The campaign earned One Show Silver pencils.
The WSJ Masthead campaign gave the paper more personality while keeping the integrity and history of paper.
The campaign earned One Show Silver pencils.
The WSJ Masthead campaign gave the paper more personality while keeping the integrity and history of paper.
The spot earned a Cannes Silver Lion.
Tennis has always been seen as more of a reserved, quiet sport where the crowd has to hush for every point. Nike wanted to bring more excitement to the game, so we brought tennis out of the court and into the streets. 'Guerilla Tennis' was shot by Spike Jonze.
Guerilla Tennis redone over 20 years later!
The print ad was featured in Communicational Arts Mag Ad Annual.
The NIKE Air Max2 tennis shoe is very, very comfortable on the hard court.
This campaign won One Show Gold.
Nike’s ‘Playball. Please.’ campaign was launched as the baseball strike began. The work featured a lone fan doing things in an empty baseball stadium to pass the time.
The 1994–95 Major League Baseball strike led to the cancellation of between 931 and 948 games overall, including the entire 1994 postseason and World Series.
The campaign featured in Baseball Weekly.
The campaign featured in the Wall Street Journal.
This Nike basketball spot was directed by Jake Scott and featured the top NBA rookies Kevin Garnett, Eddie Jones and Jason Kidd. The track was recorded by KRS 1.
This Nike US Open Tennis campaign was inspired by the rivalry between the two of the greatest tennis players of all time, Andre Agassi & Pete Sampras. They appeared as a series of NYC subway posters promoting the upcoming tennis event.
David Carson, of RayGun magazine, designed the type for this Pepsi print campaign created at BBDO NY. The campaign used the Pepsi logo with type filling in it's shape on each of the different bottles and cans.
The campaign featured in Print magazine.
The campaign featured in Adweek magazine.