Tag Archives: Contest

Scott Pilgrim’s Toronto

4 Aug

From Marketing Magazine: Toronto promotes starring role in Scott Pilgrim movie by Jeff Beer

As anticipation for the opening of Scott Pilgrim vs The World reaches a fever pitch with just over a week to go, the Canadian Tourism Commission, Ontario Tourism Marketing Partnership Corporation (OTMPC) and Tourism Toronto have joined forces to use the film to promote the city.

“We’re excited about working with Universal Pictures and Michael Cera on this project,” said Michele McKenzie, president and CEO of the CTC, in a release. “This partnership is another great opportunity to build on the international profile Canada acquired during the [Vancouver Winter] Games.”

The popular comic book-turned-film is set and was shot in Toronto, which has many touting it as the city’s coming out party as prime storytelling real estate after so many years of playing the stunt double for cities like New York and Chicago.

The tourism partners today launched TorontoLovesScottPilgrim.com, in association with Universal Pictures, featuring a video podcast by the film’s star and Toronto local Michael Cera, along with fellow cast members sharing their favourite Toronto travel tips.

If the film’s any indicator, look for places like Honest Ed’s and Lee’s Palace to pop up. The site also includes photos from an interactive social media photo booth, and a contest that offers fans a chance to win a Scott Pilgrim-themed travel package.

Toronto needs a new slogan!

29 Jul

From the torontoist: Toronto Could Use A Better Slogan, And You Should Be the One To Coin It

How do you sum a city up in a phrase? Harder still, how do you sell it in one?

Many, hoping to lure tourists here, have tried. There was that ad with the woman holding her breasts and asking her partner, “Do you think I need a breast reduction?” There was “Toronto: As Gay As It Gets.” Years before those, there was Tony Bennett urging Toronto to “discover the feeling,” which came just after “Toronto…Affectionately Yours” and just before “Couldn’t you use a little Toronto?” Most recently, Toronto has pretended like it was the home of Niagara Falls in The New Yorker, Niagara took the piss out of Toronto in an ad campaign of their own, and a writer for the Huffington Post—here on a junketdubbed Toronto “the New Capital of Cool” (and also said that “Torontonians refer to food as ‘the art that feeds people’”).

Back in 2007, in a Star piece about Toronto tourism slogans past and present, Ryerson marketing prof Ida Berger told Leah Sandals that “a brand can’t speak for itself but the citizens of a city can—and if marketing campaigns don’t represent the city, the city will speak for themselves.”

Torontoist wants to give you that chance. For the rest of the summer, we’re holding an independent competition to find a better slogan for Toronto—one that represents and shows off the city as it really is.

How to Enter, and What Happens Next

Until Tuesday, August 10, submit your Toronto slogan by emailing it, along with your full name, to slogan@torontoist.com. (Before entering, please read the more detailed contest rules. Please also note that just one slogan is allowed per person entering.)

After submissions close, a panel of Toronto experts—we’ll be outing them soon—will narrow the submissions down to ten finalists, with an eye for the best, cleverest, pithiest, and most Toronto-y slogans submitted. After the panel picks its finalists, those slogans will be turned into ten fake tourism posters designed by Torontoist’s Marc Lostracco and featuring original photography by Torontoist’s talented staff photographers. Finally, near the end of August, the public will vote for their favourite—it’s their votes that’ll decide which of the ten slogans comes out on top.

What The Winners Get

One grand prize winner and two runners-up will get big prizes, in addition to big bragging rights.

Grand Prize
The person who creates the slogan that earns the most public votes will also get:
* One 24″ x 36″ copy of their winning poster, printed by Toronto-based Posterjack;
* One one-night stay at the Gladstone Hotel in one of their Classic Designed Artist Rooms;
* One $100 gift certificate to Quinn’s Steakhouse & Irish Bar;
* One Family Pass for the Royal Ontario Museum;
* One pair of tickets to the Art Gallery of Ontario;
* One pair of tickets to the Toronto Underground Cinema screening of their choosing;
* One pair of tickets to the Second City performance of their choosing;
* One Arts&Crafts prize back, including their “anchor” t-shirt; and
* One subscription to each of Broken Pencil, Spacing, and This Magazine.

Runners-Up
The two top runners-up will each get:
* One 24″ x 36″ copy of their poster, printed by Toronto-based Posterjack;
* One Family Pass for the Royal Ontario Museum;
* One pair of tickets to the Art Gallery of Ontario;
* One pair of tickets to the Toronto Underground Cinema screening of their choosing;
* One pair of tickets to the Second City performance of their choosing;
* One Arts&Crafts prize back, including their “anchor” t-shirt; and
* One subscription to each of Broken Pencil, Spacing, and This Magazine.

Submit your slogan, then keep your eyes glued to Torontoist in the weeks ahead, as we reveal our panel, announce our finalists and show off the posters we made for them, and then turn it back over to the public to pick their city’s new rallying cry.

Concept by David Topping and Karen Aagaard/Torontoist. Original lead image by Miles Storey.

The Secret Campaign

28 Jul

From Media in Canada: Cadbury’s secret revealed, Willy Wonka style by Melita Kuburas

Cadbury’s Caramilk chocolate is testing Canadians’ ability to keep a closely guarded secret in a new campaign that will name one consumer the caramel “protector.”

Today, Caramilk revealed that those who find the 10 hidden golden keys will be sent to the Cadbury Chocolate Factory in Toronto, where one person will be able to unlock the vault that holds an envelope containing the Caramilk secret (the famous “how they get the caramel into the bar” secret). That person will receive $125,000 for having the right key, and another $125,000 if they return the envelope unopened after six months.

Cadbury will announce when each key is found through an intriguing use of OOH – the billboard at Yonge-Dundas Square in Toronto, a mural in Montreal, print ads in Metro daily newspapers, online and through a PR push, handled by Toronto’s Strategic Objectives. Cossette handled the media buy and Rocket XL developed the social media components, while The Hive was responsible for program creation, TV creative, print and OOH development (including storefront illumination), as well as website design and online advertising.

A teaser campaign launched on Facebook and Twitter in mid-May, asking Canadians what they thought the Caramilk Secret was really about, hiding the Keys to the Secret promotion “behind a virtual curtain,” explains Mackenzie Davison, director, Every Day Chocolate, Cadbury.

More tantalizing details were released in early June with OOH, print and national TV ads in French and English Canada.

“The Caramilk Key to the Secret program is an evolution of the campaign we’ve been talking about for over 40 years – it now engages consumers at a much deeper level,” Davison tells MiC.

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