
5 Minute With… Paul Banham
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The Immortal Awards juror and MullenLowe MENA executive creative director on ‘the greatest stunt of the 20th century’ by BBH.
What’s my favourite ad ever? A question that has been bouncing around my grey matter for a week or so now. But honestly, it’s practically impossible to choose just one. There are so many that I love, so many that made me think: “f**k me – I wished I’d thought of that”. I vividly remember the day, time, location and office (JWT London) when Old Spice first went viral and how I left work that day feeling both depressed and inspired all at once. Equally, I remember walking the halls of WRCS, TBWA, The Partners, Leagas Delaney and many other great agencies as a junior and being blown away by the ingenuity and brilliance of the creativity that adorned the hallways. I love all the early work for Orange and the cleverness and wit of all the BMW work from WRCS in the ’80s, ’90s and beyond. Then there are my digital and tech favs from FarFar, Poke, Dare, and Goodby. So what to choose!? In the end, I decided to go a little off the beaten track, to avoid the obvious candidates and to select a little piece of work that just made me think differently. As the sheer audacity of the idea/stunt (I love a good stunt, btw) stopped me in my tracks. Plus, while the idea is genius, the story behind it is equally as good.
A few offices down from my Digital ECD digs in JWT London in 2009 was a slightly bigger office at the end of the creative floor, which was home to two of the nicest creative fellas I’ve ever had the pleasure of working with. Now, messrs Todd and Scholes had a large collection of dusty D&AD pencils and Lions atop of a rusty filing cabinet that looked like it had been pinched from the finance dept after a few beers. One of those dusty pencils was won for the piece of work I’m alluding to.
1999 was the height of the lads’ mag era – a very different time to today – when FHM and Loaded were battling it out for enormous circulation figures. Their task was simple: to sell over a million copies of FHM’s ‘100 sexiest women’ voting issue. So, they needed to do something audacious and created a guerrilla-style voting campaign that included projecting Gail Porter onto the House of Commons. The next day it appeared in every national newspaper, and the BBC hailed it as ‘the greatest stunt of the 20th century’.
The funny part of the campaign was that it almost didn’t happen, as on the night a British bobby (policeman) stopped them just as they were setting up and trying to focus the projection from across the River Thames. So, they packed everything up, put it in the back of a crappy old van and did what we Brits do best – went for a pint. Then, when the coast was clear (around two pints later), they returned and created a little piece of advertising history.
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