The Sun celebrates the shared obsession of the World Cup
The UK-wide campaign ‘World Cup For It’ is designed to showcase how The Sun app keeps the fans at peak World Cup fever 24/7.
The charity’s first above the line campaign from Creature London raises awareness of children going hungry in the UK
One in four children in the UK are growing up in poverty. According to research from Edelman, three quarters of parents worry about not having enough money to provide for their family.
This harsh reality was brought to life in a hard-hitting campaign from Creature London, which aims to raise awareness about rising child poverty levels in the UK and the impact poverty has on children, as well as to place additional pressure on the UK’s leaders to implement policies that could change millions of children's lives.
'Imagine' is a multichannel campaign, which runs across TV, Print, OOH, Digital, and Social that brings the shocking realities of child poverty to life.
The campaign was inspired by the insight that children have been turning up to school with empty lunch boxes, a challenge which has been highlighted by The Independent.
The spot brings to life the painful truth that in modern Britain hungry children are pretending to eat from empty lunch boxes. Showing a child going through the pantomime of eating to avoid feelings of social embarrassment and isolation.
The film, directed by Adam Berg, takes viewers on a magical then painful journey in a school lunch hall. However, instead of lunch boxes with simple sandwiches and apples, we see mountains of fruit, endless popcorn, and doughnuts appearing like magic, all set to the iconic song 'Food, Glorious Food.' However, as the protagonist sits down and opens his lunchbox, instead of another incredible food surprise, we see him pretending to eat a banana as the scene changes, and he is now sitting alone.
Ben Middleton, Chief Creative Officer at Creature London, explained: "Hearing stories of children eating erasers because they are so hungry is something that I won’t forget anytime soon, but it has been a privilege to spend time in the imagination of children. It is a potent tool that should be reserved only for the magical, marvellous, and downright bizarre, not the mundane.
Meg Egan, Senior Creative at Creature London, added: “This campaign brings a child's imagination to life in all its wonder and then confronts our audience with the shocking realities 1 in 4 children face. It has to be one of the most brilliant and also most brutal campaigns that I have ever worked on here at Creature, and we are incredibly proud of it."
The out of home and Digital Creative are the first created using Creature London's new production tool, Magic Ant, a tool powered by AI which helped to keep the budgets low
Dan Cullen-Shute, Worldwide CEO at Creature, explains: "This is exactly why we launched Magic Ant and Impala, to give organisations that do vital work the chance to create campaigns that match their ambitions in a way they never would have been able to previously. People went above and beyond to make this happen. At every level, from the team at Creature to the incredible lot at Smuggler, Adam Berg, Major Tom, Total Media, the list goes on, people gave away their time, resources, and called in every favour imaginable to make this campaign a reality. It is an example of the amazing work we can do in this industry, and I couldn't be more excited about its impact."
Alison Garnham, Chief Executive of Child Poverty Action Group, added: "We could never have imagined that we would be launching a campaign like this when we first started speaking to Creature. Their passion and desire to create something that will make a real difference to so many people have been incredible." Alison continues, "This campaign highlights some of the devastating effects of poverty and gives us the opportunity to highlight the solutions. It doesn’t have to be this way: the solutions to child poverty are clear. We want to raise the bar for what is acceptable for children across the UK. At Child Poverty Action Group, we believe it's time to give children living in poverty a voice and hold those in power accountable."
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