RIESTER

Posts Tagged ‘addiction’

Troy Pottgen

Dean Hedwic, addictDEAD.

Tobacco Addiction has succeeded in killing countless numbers who were unable to overcome it. Now, thanks to a technical glitch in the Internet, a few of these “smoking dead,” who live on in a purgatory-like place under Addiction’s control, have found a way to communicate with the living—through Facebook.

Meet the AddictDead and learn their stories—and in the process, discover the truth about tobacco and avoid Addiction once and for all.

The Smoking Dead are speaking, Addiction is watching, and time is running out…

Tom Ortega

Tobacco: Choose or refuse.

When teens are offered tobacco, it’s not always easy to say no. So RIESTER has teamed up with the Arizona Bureau of Tobacco Education & Prevention to give kids the refusal skills they need.

Choose/Refuse is a video questionnaire that takes kids through a variety of scenarios.

They’re watching it on venomocity.com, YouTube and Facebook.

It features real Arizona kids, along with a real mechanical arm.

RIESTER

Addiction, there is hope.

RIESTER has been helping to fight addiction since our earliest days.

This public awareness piece was for Utah’s End Meth Now campaign. Sarah McLachlan thought it was such a powerful and important message that she donated the music.

Addiction’s goal is to kill. Our goal is to beat addiction. We know it can be done.

Mirja Riester

No smoke and mirrors: Venomocity sweeps its award categories.

VENOMOSITYCOM_LOGO_V3

When one campaign sweeps every award category for which it was submitted, you know you’re on to something special — and RIESTER’s Venomocity is something special.

Later tonight, the Arizona Department of Health Services’ Bureau of Tobacco and Chronic Disease, together with RIESTER, will be recognized at the IABC Phoenix Copper Quill Awards for its hard-hitting youth tobacco prevention campaign: Venomocity.

Venomocity captures the complexity of nicotine addiction for a youth audience in an unexpected fashion.  The strategy behind Venomocity is a result of qualitative and quantitative research conducted in Arizona with youth ages 12 to 17 that revealed an irreverent attitude toward commercial tobacco use. In fact, while young Arizonans were well aware of the health implications of tobacco use and its impacts, these consequences were perceived as far-removed from their immediate lives and something that happens “to old people.” This lethargic perspective on the issue demonstrated the need to deliver a unique anti-tobacco message, one that would jolt young people into the realization that the repercussions of tobacco use are immediate.

With this wealth of knowledge in hand, ADHS charged RIESTER with the development of an innovative anti-smoking campaign for youth challenging kids in their environment: online.

It could be seen by some as a real challenge to create a campaign on youth tobacco prevention as renowned nationally as the one we developed more than a decade ago that ran in 40 states across the country, featuring the “Tumor-causing, teeth-staining, smelly, puking habit” commercials you likely saw on TV. But this type of work is in our blood, and we were up to the challenge.

The cornerstone of the digitally- driven campaign is venomocity.com, a “lair” featuring things that teens would find especially interesting, such as a series of RIESTER-developed video games and links to the Venomocity social media handles like Facebook, Twitter, MySpace and flickr.

This winning collaborative effort will be recognized by the IABC in five categories: Community and Government Relations; Marketing Communications (communication management); Audiovisual; Electronic Communications; and Marketing Communications (electronic).

Tonight’s event at the Tempe Center for the Arts is sure to be one of the highlights for Venomocity as the team receives recognition for a truly integrated effort that included participation from many of RIESTER’s and ADHS’s team members. We’re honored to have had the privilege to develop Venomocity from the ground up, and look forward to its evolution in the coming years.

To follow RIESTER on Twitter go to: twitter.com/riesteragency

Become a fan of RIESTER by “liking” us on Facebook at: tinyurl.com/RIESTERonFacebook

Jim Breitinger

Mad Men, smoking and lung cancer.

The year is 1963 and Annabelle Mathis, an old flame of senior partner Roger Sterling, stops by Sterling Cooper, the fictional advertising agency on the television show “Mad Men.” She is in New York shopping for a new ad agency for her family dog food business, as well as possibly reigniting her romance with Roger. The show’s protagonist, Don Draper, is sitting in on the meeting with Roger and Annabelle. Annabelle says that she is now single because her husband died of lung cancer. He was 51. A moment after she delivers this news the camera cuts to Don Draper as he lights up a cigarette.

Lung cancer. Smoking. The juxtaposition is intentional.

This is classic “Mad Men.” The smoke is thick. Characters smoke in every possible setting, and they smoke often. The writers overdo it with the smoking to create a not so subtle visual reminder of the ethos of another time. From the first episode of the series titled “Smoke Gets in Your Eyes,” to the recent scene with Annabelle, a woman whose husband died from his addiction to nicotine, the air on the show is constantly clouded with tobacco smoke.

Because we understand fully today the true effects of smoking, there is little glamour left in taking a long drag and artfully exhaling smoke. RIESTER has been a leader in changing the character of our culture and its relationship with tobacco. One of our signature campaigns characterizes smoking in these words: Tumor causing, teeth staining, smelly, puking habit. There is another important word that describes smoking: killer.

Smokers are addicts. This is not an insult, it’s a physical fact. A massive and repetitious public awareness campaign has changed the way we think of smoking. While these efforts have not ended tobacco addiction, the mind shift that has occurred among millions of people is profound. Today a show like “Mad Men” can use smoking as a backdrop to help capture the feel of a different era. The thick smoke mocks another time. While people still smoke today, very few smoke in public places. The scene described above in “Mad Men” is almost unheard of today. Not many people can get away with smoking at work.

This is a good thing. There is no reason for Annabelle’s husband to be dead from lung cancer, though he was just a fictional character. Every day real people die as a result of their addiction to tobacco. We’ve come a long way since 1963, but the battle continues. Public awareness campaigns are one of the most effective tools available for breaking the grip of addiction.

The final episode of season three of Mad Men airs this Sunday on AMC.

RIESTER Blog
Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS).