Dec 17, 2009

Transport Accident Commission | Everybody Hurts | Australia

Grey Melbourne has developed this graphic spot for the Transport Accident Commission (TAC) of Australia that warns people about the dangers of drinking and driving over the festive period.

Marking TAC's 20th anniversary, the TV commercial is a compilation of TAC’s ads over the last twenty years, showcasing the work of more than thirty creative directors.

The project reminds people that although road accidents have declined by more than 60 per cent following TAC's first ad in 1989, the issue of drink driving should not be taken lightly.

The three-minute commercial has 'road blocked' four television networks (Seven, Nine, Ten and SBS) at 8:30pm. The campaign also includes a mass launch through radio, print, outdoor and PR initiatives.




Credits:
Project Everybody Hurts
Client Transport Accident Commission
Creative agency Grey Melbourne
Creative directors Greg Harper, Nigel Dawson
Account servicing Randal Glennon, Claudia McInerney
Producer Sandi Gracin
Production company MRPPP
Exposure Television, print, outdoor, radio, PR



Related Articles

Just Published

5 hours ago

Will axing fact-checkers on Meta shift media spend ...

Facebook chief Mark Zuckerberg’s decision to move to a community-based moderation system leaves marketers questioning whether they can, or should, trust Meta.

8 hours ago

Ex-OMD USA media chief joins Publicis to lead ...

Suhaila Hobba is appointed as Publicis Groupe’s APAC global client partner – Transformation, where she will drive AI-led strategies to accelerate growth in the region.

14 hours ago

Are marketers spending less on social media?

Studies suggest that marketers are increasingly diversifying their media investment away from social. Campaign explores changing media spend and how marketers can innovate with social media to drive ROI.

14 hours ago

40 Under 40 2024: Ryota Haraguchi, TBWA Hakuhodo

A mega-successful McDonald’s recruitment campaign may have launched Haraguchi to the stratosphere, but his everyday work and leadership philosophy remains firmly planted to the ground.