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Fantastic Beats by Dr. Dre commercial for World Cup: The Game Before The Game

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    Fantastic Beats by Dr. Dre commercial for World Cup: The Game Before The Game

    One of the best ads I have ever seen. Enjoy.

    Good lord, Beats by Dre is getting great at sports commercials. We wrote at length last month about how the music company and ad agency R/GA have teamed up to make some of the year's best sports ads—with Kevin Garnett, Colin Kaepernick, Richard Sherman and Cesc Fabregas. But nothing could prepare us for this five-minute World Cup extravaganza. It's about pregame rituals, yes, but Beats is proving to be surprisingly adept at all aspects of the sports ad game—which at times like these is supposed to be the purview of Nike and Adidas. The top star in "The Game Before the Game," fittingly for this World Cup, is Brazil's Neymar Jr. His pregame ritual involves talking to his father, whose pep talks are so inspiring, you'd think an agency copywriter wrote them (well, yeah). Among the other stars featured here: Spain's Fabregas, who kisses the ring his girlfriend gave him exactly four times; Uruguay's Luis Suarez, who kisses the tattoo on his wrist of his son and daughter's names; and Mexico's Javier "Chicharito" Hernandez, who prays on his knees as his father taught him. (Elsewhere you'll see Bacaray Sagna, Bastian Schweinsteiger, Blaise Matudi, Daniel Sturridge, Jozy Altidore, Mario Gotze and Robin Van Persie.) There are also many, many cameos by nonsoccer players—everyone from LeBron James to Lil Wayne to Nicki Minaj to Serena Williams—which lends a very Nike-ish vibe. The latter's grand World Cup spot this year sneaks in Kobe Bryant, Jon Jones, Anderson Silva, Irina Shayk and even the Incredible Hulk. Being a music company, Beats can also get away with making its ad basically a giant music video. The stars just slip their headphones on, and away we go. (Indeed, the director here, Nabil Elderkin, is known for his music videos.) Jimmy Iovine is known to handpick the tracks for the Beats ads, and here we get the thematically apt and swagger-filled "Jungle" by Jamie N Commons & The X Ambassadors. The concept precludes in-game footage, but you don't really miss it. It could do with a dose of humor, maybe. But throw in some risqué moments (girl on top at 3:02!) and some globe-trotting glimpses of obsessive fan antics (love the British woman's 1966 tattoo), and you have an impressive smorgasbord of hype, hysteria and hero worship. Back in 2010, Nike claimed to be writing the future. But who knew the future would include such a determined usurper as Beats? Credits below, along with some great movie-style posters from the campaign.



    #2
    What a stupid commercial.

    Comment


      #3
      Its not stupid at all. Its about the superstition that these players have which leads them to do certain rituals before big games. You have bad taste.

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        #4
        beats is a godawful brand

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          #5
          yeah beats is such a terrible brand that apple just had to pay $3 billion for it.

          Comment


            #6
            selling well and being actually good don't always have a linear relation

            Comment


              #7
              AW: Fantastic Beats by Dr. Dre commercial for World Cup: The Game Before The Game

              Better than the Nike one for sure.

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                #8
                Fantastic Beats by Dr. Dre commercial for World Cup: The Game Before The Game

                Great ad and great brand
                Team faghat PERSPOLIS

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                  #9
                  Selling well correlates to having a good product more often than not. But this isn't about the headphones, its about the commercial not the product. Don't hijack this thread.

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                    #10
                    Originally posted by Martin-Reza View Post
                    Better than the Nike one for sure.
                    I loved the nike one. What was wrong with it?

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                      #11
                      This is the new Nike animated commercial. The selfie part with Neymar made me laugh very hard. I like this commercial as well.

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                        #12
                        does Neymar really deserve all this hype? what has he done to be considered one of the top players in the world ?? i guess brazilian national team needed a poster child and he's the closest they got compared to their past.

                        it was comical to see him given # 6 or 7 player in ESPN's top 50 world cup players list. LOL...

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                          #13
                          Beats headphones banned from World Cup matches

                          Neymar likes them Brazil-green. Banned from the pitch by FIFA for licensing reasons, the bulky Beats headphones are a favorite for many of the world's top players, making the World Cup a huge unofficial ad for the company acquired by Apple Inc last month. The colourful high-end headphones created by rapper Dr Dre have become a ubiquitous soccer accessory. Neymar wore them as he stepped off the bus at the Castelao stadium of Fortaleza for Brazil's last training season on the eve of their match with Mexico on Tuesday.


                          SAO PAULO, June 17 (Reuters) - Neymar likes them Brazil-green. England's Wayne Rooney, white. Luis Suarez, blue.

                          Banned from the pitch by FIFA for licensing reasons, the bulky Beats headphones are a favorite for many of the world's top players, making the World Cup a huge unofficial ad for the company acquired by Apple Inc last month.

                          The colourful high-end headphones created by rapper Dr Dre have become a ubiquitous soccer accessory.

                          Neymar wore them as he stepped off the bus at the Castelao stadium of Fortaleza for Brazil's last training season on the eve of their match with Mexico on Tuesday.

                          Suarez had them wrapped around his neck as he joked with his Uruguay team mates during a break at a recent practice.

                          But soccer world governing body FIFA's licensing agreement with rival electronics maker Sony Corp means players have to take them off when they are in World Cup stadiums for official matches and media events.

                          Marketing experts say that probably only amplifies their appeal.

                          "When fans see World Cup athletes wearing Beats in their downtime, by choice, it has as much impact as seeing them lace their Adidas (boots) or sip a sponsored beverage," said strategist Ellen Petry Leanse, a former Apple and Google executive

                          "Maybe more, actually - Beats isn't a sponsor, so the message is more authentic and credible."

                          Acquired by Apple for $3 bln, Beats Electronics is known for "guerrilla marketing" tactics to bypass licensing barriers.

                          During the 2012 Olympics in London, for instance, the company sent thousands of free headphones to high profile athletes including the U.S. basketball team and the entire British delegation, outsmarting official sponsor Panasonic.

                          Officials at Beats were not available for comment on their strategy at the Olympics and this World Cup.

                          A five-minute film featuring Neymar, Suarez, Germany's Mario Goetze, Netherlands' Robin van Persie, Mexico's Javier "Chicharito" Hernandez and other players wearing Beats headphones released days before the World Cup has been seen by 10.6 million people on YouTube.

                          Its name? "The Game Before the Game".

                          Sony this month issued all players participating in the World Cup with a free set of its own headphones they can take to the games.

                          But so far few players have been spotted with them wrapped around their necks.

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