Post by sakibkhan49 on Feb 25, 2024 6:33:31 GMT
Even this infinite 2020 is about to end, it seemed impossible to get to the end, the Christmas holidays that usually announce the end of a year and the beginning of a new one seemed so far away, and yet here we are taking our annual assessment, decorating the house and color social media red with the new 2020 Christmas campaigns and cover images. But Christmas this 2020 has a completely different feel, you can perceive it on social media, in the streets, at home: the lockdown, the pandemic, seem to have stopped time. It is difficult to take stock of the year when most of the projects and objectives that were set at the beginning of the year have been completely overturned due to a pandemic . We were forced to put everything back into play, to no longer have certainties, but to plan new ones. It is equally difficult to have the perception that the year is ending when a virus forces you to spend the holidays differently than usual , with a limitation on travel, a dinner or lunch with the small family unit. The value of time But change , the feeling of not having stopped, must be found in the little things, in the desire to reinvent oneself and rediscover the value of time .
Precisely the different perception of this is what has influenced this year most of all: in a modernity in which time has completely disappeared, reducing it to a shock as Valeria Giordano (2013) defines it in her " The metropolis and beyond: paths Chinese UK Phone Number List in the time and space of modernity ", experiencing a slowdown of that immediacy, has confused this same frenetic society even more. In this scenario, however, the calendar has not changed: Christmas Eve , Christmas , Boxing Day and New Year's Eve are arriving as usual. The challenge that brands faced this year in preparing their Christmas campaigns was more complex than usual. Password: no banality . Most brands have tried to convey safety, solidarity and a new sense of family, given the theme of gatherings, the virus and the pandemic. Let's see together the Christmas 2020 campaigns and the ideas that the main brands have put in place . Christmas campaigns 2020 Christmas campaigns 2020 Amazon In the Christmas video, Amazon chose to tell the story of a young dancer who, thanks to her tenacity and the support of family and friends, manages to overcome the difficulties of 2020.
Amazon Christmas 2020 campaign Lego “And I think to myself…” imagining a magical world, Lego is betting everything on children's imagination, trying to instill hope and serenity at least in this period. Lego Christmas 2020 campaign Disney The Disney campaign is certainly among the most touching of this year, with a cartoon video that focuses entirely on the value of traditions and transmission from generation to generation. The emotional tone is highlighted in particular by the music and images. Disney Christmas 2020 campaign Coca Cola “This Christmas, give something only you can give” is Coca-Cola's claim for this Christmas 2020. In the video, a hero dad tries to take his daughter's letter for Santa Claus to the North Pole... the ending, certainly obvious, leaves but an important meaning. At Christmas, after all, sometimes you really just need to give what you can to make someone happy. Coca-Cola 2020 Christmas campaign McDonald's McDonald's Christmas campaign has also made the rounds on social media. Some criticized it in the name of capitalism, while others reflected themselves in the teenage protagonist who tries to repress the child inside who is happy to celebrate Christmas. After all, during the Christmas holidays we all feel a bit like children, but often we just struggle to admit it.
Precisely the different perception of this is what has influenced this year most of all: in a modernity in which time has completely disappeared, reducing it to a shock as Valeria Giordano (2013) defines it in her " The metropolis and beyond: paths Chinese UK Phone Number List in the time and space of modernity ", experiencing a slowdown of that immediacy, has confused this same frenetic society even more. In this scenario, however, the calendar has not changed: Christmas Eve , Christmas , Boxing Day and New Year's Eve are arriving as usual. The challenge that brands faced this year in preparing their Christmas campaigns was more complex than usual. Password: no banality . Most brands have tried to convey safety, solidarity and a new sense of family, given the theme of gatherings, the virus and the pandemic. Let's see together the Christmas 2020 campaigns and the ideas that the main brands have put in place . Christmas campaigns 2020 Christmas campaigns 2020 Amazon In the Christmas video, Amazon chose to tell the story of a young dancer who, thanks to her tenacity and the support of family and friends, manages to overcome the difficulties of 2020.
Amazon Christmas 2020 campaign Lego “And I think to myself…” imagining a magical world, Lego is betting everything on children's imagination, trying to instill hope and serenity at least in this period. Lego Christmas 2020 campaign Disney The Disney campaign is certainly among the most touching of this year, with a cartoon video that focuses entirely on the value of traditions and transmission from generation to generation. The emotional tone is highlighted in particular by the music and images. Disney Christmas 2020 campaign Coca Cola “This Christmas, give something only you can give” is Coca-Cola's claim for this Christmas 2020. In the video, a hero dad tries to take his daughter's letter for Santa Claus to the North Pole... the ending, certainly obvious, leaves but an important meaning. At Christmas, after all, sometimes you really just need to give what you can to make someone happy. Coca-Cola 2020 Christmas campaign McDonald's McDonald's Christmas campaign has also made the rounds on social media. Some criticized it in the name of capitalism, while others reflected themselves in the teenage protagonist who tries to repress the child inside who is happy to celebrate Christmas. After all, during the Christmas holidays we all feel a bit like children, but often we just struggle to admit it.