The Glue Society’s Jonathan Kneebone on 2025 – The Year When The World Nearly Lost Its Marbles

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The Glue Society’s Jonathan Kneebone on 2025 – The Year When The World Nearly Lost Its Marbles

Written by The Glue Society’s Jonathan Kneebone.

 

The year will be remembered for the early evening of Sunday the 14 December in Bondi.

A place where the world ordinarily comes together became a place where hatred and division tore that apart.

It isn’t my place – nor is this the right place – for trying to encapsulate the terrors of what happened.

But one thing: It is a sign of weakness to use a weapon to change someone’s life.

It is harder to use understanding, creativity, kindness and respect to make a positive difference.

But perhaps that is something we as a communication business can and must try to do.

We have to remind ourselves that a lot of people worked hard this year to make a positive change in the world.

And while sometimes these things feel trivial and meaningless at times like this, it is still something that can inspire us.

So let’s get straight into the best ad of the year.

 

ANDREX – #1 for #2s.

Given how crap the year has been, it’s rather appropriately for Andrex.

Encouraging or supporting school kids to throw caution to the wind – their award-worthy words, not mine – taking the drama out of number twos and relieving boys and girls of any pee-er pressure they might feel to hold things in.


Some would argue a step far more likely to improve the quality of teenager’s lives than stopping them watching Snapchat.

Apparently 76% of kids aged 10 to 17 felt too anxious or embarrassed to poo at school.

But more than getting toilet time back onto the curriculum, what the agency (or should I say ex-agency) FCB London and its extremely focussed client – led by Matt Stone (not the South Park one, but equally brave) – have achieved is a total reinvention of the brand.

It’s gone from a tissue of puppy-dog lies to a standard bearer for bowel liberation.

Following on from the success of the 2024 workplace campaign, they scrunched up any concerns about second-album syndrome, and just dropped this school of stools magic.

The Glue Society’s Jonathan Kneebone on 2025 – The Year When The World Nearly Lost Its Marbles

The posters alone are worthy winners. But Andreas Nilsson’s cool performance direction dynamite casting and quirky playfulness added a bit of class to what could have just been a fart gag.

While you could argue that strategically this is just a copy of what Libresse did to taboos years ago, the creative work by comparison has a simplicity and irreverence that feels a little less pretentious, impossible to ignore and oddly comforting.

I’ll avoid saying it’s a breath of fresh air, or it’s wiped the competition away, because that would be unnecessary.

But given how unsettling and divisive the rest of the year has been, it feels particularly smart for Andrex to present itself as the great equaliser.

Andrex – Conquer the First School Poo
Directed by Andreas Nilsson
Production: Biscuit Filmworks
Agency: FCB London

Saying the year’s been unsettling is of course a massive understatement.

For much of the time, it’s felt like we were being compelled to watch global tyrants having a giant game of kerplunk to see who might lose their marbles the fastest.

Suffice to say, there were lies and deceits at every turn – and many of those were at the hands of Alan Carr in The Celebrity Traitors.

There were agency mergers and entertainment company buyouts.

DDB became Disbanded, Demolished and Broken. Despite being Cannes’ Network of the Year’ – albeit with its controversial AI case-study assistance.

Bill Bernbach thought he’d seen off this type of thing with his ‘Think Small’ VW campaign.

But apart from giving this industry some respectability, inventing the creative team notion of 1+1=3 and using unexpected arguments rather than relentless repetition to convince potential customers, what did he ever do anyway?

When there are distractions of this magnitude around, it fair to say creative people do find it hard to concentrate. And that’s usually when the work suffers.

And it’s fair to say that as a result, there was a bigger load of below average stuff produced this year than usual.

But in the spirit of trying to be positive in a year of negatives, let’s just move swiftly on to another great ad with a kid…

IRN BRU FOUND ITS VOICE AGAIN

Irn Bru brought back their brilliant ‘Made in Scotland from Girders’ line. And with a young unknown in Davis Harvey, they found the ginger-haired boy who could put the man into manifesto with just the right amount of cockiness to have you hanging on his every word.

OK, they let the side down a little at the reprise by including a fizz-that-gives-you-whizz granny in an electric buggy gag. But the joke had already been well and truly landed by then.


IRN-BRU – This is Not A Soft Drink
Directed by Elliott Power
Production: Love Song UK
Agency: Lucky Generals

KFC GOT EVEN WEIRDER

KFC almost beat its own levels of bizarreness by creating a lake of gravy for their cult members to be reborn in.


KFC – All Hail Gravy
Directed by Vedran Rupic
Production: Business Club
Agency:  Mother, London

You have to take your hat off to Mother for this work. It’s not just of the moment, it’s owning the moment.

Something about it captures the disorientation we’re feeling – and reminds us that gravy is something that is oddly reliable in life.

Lots of brands tried this hard to do dangerous…American Eagle, Twix, DiDi…but what KFC did was support it with a strategic platform which was of the youthful audience, not of the marketing dad.

Which rather neatly brings us to Christmas.

JOHN LEWIS GOT ITS GROOVE BACK


John Lewis – Where love Lives
Directed by Jonathan Alric
Production: Iconoclast
Agency: Saatchi & Saatchi London

30 million people tuned into this year’s ad for John Lewis by Saatchi & Saatchi London in its first week alone, with its adolescence themes and focus on boys reconnecting with their fathers via a dance club anthem.

Really it was a simple idea led by the line – If you can’t find the words, find the gift. But what this did which the brand’s earlier ‘Tableau’ spot forgot to do was add a bit of emotion.

There’s no doubt that Kim Gehrig took the notion of a one-er to Adolescence themes too. Single shots were everywhere this year it seemed. But this flick through the pages of John Lewis history somehow didn’t have Kim’s usual sense of purpose.


John Lewis: Tableau
Directed by Kim Gehrig
Production: Somesuch
Agency: Saatchi & Saatchi London

JD WENT ALL IN

In contrast, JD Sports via Uncommon gave 286 kids the chance to express themselves – handing over the film-making and content of their ad to the very people they wanted to appeal to. And got them to ask themselves the question “Where are you going?”.


Directed by Francis Plummer
Agency: Uncommon

Allowing such a diverse and expressive ensemble to control everything created something that was genuinely fresh. And again it was of the audience, rather than for the audience.

It couldn’t be further than what the corporations are doing. By handing the reins to AI, it feels like brands like McDonald’s and Coca Cola are actually falling for a trap, and emphasising their artificiality. Perhaps it’s an admission of guilt.


WAITROSE WON ACTUALLY

Elsewhere, some brands just appeared to give up on Christmas. And if they can’t be bothered with it, why should their customers?

The people who put in the effort were Waitrose of course, with its 4 minute romcom.

You can complain all you like about the ad being as traditional as sweet sherry, getting sick on mince pies or re-watching Love Actually. But when you have Keira Knightley and Joe Wilkinson actually, and got Richard Curtis to approve your script, you’ve got to hand it to Wonderhood and Biscuit’s Mollie Manners.

Waitrose: The Perfect Gift
Directed by Molly Manners
Production: Biscuit Filmworks
Agency: Wonderhood

It was a tough act to follow the Agatha Christie-style detective story of last year. But this year, they rewarded the faithful.

Using the real stars as opposed to cheap imitations also stood out as a major theme of the year.

REAL STARS ALIGNED

Hellmann’s managed to get the OG’s back for a Billy met Meg / Harry met Sally orgasmic reunion. Columbia got the actual Aron Ralston to repeat his famous rockfall incident. Telstra got the actual Steve Buscemi to dress up as an evil intergalactic scammer – even though they almost made him unrecognisable. And Astronomer got Chris Martin’s actual ex (Gwyneth Paltrow) to deliver an educational message about the company following the Coldplay Kiss-Cam affair.


Hellmann’s: When Sally Met Hellmann’s
Directed by Jake Szymanski
Production: Caviar
Agency: VML NY


Telstra: Scamageddon
Directed by Randy Krallman
Production: Smuggler
Agency: Bear Meets Eagle On Fire with +61

Having the original stars doesn’t guarantee you success of course.

But brands that simply mimic our favourite shows purporting to be delivering brand entertainment are doing themselves a disservice. Why would anyone watch a short copy of something that’s an ad when they can watch the real thing that isn’t?

So when Apple put the real people from the show in the real world setting of Grand Central Station – to promote the upcoming series of Severance, you can see how much more powerful that is as a statement. And how much more potent a way to use your budget.


Severance: The Cube
Agency: Apple / Kamp Grizzly Portland / OMD NY

Rather than preaching to the converted on their own channels, or paying to run a trailer on other media, Apple just owned the story. And didn’t just make immediate impact with thousands of commuters, they made global news through the imaginative idea.

Then again, if you can afford to get the real Scarlett Johansson and the real Yorgos Lanthimos to make a real Prada handbag ad, well, arguably it is money very well spent.


Prada: Scarlett Johansson for the Prada Galleria bag
Directed by Yorgos Lanthimos
Production: Partner Films
Agency: Art Partner

And it does feel like these two ends of the spectrum are becoming the most powerful way to connect with audiences.

Something that no-one else can afford to pull off. Or something that you can afford to do well because you have control. It’s all the stuff in the middle that’s not getting anyone’s attention.

We are moving into a world of big or small. Ikea’s “U Up?” or the Apple Half Time Show.

HORNBACH SHONE A LIGHT ON CRAFT

What else shone throughout the year?

Hornbach put craft front and centre yet again.

This was a brilliantly theatrical and original way to explore the idea that every DIY project you attempt with the help of Hornbach is never short on drama.


Hornbach: No Project without Drama
Directed by Lope Serrano
Production: Tempomedia Berlin x CANADA
Agency: HeimatTBWA

The Greek Chorus are the glue here – providing sound, action and reaction – to emphasise the journey from one woman’s determination to make over her bathroom.

Lope Serrano helms the ship on this particular journey, and the team at Heimat TBWA have done it again. It’s one thing to create Grand Prix quality work. It’s quite another to maintain that year after year. And these guys have been doing it all the way to their Hornbach Hammer, created by melting down a Russian tank.

TV & MOVIE PROMOTIONS GOT MORE SOPHISTICATED

The promotion of TV shows and movies has been something of a fine art. Channel 4 aced it with their Educating Yorkshire promo, where Dougal Wilson worked with over 400 kids from the Yorkshire region to bring their own ideas to life writing, starring and directing their own ad. It had an infectiousness that comes from giving kids the support, encouragement and chance to shine.


Channel 4: Educating Yorkshire
Directed by Dougal Wilson
Production: Blink
Agency: 4Creative

And the latest A24 promotion for Marty Supreme is set to win all the awards.

(Even if it’s going to be one battle after another from a film-prize perspective between Timothee Chalamet and Leonardo DiCaprio.)


Marty Supreme: Zoom Call
A24

Featuring the real Timothee on a Zoom call making his own suggestions of how to promote the film he is starring in, this is a truly watchable 20 minutes. A superb performance in and of itself.

He’s magnetic. And the acting across the board from the execs is first rate. It’s superbly set up, conceived and written.

And one of his suggestions, casually dropped by Timothee into conversation, that his character should be up there with Michael Jordan or Serena Williams appearing on a packet of Wheaties….is now happening for real.

The Glue Society’s Jonathan Kneebone on 2025 – The Year When The World Nearly Lost Its Marbles

This is how to do it folks. It’s about as good as movie promotion gets.

A contender for an even bigger mover and shaker of the year has to be Robert Irwin.

Not only did he jive his way to the trophy in America’s Dancing With The Stars, he also had a fairly large non-speaking part in the Bonds campaign.


Bonds: Made for Down Under
Directed by Stefan Hunt
Production: Exit Films
Agency: Special Group, Australia

Sure he may not have outdone Bad Bunny in the battle of the bulge, but he definitely gave rise to more column inches.


Calvin Klein: Bad Bunny is Infinite
Directed by Mario Sorrenti

‘Made for Down Under’ was just one of those moments when the planets align – and the seemingly simplest and most obvious of decisions went stratospheric.

It’s the kind of work that feels so much easier in hindsight. But credit has to go to Special for breaking the American market.

THE BEST OF THE REST

On reflection, it’s been quite a big year creatively.

I haven’t got round to talking about Coors Case of the Mondays. Where the brand made a Superbowl ad about the dreariness of Mondays. But also made actual cases of Mondays beer.


Coors: Case of the Mondays
Directed by Matthijs van Heijningen
Production: MJZ
Agency: Mischief @ No Fixed Address

Or the fantastically shot music video for DJ Snake (with Amadou & Miriam) for Patience – directed by Valentin Guiod and shot by Benoit Soler.


Or the lovey posters for British Airways where the logos are reflected in the engines of their planes as they arrive at various delightful locations.

The Glue Society’s Jonathan Kneebone on 2025 – The Year When The World Nearly Lost Its Marbles The Glue Society’s Jonathan Kneebone on 2025 – The Year When The World Nearly Lost Its Marbles

Agency: Uncommon
Photographers – Laura Pannack, Jack Johnstone, Catherine Hyland and Cian Oba-Smith

But there is time to explore a couple of fantastic outdoor campaigns of the year.

Cadbury ‘Made to Share’.

This is such a smart campaign. The cohesion of product, brand, design, promotion, advertising and emotional insight with humour and previously unwritten truth.

The breaking up a share bar into sections for the various parties involved makes for more-ish enjoyment.


Cadbury Made to Share – Case Study
Production: Girl & Bear
Agency: VCCP

The advertising creative team involved will certainly have a version of the idea posted on the wall. The person who had the idea, the person who did up the presentation with perhaps one chunk left for the person who happened to be in the room…

But frankly everyone involved deserves the chocolates. It’s an idea that is not only likeable, it feels generous, participatory and rewarding.

And finally, a very recent but very fresh concept which somehow nails in just four words a very potent force that is emerging in culture, craft and creativity.

Red Wing ‘Made The Hard Way’.


Red Wing: Made the Hard Way
Directed by Leo Aguirre
Production: Park Pictures
Agency:Wieden+Kennedy, NY

Wieden and Kennedy have literally nailed it for Red Wing shoes and boots.

In the highly disposable world of fast fashion and throwaway culture, they’ve literally planted a flag in the ground for doing things by hand.

Made the hard way isn’t just a campaign, it’s a way of life. It’s an approach to every single action.

And for that reason, this campaign will immediately find an audience who will run a mile to sign up. It hits a massive nerve that sits just beneath the surface of so many of us. And this one is set to last.

It will quite literally work its socks off.

In many ways, it also feels particularly pertinent for its time. It captures the spirt of those people who have dedicated their life to pioneering their art.

People we’ve recently lost like Frank Gehry, Tom Stoppard, Piyush Pandey, Brian Wilson, Martin Parr, David Lynch….

You imagine that even though they probably were never satisfied with what they did, you can only hope that they felt somewhat happy with what they did achieve.

They shared a determination to make us realise that there’s always another way to do things. You don’t have to settle for what’s been done before. You don’t have to settle for the mediocrity we sometimes find ourselves in. Or the crapness the world finds itself in.

Creativity can permanently change people lives for the better.

And that’s the message of my film of the year.

It’s like nothing I’ve ever seen. It has pretty much no dialogue and is basically about rocks.

But as a piece of inspiration to help us all move forward, it couldn’t be more timely and motivating.


Architecton: Trailer
Directed by Viktor Kossakovsky
Production: A24, ma.ja.de filmproduktions GmBH, Point du Jour International, Les Films du Balibari, Hailstone Films

 

 

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