Emily
Hodgson and Emilie Riis, staffers at London ad agency 18 Feet &
Rising, have harnessed the awesome global power of the Internet for its
ultimate purpose—pestering Nike. They've created Purple Unicorn Planet, a
site that at first glance seems to sell various Nike training shoes. In
fact, clicking on sneakers yields a message informing you that Nike
doesn't make those shoes in women's sizes. The Emilies urge you to share
a letter of protest with Nike (it begins, "Somewhere in Swoosh Central,
there's been an oversight"). There's also a Twitter feed, @PunicornP, and hashtag, #PleaseJustDoIt, because
everything has to have a Twitter feed and hashtag these days. Why not
simply buy some other company's shoes? Or, if they're dead-set on
wearing Nike Air Safaris, just saw off the toes? "The open-toe look
isn't in this season," Hodgson tells AdFreak. Riis adds: "We saw a gap
in the market and we want cooler trainers in girls' sizes. We are both
huge Nike fans and love their men's designs, so that's why we are
focusing on Nike." They swear the campaign isn't intended to generate
buzz for themselves or their agency, but that's what's happened, so I
guess it's all good. "We haven't heard from Nike. Yet," says Riis. The
company might respond eventually, but I wouldn't hold my breath waiting
for that shoe to drop.
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