Showing posts with label New Zealand. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Zealand. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

NZ church keeps up its irreverent Christian holiday ad tradition

St Matthews in the City Church in Auckland, NZ, is known for its controversial billboards. This Christmas, they did not disappoint:

Via stuff.co.nz and Copyranter

Here's a clearer image:

Via The Daily Mail
Well, how would you react if you were an engaged homeless virgin who just found out she was pregnant?


Vicar Glynn Cardy says the irreverent ad has a serious Christmas message:

"It's real. Christmas is real. It's about a real pregnancy, a real mother and a real child. It's about real anxiety, courage and hope. This billboard portrays Mary, Jesus' mother, looking at a home pregnancy test kit revealing that she is pregnant.   Regardless of any premonition, that discovery would have been shocking.  Mary was unmarried, young, and poor.  This pregnancy would shape her future.  She was certainly not the first woman in this situation or the last."

Screw the haters. I love these guys.

Other great St. Mathews billboards:

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Putting out cooking fires in urinals

I've heard of this "drinking and frying" issue before, but it was in Wales. Guys were going home wasted, putting bacon, sausage or eggs on the stove, then passing out and allowing the grease to ignite.

I guess Kiwi men have the same weakness for late-night eggs'n'bake. So this campaign by the NZ government uses heat-reactive urinal stickers to remind men — while they're peeing out that last pint — to grab some takeout on the way home instead. (How appetizing!)

Via Creative Criminals

I think late-night junk food takeout joints here in Canada should take advantage of this issue in their POP marketing: "poutine saves lives"

In the short term, anyway...

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

A smarter way to stop drunk driving

Copyranter just featured this NZ anti drunk driving spot, and I'm reblogging it because I really love it:



Here are all the things it gets right:


  • It accepts that teens like to get drunk
  • It recognizes the social pressure not to take a stand
  • It's funny and culturally relevant
  • The language, characters and setting realistic

Here are things it didn't do:


  • Guilt
  • Preach
  • Shock
  • Tell youth not to drink

Through my work with the Traffic Injury Research Foundation I've come to understand that positive reinforcement is the only way to really get through to anyone. To completely denormalize drunk driving, you've got to normalize the culture of refusing to participate in it.

This isn't the first time New Zealand has taken a more progressive approach to encouraging responsibility. The "4 Mates" series, aimed at men, also showed that being a designated driver for your drunken friends sucks, but is sometimes necessary.



(There is something wrong with the vid, though. It shakes.)