On the subject of Book PR

The Royal Ballet: Coming To A Cinema Near You!

On May 28th, 2009 James wrote on the subject of Arts PR,Ballet PR,Event PR,Film PR.

ondine_watson

Arts Alliance Media will stream the 50th anniversary of the classic ballet, Ondine, live from Covent Garden to cinemas across the UK on 3 June followed by the live broadcast of La Traviata on 30 June.

The Royal Ballet’s principle dancer Ed Watson and American Soprano Renée Fleming are available for interview.

Contact: Hayley.dodd@taylorherring.com

National Poetry Competition set for BBC TWO final

On May 13th, 2009 James wrote on the subject of Book PR,Event PR,Poetry,Television PR.

• Winner of UK-wide poetry competition is unveiled in one-off 90 minute film
• Off By Heart contest to help children foster a love for poetry
• Expert judges Philip Pullman, Benjamin Zephaniah and Dawn Postans choose overall winner

Off By Heart, Friday 22 May 2009 at 9pm on BBC Two

The lost art of poetry recitation has taken centre stage in primary schools across the country thanks to a BBC Two film which documents Britain’s first national competition of its kind.

jeremy-paxman-off by heartMore than 1,500 primary schools signed up to take part in the Off By Heart poetry competition, selecting one 7-11 year old pupil to represent them. Children from Belfast to Brighton then battled it out in 57 heats, choosing one poem from a list of 15 to perform in front of a panel of well-known judges including librarians, teachers, actors and poets. The most popular choices were The Pig by Roald Dahl, Matilda by Hilaire Belloc and Alligator by Grace Nichols.

Twelve finalists were eventually selected and include two children from working farms, one from North Wales who attends a school where all the lessons are in Welsh, and two children with Iranian parents. Children from Aberdeen to Bushmills in Northern Ireland to Barrow in Furness have earned themselves a place at the Off By Heart final.

Each of their stories have been captured on camera by the award winning director Antonia Bird for a 90 minute film to be shown on BBC Two, which documents every stage of the competition. The film aims to enhance poetry education in schools, which has in the past been criticised by OFSTED.

The overwhelming response from children shows that there is an appetite for poetry, especially when it is taught through performance. At Earlham Primary School in Newham, East London, where 92% of the children are from ethnic minorities, the Off By Heart judging panel was treated to a rip roaring beat box version of Lewis Carroll’s the Owl and the Pussycat. The performance earned the ‘bad boys’ a standing ovation from the whole school.

off-by-heartThe finalists attended a series of workshops to help them prepare for the final stage of the competition. Their memories were honed by Edward Cooke, who has pioneered an active learning technique that had the children rushing around the room reciting different lines in different places – resulting in word perfect recitals after just forty minutes. They were inspired by Benjamin Zephaniah who showed the finalists that learning poetry can be a conduit to writing it, and after one hour trading poems with Zephaniah they were all writing verses of their own.

The children’s journey culminated a nail-biting final which was held at The Sheldonian Theatre as part of The Sunday Times Oxford Literary Festival on Sunday 5 April 2009 and compered by Jeremy Paxman. Nerves had to be firmly in check as the finalists stepped onto stage to give the performance of their life in front of a sell out audience of 600 people.

The finalists were awarded marks for their performance and interpretation of two separate poems; Sea Fever by the former Poet Laureate John Masefield and another from a list of 30. The competition was made all the harder by the high profile judging panel which consisted of poet Benjamin Zephaniah, Dawn Postans, the head examiner at The London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art, and was headed by Northern Lights author Philip Pullman.

Philip Pullman says: “The performances have been extraordinary and it never ceases to amaze me when you see children as young as seven, who are initially shy and timid, transformed on stage through their love of poetry.”

Jeremy Paxman says: “Learn a poem in childhood and you’ve a friend for life.”

Daisy Goodwin says: “Off By Heart is an attempt to revive the tradition of parlour poetry – to make poetry a public delight rather than a purely private pleasure. Through making this film we have discovered an untapped hunger for poetry amongst children in the UK, and I am pleased that all of the children that have been involved in this project have come away triumphant, for to learn a poem is to own it forever.”

As for the winner, they are now the proud recipient of the first ever Off By Heart trophy, while their school has also been awarded book tokens worth £500. Each of the finalists received book tokens worth £100 for their school.

The story of the competition and many of the entrants, including the winner, will be documented in the 90 minute film by independent production company Silver River and will be shown on BBC Two on 22 May 2009 at 9pm.

It is now hoped that Off By Heart will not only become an annual event for primary schools but that poetry recitation will once again become a firm feature on the primary school curriculum.

For more information about Off By Heart contact Nicola Dann at Taylor Herring Public Relations on 020 8206 5151 or e-mail nicola.dann@taylorherring.com

 -ENDS-

Notes To Editors

Off By Heart, the 90 minute film produced by independent production company Silver River will be shown on BBC Two on 22 May 2009 at 9pm.

BBC Poetry Season

This May the BBC celebrates the diverse, compelling and inspiring world of poetry with a landmark season of content across television, radio and online.

BBC Two highlights include a one-off special from Griff Rhys Jones on Why Poetry Matters (1×60), while some of the nation’s best loved celebrities explore British poetry from a very personal point of view in Lifelines (4×60); and a nationwide poetry recitation competition for primary school children culminates in a grand final compered by Jeremy Paxman in Off by Heart (1×90).

On BBC Four Ian Hislop welcomes in the new Poet Laureate (working title) (1×60) and Owen Sheers presents A Poet’s Guide to Britain (6×30) exploring six great works of poetry about the British landscape.

CBeebies also brings works from well-known contemporary poets vividly to life through animation in Poetry Pie.

BBC Radio 4 is dedicated to broadcasting poetry programmes every week of the year. The channels highlights for the Poetry Season include an analysis of Rainer Maria Rilke and a new Poetry Slam. On Radio 3, Poems for Today, a series of more than 40 poems broadcast daily, will celebrate the breadth of contemporary poetry in the UK today.

BBC Online will be a key destination for a wealth of content, from great poets past and present, poems to suit your mood, live spoken word events and a vote for the ‘Nations Favourite Poet’ (Winner announced in October). bbc.co.uk/poetryseason

Richard & Judy and UKTV Call Time On Chat Show

On May 8th, 2009 James wrote on the subject of Book PR,Celebrity PR,Television Industry PR,Television PR.

richard-judy-new-set1LONDON: Friday 8th May 2009, Richard & Judy and UKTV have mutually decided to call time on their chat show, as the husband and wife team celebrate a TV partnership spanning 21 years.

One year after signing with the brand new TV channel, Richard & Judy will present the final edition of the show on 3rd July 2009, at the end of its current series.

Richard & Judy had the opportunity to continue with the show until December, however a break clause in the contract allowed them, the broadcaster and the production company to cease production in the summer.

Ratings had not been in line with expectations and new audience research has prompted Watch to re-focus its direction towards family skewed entertainment and away from topical discussion based output.

Since its launch in October last year, success with non-topical shows such as Torchwood, Wipeout USA, Doctor Who and blockbuster films has made Watch bigger in Pay TV than Film4, Virgin 1, Sky News, Discovery and Comedy Central.

Since switching to UKTV, Richard & Judy have welcomed a host of high profile guests onto their sofa, including Hollywood stars Samuel L Jackson, Helen Mirren, Charlize Theron and Mickey Rourke. In addition to hosting a regular daily show at 6pm every weekday, they also fronted the Galaxy British Book Awards.

On their time at Watch, Richard & Judy reflected; “Some you win, some you lose. It’s a shame we couldn’t get this one to fly because both we and our brilliant young production team were genuinely proud of the show and the guests it attracted. But it became obvious that it wasn’t the right fit with a brand new pay-for-view digital channel. Many of our former viewers have told us they simply couldn’t find us there. When we started we said we wanted to get ahead of the curve, as British television inevitably goes digital. Looks like we were a bit too far ahead of the curve! Perhaps a bridge too far too soon, despite UKTV’s strong support. But TV is all about taking risks and that means sometimes you fail. It was a really worthwhile experiment and we don’t regret it at all. Now we’re both going on to other projects, together and separately.”

Matthew Littleford, Controller at UKTV said,” I’d like to personally thank Richard and Judy for all their hard work, professionalism and that indefinable R&J magic that they consistently brought to UKTV. We’ve been incredibly lucky enough to have the King and Queen of British telly on UKTV and together with Amanda and Simon Ross at Cactus TV, they created a show I remain incredibly proud of. The calibre of the guests that have sat on the sofa has been as strong as ever and it is testament to the professionalism of the entire team at Cactus TV that the quality of the show has never waned. We wish them the best of luck in the future, and look forward to giving them a fitting send off.”

One of the most successful brand extensions of the Richard & Judy partnership has been the phenomenally popular Book Club, which has boosted book sales and propelled unknown authors to commercial and critical acclaim, and led to Cactus MD Amanda Ross being consistently named the most influential person in publishing in book page polls. In its most recent series, the initiative shifted almost 1 million copies, and amongst others, elevated author Kate Atkinson to number one with her book, When Will There Be Good News?. The current run achieved No.1 slots for four out of the ten books featured.

Cactus TV hopes that the Book Club will continue beyond UKTV, and are currently in discussions with media partners about its future.

Richard & Judy will continue to present the show as planned into the summer, hosting a new series of the Summer Read from Wednesday 15th May.

Cactus TV, who have produced Richard & Judy’s shows since they left ITV in 2001, continue to produce a range of shows, including Saturday Kitchen for BBC One, Hairy Bikers for BBC Two, Rachel Allen: Bake and the popular ITV Crime Thriller season.

For further information, please contact Justin Jeffreys at Taylor Herring PR on Justin.jeffreys@taylorherring.com

Notes To Editors

Richard Madeley began his career as a local journalist in Essex. At 19, he joined BBC Cumbria as a news producer and presenter before joining Border Television as a reporter/presenter in 1978. In 1980 Richard moved to Yorkshire Television where he reported and presented on regional Yorkshire Television programmes before moving on to Granada TV in 1982.

Judy Finnigan began her career as a TV researcher for Granada TV in 1971 after graduating from Bristol University with English and Drama BA Hons. Following a year’s working holiday in America, Judy returned to the television industry in 1974 to take her first on-screen job as Anglia Television’s first female reporter. She rejoined Granada in 1980 and worked on a range of live programmes including Granada Reports, which she co-presented with Richard.

In October 1988, Richard and Judy recorded their first episode of This Morning from the Albert Dock in Liverpool. They went on to present the programme for 13 years and established themselves as Britain’s favourite TV couple. Whilst on ITV, their much-loved presenting helped the programme scoop the coveted award for Most Popular Daytime Programme at the National Television Awards in 1998, 1999, 2000 and 2001. Other collaborative successes for the couple include Get A Life, Tonight and the British Soap Awards. Individually, Judy presented the Granada TV Coronation Street Specials, two series of the Judy Finnigan Debate and the primetime consumer show We Can Work it Out, whilst Richard presented the adult series of Connections, Runway and the extremely popular Eye of the Storm.

In 2001, Richard and Judy left ITV to present Richard & Judy for Channel 4, weeknights 5pm-6pm. The show combined news-reactive items, light informal features and celebrity interviews. In January 2006 Richard and Judy agreed to further extend their contract with Channel 4 until the end of 2008, and to share their teatime slot with Paul O’Grady, each presenting their magazine shows for half of the year. Richard and Judy are also responsible for a revolution in the nation’s reading habits, following the phenomenal success of their literary programme strands, particularly Book Club and Summer Read which both launched in 2004. To date Book Club has sold over 10 million books and generated over £60 million in book sales. Its featured titles are known to increase sales by as much as 3,000 per cent overnight. Book Club has turned at least eight authors into multi-millionaires.

In autumn 2006, Richard and Judy made a cameo appearance in Extras with Ricky Gervais on BBC2, and in early 2007, Richard presented Fortune: Million Pound Giveaway on ITV. After seven successful years at Channel Four, Richard and Judy are now hosting a topical prime-time chat show on the brand new digital channel, Watch, every weekday at 6pm.

Richard and Judy have been married to each other for over 20 years, and live in North London. They have a son, Jack, and a daughter, Chloe, who co-presented Big Brother’s Big Mouth for a week in August 2007; Judy also has twin sons from her first marriage.

Richard Madeley has recently written a book, Fathers and Sons, which charts the extraordinary tale of Richard’s family history. Spanning four generations, Father and Sons is a deeply personal insight into a story of betrayal and forgiveness, and was officially released through Simon & Schuster.

Richard & Judy’s Best Books For Summer Announced

On May 1st, 2009 James wrote on the subject of Book PR,Event PR,Television PR.

Screenwriter Julian Fellowes Leads List of Authors On Course For Summer Success

LONDON: 1st May 2009: The eight books hailed as this Summer’s most sought after holiday reads are announced today, as Richard & Judy unveil the short list for their popular Summer Read. Returning for its sixth series, the hotly anticipated strand showcases an array of both established and up-and-coming authors, and an enticing selection of stories.

richard-and-judy-book-clubThis year’s eight fiction choices will be revealed by Richard & Judy on their teatime show today, just under a fortnight ahead of the first book review on Wednesday 13th May.

A TV actor and screen writer, a former Oprah Winfrey Book Club author, an award winning poet and an American sports columnist are all inducted into the segment, a spin off to the acclaimed Book Club series. Julian Fellowes, who starred in Monarch of the Glen and wrote the screenplays for movies Gosford Park and Vanity Fair, gets a coveted recommendation for Past Imperfect. Meanwhile, Sue Miller, who features on the list with The Senator’s Wife, is no stranger to TV Book Clubs after being picked for Oprah’s Book Club back in 2000. Sports commentator Dave Boling, who writes a regular column for Tacoma News-Tribune, swaps sports opinion for storytelling, with his book Guernica already on sale in eleven countries internationally.

The Summer Read selection in its entirety is as follows: Past Imperfect by Julian Fellowes, Guernica by Dave Boling, Palace Council by Stephen L Carter, Mr Toppit by Charles Elton, The Great Lover by Jill Dawson, Mystery Man by Bateman, The Senator’s Wife by Sue Miller, and The Piano Teacher by Janice Y K Lee.

Each week, the couple will rate and review one chosen title, joined in their studio by two special celebrity guest critics. Joanna Lumley and Dominic West are confirmed to discuss Past Imperfect, following in the footsteps of previous reviewers who include Michael Palin, Trevor McDonald and Piers Morgan.

Richard & Judy’s Summer Read has had a prolific effect on the careers of a number of its alumni, including Linwood Barclay, who earnt a place on the list in 2008 with No Time For Goodbye which went on to be the best selling book of the whole year. Linwood recently hit number one in the literary charts with his second novel Too Close To Home. Meanwhile, 2007 entrant Kim Edwards, who wrote The Memory Keeper’s Daughter, shot to the top of the New York Times Bestseller list after her Richard & Judy recommendation. One of the original Summer Read intake, Cecilia Aherne, even saw her publishing hit PS, I Love You reinvented into a major motion picture, released to cinematic audiences in 2007. The 2006 Summer Read Winner Victoria Hislop is currently at number 1 in the charts with her second novel.

At the helm of the selection process for all of Richard & Judy’s celebrated literary formats is Amanda Ross, executive producer of the daytime series. Having created both Book Club and Summer Read in 2004, Amanda has since pioneered a Children’s Book Club, launched the Christmas Book Special and even taken a child literacy petition to Gordon Brown at Downing Street. Her contribution to televised literature is unrivalled, with her production company Cactus TV, airing the Galaxy British Book Awards. Her contribution to the publishing market was acknowledged when she was first declared Most Powerful Person in Publishing three years ago. Amanda heads up a team of four advisors who whittle down scores of publishing house submissions, before settling on the eight books deemed worthy of the Richard & Judy seal of approval.

With the compilation of the 2009 short list complete, Amanda Ross reflected “Each year as the standard of books is so high, I worry that we can maintain our success rate. My husband and business partner Simon Ross is my harshest critic, but he thinks this year’s bunch are the best yet, and couldn’t put them down when we took them on our Easter break.”

Viewers can get full details of how to join the Summer Read and getting special extra back up material by calling 0870 191 9955 or logging on to the Richard & Judy website www.justwatch.co.uk

THE GALAXY BRITISH BOOK AWARDS

On March 6th, 2009 James wrote on the subject of Awards PR,Book PR,Celebrity PR,Event PR,Television PR.

jk-rowlingSunday 5th April marks the most anticipated event in the publishing diary, as highlights from The 20th Annual Galaxy British Book Awards (more affectionately known as “The Nibbies”) screen exclusively on Watch, the home of the ceremony’s hosts Richard & Judy.

In the glitziest and most glamorous affair in publishing, the gala awards will see gongs handed out to a host of showbiz talents. Amongst last year’s victors were Hollywood sensation Ewan McGregor and his motorcycling counterpart Charley Boorman, and comedy heavyweight Russell Brand, and Harry Potter creator JK Rowling. The star studded event, held at Grosvenor House Hotel, Park Lane, marks the culmination of Richard & Judy’s phenomenal Book Club 2009 strand.

One of ten hugely popular titles, all of which have already witnessed significant sales upheavals, will scoop the hotly contested Best Read award. The Galaxy British Book Awards is the only awards of its kind where the public have influence; Voters can opt for their favourite read in all eight categories by visiting the Awards website: www.galaxybritishbookawards.com.

For further information, please contact Justin Jeffreys on Justin.jeffreys@taylorherring.com

Parents ‘too busy’ to read to kids

On February 27th, 2009 James wrote on the subject of Book PR,Television PR.

bookabooThree quarters of Britain’s parents are too busy to read bedtime stories to their children, according to a study.

Worryingly, it also emerged only three per cent of fathers now find the time to read to the kids compared to 89 per cent of mothers.

The majority (87%) blame work commitments, but over a third (34%) said they are just too tired to read to their youngsters.

The poll of 2,000 parents was commissioned by CITV to mark the launch of the children’s show Bookaboo, which encourages parents and children to read together. It found most parents believed bedtime was the best time to read to a child – just 5% read to their youngsters during the day.

Lucy Goodman, creator of Bookaboo, said: “It’s important development wise that young boys are able to share a book with dads, granddads or male carers and it can be fun and rewarding too. Our research is showing that dads are just not finding time to do this.”

Comedian Al Murray, Britain’s Got Talent judge Amanda Holden and veteran rock star Meat Loaf are amongst a host of stars will join a drum-playing puppy in a the new CiTV series which helps children and adults to enjoy reading.

The 13-part series starts on March 2  and will be shown at 12:15, 15:20 and 17:50

Press contact: Louisa Bradshaw 0208 206 5151

Online PR Case Study: Bebo’s Slang Dictionary

On February 22nd, 2009 James wrote on the subject of Book PR,Online PR.

bebo-pr-stuntOverview…

As part of our ongoing work for Bebo we worked-up a research story that would maximise Bebo’s media presence, underlining the social media network as the voice of young Britain.

Execution…

Taylor Herring suggested that Bebo unearthed the latest slang words used by teenagers in 2009 which could be included in an edition of a national dictionary. To add credibility to the campaign Taylor Herring approached the established UK publisher Harper Collins. They agreed to come on board and potentially use the words Bebo sourced in the 2009 Collins English Dictionary.

This provided two opportunities for press coverage; the debate around which words should be included (February 2009) and also an announcement of final words published (scheduled for Summer 2009). In order to uncover the new slang vernacular, we organised a focus group with a panel of teenagers who helped shortlist the most widely used words in the UK today. This shortlist of 24 words was then divided into six categories; money-orientated, girls and boys, put-downs, street language, cool and friends which were voted on by the Bebo community.

More than 15-thousand votes were cast and the most popular words were forwarded to Collins for potential inclusion in the English dictionary. The story was then sold in to all key national press, education, media and arts correspondents as well as a wide range of online targets. All of the generated coverage carried a double credit for Bebo and Collins.

Results…

The story proved hugely popular across national press with fully credited pieces running in The Sun, Daily Telegraph, Daily Mirror, Daily Star and The London Paper. The teen slang words announcement also continued to generate interest long after it was released to the media.  

The story also proved a massive hit online with fully credited pieces featuring on the front page of Media Guardian, The Sun Online, Mail Online, Telegraph.co.uk, Metro.co.uk, Express.co.uk, Daily Mail online The Scotsman, Channel 4 News, MSN News, Yahoo News and Brand Republic amongst others. As the story ran with two news agencies including The Press Association, it also generated a lot of regional coverage both in print and online. This included The Liverpool Daily Post, Wrexham Chronicle, Coventry Telegraph, Blackpool Gazette, Birmingham Post, Yorkshire Evening Post, Halifax Courier and Hastings Observer.

Bebo is an international brand – and media from as far afield as Australia and India also picked up on the story and online pieces also featured on the sites of The Irish Examiner, The Times of India, Hindu.com, Indopia and The Hindu.

Our campaign reached more than 84 million people and is still being quoted and spoken about to this day.

Bookaboo: Rock and Read!

On January 29th, 2009 James wrote on the subject of Book PR,Children's Brands PR,Television PR.

meatloaf-and-bookaboo1Veteran rock star Meat Loaf will join a drum-playing puppy in a new TV series aimed at helping children and adults to enjoy reading.

The 13-part CiTV series is based around picture books read by celebrity guests to a rock star dog called Bookaboo, who needs to hear “a story a day or he just can’t play”.

In the first programme, the Bat Out Of Hell singer will read The Lamb Who Came For Dinner.

Other celebrities sharing a story with Bookaboo include Britain’s Got Talent judge Amanda Holden, comedian Al Murray, former Spice Girl Mel C, singer Alesha Dixon and TV presenter Fern Britton.

Bookaboo starts on March 2.

For all press enquiries: Louisa.Bradshaw@taylorherring.com

The Publicity Stunt Hall Of Fame

On January 26th, 2009 James wrote on the subject of Arts PR,Awards PR,Book PR,Celebrity PR,Children's Brands PR,Computer Games PR,Event PR,Fashion PR,Festival PR,Film PR,FMCG,Food and Drink PR,Games PR,Magazine PR,Music PR,Online PR,Online PR Trends,Publicity Stunts,Retail PR,Sport,Sport PR,Teen PR,Television PR,Travel PR.

Think Famous. Get Famous. Some genius publicity stunts that inspired us.

You can also visit our Stunt Of The Day ideas blog over on Tumblr

The Olympic Torch Relay. The IOC’s world famous Torch Relay, has been executed in the months before the Winter and Summer Games since 1936. The legendary stunt has generated mass publicity for the Olympics, athletes, and sponsors .

olympic-torch-relay

Macy’s Thanksgiving Parade. In 2008 twenty-eight floats; a 400-lb. inflatable Buzz Lightyear, Dr. Seuss’s Horton elephant, a giant Smurf, 10 marching bands and a cast of thousands attracted 3.5 million New Yorkers to line the streets for the Macy’s 82nd annual Thanksgiving Day Parade. Another 50 million households watched from home. The first parade was a much smaller affair, created in 1924 as a publicity stunt to draw attention to the store. Macy’s employees walked 6 miles in fancy dress, accompanied by animals, on floats, from the city Zoo.

Tiger Tees Off. In March 2004 Tiger Woods was paid $1 million to play in the Dubai Desert Golf Classic. Organisers staged a media call to launch the tournament in which Woods practiced his tee-shot from the helipad of the Burj Al Arab, the world’s tallest free-standing hotel.

Tour De France. 100 years ago Henri Desgrange came up with the idea of a bike race round France in order to raise the profile of L’Auto, the newspaper he worked for. The first race was a big success. The road conditions were terrible, the riders barely slept and they were expected to ride through the night. But it captured the imagination of the public, doubled the circulation of L’Auto and put its rival paper Le Velo out of business.

Sex Pistols Sign To A&M Records. To mark their new deal with A&M records – The Sex Pistols staged a contract signing event for media in front of Buckingham Palace.

The Peanut Protest. Mark McGowan pushes a peanut, using only his nose, from Goldsmiths College to 10 Downing Street in protest at his student debt. The two week journey across London in September 2003 drew massive media interest and culminated with McGowan delivering the nut to Prime Minister Tony Blair, asking him to accept it as payment for his debt.

Hands Across America. On May 26, 1986, more than 7 million people, including President Ronald Reagan, joined hands in a human chain across sixteen states to raise money for the hungry and homeless in the United States. Participants paid ten dollars to reserve their place in line.

Ikea’s Bondi Book Stunt. For one day only the Scandinavian furniture giant placed 30 bookcases on the sands of Bondi beach in Sydney. Beachgoers were invited to swap one of their own books or make a donation, with money raised going to The Australian Literacy and Numeracy Foundation.

retail PR stunt

Calendar Girls. In 1999 a group of eleven members of the Women’s Institute (in Yorkshire, UK) stripped to create a calendar to raise money for charity. The original calendar featured the women posing nude – obscured by baked goods and flower arrangements. 800,000 copies were sold worldwide. Their efforts took the world by storm in 2000 and inspired a hit movie, starring Julie Walters and Helen Mirren. Since then almost £2m has been raised for leukaemia research. The ladies posed again in 2009 to mark the 10th Anniversary. Angela Baker came up with the idea for the original calendar after her husband, John’s death from lymphoma. You can buy the calendar here.

calendar-girls-publcity-stunt

Best Job In The World. To bring tourist attention to their region Tourism Queensland took an advert to recruit an “island caretaker” willing to spend six months exploring the land and waters around the Great Barrier Reef for £70,000. The post, billed as “the best job in the world” would involve the successful applicant moving to a rent-free three-bedroom villa, complete with pool, on Hamilton Island. Click here to read more about the campaign.

Dove’s Campaign For Real Beauty. Unilever’s toiletry brand Dove became a household name thanks to its highly PR’able ‘Campaign for Real Beauty’ which used real women in ads rather than the stick thin models favoured by rivals. The campaign kicked off in 2003 with adverts featuring six ordinary women in their underwear and boosted sales by 700%.

The Boston Tea Party. On December 16th 1773 American patriots dressed as Mohawk Indians threw 342 chests of tea into Boston Harbour – in protest against repressive taxation and the monopoly of the East India Company. The event achieved mass awareness. The architect of the stunt, Samuel Adams, orchestrated much of the propaganda for the revolution – he pulled together the Sons of Liberty, developed the symbol of the liberty tree and named the Boston Massacre.

the-boston-tea-party-publicity-stunt

Harrods Gift Wrap A Helicopter. Luxury department store Harrods used over 600 metres of paper to gift wrap a helicopter. The chopper was sent to a Harrods customer as a gift to take his partner on a trip of a lifetime. The wrapping was caught on camera to help promote the launch of the ‘Anything Is Possible’ season.

That Dress. Unknown model Liz Hurley arrives at her boyfriend’s Four Weddings And A Funeral premiere in a Versace dress adorned with safety pins. The next day she was the most famous person in Britain.

BA Can’t get it Up. Virgin Airlines took a swipe at the late-running, British Airways sponsored Millennium Wheel project by flying a blimp over the site – carrying the message ‘BA Can’t Get It Up’.

Lotus’ Faceless People. Lotus cars placed ‘faceless people’ at key events in 2008 including Wimbledon and Elton John’s party to tie in with their marketing slogan – ‘True character in a faceless world’. The ‘humanoids’ wore prosthetic skin covering their facial features and black suits with the Lotus logo spelling out the message that you are nobody until you own a Lotus.

The Big Bird Race. Back in 2004 bookmaker Ladbrokes came up with a unique betting opportunity and one that would also do its bit for conservation. In ‘the ultimate flutter’ – 17 Albatrosses were electronically tagged to allow the public to follow their migration across the Southern Ocean. Punters and wildlife enthusiasts alike could bet on which bird they thought would win the race, with updates available at Ladbrokes.com via an interactive map. All proceeds generated during the Big Bird Race were donated to the ‘Save the Albatross’ campaign, while punters were also given the option of donating their winnings to the fund. After a long journey, a Tasmanian Shy Albatross called Aphrodite, sponsored by Jerry Hall, eventually crossed the finish line first. Following the success of the race in 2004, it was decided to stage the race again in 2005 with similar rules – however all of the birds went missing off the coast of Australia.

the big bird race albatross

Trafalgar Square Turfed. In May 2007 Trafalgar Square was transformed into a green space as part of Visit London’s campaign to promote green spaces and villages in the city. The grass covered the square for two days during which visitors were able to soak up the sunshine in deckchairs or enjoy a picnic More than 2,000 square metres of turf covered the piazza around the national monument.

trafalgar-square-turfed1

The Blair Witch Project. Producers of The Blair Witch project succeeded in creating huge pre-hype for their low budget horror flick which centered on students being murdered in a forest. Blurring the boundaries between fact and fiction was key to the early buzz that surrounded the movie. Allegedly the film makers had circulated tapes to colleges which were presented as ‘real video diary footage’. Clips that were presented as ‘documentary’ rather than fiction were shown on the Independent Film Channel. This was one of first feature films to use online and viral PR to build hype. The buzz ensured that Blair Witch was a major success which took over $150 million at the box office.

Squirrel Crisps. Snack food giant Walkers launched its Do Us A Flavour campaign in 2008, challenging members of the public to think up a unique flavour of crisp. Crisps that taste of chilli and chocolate, onion bhaji, hoi sin duck and even Cajun squirrel were subsequently produced as part of the competition. Celebrity chef Heston Blumenthal helped pick the top six entries from more than one million, and Walkers turned the ideas into reality.

publicity-stunt

KLF Burn A Million Quid. K Foundation Burn a Million Quid. It wasn’t the KLF’s machine gunning the 1992 Brit Awards (with blanks), which cemented their controversy. On 23 August 1994, the K Foundation burned one million pounds sterling in private on the Scottish island of Jura. The money represented the bulk of the K Foundation’s funds, earned by Bill Drummond and Jimmy Cauty as The KLF, one of the early 1990s most successful pop groups. The act inspired a book and world tour of the film Watch the K Foundation Burn a Million Quid. In 1995 the pair resolved not to explain their act for 23 years. The fact that the pair have never fully explained their motivations has forever sealed their legend. Is it art / an act of purity / a crime against humanity? Fervent speculation still rages on. Whether or not intended, Drummond and Cauty’s burning of a million quid, is one of the most controversial publicity stunts of all time. The burning question which still remains is why? (with thanks to Photini)

It’s A Wrap. The most accident-prone street in Britain was given the ultimate safety blanket - 1,500 sq metres of bubble wrap. Cars, gates, lamp posts and even garden gnomes were wrapped to highlight the dangers of winter driving. According to a car insurance comparison website, confused.com, homes in Somerville Road, Worcester, generate the highest number of accident claims in the whole of the UK. The stunt took eight men more than 12 hours to complete.

insurance company PR stunt

Cops Stage Fake Art Exhibition. London’s Metropolitan Police Service’s Art and Antiques Unit raise awareness of some of the investigative methods involved in detecting and preventing the increasingly sophisticated crime of art forgery by staging an exhibition of fake art at the V&A.

art PR stunt

Earth Hour. Earth Hour started off in 2007 with 2.2 million people turning off all their non essential lights in Sydney, Australia. A year later and this event had captured a global audience with up to 50 million people across 35 countries participating. Famous landmarks such as the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco and Rome’s Coliseum all plunged into darkness as the world joined together to raise awareness of climate change issues.

earth-hour1

Edward Bernays. Born 1891, Bernays was nephew to Sigmund Freud and pioneered the use of social science in delivering public persuasion. In the 1920s, working for the American Tobacco Company, he sent a group of young models to march in the New York City parade. He informed the media that a group of women’s rights marchers would light “Torches of Freedom”. On his signal, the models lit Lucky Strike cigarettes in front of the eager photographers. The New York Times (1 April 1929) printed: “Group of Girls Puff at Cigarettes as a Gesture of ‘Freedom’”.

edward bernays

Frozen Grand Central. On a cold Saturday in New York City, the world’s largest train station came to a halt. In January 2008 a flash mob group from Improv Everywhere froze in place at the exact same second for five minutes in the Main Concourse of Grand Central Station. The stunt has inspired many spin-off’s including the T Mobile dance-mob PR stunt/advert shot in Liverpool Street Station London in 2009.

Frozen Grand Central

Richard Branson. Sir Richard Branson has always understood the power of a good picture, whether donning a wedding dress for the launch of Virgin Brides, a spacesuit for Virgin Galactic, or sticking a TV on his head for Virgin 1. The Virgin brand is one of the most recognisable in the world, helped in no small part by its CEO’s willingness to have fun with his own image in a way unimaginable for most brands and companies.

The Travelodge Nativity. In December 2007, Travelodge announced that all married couples named Mary and Joseph would be offered a free room at one of their hotels. The hotel chain said that husbands and wives who showed an official marriage license would get a night’s stay on the house between Christmas Eve and January 5th 2008, but with more home comforts than the humble stable of the Nativity story.

Naked Gail Porter on The Houses Of Parliament. A 100ft naked image of Gail Porter was projected on to the Houses of Parliament in 1999 as part of a publicity stunt by FHM magazine.

When Pepsi Turned Blue. In April 1996, Pepsi paid The Mirror to print on blue paper. They also arranged for Concorde to be sprayed blue and got the cosmonauts on the Mir space station to pose with a giant Pepsi can. The stunt was a success overall but Pepsi had to take some PR pain too. The Sun newspaper poured scorn on the initiative (for obvious reasons). Other papers suggested that the 300 litres of blue paint applied to the Concorde would prevent it from going supersonic. Pepsi denied this. Meanwhile Nasa’s Endeavour space shuttle blasted off – stocked with Coca-Cola.

PETA. The animal rights campaign group are renowned for their highly visible, frequently controversial campaigns. From young women dressed in lettuce bikinis to the annual “Running of the Nudes” PR stunt which sees PETA activists run naked through Pamplona, Spain in a parody of the bull run tradition. The organisation has managed to win the celebrity vote – as such Christy Turlington, Eva Mendes and Naomi Campbell have posed naked on billboards supporting the slogan “I’d Rather Go Naked than Wear Fur.”

christy_turlington_id_rather_go_naked_than_wear_fur1
Asda’s Free Eye Tests For The Swiss. Piggybacking the media frenzy of Euro 2004, British supermarket chain Asda offered free eye tests to Swiss citizens. The stunt responded to a controversial decision of Swiss referee Urs Meier who disallowed a late goal. His ruling terminated England’s future in the tournament.

Barbie Street. In November 1997 toy giant Mattel announced a ‘pink month’ to boost sales of their best-selling doll Barbie. The centre piece of the campaign involved re-decorating an entire street in bubblegum-pink. Mattel estimated that media coverage reached over 100 million people. (pic credit: Aidan O’Rourke)

barbie-pink-street

Michael Jackson Statue On The Thames. In June 1995 Sony launched $30 million dollar promotional campaign for the album HIStory by floating a huge statue of Michael Jackson down the River Thames. There were a total of nine statues throughout Europe. Each statue was 10 meters tall, 2,100 kilograms in weight and made from steel and fibreglass.

Message In A Bottle. In 1959 The Guinness Brewing Company was wondering how to build a global identity. Its solution was to drop 150,000 bottles of Guinness Export into the Atlantic and Caribbean. Each bottle contained a message from King Neptune and instructions for how to convert the bottle into a lamp. The brewery intended that beachcombers would discover them and spread the word.

guinness-export

Homer Meets The Giant Of Cerne Abbas. To mark the release of The Simpsons Movie in July 2007, Fox Theatrical created a 70m x 50m chalk Homer in his underpants on a hillside to mirror the famous, 250 yr old chalk giant and brandishing his very own magical symbol, a doughnut.

Fathers For Justice. Despite factional issues within their own organisation, the campaign group Father’s For Justice became famous for their headline grabbing tactics. Their supporters resorted to dramatic protest stunts, usually dressed as comic book superheroes. They frequently scaled public buildings, bridges and monuments – perhaps most famously Buckingham Palace.

Fathers For Justice

Brown Is The New White. Snooker ace Jimmy White temporarily changed his name by deed poll to Jimmy Brown in a sponsorship deal with HP brown sauce. White known as ‘the Whirlwind’ for his fast potting, also swapped his black tuxedo for a brown outfit during the Masters tournament.

FBI’s Most Wanted. In 1949, a reporter from United Press International asked former FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover to list his most-wanted criminals. After the story generated acres of positive publicity, the bureau formalised the Most Wanted list as a means to bringing media attention to fugitives. As of November 2008, 491 fugitives have been listed and 460 captured or located, 31%) of them due to public assistance.

FBI Most Wanted

David Blaine In A Box. Public interest in David Blaine peaked In September 2003 when he staged his most ambitious stunt to date. The American illusionist spent 44 days suspended in a glass box by the River Thames in London without food.

P.T Barnum: Born in 1810 Phineas Barnum was a circus promoter, museum curator, publicist, hoaxster and consummate showman. He staged bizarre events and generated sensational word of mouth for his attractions. From Jumbo the Elephant to the Feejee Mermaid, Barnum’s publicity stunts tickled the hearts, minds and imaginations of millions.

jumbo-pt-barnum

Cannes Bee Movie launch. At the Cannes Film Festival in 2007, Jerry Seinfeld climbed to the top of the iconic eight storey Carlton Hotel, dressed in a giant bee costume. Thirty minutes later, arms and legs flailing, he zoomed down a 126 meter wire which took him across a four lane road, to the beach pier below where the press pack of international media were assembled. For more Cannes stunts click here.

bee-movie-cannes-publicity-stunt

The BBC’s Flying Penguins. In April 2008 the BBC released remarkable footage of flying penguins that would be featured in a new natural history series. The following day the corporation issued a press release confessing to the April Fools Day stunt which was to promote their new online catch-up service iPlayer.

Madonna kisses Britney. At MTV’s Video Music Awards in 2003 Madonna and Britney play tonsil hockey, their combined star power ensured the picture dominated front covers around the world for days to come.

KFC Face from Space. To celebrate a revamp of their logo – fast food giant KFC created an 87,500 square feet picture of founder, Colonel Sanders.The massive creation is made up of 65,000 one-foot square painted tiles that were laid out in the Nevada desert in a task that took 24 days.

KFC from space

Ultimo Bras. Founder Michelle Mone created huge tabloid coverage when she sacked Penny Lancaster (Rod Stewart’s current partner) and replaced her with Rachel Hunter (Rod Stewart’s ex-partner), as the face and body of the brand.

Mission Not Impossible. In May 2006 movie publicists, promoting Mission Impossible III, teamed up with the famous Vegas venue Caesars Palace (who were celebrating their 40th anniversary) to create a new world record that would be broadcast on national television. Stuntrider Mike Metzger become the first rider to successfully perform a backflip over the famous fountains.

film publicity stunts

Prince Changes His Name. Following a row with his record company Prince announced to the world (on June 7th, 1993) that he would be changing his name to an unpronounceable symbol.

Bye Bye Blue Smarties. Blue Smarties were voluntarily removed from tubes in 2006 as maker Nestle announced a drive to remove artificial ingredients in children’s food. After a two year absence the blue sweets were brought back with a media fanfare as a natural colouring agent in seaweed was discovered.

David Beckham’s Hair. The world’s No.1 celebrity footballer David Beckham has always played to the gallery. When not stepping out in sari or allowing the reality TV cameras into his home he keeps himself busy by unveiling new haircuts. Timing has always been his forte – the reveals are usually made just before key games and tournaments to ensure that the media lens is firmly pointed in his direction.

david-beckham

The Goodyear Blimp. Tyre and rubber company Goodyear built its first PR airship, the Pilgrim in 1925. The firm painted its name on the side of the balloon and began to tour sporting and entertainment events across the USA. In later years the company offered up their blimps to TV networks, free of charge, for use as a camera platform – which they did in exchange for brand mentions.

goodyear-publicity

Elvis Presley joins the army. On 24 March, 1958 Elvis Presley became soldier No.53310761 and a national hero when he enrolled in the U.S Army . The move came after Presley had spent ten years in the creative wilderness following a fateful movie deal. To quote Alan Levy’s Operation Elvis ‘By pretending he was just like anybody else, the Army had demonstrated to the world The Importance of Being Elvis.’ (with thanks to Ben Thompson)

elvis-presley-army

Red Bull In St Marks. Venice’s St Marks Square had been making headlines all week for record flooding so Red Bull dispatched their stunt man to wake-board across the world famous piazza assisted by a power winch.

A Lego Inauguration. A week before President Obama’s official inauguration – Legoland in California revealed an impressively detailed model of how the ceremony might look. The display showed Barack Obama and his wife Michelle arriving at the White House by helicopter. There were also more than 1,000 other Lego figures, representing celebrities, officials and other guests. An excellent example of how creative, opportunistic PR can hijack the topical news agenda.

lego-pr

Burger King’s £85 burger. Burger King launch an £85 burger, made from finest Wagyu beef from Japanese Kobe cattle and garnished with foie gras and blue cheese. Rather than beans or salad, customers could get treats like black truffles as a side-order – but the traditional fries and fizzy drink would still be available. The burger was to be sold in a select few stores, with Kensington and Chelsea top of the list.

burger_king_£85-burger

The Beatles Rooftop Gig. The Beatles final live performance was an unannounced rooftop concert. The gig, which took place on top of the Apple Records office in London (in January 1969), attracted a lot of attention from passers-by and was eventually closed down by the police. Similar stunts are regularly employed as means to drawing a crowd and creating that all important photo opp – most recently, in Feb 2009, by U2 on the roof of BBC Radio’s HQ in London.

A Publicity Masterpiece. Actress Kim Cattrall posed semi-naked as part of a campaign to save a famous painting. The Italian masterpiece, Titians’s ‘Diana and Actaeon’, was under threat of being removed from public display. The Sex And The City star went topless for a modern photo version of the painting to help artist Tom Hunter raise 50 million pounds to save the artwork from hitting the open market.

Borat At The White House. In September 2006, Secret Service officers denied Borat access to The White House. Sacha Baron Cohen’s creation had hoped to persuade ‘Premier George Walter Bush” to attend a screening of his film. The antics prompted the Kazakh government to disown the movie which went on to take more than $248 million worldwide.

Extreme Scrabble. Scrabble mobilised their fans to celebrate the brand’s 60th anniversary. PR’s at the board game compiled (and presumably staged) various snaps of extreme scrabble play including shots of sky divers who jumped from a plane 13,000ft over Florida to play the word game.

Google’s Streetview Captures The Stig. Google brought together two great unsolved mysteries in January 2010 as Top Gear’s mystery racing driver The Stig was ‘caught on camera’ by Street View – on the banks of Loch Ness. The cult character from hit BBC motoring series was spotted on the mapping website on the shores of the Scottish lake made famous by sightings of a prehistoric monster.

online PR stunt

Panda’s In Paris. 1600 papier mâché pandas were put on display in the centre of Paris to increase public awareness about the endangered species. The pandas, installed by members of the WWF, represent each of the remaining 1,600 pandas left in the wild.

A Tummy Tuck For Little Chef. In August 2004 roadside restaurant chain Little Chef put its famous logo on a diet. The company commissioned a slimmed down version of the chef character without his tummy in response to the growing awareness of healthy eating. Tim Scoble, chief executive of Little Chef, told The Times: “We get accusations that he’s overweight, so he’s going to lose his paunch.”

little-chef-pr3

America’s First .Com City. Half.com, a retail website known for promoting heavily discounted items, paid Halfway, Oregon, to adopt the name Half.com for their town for 12 months - becoming America’s first “.com” city. In exchange, Halfway received $100,000, new computers for the local school and other financial subsidies. There was a blitz of publicity and five months later eBay bought the company for $300 million.

internet-publicity-stunt
The Human Billboard. In November 2008 an engineering student spent the day glued to a billboard in East London for a book pr stunt. Press reports claimed that the living advert ’caused passers-by to double take.‘Daring’ Dave Lions agreed to promote ‘This Diary Will Change Your Life’ to help pay his way through university. (picture credit: London Media)

human-billboard

Formula1 in London. Formula1 cars parade through central London in July 2004 ahead of the British Grand Prix at Silverstone. Jenson Button, David Coulthard, Nigel Mansell and other F1 stars give fans and families a chance to see the awesome cars up close as they roar through Piccadilly Circus and Regent Street. Ear plugs were recommended. Photos and video ran round the world.

Robbie Williams vs Oasis. On 22nd February 2000, having been dismissed as a “fat dancer” by Oasis star Noel Gallagher, Williams responded by sending Gallagher a £100 funeral wreath to The Sun newspaper, with a note that read: “R.I.P. Heard your latest album – with deepest sympathy, Robbie Williams.” The Sun then passed the flowers on to Gallagher.

robbie-versus-oasis

The Lamborghini Police Car: Taking product placement up a gear – Lamborghini handed Rome’s police department the keys to a brand new 560-horsepower, fully customised Gallardo. The car hits 60 mph in 3.5 seconds, making it just the thing for chasing down criminals or making a run for espresso.30 officers were personally trained by Lamborghini’s test drivers.

lambo_policecar1

Chemists Solve Italian Job Riddle. An IT specialist solved the notorious cliffhanger quandary of The Italian Job movie and won a competition organised by the Royal Society of Chemistry. The society attracted over 2000 entries and received lots of media attention. The winner John Godwin of Godalming in Surrey won a holiday in Turin, the city where the 1969 film was made.

italian_job_publicity_stunt

Threshers Voucher Error? In 2006, shortly before Christmas, alcohol retailer Threshers leaked a voucher worth 40% off booze via the internet. Word on the street was that the promotion was only intended for retail partners. The myth that Threshers had mistakenly released the voucher made it spread faster and faster round the country via email, social networks and blogs. Threshers told the media that they were worried about losing money on the promotion but no doubt ended up making a huge profit and getting publicity in a month than they got for the previous year.

drinks brand pr

Courting Publicity. No.1 seeds Ana Ivanovic and Elena Dementieva launched the Sony Ericsson Tennis Championships by playing a match on a specially built court on a desert island in the bay of Doha.The only people on the island other than the two tennis pros were the ballboys.

tennis-pr-stunt
Musuem Appoints Director Of Fun. The National Railway Museum in the UK hired a 6-year-old as its “director of fun.” Six-year-old Sam Pointon wrote to the National Rail Musuem and applied to replace retiring director Andrew Scott. In his application Sam wrote: “I have an electric train track. I am good on my train track. I can control two trains at once.” Bosses were so taken with his enthusiasm they offered him the role. Great move. Deserved more coverage.

national-railway-museum-pr-stunt

World’s Greatest Dice Roll. With the help of a helicopter designed for extreme conditions, gambling website Gnuf.com air-lifted two huge dice, weighing half a ton, over a steep snow-packed slope in the mountains outside Nuuk, Greenland. By visiting gnuf.com, users could view the film of the dice on their journey down the mountain and bet on the result which would be revealed a week later.

Two Strangers And A Wedding. In 1999 two contestants, who had never met before, were chosen by a radio station’s listeners to marry on live air. The marriage lasted just three months. But the bride eventually married the competition host, BRMB radio DJ Jeremy Kyle. The stunt was originally made famous in New Zealand.

Beaujolais Noveau Spa Launch. Marketeers at the Hakone Yunessun spa resort in Tokyo arranged a unique treat for their guests to celebrate the arrival of 2008′s Beaujolais Nouveau. Bathers splashed about in a wine filled pool. For the teetotallers there was also a pool of green tea.

wine-pr-stunt

Cosmo’s Beach Babes. In March 2007 the Australian version of Cosmopolitan magazine created a human advert by gathering over 1,000 bikini-clad babes on Australia’s Bondi Beach (the girls were lined up to spell out c-o-s-m-o).

Bondi Beach Cosmopolitan Stunt

$5Million Dollar Bra. Heidi Klum and a bevvy of supermodels took to the stage in Miami in November 2008 for the Victoria’s Secret show where the company unveiled a $5 million ‘Black Diamond Fantasy Miracle Bra’ paraded by Adriana Lima. (Photo Credit: Splash News)

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Eau De Burger. In 2008 Fast-food chain Burger King launched a meat-scented fragrance.The cologne for men sold at a New York retailer and online was being touted as “the scent of seduction, with a hint of flame-broiled meat”. Beef-loving consumers could buy a bottle of the scent for just $3.99.

burgerkingcologne

A Night At The Museum. In 2010 capitalising on the impact of the Hollywood movie franchise, London’s Natural History Museum created a unique dinosaur sleepover event for kids. The initiative ‘Dino Snores’ was such a success the museum now plans to allow 400 kids to sleep there every month.

museum PR

and finally…a hat tip to some of our own…

Pink My Ride. To mark the launch of the Fiat 500 Pink - we worked with marketing agency Krow to win the car manafacturer a place in the record books by painting an entire vehicle in pink nail polish. The artist used 131 bottles of pink nail polish to turn a brand new Fiat 500 into a glossy pink ride. He lived and slept in a special studio where he completed the mammoth task which was broadcast over the internet by webcam.

car PR stunt

Polar Bear On The Thames. We floated a 1.5 tonne, 20ft high statue down the river Thames to mark the launch of natural history channel Eden. The campaign reached 260 Million people.

polar-bear-on-the-thames

Live Sky Dive For Honda. We worked with Channel Four to stage Britain’s first live television commercial - an ambitious sky-diving stunt which would be the curtain raiser for a new Honda advertising campaign. Sky divers took to the sky over Madrid to undertake a series of highly challenging formations to spell the name H.O.N.D.A to viewers during a 3 minute commercial.

Edible Ascot Hat. To celebrate the 10th anniversary of the reinvented Flake 99 ice cream brand – we created an edible fashion accessory which was then paraded at the world famous hat parade that is Ascot’s Ladies Day. We secured next day coverage in every main UK paper – from The Sun to the Daily Telegraph.

flake-hat-ascot1

Giant Suduko. Our team created a giant Sudoku board for Sky 1 to launch their new game show. Visible from up to 3 miles away, the full 275 x 275ft puzzle grid was positioned alongside the M4 Motorway – one of Britain’s busiest roads.

The Simpsons Movie. In 2007 we were hired by 20th Century Fox to promote The Simpsons Movie. In a homage to the famous Pink Floyd album cover we created a super-size Spider Pig (the size of a double decker bus) and flew it over Battersea Power Station.

Del Monte’s Super Smoothie: In July 2009 we marked the launch of the Del Monte Superfruit Smoothie range by creating a ‘for one-day only’, limited edition Daniel Craig lolly. The 007 creation was in a response to a national survey that we undertook to find the UK’s smoothest celebrity. Sales increased by 25% in the first week.

daniel-craig-ice-lolly

Sister Act’s Abseiling Nuns: In May 2009 we stopped city centre traffic by sending six nuns abseiling down the front of the iconic London Palladium theatre to mark the start of new West End hit musical Sister Act.

sister-act-

Zooming In On The Lumix. We worked closely with digital agency AKQA to launch Panasonic’s ZX1 Lumix camera – a super-compact with an 8x optical zoom. The key PR creative focused on bringing the camera’s lifestyle and zoom features to the fore via a series of giant model installations that would appear across the UK.

camera PR stunt

 

 

 

 

 

 

Share a book this Spring

On January 6th, 2009 James wrote on the subject of Book PR,Television PR.

bookaboo-animation1Bookaboo is ITV’s new, animated live-action children’s series which highlights the pleasure of sharing picture books.

Set to air at the beginning of March the series features a famous drum playing ‘rock puppy’ called Bookaboo who cannot perform until he has shared a book with someone – “A story a day or he just can’t play!”

Produced by Happy Films - Lucy Goodman, MD, chose the thirteen books to feature in the series, which will be read by a host of celebrities who will meet Bookaboo backstage.

Contact: Louisa.Bradshaw@taylorherring.com

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