Tag Archives: Controversy

TTC: The Better Way to Eat Fresh

21 Jun

From the Torontoist: SUBWAYTM Map Not a Joke After All? by Hamutal Dotan

Back in March, the TTC indicated that it would entertain proposals to sell naming rights to subway stations and subway lines. It was a small clause buried in a long document outlining the requirements for those seeking to bid on the TTC’s advertising contract, and we decided to have a bit of fun with it. On April 1, we published a map of what the TTC might look like with the stations renamed after potential corporate sponsors.

We had a great time putting the map (and corresponding platform mock-ups) together, and you, dear readers, seemed to enjoy discovering what your new transit system might look like.

Regrettably, it might turn out to be less of a joke than we intended. This week the City of Toronto also released a proposal that will be examined by the Executive Committee later this month; it calls for a new policy on naming rights for public spaces in Toronto, and would make it easier for a company to, say, purchase the naming rights for a playground. The Toronto Star asked mayoral brother and advisor Doug Ford (Ward 2, Etobicoke North) about this new approach to naming. Would he, for instance, be comfortable taking a subway to Spadina-McDonalds station?

His reply: “Whatever. If it brings in revenue, I honestly don’t believe anyone cares.”

The Torontoist put together some great mock ups of what stations might be called in the future….

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Christ and Bigfoot ride the bus together

2 Dec

From POSTMEDIA: Christ meets Big Foot: more irreverent atheist ads to hit Canadian cities by Carmen Chai

The atheist group (Centre For Inquiry) behind last year’s controversial bus ads suggesting “there’s probably no God” is rolling out a provocative new set of posters on buses across the country that places Allah beside Big Foot and Christ beside psychics.

The new posters bear the slogan: “Extraordinary Claims Require Extraordinary Evidence” with “Allah, Big Foot, UFOs, Homeopathy, Zeus, Psychics, Christ” listed below.

They will hit Toronto streetcars in January, pending final approval from the Toronto Transit Commission, said Justin Trottier, national executive director of the Centre for Inquiry, an atheist organization. After the Toronto debut, the organization plans to post the ads to buses in Calgary, Vancouver, Ottawa, Saskatoon and Montreal.

Turning Condo Ads Into Shelter

19 Nov

Torontoist: Turning Condo Ads Into Shelter by Steve Kupferman

If you can’t afford a condo on Queen West, have you considered a lovely makeshift tent in the heart of Trinity Bellwoods Park?


One of Martindale’s tents, on a side street near Trinity Bellwoods Park.

It wouldn’t come with a stainless steel refrigerator, and you’d never be able to fit a seventy-two-inch HDTV in there, but you’d be walking distance from the farmer’s market and just steps from shopping and transit. And it wouldn’t even necessarily set you back a single cent, if you were to build it out of the same materials Sean Martindale used to build his.

Martindale, a street artist, has, for more than a year, been removing those large outdoor banner advertisements that condo developers use to draw attention to their new buildings. Rather than throwing them out, he’s been hoarding them. Now, using broom handles as poles, he’s fashioned the ads into one-person pup tents, which he spent yesterday placing in strategic locations downtown, where the public would see them. He’s also accumulated a collection of sandwich board condo ads, the type that sit out on sidewalks all over the city. These, he’s rebranded with a logo and some ad copy of his own making. (“TENT: THE ULTIMATE IN OPEN CONCEPT LIFE-LIKE LIVING.”)

“I thought it was appropriate for condo ads. It’s shelter. And the material lent itself to being turned into a tent as well,” said Martindale of his handiwork, while showing off a tent he’d just finished erecting near Trinity Bellwoods Park. He had a five ‘o clock shadow and his fingers were covered in bandages―both symptoms, he said, of working long hours on this and another installation project.

“And there’s this huge gap between people who can afford condos and the homeless in the city.”


Martindale obscured the original advertising copy on these sandwich boards with tape, and substituted his own.

But as is typical for Martindale’s outdoor work, the main concern is with public space. “The advertising in general is really what I’m trying to draw attention to,” he said. “The aggressiveness and obnoxiousness of it.”

Martindale said he attempted only to take ads that in some way contravened the City’s sign bylaws.

The proliferation of condo ads across the city reflects a trend. The Queen West and Liberty Village areas, in particular, are increasingly dotted with high-rises. With exceptions for projects like the recently opened Artscape Triangle Lofts, where units are rented to artists at below-market rates, the creative community that once defined those neighbourhoods is largely priced out of the new buildings.

Martindale conceded that development isn’t always a bad thing. “Density is important, and condo developments are necessary in an urban environment,” he said. “It’s just that they can be done in better ways.”

“Their marketing really shapes our city.”

In fact, if Martindale’s project has a flaw (other than the moral quandary inherent in taking private property, even if it’s allegedly illegally placed), it’s that the fake brand identity is almost too convincing. For a developer to adopt a tent city theme would only be about 10 or maybe 20% more bizarre than the current standard for condo marketing. It could even even create buzz.

Martindale will be capping his project by opening a “presentation centre” for his tents at the 107 Shaw Gallery, at 107 Shaw Street, starting on November 19. The show will end on November 26.

Photos by Dean Bradley/Torontoist.

Dangerous Dan’s Stoner Ads

19 Nov

From Marketing Magazine: Dangerous Diner campaign caters to hungry stoners by Chris Powell

While “baked” and “fried” are usually methods of food preparation, in a decidedly un-PC ad campaign from Toronto greasy spoon Dangerous Dan’s Diner, they’re actually the target market.

The eatery, whose menu includes items like The Coronary Burger and The Big Kevorkian, has developed a campaign catering primarily to young adults experiencing drug–induced munchies.

Radio ads running exclusively on Ryerson University’s radio station, CKLN, feature unscripted, drug-fueled conversations on everything from Frisbee golf and Grease to how tattooed genitals will look on an old person.

All of the participants speak in the lazy drawl of the stoned, while each ad is filled with the sounds of laughing, frequent coughing and a bong burbling away in the background.

The radio ads are accompanied by a series of print ads showing Dangerous Dan’s menu items in all their greasy, drippy glory accompanied by messages like “You bake. We fry,” and “22% of Ontarians are obese. We can do better.” Some of the ads feature the tag “Dude, we deliver.” (Its success will likely hinge on whether its target audience can remember where they left the phone.)

The campaign was developed by Toronto’s Tattoo Sound + Music.

Rocco’s Mafia ads

2 Oct

From AdFreak: Toronto whacks mayoral hopeful’s mob ads

If there’s one thing people of Italian descent tend to dislike, it’s Mafia-themed marketing. This hasn’t occurred to Toronto mayoral candidate Rocco Rossi, himself an Italian Canadian, whose campaign posters label him a “wise guy” and a “goodfella,” and make some uncomfortable references to his “bocce balls.” Rossi means no disrespect, but this stunt won’t help his already-dismal showing in the polls. The response from Toronto’s Italian Canadian community has been largely negative. Good intentions or not, no one who still thinks mob allusions are fresh material should be running a first-world city in 2010.

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