A day in the life of Harvey & Gilmot

Entries from October 2009

A great quote. Loosely connected to Ass Paper.

October 30, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Came across this quote today, courtesy of Tom Upton.

“If you think it’s expensive to hire a professional to do the job, wait until you hire an amateur.”– Red Adair

A great sentiment, reinforced by this product, spotted in the children’s stationery drawer last night.  Typography is not something that should be entrusted to amateurs.  The chances of something going wrong with the word ‘assorted’ are unexpectedly high.

Assorted Paper

Categories: Diversion
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Another new word

October 28, 2009 · 1 Comment

More in the ongoing series of the mildly amusing new words that can be created by adding/changing a letter in an existing word. 

Articulater

The frustrating tendency to think of the perfect witty rejoinder or cutting riposte just slightly after the moment has passed.

Categories: Diversion · Mildly amusing words
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Ten Observations on The September Issue from an Advertising Suit (who can’t count)

October 27, 2009 · Leave a Comment

I finally saw The September Issue at the weekend.  I loved it.

This post will betray two things about me:

  1. I see everything through the filter of advertising, but I guess after 20 years that’s inevitable. And it does make me thankful that I decided against becoming a taxidermist.
  2. I also know more about fashion designers than any man should readily admit

Anyway, during the course of The September issue, these ten thoughts occupied me:

  1. Whenever Anna Wintour gets in her Towncar she fails to put on her seatbelt. As a Suit, this negligence alarms me.  But imagine what it’s like for TV Producers to have to watch this.  First, the majority of TV Producers are female.  Second, absolutely without exception they will all have been to see The September Issue. In the first week of its release. And they will have been horrified by the seatbelt oversight. You want to be focusing on the rather fetching cardigan Anna’s wearing, when in fact all you can see (or not see) is her absent seatbelt. And all you can hear is a quiet, but insistent, interior voice saying ‘reshoot’.
  2. Anna Wintour has a great office. (The version imagined in the The Devil Wears Prada, is actually even cooler, but the real version is great anyway.) It demonstrates the true depths of my shallowness, that I don’t mind admitting that one of the main things that motivates me is the idea that one day I’ll get to build my own office in its image.
  3. Decisiveness works.  Right or wrong, it’s better than vacillation.  It’s entirely possible that you might make the wrong decision. But making it early at least means that the bulk of your time goes into doing something great with it. So even the wrong decision is at worst a well-executed, highly polished, wrong decision. Which usually stops it from looking like a wrong decision to most observers.
  4. To outsiders, the people at the extremes define the industry.  Andre Leon Talley is a nutjob.  He’s an eccentric, cape-wearing, fruitcake. He’s very probably a genius, but he, more than anyone else in the film, defines the fashion industry to those who view it with suspicion.  No amount of talent or inspiration can override the image of a man with a Louis Vuitton Water Bottle case prattling on about his aesthetic. He comes across as absurd and indulged. The advertising industry has the same problem.   To outsiders (read, clients) the extreme figures characterise our industry, such that we’re not defined by the real success of our work, but by the imagined failings of our characters.
  5. At a really basic level, Anna Wintour is ashamed.  Fashion is an enormous, and important, industry. So too, magazines.  She’s inarguably one of the most important figures in both. But she’s ashamed of what she does.  She wants her family to take it, and her, more seriously. She wants it to be more significant than it is.  But she’s weighed down by what she knows others believe is frivolous. Sound like an industry you know?
  6. Stefano Pilati comes across like a stereotypical fashion designer. With Anna in the room he’s a bit fawning (despite being a fully-fledged genius). He’s also conspicuously fey.  He does a great job of playing the camp-designer cliché.  But he’s also a big rugby fan who spent time training at the Sydney Academy of Sport and Recreation in the rugby performance programme (at the age of 42).  We like to pigeonhole people. The fashion and advertising industries are notorious for it.  But a film about a magazine provides a reminder that a book shouldn’t be judged by its cover.
  7. At one point Grace Coddington is in the back of a car being driven through Paris (I think). She mentions a conversation with a photographer early in her career who tells her to ‘never fall asleep in a car, because you might miss something’. Great advice, clearly taken to heart by someone with an extraordinary eye for detail.
  8. Many people have observed that Grace Coddington comes across as the star of the film, the real reason for Vogue’s success.  I don’t feel that way. I think she’s amazing. She’s a great character with a remarkable talent.  She’s personable and vulnerable, which makes her easy to warm to.  And she’s clearly the creative force in the Vogue world.  But she’s also completely absorbed. She’s single-mindedly, obsessively, admirably focused on the artistic merit of what she produces, to the exclusion of all else.  She judges every shot you see in the movie on its aesthetic value, and takes genuine and understandable offence when others don’t. Namely Anna Wintour. But she doesn’t judge shots on the basis of what readers want, or on the bigger picture of how the magazine works. That’s what Anna does, sometimes clumsily and insensitively, but with the success of the magazine in mind. But we warm to Grace because her motivations seem more pure and genuine. But I don’t think they are.  Anna’s motivations are just as pure and as genuine.  She wants people to get maximum value from the magazine. And for lots and lots of people to buy it every month.  Her ability to harness what Grace Coddington does in order for that to happen is what makes Vogue a success.
  9. On the point above, are the two abilities so contradictory that they can’t ever reside in the same person?  Dave Droga?  Jil Sander? David Abbott? Giorgio Armani? Or is it always the balance of two complementary talents?
  10. Towards the end of the film Anna Wintour is asked about when she’ll retire, when she’ll know it’s time to go. She mentions her father’s retirement, and his explanation that he knew it was time to move on ‘when things just started making me too angry’.  In 20 years I’ve worked with a lot of people who I think find our industry makes them a little too angry.
  11. In the opening scene in the towncar, Ann Wintour asks her assistant about an email from Tom Ford. If, just once in my life, I get to ask an assistant about an email from Tom Ford I will die a very happy man.

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Categories: Advertising · Clothes · Marketing
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Mr B, The Gentleman Rhymer would like to say ‘heellloooo’

October 26, 2009 · Leave a Comment

I understand that no one else is going to find this as funny as I do.

You’d be forgiven for thinking that the chances of hip-hop, banjos, blazers, cravates and pipe-smoking ever meeting in one place are marginal at best (at least outside my criminally unsuccessful 2006 audition for Australian Idol). And yet here they are.

I give you Mr B, The Gentleman Rhymer.

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Categories: Diversion · Music
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Air New Zealand’s Kiweets – it’s a bit of a mouthful but it’s a nice idea

October 23, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Just found this from Air NZ.  It’s a North American promo giving people the opportunity to win trips to NZ – 30 of them in 30 days.  Twitter-based, it asks people to reply to New Zealand trivia questions. It doesn’t seem to be any more complicated than that. Nothing gets in the way of what is just a really, really good prize.

A great, simple idea, nicely put together.

Kiweet

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Categories: Advertising · Marketing · Media
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Don Q Rum offers up LadyData – The Female Perspective

October 22, 2009 · Leave a Comment

I really enjoyed this.  A site put together by Don Q Rum (a Puerto Rican rum apparently), it’s a forum in which guys can ask questions or seek guidance and lots of women offer up the female perspective, or LadyData.

It’s seems basically to be a really elaborate singles site but done in a slightly stylish, witty and non-icky way.

My favourite, after a quick glance, is Jenna, 30, of Indiana, who quite rightly points out that a man who’s nervous about attending a networking event needs to  ‘just accept that at some point you’re going to have to put on the big-boy pants’.

Don Q Rum

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Categories: Advertising · Diversion · Marketing · Media
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Jessica Hisch is brilliant

October 21, 2009 · 1 Comment

Ah, the joy of the internet. Stumbling across the design work of Jessica Hisch has made me inordinately cheerful.

I’m a bit of a design/type junkie. I’m one of those people who possesses InDesign, but no discernable talent. So I admire that talent wherever I see it. And here it’s plain for all to see.

According to her blog Jessica’s a designer, illustrator and typographer living in Brooklyn.

If you’ve got a spare ten minutes check out her work. Her site is here. Her blog is here. Her work is unspeakably gorgeous.

Witness below.

makeoverissuewinter5Print

Printspca-poster1

Categories: Design · Diversion
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Invoice for Day-Ruining

October 21, 2009 · 1 Comment

Spotted this today on the great Kitsune Noir blog.  It’s a design piece by Jessica Hisch.

Brilliant idea.  Wonderfully cathartic.  And just plain fun.

Downloadable version here.

invoice-for-day-ruining

Categories: Design · Diversion
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Google Wave explained via Pulp Fiction

October 17, 2009 · 3 Comments

This video demonstrates a little of how Google Wave works.  It does this by using a scene from Pulp Fiction.  This doesn’t sound like it should make sense.  Oh, but it does.  

With some pride, this is also the first blog post I’ve produced that carries a profanity warning.

 

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Categories: Diversion · Media
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I know this might kill me, but, hey.

October 15, 2009 · 1 Comment

There’s a great story in the October issue of US Wired.

It focuses on research conducted by Ralph Keeney, a decision analyst at the Duke University Fuqua School of Business. He studied the proportion of deaths in the US that are attributable to personal choices – things like smoking, overeating or unsafe sex.

What he found is that 55% of deaths result from a behaviour that people choose to engage in. And for each of those behaviours there is a clear, well-established alternative. So, as the research notes, ‘most people are the agents of their own demise’.

I think this is interesting for a couple of reasons.

The finding does rather reinforce that people can’t be relied on to make rational decisions. In the face of significant evidence that something is unsafe (and not just unsafe, but potentially deadly) people still choose to do it. That’s surely the definition of irrational. (I find this interesting as someone who has regularly confronted the stupidity of his own decision-making and been alarmed to realise that despite overwhelming evidence that something was a bad decision he’s done it anyway. So I find some consolation in finding that I’m not alone, but I lose some consolation in realising that my stupidity might well kill me.)

And it’s a clear example of Optimism Bias (one of my favourite of all the psychological principles), the process by which we grossly underestimate the odds of something bad happening, but grossly overestimate the odds of something good happening. We convince ourselves that speeding won’t kill us (despite the fact that it has killed plenty of people before) just as we convince ourselves that there is a chance that we will win $22m in a Powerball jackpot (despite being made aware of the extraordinary odds against us winning).

Which I find interesting because it shows how deep-seated the bias is. At a certain level you can understand how just a natural sense of optimism allows you to believe that good things will happen and bad things won’t. On a day-to-day basis this is probably a very desirable behavioural trait. But when dealing with matters of life and death, decisions that are as significant as they come, we still exhibit the same bias.

Which has real implications for the role of marketing in trying to encourage people to modify behaviour. So much of what we do is predicated on the idea that success lies in finding the most interesting way to present facts. Quite reasonably it’s why we get really enthusiastic when presented with a product that lasts longer, a service that’s demonstrably quicker or any other situation in which ‘the facts speak for themselves’.

But what happens when the facts don’t speak for themselves? What do we do when the facts have a pretty compelling story to tell (compelling, as in ‘this could kill you’, compelling) and that’s still not enough? How do you ‘market’ your way around that?

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Categories: Advertising · Marketing
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