Post by samsparrow74 on Feb 15, 2024 9:25:25 GMT
Orange is the last (but not the first) telecommunications company to encourage responsible use of the ubiquitous smartphones (the same ones that fill their coffers to the brim) with a spot that portrays the emotional relationship between a father and his teenage daughter. In the ad, signed by the Publicis Conseil agency and councilor Katia Lewkowicz, a father gift-wraps a smartphone for his daughter while he can't help but think about the (infinite) implications of what he is doing . The spot shows scenes in which the protagonist begs his daughter to take her eyes off her laptop and in which the teenager contemplates with envy how her friends gaze eternally lost in their smartphones .
If you do not see the embedded video correctly, click here The father insists that his daughter not stop appreciating the real world and that she approach the universe she is about to enter with caution Bosnia and Herzegovina Phone Number List but without fear with the invaluable help of her brand new mobile phone. Brimming with nuance, Orange's ad deliberately avoids lecturing the viewer. “I know I'm not perfect either ,” the father confesses while he and his wife are engrossed in their respective smartphones (or decide to applaud their children at a school performance instead of recording their offspring's performance for posterity). The spot concludes with the father giving his daughter his new smartphone in a place of disconcerting and captivating beauty: the top of a mountain .
Promise me that you will never forget how beautiful the world is," the father whispers to his daughter. Many parents will probably see themselves portrayed in an advertisement that very accurately reflects the dilemma that many parents of teenage parents face : letting them explore the multiple possibilities of technology and simultaneously protecting them from its dangers. The marketing universe is filled to the brim with trends and "words" as bombastic as they are meaningless, but what if we left fashions aside to focus on what has always worked (and continues to work) in the marketing industry? There are certain trends (or rather "non-trends") that, oblivious to the passage of time, pride themselves on being eternal and entertaining with exceptional results all those brands that decide to fix their eyes on them. Below, and with the help of Muse.
If you do not see the embedded video correctly, click here The father insists that his daughter not stop appreciating the real world and that she approach the universe she is about to enter with caution Bosnia and Herzegovina Phone Number List but without fear with the invaluable help of her brand new mobile phone. Brimming with nuance, Orange's ad deliberately avoids lecturing the viewer. “I know I'm not perfect either ,” the father confesses while he and his wife are engrossed in their respective smartphones (or decide to applaud their children at a school performance instead of recording their offspring's performance for posterity). The spot concludes with the father giving his daughter his new smartphone in a place of disconcerting and captivating beauty: the top of a mountain .
Promise me that you will never forget how beautiful the world is," the father whispers to his daughter. Many parents will probably see themselves portrayed in an advertisement that very accurately reflects the dilemma that many parents of teenage parents face : letting them explore the multiple possibilities of technology and simultaneously protecting them from its dangers. The marketing universe is filled to the brim with trends and "words" as bombastic as they are meaningless, but what if we left fashions aside to focus on what has always worked (and continues to work) in the marketing industry? There are certain trends (or rather "non-trends") that, oblivious to the passage of time, pride themselves on being eternal and entertaining with exceptional results all those brands that decide to fix their eyes on them. Below, and with the help of Muse.