/ Starts in Part 1: A valuable argument http://youtu.be/iSZ3BUru59A The resource covers basic logic and faulty arguments, developing student's critical thinking skills. Suitable for year 8-10, focused on science issues, the module can be adapted to suit classroom plans.

Antonio Ortiz

Antonio Ortiz has always been an autodidact with an eclectic array of interests. Fascinated with technology, advertising and culture he has forged a career that combines them all. In 1991 Antonio developed one of the very first websites to market the arts. It was text based, only available to computer scientists, and increased attendance to the Rutgers Arts Center where he had truly begun his professional career. Since then Antonio has been an early adopter and innovator merging technology and marketing with his passion for art, culture and entertainment. For a more in-depth look at those passions, visit SmarterCreativity.com.

The Week's Links (2.12.12)

All the links posted to TwitterFacebook and Google+ this week: 

  • What I Learned This Week, Super Bowl Editionowl.li/91maT
  • Meet the New Kings of Kickstarter: How Double Fine Gamified Game Funding owl.li/8Z0qBThey raised $1M in 8 hours.
  • The models for American Gothic standing next to the painting. owl.li/8YdQf Amazing find by @jkottke
  • Tim Berners-Lee Takes the Stand to Keep the Web Free owl.li/8Z0tr
  • The Mega Companies Behind 90% Of Mediaowl.li/8YcWJ
  • New research suggests less-creative people do more innovative thinking when they are instructed to conform. owl.li/8WuDp
  • Five days later, some things to consider about the Super Bowl owl.li/1hhWuU
  • The 100 Best Movie Posters of the Past 100 Years owl.li/8Wu9Y Some amazing older posters.
  • The top mistakes UX designers makeowl.li/8Ydze
  • 10 Lessons for directors today by Terry Gilliamowl.li/8Wuqb
  • GIF: A Technical History owl.li/8VG6b
  • The BBC Unmasks an Internet Troll owl.li/8WtZT
  • The four key features that characterize Flow, or what 10000 hours of practice gets youowl.li/1hgph3
  • My Dinner With Clay Shirky, and What It Means to ‘Friend’ Someone owl.li/8Ykmw
  • Beautiful web type, a showcase of the best typefaces from the Google web fonts directoryowl.li/8SQ8p
  • Drawing Back the Curtain On Madonna’s Super Bowl Halftime Show owl.li/8XxNQ What it took to produce the massive projections and sets.
  • Apple to Stream Live Paul McCartney Concert to iTunes and Apple TV Tomorrow owl.li/8Xxsp
  • The Gunn Report 2011. Combines ad awards from around the world, to identify the most successful agencies, campaigns. owl.li/8VBQG
  • Five Advertising Ideas From Around the World You Need to See owl.li/8VXrQ
  • Layering: Multitasking That Actually Worksowl.li/8VB7A
  • Dancers Flow In to Lincoln Center After Opera’s Exit owl.li/8VCZz
  • Colourised photographs by Sanna Dullawayowl.li/8SQID These are amazing.
  • PBS Arts: Off Book, Exploring Cutting Edge Art - The Complete Series owl.li/1heZlb
  • Speaking of color, here is a refresher on the three primary colors, courtesy of a stop motioned OK Go and Sesame Streetowl.li/8SQTe
  • Color: a color matching game. owl.li/8SQlTHow good are you with colors?
  • Creativity Online’s Lessons from Super Bowl 2012 owl.li/8VWPC
  • Celebrate the 200th Birthday of Charles Dickens with Free Movies, eBooks and Audio Books owl.li/8VRLA
  • You Will Never Kill Piracy, and Piracy Will Never Kill You - Forbes owl.li/8VgmP
  • Mark Zuckerberg, the Hacker Way and the Art of the Founder’s Letter owl.li/8T2hw
  • Scared Spitless in Zanesville: Esquire Creates Video Teaser For Animals An Article By Chris Jones owl.li/1hdSJ7
  • For the next seven days you can watch the recommended documentary PressPausePlay for $0.99 on iTunes US owl.li/8VGoZ
  • States Mulling Creativity Indexes for Schoolsowl.li/8T2ce
  • Solve For X owl.li/8VxKC Google’s new TED-like website.
  • Official Google Blog: What’s your X? Amplifying technology moonshots owl.li/8VxGl
  • Google unveils ‘Solve for X’ website, hints at TED-like think tank owl.li/8VxyB
  • The Technium: Next Phase of Commercialsowl.li/8Vx78
  • Stuffed Animals Sleep Over At The Library To Get Kids To Read owl.li/8T26Y
  • An Important Time for Design owl.li/8SQFx
  • Did Leonardo da Vinci Copy His Famous “Vitruvian Man”? owl.li/8T1pw
  • Creativity Top 5: Super Bowl XLVI Editionowl.li/1hcvva
  • Wired UK’s The Smart List 2012: 50 people who will change the world owl.li/8T1kI
  • Writing Tips by Henry Miller, Elmore Leonard, Margaret Atwood, Neil Gaiman & George Orwellowl.li/8T0Vl
  • Henry Miller’s Productivity Commandmentsowl.li/1hc4VN
  • Pricing Strategy for Creatives owl.li/8SQhEMust read.

Antonio Ortiz

Antonio Ortiz has always been an autodidact with an eclectic array of interests. Fascinated with technology, advertising and culture he has forged a career that combines them all. In 1991 Antonio developed one of the very first websites to market the arts. It was text based, only available to computer scientists, and increased attendance to the Rutgers Arts Center where he had truly begun his professional career. Since then Antonio has been an early adopter and innovator merging technology and marketing with his passion for art, culture and entertainment. For a more in-depth look at those passions, visit SmarterCreativity.com.

Five days later, some things to consider about the Super Bowl

NFL:

  • Has reached a saturation point with their main audience, men, football fans. The men that are going to watch football already watch football.
  • The Super Bowl is an opportunity for the NFL to educate and recruit new fans, those that only watch one football game a year at parties with friends.
  • This year was about reaching women and gay men and trying to retain them into next football season.  
  • They used the internet and "second screen" offerings to achieve just that, educate the potential fan while enhancing the experience for the current fan.
  • The game was streamed online for the first time, with some technical challenges still needed to be worked out. 
  • In conjunction with NBC asked Madonna to perform the halftime show. 
  • The game itself was exciting, which is not always the case.
  • It was the most watched program in US television history. 
  • During the last three minutes of the game 10,000 tweets were sent every second. 


NBC: 

  • The beleaguered network has been lagging in the ratings with very few hits in their primetime line up.
  • With the NFL, asked Madonna to perform the halftime show.
  • Promoted the network's programming hoping to retain some of the massive audience. Targeted women and gay men, the most likely audiences for the shows they need to be hits.
  • Began Super Bowl programming with a 3 minute long promo for the network. The promo was an elaborate musical number.  
  • Heavily promoted Smash, an expensive to produce tv program about the making of a Broadway musical with a pedigree of top tv and stage talent, including Steven Spielberg, producing it.
  • Smash premiered the following night to very strong ratings.
  • The new season of The Voice, a singing competition featuring halftime show performer Cee Lo Green as a judge, premiered immediately after the game to the biggest non-sporting event ratings on any network in six years. 


Halftime Show:

  • The NFL selects the performer with input from the network airing the game. 
  • The Madonna halftime show was produced by the NFL, sponsored by Bridgestone, and employed the best of the best in the world of stage production with crews from Tribe, Inc., Cirque Du Soleil, Moment Factory, as well as Madonna's own inner circle of collaborators, including Givenchy who designed the costumes.
  • Creating the show required 320 hours of rehearsal.
  • The production crew had 8 minutes to get the most technically intricate stage set up in halftime show history into the field, 12 minutes and 40 seconds to run the highly choreographed performance, and only 7 minutes to take it all down.
  • The performers do not get paid for the performance, the NFL covers productions costs.
  • By featuring LMFAO (pop/dance), Nicky Minaj & MIA (hip hop) and Cee Lo Green (R&B) during the performance Madonna ensured she covered all the genres of music that get the most radio play and exposure. 
  • The performance ended with a rousing rendition of "Like A Prayer." When originally released Madonna and the song were featured in a Pepsi commercial that was subsequently pulled from the air due to the controversial imagery in the song's video. 
  • The game's average rating was 40.5. The halftime show rating was 41.5. More people watched the halftime show than the game itself. 
  • The football-themed video for Madonna's new single, which she performed during the show, premiered on the web the Friday before the game. As of now it has 11M views on YouTube. 
  • Madonna's new album is titled MDNA, a reference to the emotion heightening drug MDMA (Ecstasy) and also an abbreviation perfect for social media updates and hashtags. 
  • The album went on pre-sale exclusively on iTunes the Friday before the game. 
  • By the time the halftime show began the album was #1 in 50 countries. The biggest one day pre-order in iTunes history.  
  • Two days after the show Madonna announced a world tour, with tickets going on sale around the world starting next Monday. 
  • Two nights after the show songs by Madonna and LMFAO were featured on Glee
  • For a lesson in collaboration and team work watch the halftime show again, muted, and ignore Madonna and the primary talent. Instead watch how the dancers and the many extras, all do a hell of a lot more than what it looks like they are doing. Watch as microphones get passed from dancer to dancer, costumes changed and taken of stage. How the crew, dressed completely in white with camera equipment wrapped in white so projections will reflect of them, dart in and out setting things up and removing them all seamlessly. Madonna was the performer, but the crew put on the show.
  • 12 minutes and 40 seconds of air time during the Super Bowl cost advertisers approximately $85 million. 


Advertisers:

  • The Super Bowl is the one time when people purposely watch commercial spots.
  • Most ads were pre-released leading to few surprises during the actual game. 
  • Most ads were produced using pop culture references as short cuts to relevance. They used borrowed interests, rather than create their own. 
  • An M&M commercial, introducing a new brown M&M, featured an LMFAO song.
  • It used to be a Super Bowl ad came out of nowhere, surprised, and created a cultural moment with the ability to make icons out of a brand almost instantly. 
  • Super Bowl advertising is no longer about the ads during the game, it's about social media. 
  • Coca-Cola and Acura's websites crashed during the game. 
  • David Beckham's ad for H&M, close ups of Beckham in his underwear, was mostly ignored by the primary NFL audience, but of all the ads in the game it was number 1 in social media mentions.
  • The only ad that was a surprise, since no one saw it prior to the game, was the expertly executed "Halftime in America" for Chrysler.
  • It followed the strategy of last year's "Imported from Detroit" featuring Eminem.
  • In the days after the game various groups have referred to it as an homage/ripoff of "morning in America" as well as showing support for Obama's campaign. 
  • Apple's "1984" is considered by many one of the best Super Bowl commercials ever, and even though Apple did not advertise during the game it didn't really have to. Once the game ended, with the Giants winning, all you could see was a sea of people, players, managers, crews, holding up their iPhones taking video and pictures of the moment.


Audience:

  • Many, many people watched an exciting game. 
  • Fans of football where thrilled by the game, mildly amused by the advertising and did not really care for the halftime show.
  • Non fans of football got to see an example of what makes football so exciting, were mildly amused by the advertising and really enjoyed the halftime show. 
  • With the exception of the Patriots and most advertisers, it seems every one was a winner. 

Antonio Ortiz

Antonio Ortiz has always been an autodidact with an eclectic array of interests. Fascinated with technology, advertising and culture he has forged a career that combines them all. In 1991 Antonio developed one of the very first websites to market the arts. It was text based, only available to computer scientists, and increased attendance to the Rutgers Arts Center where he had truly begun his professional career. Since then Antonio has been an early adopter and innovator merging technology and marketing with his passion for art, culture and entertainment. For a more in-depth look at those passions, visit SmarterCreativity.com.