
Canadian Paralympic Committee ready to race
The organization is launching its first-ever advertising campaign in support of its athletes, using donated media space for an inspirational campaign.

Canucks earn four Festival of Media nods
Canadian media agencies OMD and PHD receive recognition for their work in four categories.

The CBC gets Heavy
The broadcaster delivers short-form content past and present onto three new streams hosted by male-targeted lifestyle site Heavy.com.

BCP bags Metro food brands biz
The Montreal-based agency will handle national media responsibilities for the company’s food brands, while Publicis has been named creative AOR.

Olympic push pays off for Hiccups, Dan
The latest shows from the Corner Gas gang are off to strong starts, bolstered by aggressive Olympics pre-promotion.

PepsiCo teams up amid hockey fervour
Riding high on Canada’s gold medal wins, the media campaign behind its annual ‘Team up and bring home the cup’ contest boasts a new customer engagement strategy.

NABS taps Doug & Serge for Media Ad Auction
The charity announced this week that the Toronto-based shop will handle the creative campaign to will help promote the auction’s new 12-month format.

Switzer pushes action, romance channels
The former top man at CHUM is attached to applications for the proposed channels Velocity, Adventure, Kiss and The Love Channel.

Evian’s ‘Rollerbabies’ hit Toronto’s Commerce Court
The most watched online spot of all time dances onto large-screen digital boards in TO.

CUME Day 17: Crosby’s goal gold for ratings
The final day of CUME stats are in and, unsurprisingly, the gold-medal men’s hockey game brought it home for the Consortium, bringing in all-time-high audiences.

BrandScience: OOH amplifies TV, but not radio
At an OMAC event last week, a presentation by the UK-based consultancy says its econometrics study indicates OOH’s most efficient RROI is in retail, CPG and financial services. And while TV appears to be amplified by OOH in terms of media spend RROI, the same doesn’t appear to be for radio.

Caribbean Farms traffics black gold
The Canadian coffee co has started selling its organic Black Sunshine Haitian coffee to consumers – but they have to navigate the shady underworld of the drug trade (online) in order to get it.

Caribbean Farms traffics coffee online
HED: Caribbean Farms traffics coffee online
DEK: The Canadian coffee co has started selling its organic Black Sunshine Haitian coffee to consumers – but they have to navigate the shady underworld of the drug trade (online) in order to get it.
by Nick Krewen
Welcome to the deep dark underbelly of…the coffee business?
In an intriguing twist, Halifax and Toronto’s Extreme Group has teamed up with Toronto digital production studio Lollipop to present a dynamic new way of buying coffee.
In order to access Caribbean Farms online-exclusive Pure Black Sunshine blend, coffee lovers have to enter the website at pureblacksunshine.com, virtually charter a flight to a mysterious island, make it past an imposing steel door and deal with a humourless gun-toting dealer who will shoot you on the spot if you rub them the wrong way.
Make the right choices, however, and once you place your order, a package of coffee resembling a brick of narcotic, with a symbol marking light (lizard), medium (scorpion) or heavy (spider) will be mailed to you in a brown envelope wrapped with clear tape.
The website, which took three months to build, includes approximately 10 minutes of content filmed from a first-person point-of-view, using a Steadicam, intuitive point and click decision making navigation and photography by Frank Hoedl.
Extreme Group creative director Shawn King tells us that Caribbean Farms, originally a wholesaler before making this first foray into retail, gave his agency permission to run with something a little dark and subversive.
‘It comes from a bean that is in demand but a little hard to get, and because of that, we kind of landed on this idea of treating it like a narcotic,’ says King. ‘So we started with the packaging, and it led to this site. This product is being treated like an online only purchase. You can only get this through a website.
‘And when the idea of the narcotic aspect came to light, we were exploring various ways to make that as an authentic experience as possible,’ King tells MiC.
King says the campaign isn’t targeted at a specific demographic.
‘ We’re aiming at the online generation of coffee drinkers – probably a younger demographic,’ he concedes. ‘ We’re aiming towards the type of consumer who is web savvy, who understands and is not thrown off anything shocking that you might see online. ‘
King says the campaign is exclusively viral at the moment .
‘We wanted to create some buzz,’ says King, who adds that there will be further work on the site, plus a launch of another more retail-friendly Caribbean Farms product in the months to come.

In the rings: CUME Days 14, 15, 16
The numbers aren’t in for last night’s big game yet, but Thursday, Friday and Saturday saw high ratings continue as the Games drew to a close.

Survivor and Dragons’ Den come closest to Olympic ratings domination
Olympic prime time dominated every day of the week, but Survivor: Heroes vs. Villains came closest to the silver.