Plus, NBCUniversal’s streaming service will be called ‘Peacock.' Thoughts?
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September 18, 2019
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[Tinder is making a choose-your-own-adventure streaming series: Wednesday Wake-Up Call](
By Angela Doland
Welcome to Ad Age’s Wake-Up Call, our daily roundup of advertising, marketing, media and digital news. If you're reading this online or in a forwarded email, here's [the link]( to sign up for our daily newsletter. You can also get an [audio version]( of this briefing on your Alexa device.
[Tinder’s ‘Project X’](
Tinder, arguably, is one extended choose-your-own-adventure game; you swipe left or right to follow different paths. So it’s fitting that the dating app is making a choose-your-own-adventure streaming series. Variety [reports]( that the show, kept secret during production and known as “Project X,” is set as the apocalypse nears, forcing characters to choose who they want to spend their last night with. It's reportedly set to debut next month.
“The show will upload directly to the Tinder app, and users will be able to swipe right or left (the service’s basic function of approving or denying a potential love match) and advance the plot as they see fit,” Variety writes. Agency 72andSunny was a producer, Variety says. Tinder hired its chief marketing officer, Jenny Campbell, away from the agency last year. But this project seems like a good consolation prize.
[‘Peacock’](
There’s a lot of streaming-related news today: NBCUniversal revealed that it will call its subscription- and ad-supported service Peacock, a nod to NBC’s classic logo. “For us, it’s the perfect nod to the legacy without being too on the nose,” Bonnie Hammer, the streaming service’s chairwoman, said, [as quoted by]( The New York Times. “From my point of view, it screams that we are proud and we are bold.” There were a few snickers about a brand name containing the word “cock,” but at least the company didn’t follow Apple and Disney’s lead and call its new platform NBCUniversal+. Giggle if you must, but the name’s memorable.
Publishing Partner Post from Wayin:
It is possible for marketers to know what their customers intend to do or buy in the future when they collect data that is intentionally and proactively shared directly by the consumer. This is called zero-party data, and it allows brands to build direct relationships with consumers. Read more from Wayin’s Richard Jones [here](.
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[Even more streaming news](
It’s the future, it’s the streaming era, and somehow old TV reruns are the content everyone’s fighting over. HBO Max, the upcoming streaming service from AT&T's WarnerMedia, just snapped up U.S. streaming rights to air “The Big Bang Theory” for five years. The Hollywood Reporter [says]( the comedy’s 12 seasons will be ready to stream when HBO Max launches in 2020. The price tag was not disclosed. Netflix, meanwhile, just bought the rights to “Seinfeld.” And Peacock is rebooting shows including “Saved by the Bell.” We’re curious to see how the cheesy-but-classic '80s-'90s high school comedy translates to 2019. How will we recognize the characters without their teased-up '90s bangs?
Just briefly:
Olympic mascots: The mascot for the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing is a big-eyed panda named Bing Dwen Dwen. Ad Age’s Ethan Jakob Craft [ranks]( the five best and worst Olympic mascots in history, including a creature dreamed up for Atlanta 1996 that looked like “a second-tier Saturday morning cartoon character.” Ha.
Plot twist: Elliot Schrage, Facebook’s policy chief, quit last year amid successive scandals at the company. But Bloomberg News [reports]( that he actually stayed on, quietly, and took a new title: VP of special projects.
'Zeus': The Washington Post launched Zeus, "an ad network it hopes can make inroads against Google's empire come next year,” Ad Age’s George P. Slefo [writes](. (The Post is owned by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, who is also using his e-commerce website to challenge Google for ad dollars.)
Bye: George Schweitzer, longtime CBS marketing director, “will step down from his post at the end of the 2019-20 broadcast season, whereupon he’ll transition to a new role as a special advisor to the company,” Ad Age’s Anthony Crupi [writes](.
Branded: Outdoor retailer [REI]( launched Uncommon Path, "a quarterly print magazine, in partnership with [HearstMade]( the division of Hearst Magazines that produces [Airbnb Magazine]( with Airbnb,” Simon Dumenco [writes]( in Ad Age.
Product of the day: Philadelphia, the cream cheese brand, decided the world needs more bagels. So it created a gimmicky gadget to “cut a hole into other foods—think waffles, a slice of bread or even a slice of pizza (really?)—to make them look more like bagels and therefore ready for cream cheese,” Ad Age’s Jessica Wohl [writes](. There’s also a video from indie agency Gut. Sadly, the hole-punching device is already sold out on Amazon.
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