If people had been wandering along Long Street in Cape Town or Greenway Road in Greenside, driving down Maude Street in Sandton or passing through the amphitheatre at the V&A Waterfront in Cape Town over the last few weekends, they may have been ‘hit’ by these falling angels.
As one can tell from the videos (see below), the angels are quite dazed and confused about their whereabouts after crash-landing on Earth, so hopefully kind-hearted Axe guys took it upon themselves to show them where to find a place to rest their weary wings.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=SdT8YSX63tYwww.youtube.com/watch?v=HRD5SAypugQwww.youtube.com/watch?v=8_GiceYiJmQwww.youtube.com/watch?v=FBxP8t9GqKEwww.youtube.com/watch?v=7RNCcW_EYaMwww.youtube.com/watch?v=0TwWhCpLHek Similar projections have been done in Chile recently. Each projection took place for over an hour, allowing the public to be exposed to the AXE angels through a relatively new medium. The projections were done from the back of a double cab bakkie by Sound Media, the agency tasked with this activity. The team placed a voltage regulated generator in the back to feed power into the cab and projected with a Sanyo XS 47 15000 Ansi Lumen in the back seat. The source signal was VGA from a laptop.
“AXE is an exciting, youthful, cool brand and we like to use this approach when communicating with our target market. Axe guys like to feel like VIPs – this is why we planned the ‘invite only’ party for a few lucky AXE guys who won exclusive tickets through the AXE Cloud 9 Party competition,” said Kyle Carson, assistant brand manager for AXE. “We were guaranteed to grab the attention of AXE guys using building projections of gorgeous angels falling to earth – the videos that were filmed captured the interest of the
Facebook group very well.”