The Citizen (KZN)

This is an ad to die for

BUSINESS OF DEATH GETS A MOVING SPIN

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It can’t be easy sitting down to come up with an acceptable, non-offensive, advertisin­g idea to promote a business whose stock-intrade is, essentiall­y, dead bodies. You can focus on the costs of burial insurance (which is part of what the business offers), but this has been done before. You can show a grieving but cared-for family at a funeral (also done before).

Or you can do something completely different.

And that’s what the et al group (a creative agency) and Luma Animation did for funeral service and insurance mutual company Avbob, which this year celebrated its 100th year of existence.

It’s a left-field, but highly effective, way of portraying – via beautiful vocal and visual metaphors – that Avbob has been around for a century. It is the sort of institutio­n which will always be there with you, come rain or shine, but all the while providing shelter from the vicissitud­es of life.

The way et al and Lumina chose to portray this message was through the lens of the baobab tree, one of the biggest and longest-living trees in Africa. We see it start out as a seed, growing into a sapling, then a sturdy tree and finally into a solid, massive anchor in the soil. All the while, it shelters creatures – from a beautiful sunbird to a tortoise and a squirrel. All find shelter under, on, or in the accommodat­ing old tree.

The amazing computer generated images are accompanie­d by moving words, read out in the form of a poem – something the producers tell me owes its inspiratio­n to Avbob’s Poetry Project.

It is an elegant concept, brilliantl­y executed.

It’s also sweet and peaceful and, at times like these, that helps it stand out in the hurried and often angry clutter of our daily lives and the lives we live vicariousl­y on TV.

So Orchids to Avbob (and happy birthday, by the way), as well as et al and Luma Animation.

I wonder which one of Supra Mahumapelo’s friends or relatives must have got the hugely inflated tender to do promotiona­l work for the North West government.

More correctly, whoever was paid to help put together the “Mebala Ya Rona” platform, should “pay back the money!” (Copyright EFF).

It is billed as “a new and exciting” platform developed by the Bokone Bophirima (North West’s new name, by the way) department of Rural Environmen­t and Agricultur­al Developmen­t.

The website is badly put together, especially when it comes to logic and sloppy use of language.

But what really made me sit up and take notice was the way they tried to promote the province’s “Heritage Walk” this week.

I saw an ad in Sowetan newspaper on Monday, the day entries closed (great logic that) … but what made me rue the waste of my money (I am a taxpayer, after all), was that when I went to the site to find out more informatio­n, there was none. Nothing about transport to or from the start or finish of the 113km route, what the food would be. Nada. But the salt in the wound was when I tried to download the registrati­on form. The link had been entered incorrectl­y, so I got an “address could not be found” response from Google.

Pathetic. Surely Website Building 101 and PR 101 requires someone to actually check any and all links on the site or that you might use in your advertisin­g.

So, for the North West government and whoever you hired to do this awful job: A Mega Onion.

And, if you were wondering why there were only a handful of civil servants on your walk, now you know …

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