Courtesy 42 Entertainment
Courtesy 42 Entertainment
Courtesy Science + Fiction
Courtesy Big Spaceship
Courtesy Campfire
Courtesy Big Spaceship
A View to a $25 Billion Opportunity42 EntertainmentScience + FictionBig SpaceshipCampfireThe Dark Horse to Watch
Watching TV shows when and where you want to is quickly becoming commonplace in a world awash with Hulu, TiVo, and iTunes. But if the fragmented media landscape is great for consumers, it's hell for advertisers. Now, big brands are turning back to an idea as old as P&G-sponsored soap operas -- hiring agencies to create entertainment designed to promote products. Only this time, companies are doing it via playful webisodes and websites. They are also experimenting with alternative-reality games, or ARGs. These puzzles build anticipation for a product release by sprinkling clues on the Web and in the real world. Spending on these forms of branded entertainment, as it's being called, grew 13 percent in 2008 to $25 billion, according to estimates from the research firm PQ Media. So who are some of the major players?
Pasadena-based 42 Entertainment is a collection of game developers, artists, puzzle makers, theater folk, and writers. Its specialty is alternative-reality games, or ARGs. The company's breakout work, "Why So Serious," a campaign for the Batman film The Dark Knight, featured websites that were made to look as if they had been hacked by the Joker. Online clues led to a scavenger hunt through major cities; players who sent in pictures of themselves as the Joker were mailed copies of the fictional newspaper The Gotham Times. The campaign drew 124 million viewers.
Kevin Townsend, founder of San Francisco-based Science + Fiction, honed his skills as head of digital for George Lucas's Industrial Light & Magic. His forte is webisodes that pull in pitch-perfect Hollywood talent. For The Rookie, an online series about a secret agent for Degree Men deodorant, he got veterans of 24 and Law & Order to participate. Another project, In the Motherhood, developed by the producers of Friends, features Suave shampoo's target demographic: harried mothers. ABC picked up the online sitcom in March.
Big Spaceship, based in Brooklyn, made its name building websites for movies like Bridget Jones's Diary. Now, it creates digital campaigns for the likes of Adobe, Corona, and Epson. For HBO, the firm created The Voyeur Project, a website on which apartment dwellers in 12 virtual New York City downtown apartment houses are shown going about their private lives in the style of Alfred Hitchcock's Rear Window. HBO also projected the site's content on the side of a real apartment building. The promotion drew 12 million viewers.
Launched by creators of The Blair Witch Project, New York City-based Campfire staged a mock heist at Audi's Manhattan showroom on Park Avenue. From there, the action went online and on TV, with a couple racing for their lives and a hit man in hot pursuit. And for FiOS, Verizon's fiber-optic broadband network, Campfire produced a home-makeover show called My Home 2.0, in which Verizon tech geeks show homeowners the virtues of getting wired for digital. Verizon then organized block parties in areas eligible for FiOS.
Brands are looking for ad agencies that have "experience pulling off things that haven't been done before," says Rob Reilly, creative director at Crispin Porter + Bogusky, the agency behind Burger King's viral Whopper Freakout. Given the huge success of its innovative campaign to promote The Dark Knight, ARG pioneer 42 Entertainment is a clear standout. But such blockbuster campaigns can be expensive to produce and do not always achieve the stellar results that millions of devoted Batman fans helped produce for this one. That's why Big Spaceship, with its scrappier approach, is a dark horse to watch.










