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View Full Version : Video Ads, In a Magazine!


gehn6
08-19-2009, 11:12 AM
http://news.cnet.com/8301-1023_3-10313064-93.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-5

NEW YORK--Broadcast network CBS will be advertising its fall TV season with a video-chip ad embedded in an issue of Entertainment Weekly.

The September 18 issue of the Time Inc.-owned magazine will feature the first video ad to appear in print, CBS marketing president George Schweitzer said Wednesday at a press conference at the company's headquarters here.

The ad will be launched in partnership with PepsiCo to promote Pepsi Max soda and the TV network's Monday prime-time lineup. Not everyone will be seeing it: the ad will appear in a magazine insert sent to subscribers in the New York and Los Angeles metro areas--an edition without the video chip will be sent to subscribers elsewhere and show up on newsstands.

The technology for the battery-powered ads was manufactured by a Los Angeles-based company called Americhip, and each video ad can handle about 40 minutes of video.

"It's leadership in innovation, which we really stress at CBS in every part of our company," Schweitzer said of the ads, which were developed with the collaboration of the Ignition Factory, a division of the Omnicom Group's OMD media agency.

PepsiCo has been experimenting with edgy, experimental ads for some time now, distributing millions of 3D glasses for its SoBe LifeWater Super Bowl ad earlier this year and more recently launched a new Mountain Dew flavor by inviting prominent Twitter users to a party at a trendy Brooklyn venue.

Pepsi Max is the company's new diet soda geared toward men, advertised earlier this summer with bold print ads that declared, "Save the calories for bacon."

"The evolution of marketing television in the fall, it used to be as simple as this," Schweitzer said of the decision to develop a print video ad, holding up a vintage copy of TV Guide magazine. "It was axiomatic in those days, if you took an ad in TV Guide, people watched your program. Not anymore."

Disclosure: CNET News is published by CBS Interactive, a unit of CBS.

Crazy shit, what will they think of next?

EClaris
08-19-2009, 11:17 AM
OH SHIT
ts like Harry Potter Photos, but real

Jub8Jub
08-19-2009, 11:34 AM
Just because it is in video form does not mean I will buy more Pepsi. If they add it to the newspaper it could be cool. But then again my paper is always wet in the morning, hopefully the video ads wont smudge.
Hmmm now I’m thirsty

ot: I was walking around in the MOA and I seen a guy talking about something stupid. But as I got closer I found out it was just a piece of cardboard with a video of a guy on it. He looked so real.

hunterhunter
08-19-2009, 12:12 PM
we're one step closer to digital news paper

Claudia
08-19-2009, 12:44 PM
OH SHIT
ts like Harry Potter Photos, but real

LOL. Thats what I was thinking.

Bloodshed269
08-19-2009, 05:51 PM
Someone should break in, reverse all the chips, and make them play BloodRayne. That'll sell some DVDs.

Waterboy2go
08-19-2009, 05:53 PM
Not a hologram.

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