Alexander Rea's Post Archive

Friday, April 3rd, 2009

The Concept Farm wins Emmys for NYC

The Concept Farm announces the honor of winning two Emmy awards from the NY Chapter – one for Cool In Your Code and the second for The American Heart Association’s PSA on stroke awareness.

Cool In Your CodeThe 2009 Emmys mark the fifth consecutive year the New York Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences has honored The Concept Farm for its Hit TV show, Cool In Your Code and community public service work.

The Concept Farm, an independent ad agency, production company and entertainment development group, has over 40 full-time employees and was recently ranked #20 in Crain’s Top 50 Best Places To Work in NYC (it ranked number 7 among small businesses).

“We are a creative company that draws its energy, inspiration and talent from NYC, so being recognized by Crain’s was very important to us,” said Ray Mendez, a managing partner at The Concept Farm.  “Creating a television show that celebrates NYC neighborhoods and public service campaigns that help improve the lives of New Yorkers just naturally evolved as part of our business strategy. The fact that they have received such notice and critical acclaim is a big bonus.”

Since 2004, The Concept Farm has garnered an impressive and unprecedented 23 nominations and 7 big Emmy wins from the New York Chapter. This year’s Cool In Your Code Emmy award for best Advanced Media Entertainment came over three entries from Style.com and one from pbs.org.

When asked to describe the success of Cool In Your Code, Will Morrison, a managing partner at The Concept Farm, summed it up by saying: “Our partnership with NYCTV is in its fifth year and has been very successful and gratifying in many ways. We have created, produced and aired over 40 episodes of half-hour prime-time programming that New Yorkers love and sponsors want to be associated with. We are major supporters of Mayor Bloomberg’s initiatives to use high quality creative formats to communicate a positive message about New York City.”

Buoyed by its consumer appeal and Emmy success, the Cool In Your Code Brand has crossed the ocean to London and roll-out plans for other US cities and overseas markets are currently underway.

The NY Emmy Award for best community service campaign marks The Concept Farm’s second win in this category after winning the Emmy in 2004 for its bold NY Latino Film festival campaign to combat Latino stereotyping.

American Heart Association & American Stroke AssociationThis year’s stroke campaign is truly one of those “only in NYC” initiatives.  Funded by a grant from John Charlsty, a New Yorker who is also a stroke survivor, the sole purpose of this particular American Heart Association campaign is make other New Yorkers aware of the signs of a stroke and encourage them to call 9-1-1.

“John donated a substantial sum of money to the NYC AHA to fund this campaign saying that he would do anything to make sure that others don’t go through what he went through,” said The Concept Farm’s managing partner Gregg Wasiak.   “John instructed us to ‘make it different and have it make a difference’ so we went in with the mindset that when it comes to saving lives, nothing is too far.”

Built around the central idea that “We’ll do anything to make New Yorkers aware of the signs of a stroke,” The Concept Farm pulled together an eclectic group of New York talent including Jerry Stiller and Anne Meara, the Fordham University cheerleaders, Time Warner Cable and even the FDNY’s EMT’s to convey the message.

“The campaign broke the bank in terms of consumer responses as measured by Time Warner Cable’s interactive response metrics,” added The Concept Farm’s managing partner, Griffin Stenger.  “So we know we’re helping save lives….and now, the Emmy award?  Only in New York.”

Posted by Alexander Rea

Thursday, March 19th, 2009

Boxed Water Is Better For The Earth

Boxed Water Is Better For The EarthYou may have seen the spot currently running where the focus is on a water bottle and the title reads something along the lines of an unimaginable number of years in a pile.  Here is an idea that is radically fresh.  Will it work?  Could it catch on?  Could you get a chain like Safeway to carry it or your local corner bodega (NYC only on that last one no doubt).

The following bit is ripped directly form their website.

“Part sustainable water company, part art project, part philanthropic project, and completely curious. Boxed Water Is Better, is a boxed water company.

Started with the simple idea of creating a new bottled water brand that is kinder to the environment and gives back a bit - we found that it shouldn’t be bottled at all, but instead, boxed. So we looked to the past for inspiration in the century old beverage container and decided to keep things simple, sustainable, and beautiful.”

Learn more about what they’re doing

Posted by Alexander Rea

SXSW Monday Keynote: Virginia Heffernan / James Powderly InterviewAlexander here.  Interactive Director for The Concept Farm.  Before I post any official reviews of Griffin Stenger (Partner) and my time here in Austin at SXSW Interactive, I wanted to post a quick little pre-review. I like to watch people.  Living in New York City it’s really easy.  Riding the subway you are forced to.  It’s a way of life.  Here in Austin I’ve been doing much of the same.  Since Friday I have been observing how many of the thousands of the attendants have iPhones and then how many have Apple laptops and any combination there of.  I would say at least 60% of the attendants have both.  And on these iPhones we have all been loading up all of the schedules and tweeting about this that and the other.  The only downside, AT&T’s infrastructure simply can not handle all of the iPhone data concentrated in one area.  SXSW Monday Keynote: Virginia Heffernan / James Powderly InterviewSo at one of the most important Interactive conferences in this country, the users of a device (argumentatively the most popular device) can not fully benefit from the very services being championed.  You have to wait until late at night before you can expect any true activity or be in the convention center on the free WiFi.  And even that shows signs of heavy load.

These above images are from today’s keynote in one of the three larger rooms.  Virginia Herrfernan of the New York Times interviews James Powderly of FATlab and Graffiti Research Lab (GRL).  Click to enlarge.

Setting up camp on the vast hallway floors of SXSW InteractiveRegardless of the individual attendant’s gear of choice, that gear runs on good old American electricity.  One of greatest faults of this convention (and really there are not many) is that there is no convenient source of power.  All of the outlets run along the floor.  Every panel room regardless of size is surprisingly short on outlets.  Don’t you think that the organizers of the event would have coordinated with the Freeman union controlled convention center to install power strips?  The results are obvious.  You enter each panel room and everyone is huddled along the walls.  Death traps by laptop cords.  Between events you find people by the droves forced to camp out on the floor as if their flights were delayed at a crowded airport.

Surprisingly Apple does not participate in conventions like this.  Despite the large percentage of people that would enlist immediately in an Apple army if one existed.  Those companies, authors and aritsts that have been conducting panels or signings have really been inspiration to many.   When my tour of duty expires on Wednesday, I’ll have the chance to go through the pages of notes, business cards, tweets, scratches, scribblings and memories and post something slightly more helpful here on 365.

Tomorow afternoons final keynote of SXSW Interactive will be the long-awaited Guy Kawasaki (Alltop) interview of Chris Anderson (Wired) on the power of free.

Posted by Alexander Rea

There is no way to post this without sounding like I am plugging MTV Networks’ Comedy Central so here goes. Tonight, on my way to SXSW I was able to catch The Daily Show (the photo shows everyone in my view also watching). For those that don’t regularly follow the show, tonight was the long awaited episode when Jon Stewart would face Jim Cramer of CNBC. Ending or potentially fueling the recent widely publicized fued (Google that). Jon rails into Jim on how Jim and those like him admit to knowing how the market can be cheated and where the holes in SEC regulations exist however they do nothing to stop it. Plug the holes over the last ten years that have caused the market free fall we are now experiencing. Jon suggests that perhaps Jim should go back to reporting financial news so John can go back to fart jokes.

I won’t profess to knowing about the markets. We at The Concept Farm are not and should not be regarded in whole as financial experts. So there will be no further exposition on a point of view. Just please watch the entire intetview.

And during the closing credits they show a clip from Jim on Martha Stewart (earlier in the day). Martha says “Jim does what Twitter does”. Alexander Rea from The Concept Farm asks “WTF!?”.

Posted by Alexander Rea