For ''Indy'' Billboard Campaign, more is more
Posted on Tue, 13 May 2008 00:50:36 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
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By Carl DiOrio
LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Steven Spielberg loves billboards. That's the
simple explanation for those giant double-billboard promos for "Indiana Jones
and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull" throughout Los Angeles, as well as the
huge Indy messages plastered around all four sides of Madison Square Garden in
New York.
Paramount mounted a big outdoor-advertising campaign in 2007 for the
Spielberg-produced "Transformers," and when the studio was strategizing how to
scream "event pic!" in marketing the Spielberg-directed Indy sequel, the
creative hyphenate had just one suggestion: more.
"Steven said, 'I know they always do big billboards in L.A., but let's do them
all over,"' said Steve Siskind, executive vice president advertising and
marketing at Paramount.
That enthusiasm led to the MSG placements adjacent to commuter-nexus Penn
Station as well as major billboard "dominations" -- that's what the industry
calls it when you really "own" a site, Siskind noted -- in Chicago, San
Francisco, Houston, Dallas and elsewhere. Airports were targeted in several hub
markets.
Several Los Angeles sites were selected for their proximity to freeways.
"I guess it's kind of a trains, planes and automobiles strategy," Siskind
chuckled.
To make the Los Angeles locations stand out, Paramount went to CBS Outdoor and
other vendors of billboard sites it uses throughout the year and asked whether
there was a chance of adding adjacent sites to allow one message to run across
two billboards.
Paramount execs said they believed it was the first time anyone has employed
multiple billboards for a single movie message.
The Indy campaign's other splashy L.A. signage includes promos on all four sides
of a building under construction at Sunset and Vine and, at the intersection of
Venice and La Cienega boulevards, a concentration of no fewer than eight
billboards.
"L.A. in many cases is 10 percent of our boxoffice," Siskind said. "(So) it's a
great market for billboards."
Nationwide, the Indy campaign comprises about 2,000 billboards, wall messages,
bus-side promos and other "out of home" messages. Executives wouldn't disclose
the cost of the campaign. Outdoor advertising on tentpole releases generally
costs $2 million to $4 million, and Siskind said that Paramount didn't spend any
more than the norm.
Reuters/Hollywood Reporter
© Copyright 2007 Reuters.
Posted on Tue, 13 May 2008 00:50:36 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
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