Archive for September, 2009

30.September.2009

Truth in Advertising

This is a good ad. I love the copy. It’s folksy – the language is down to earth. Heck, it could be my mom talking, the voice of the ad is that good.

Truth in Advertising ad by the ASC

“Fact is, truth is an essential part of any successful ad campaign. Smart advertisers have known this for years. That’s why the advertising industry created the Canadian Code of Advertising Standards. For more than 40 years, the Code has set standards for acceptable advertising in Canada. It helps ensure that the ads you see are truthful, fair and accurate. Check it out for yourself. Because the more you know about advertising, the more you get out of it.”

The ASC Code apparently exists to help advertisers, especially the not so smart ones. I guess the free market isn’t smart enough to regulate itself, so it needs a little help so that advertisers tell the truth. I haven’t read the ASC Code yet. And I’m here and now committing to reviewing it. I look forward to it. This particular ad assures me that ads in Canada are “truthful, fair and accurate”. But there is some small, cynical part of me that wonders if this would be worth advertising for if it was actually the case. I struggle with this kind of cynicism though because I do believe in education through advertising. Gosh, I even believe in advertising! But when I really ask myself, if ads are fair, I balk. True, sure. The best propaganda is always true. Let’s raise our standards though shall we? Truth is not enough.

If you don’t already trust ads, will one more ad help?

The question might be, do ads help us to live better lives? Or perhaps, do ads make us smarter? Wiser? These are reasonable expectations. Or the question could be framed on the flip side. Do ads make us stupid? Do they lie to us, despite being true?

This is why the language of “fair” is curious to me. This is a higher standard than true, and if ads are fair that is really interesting. Of course, the ASC might have a very low expectation of fair. What they mean by fair could be really weak – like, it could simply mean legal. Or, even worse, it could simply be another term for true. That would be somehow irresistibly funny since this ad would then be propaganda for the ad industry. It would then be meta-propaganda! It’s a bit of a trust issue isn’t it. If you don’t already trust ads, will one more ad really help?

To learn more about the Code, visit www.adstandards.com or call their recorded toll free information line at 1-877-656-8646. I’m going to.

27.September.2009

Autumn prairie

Between Vulcan and the Little Bow Provincial Park.

alberta_autumn_prairie

26.September.2009

Positioning the other

Advertisements push our buttons and our boundaries. Ad copy that once might have been rejected for being too risky or simply in bad taste is now often fair game. Companies and organizations work hard to create a brand that is irreverent, humourous and memorable. And that works for many organizations – especially if you are speaking to a younger “less reverent” generation. I use my dancing fingers here because I actually don’t believe that one generation can be less reverent than another – they’re usually just reverent about different things. But you know what I mean.

And there are those who suggest that if you’re talking about an ad, or a campaign, or a slogan then that means it’s effective. I don’t believe that either. The thing is that people complain. I do. And more than complain. Talking leads to new behaviour. There are those that disagree with me here, but they’ve probably joined the dark side.

All of this is by way of introducing this bad advertisement. It’s not just distasteful (not a good brand quality for a restaurant), it’s actually quite racist. And that is an interesting thing about brand positioning – when your brand is related to race, nationality, ethnicity, sexual orientation, class, gender or religious beliefs, there’s a good chance that your brand position is creating the other. Edward Said said it most and best, but I think it’s worth saying again. And I think it’s worth developing an analysis of othering in the context of advertising.

22.September.2009

Testing the WordPress app for iPhone

Well this is pretty cool. I loaded the WordPress app onto my iPhone and I’m going to actually post. This being my fifth post, this app has enabled 20% of my actual posts. And that is not bad.

But how hard will it be to assign my dropcaps and first line CSS? Hmmm. Not too bad. I couldn’t remember the proper tags so I had to copy and paste the html from another post. Now a photo.

Okay, the photo is a little scunjy. Low light. I should note that this is a bad photo of a great painting, by my good friend Wyndi. Now a link.

18.September.2009

A good php resource

PHP is a scripting language. I really don’t know a lot about PHP other than that WordPress and Drupal work because PHP works. I believe that it allows for site content, and data about the content, to get stored in a database and that this makes it easier for people to manage this content without having to write HTML or even CSS. And all of that is totally cool.

When designing a site, there is the odd occasion when I want to tweak the PHP a little and when I do that these guys come in very handy. The particular way the time stamps are written on this blog, for instance, are using the following bit of code:

php the_time('d.F.Y') 

That capital F expresses the month as a whole word instead of as a number or as an abbreviated word or as a two digit number. I found that out by referring to this useful resource.

I guess I just want to say thanks. Thanks PHP people.

17.September.2009

Pentagram redesigns craigslist

Pentagram is a stellar design studio and I enjoy to check out their blog now and then. They did a cool redesign of craigslist. Awesome.

17.September.2009

Drupal Camp Victoria 2009

I had the good fortune of going to Drupal Camp last weekend here in Victoria. There were so many cool nerds there!

I haven’t launched a site using Drupal yet — at least not a site that’s intended for public consumption. But I hope to. As a CMS it’s a lot more clicky than WordPress but it’s also way robust and generally way cool. And as I’ve discovered over the last six months or so, people are building some very attractive (i.e. pretty) sites with Drupal. Some of the workshops were below my level of understanding and several were well beyond my level of understanding but that’s the way it goes at conferences. And for $20, who can really complain. One of the highlights for me was watching a module author, check out his code from drupal.org, sqash some bugs, and then check it back in. I’ve never seen someone use CVS before. I met a lot of totally awesome people.

drupal_camp_2009

Watching over the shoulder of people who know stuff about stuff that I don't know stuff about.

16.September.2009

About this theme

This blog owes most of it’s functionality to WordPress. The look and feel of this site was originally inspired by Jon Tangerine and Mark Boulton.

However, the theme has morphed quite a lot. Wish I could say it’s done shifting, but I doubt it.