1978 and all that…

July 18th, 2008

This is a classic bit of old-school jingle-ry that I stumbled upon. It’s a BBC in-house tape from the late 70’s in which Simon Bates (taking time out from reading ‘Our Tune’ letters no doubt) showcases the new set of jingles created by JAM to be used on Radio 1.

I think you’ll agree it’s a surreal listen. I particularly like the driving jingle - ” Radio 1, the sound of happy motoring ” and the robot style “The Road Show” vocal. It reminds me of Metal Mickey.

I am of course way too young to remember these the first time round, so that’s probably why I find them amusing rather than flash-back inducing. Click on the button below to enjoy. Cheers! - Mike

Radio 1 Jingles from 1978

Wordle of Shell Like blog

July 9th, 2008

title="Wordle: Shell Like"> src="http://wordle.net/thumb/wrdl/59356/Shell_Like"
style="padding:4px;border:1px solid #ddd"
>

Wordle is a toy for generating “word clouds” from text that you provide. The clouds give greater prominence to words that appear more frequently in the source text. You can tweak your clouds with different fonts, layouts, and color schemes - cool!

Crunching Slebs

July 8th, 2008

Just been reading in Marketing about an expected double digit fall in circulation for weekly celebrity magazines. Heat, Reveal, Closer etc. The article didn’t say why this fall might be happening. There’s the obvious competition from the freesheets and internet, but it strikes me that as the effects of the credit crunch ripple through the UK economy and we all begin to tighten our belts, the ‘Sleb’ press will be hit in two ways. Firstly, the obvious fact that spending on non-essential purchases will drop (whether your weekly dose of Pete’N'Katie Inc., or BB slanging match-ups is essential or not I’ll leave up to you to decide). Secondly, if we are all being asked to avoid conspicuous consumption, are we going to want to read stories of celebrity excess anymore? In a way I hope not, but you could argue that it’s always been the ‘Have-nots’ that want to read about the ‘Haves’. So if there’s more of us who ‘have not’ then sales should be rising. Its an interesting paradox. Meanwhile, why not try Heat radio instead? Its much the same heady mixture, won’t take up as much room in your handbag, and it carries advertising too apparently… - Mike

Ideas

July 4th, 2008

You know when you have one of those brilliant moments of clarity and a really excellent idea rears its head? Ideas that are simply perfect, so perfect in fact that you say to yourself ‘ surely somebody must have thought of this before? ‘ Well imagine how the guys that came up with this must have felt -

Apologies if this is old news to any of you. Thanks to Sparky for sending me the link - Mike

We like this…

June 19th, 2008


The best sound effect ever! Commercial for rusks - kewego
The best sound effect ever! Commercial for rusks - kewego

The best sound effect ever! Commercial for rusks - kewego
Two men are preparing an ad for some cereals bar. They have to make the sound effects of the ad but they use a very unconventional way of doing it! They reveal the mystery ….

Video from login

Thanks to Rob at Nonsense for flagging up to me - Mike

What’s In A Name?

June 19th, 2008

Virgin Radio was bought out recently, by Bennett, Coleman & Co, owner of Times of India newspaper, and Absolute Radio. But the Virgin name will not be part of the sale as the tidy-bearded Mr. Branson objected to it due to Virgin’s other interests in India. Full story here.

So thirty million dollars will be invested in renaming. Which made me think about station names in general. UK station names appear to derive from local rivers - Trent, Clyde, Forth etc. with Ocean FM taking it a bit too far, and River FM a bit literally; from the music they play - Rock, Smooth, Classic; or their broadcast frequency - 2Ten, Ten17, and perhaps even Signal 1 & 2.

Certain fauna are a big fave, presumably ones that have some significance to the broadcast area - Bee, Eagle, Fox, Kestrel, and Bear. Then you have the ‘picked it out of a hat’ examples - Delta, Dune, Fire, Home, Oak, Pirate, and The Edge (wonder if they play a lot of U2?).

Two that I have absolutely no idea about are Lantern FM and Ivel FM. But then they both hail from the west country, which has a long history of bonkers names, as the residents of Piddletrenthide and Affpuddle will testify.

Whatever they come up with, expect the new name for Virgin to end with a dot com. This will be done to highlight the multi-platform aspects of the station and its output in the modern media landscape, or to save on printing costs.

Ever wondered why US radio stations all begin with K or W? No? Well it’s the kind of thing that keeps radio geeks like us up all night. Way too much information about it can be found here.
- Mike

Creative from across the pond…

May 28th, 2008

So after managing to squeeze the Aerial Award into our trophy cabinet (well, it’s got one more in there than Arsenal’s, okay?) it was time to check out the competition from around the world.

On May 21st, the winners of the Radio-Mercury Awards (the U.S.A equivalent of the Aerials) were announced at a glitzy ceremony (probably, we weren’t there) in Beverly Hills. And they had a lot to live up to – last years winners were of an extremely high standard (check out THIS, THIS, and THIS.

And the Shell Like verdict?

Unfortunately, I don’t think they’re quite up to the standard of 2007. However, there are a few gems:

“Gardening Tips” for Philips, by DDB Toronto Canada

“FDIC Guy” for Norwegian Cruise Line, by GSD&M Idea City

and one in the Student category:

“Silence” for Austin Silent Film Festival, by UT Austin

What you may notice by listening to this year’s winners, and scrolling through the archives, is that the majority of these commercials are 60”, with the odd 45” and 30” spot. This certainly seems to be the predominant format in the States, and it’s interesting (if a little depressing) to see how much further a few extra seconds can go.

Whether this is the result of cheaper airtime, or clients adding that much more to the radio budget, I’m not sure. One thing’s clear - it works.

P.S. The winner of the Grand Prize gets $100,000, with all other winners receiving $5,000 (even the winner of the student category gets $2,500). Nice.

-Rich

Eyes on the prize

May 27th, 2008

The Winners

More success in the shape of an impossibly heavy trophy for Shell Like at last week’s Radio Advertising Awards. The Network Rail “Repetition” spot for Iris London, which we produced and directed, won ‘Best use of creative radio in a multimedia campaign’ to go with its monthly win last Autumn. The pic is of Grant (bearded) and Susan from Iris, and Mark from Network Rail picking up the gong. I was way too busy pouring the champagne to get myself in the picture, and I find Alex Zane’s hair ‘intimidating’ - Mike

PS - That smoke is not from me smoking a victory cigar, it’s from a machine.

Resonating across the airwaves

May 15th, 2008

Went for a meeting with Ed at Resonance FM the other day. They are an ‘ Arts radio project broadcasting to the South Bank and Bankside in London… Available on FM and live on the web…brought to you by the London Musicians’ Collective’. The emphasis is on arts based programming, but they cover much more than that. Indeed their top-rated show is about cycling apparently. Ed had an idea for something which he wanted to discuss and we hope to break it later in the year. Meanwhile, I urge you to sign up to their RSS feeds as the podcasts are well worth listening to, especially the one with the creator of Persepolis, an MP3 of which can be found here - Mike