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Busy...
You guys take Friday off? I need to convince my DVD distributor to hire Campfire for the DVD release this fall... I guess I'll have to wait 'til monday...

- Paul Krik

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Hey, Megan, why thank you! Where are you based?

- Steve

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As one of my favorite companies to watch, I can't be any more excited to see the new campaigns and ideas that come out of the agency. Each campaign is unique and innovative in...

- Megan Green

Happy Holidays from Campfire
Полное моральное удовлетворение! Вот, что я получаю от такой новости

- Феодосии Разуков

Busy...
So glad y'all are doing well - you deserve it!

- Dee



Archive for July, 2008

And Now A Word From Our Sponsor

Wednesday, July 30th, 2008


Giving Credit Where Credit Is Due

Friday, July 25th, 2008

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Yvonne Cheng is a supremely creative and talented designer working here at Campfire. She also runs a fantastic website called Lost in Emoticons, documenting the IM transcripts between Yvonne and her Chinese mother. Apparently, Mrs. Cheng is a little unhappy over the lack of credit for Yvonne in the recent NY Times article about Campfire and our True Blood campaign for HBO.

We’re sorry Mrs. Cheng, but something tells us it won’t be long before Yvonne ends up in the New York Times. We just hope it won’t be the police blotter.

Update to 49:00

Thursday, July 24th, 2008

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Update to my previous post: I think it’s interesting that such a raw piece of music is able to sit at the top of amazon’s MP3 album list, above the Mamma Mia! soundtrack, the new Coldplay, and all the other usual suspects. ABC News has a thoughtful review by Allan Raible, but more importantly, a member of Westerberg’s official discussion board has taken note of the number of guests surfing the messages (not just the front page but the message board, where the hardcore faithful hang out), in the past 24 hours.

And to continue the dialog, Westerberg got around to making some official back cover art.

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Paul Westerberg releases 49 cent album, one-ups Radiohead

Wednesday, July 23rd, 2008

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While Radiohead gets all the love for experimenting with the distribution and business aspect of selling music online, Paul Westerberg has taken the next step and released an album that simply wouldn’t exist without the ability to go directly to his fans. “49″ is an entire album in the form of one-long MP3, a noisy, self-recorded burst of rock n’ roll energy that violates the traditionally accepted structure of the “album,” and you can download the entire thing for $0.49 from Amazon.

Westerberg’s site contains the following message:

WARNING: DO NOT LISTEN WHILE OPERATING A MOTOR VEHICLE

THIS PRODUCT IS NOT FAULTY - ALL SOUNDS ARE INTENTIONAL AND VALID AS A WORK OF ART

There’s no track listing, some parts are snippets of music cut together with other songs, crashing in and out of each other, it’s chaotic and charming, brilliant and maddening all at the same time. Darren Hill, Wetserberg’s manager, was quoted in The Guardian:

“He finished it on Monday, sent it to me on Tuesday and it was out this weekend,” Hill explained. “It’s just wonderful that you can actually do this. The freedom an artist can enjoy these days is fantastic. Can you imagine me pitching this idea to a label?”

The surprise release is grabbing a lot of attention, (see Pitchfork, The Onion AV Club, The LA Times, Wired, Stereogum, and many others), but Jim Connelly over at Medialoper has an interesting take on the release:

Because its not just full songs, it’s also song snippets. Then its two songs playing at the same time, and excerpts from cover versions that fade in and out, and then, suddenly, I’m in love, what’s that song?

No really, what’s that song?!?

It’s all a bit of a mess, really. But that’s OK, because it only costs forty-nine cents. In a strange way, Westerberg has used the internet to bootleg himself.

Because it’s such a mess, you might wonder who is going to listen to it more than once, and then you realize that because it’s a nice big digital file, what will eventually happen is that his fan base will come up with consensus names for all of the songs, and song snippets, and the time codes for everything.

And that’s exactly what’s happening on the discussion boards at PaulWesterberg.com, where the new album is receiving overwhelmingly positive response from his fans, who are dissecting and discussing every minute of it.

Best of all, it’s rumored that Westerberg doesn’t even own a computer.

Geostationary Banana Over Texas Project on hold

Wednesday, July 23rd, 2008

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I absolutely love pranks and prank-like projects, so I’m sad to report that the Geostationary Banana Over Texas has just been suspended. Over the course of two and a half years, this large scale collaborative project captured attention all over the world. In their most recent email, the organizers state:

We have recorded the GBOT project being discussed in 23 languages. Its concept was the motive for specialized art papers; it was published in children’s books in France, in specialized engineering publications in Russia; it inspired the realization of video games in the UK; it was discussed in local newspapers and community radios, in articles in art and science magazines. It was posted in thousands of blogs. It was broadcasted through mainstream media in many countries (like: Brazil, Hungary, Indonesia, the Philippines, Poland, Finland, Belgium, Rumania, India, Sweden, Iran, Japan, Korea, China, and so on). In two and half years that this project lasted, the website reported 38 million visits.

We still are reviewing the wide implications and impact of this project. At the moment we are compiling all the documentation related to this experience; and we hope to make it available through a publication, website, and public presentations later this year.

In all, this was a successful widespread collaborative project where the contribution of each participant was precious and will be acknowledged in all final publications.

I still believe, and I hope one day to look up and see that giant banana floating high above in the Texas sky.

A little more press for True Blood

Tuesday, July 22nd, 2008

Read the AdAge article
Download the PDF

Read the BrandWeek article
Download the PDF

Read the Portfolio article
Download the PDF

Media Bullseye Gives Us Some Love

Monday, July 21st, 2008

The cool cats over at Media Bullseye do a Roundtable podcast and this week they served up some great kudos for our True Blood campaign. Debbie Weil, author of the Corporate Blogging Book, offers up her insights into what she thinks about the campaign.

Click here to give the podcast a listen. The True Blood spoken word starts in at about the 9 minute mark.

The Origins of Twitter

Saturday, July 19th, 2008

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Jack Dorsey talks about the origins of Twitter on his Flickr page…

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Twitter as of today, Saturday, 7/19/08 @ 2:00 p.m.

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You Have Been Warned!

Thursday, July 17th, 2008

nytimesThe New York Times featured a story about Campfire’s latest work for HBO in its July 15th edition. The article, “The Vampires Are Coming, but Only After Months of Warnings”, was written by Douglas Quenqua and touches on how HBO and Campfire have been stirring up fans for “True Blood,” HBO’s new Alan Ball series. Along with a great introduction of Campfire’s doings so far, the piece also includes a great preview of what to expect from the campaign in the months to come.

Read the whole story

Download the PDF

I Would Actually Rather See This Please

Wednesday, July 16th, 2008

Subway poster remix via Copyranter



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