A publication of Brunico Communications Ltd

Archive: Jul 27, 1998
Merger engages money markets
At Press Time
Studio boon through MaritimesÊ
Elation, trepidation: Alliance, Atlantis creating Cdn. 'mini-major'
Belanger returning in Sept.
Casing CTV
Radke, Partners' split
Distribs lose U.S. deals
Manitoba plans new $7M studio
Programming
Editorial
Journal
Van.: AAC a `mixed blessing'
AAC's new distrib muscle
Post community eyeing merger
Global Media expands in video distrib
On set: Top of the Food Chain
News Brief: AFF writers workshop
APFTQ quits promotion group
News Brief: CBC comedy in production
NSI adds new staff, offers new programs
First Norway copro sets sail in Nfld.
B.C. Scene: Echo Lake test should resonate with low-budget producers
Quebec Scene: Simoneau, Allegro uniting on Turner suspenser Dead Ahead
Atlantic Scene: Ship race project a tall order for Ad Vantage Productions
News Brief: Ground set for July 29
Radical Sheep shooting 1 for 2 preschool shows in Toronto
Word: Five hundred spot folks Spy a party
:30 Curtis Wehrfritz
Commercial Directions: Less tours Ontario for 13 days
F/X Files - How'd they do that? Loop Media
Network
Special Report on Cinematographer's Tools: Lights and cameras action
Special Report on Cinematographer's Tools: Good results on L'Ombre de l'Epervier: Dramatic differences with Digital Betacam
Special Report on Cinematographer's Tools: New stocks improve effects
Special Report on Studios and Services: Montreal experiencing growing pains
Special Report on Studios and Services: T.O. booms but won't expand
Special Report on Studios and Services: Demand exceeding supply in B.C.
Special Report on Studios and Services: News Brief: $25 million studio planned in Saanich
Special Report on Studios and Services: Alta. stage buzz, despite woes
Special Report on Studios and Services: Sask: soundstage a low priority

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Storyboards: Brandworks/TOPIX/MD tackle G&M re-think
by: Jul 27, 1998 Print

Many Canadians waited with great trepidation - and startling visions of USA Today dancing in their heads - to see what would become of beloved National Newspaper and font of reason The Globe and Mail as it went under the knife of redesign.

Post-op, opinions differ on the soundness of the paper's re-think, but agency Brandworks International remained on the high road in creating a campaign to communicate the paper's evolution to the country.

With a Black cloud on the horizon and an imperative to evolve its means of communicating a quality message, the Globe earlier this month undertook a much-discussed redesign including typography, graphics and content changes as well as adding color to the stolid black-and-white face it had presented since 1844. Brandworks created the "Read Up" campaign consisting of meaty inserts in the paper, radio spots and a tv campaign, created with TOPIX/Mad Dog.

Brandworks' creative director and writer Tracy Jones approached TOPIX/Mad Dog with the project, which aimed to convey the philosophy of "enhancing the art of communication," and found a receptive partner in type-design guru Robin Len, the spots' designer and director of animation.

The spots are designed to communicate the philosophy of the redesign and revolve around typographical and graphical elements. It starts with an explosion of text which begins to mould itself around the image of a reading eye, with key words, culled from the print insert created by the agency, coming to the fore. "I wanted to do a real stream of consciousness spot," says Jones. "It was high concept, not driven by the specifics of `Here's the new type face,' `Here's what the new graphs look like.' It was to get at the fundamental reason they were doing the redesign - it was driven by content and enhancing the reading experience."

The spots grew out of the "Read Beyond Words" print concept as a visual interpretation of the reading experience. The spots also centered around music created by Great Big Music, originally for the campaign's radio spots. "That track laid the ground work for the visuals," says Jones. "It's a very dreamy, trippy piece. When we were using it for the radio, we thought it would make good tv. It's a very `visual' music track."

TOPIX/Mad Dog producer Lisa Weintrib says there was an immediate identification between the two companies in the approach to the spots, centering on illustrating the pleasures of reading. "It stemmed out of the philosophy of the art of communication," says Wenrib. "Part of that was to get into typographical, textural treatments." Len designed the spots using typography animations, live-action elements, textural treatments, multi-layered compositing and effects. The spots were created over about a month with After Effects, Photoshop and Corel Draw with some compositing and effects embellishment done on Flint.

In addition to Len and Weinrib, TOPIX/Mad Dog Flint artist was Marco Polsinelli. On the Brandworks team with Jones: Partner/director client services Lorne Kirshenbaum and producer Dee Anderson. Great Big Music composers are Tom Thorney and Carl Lenox.

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