Coca-Cola's latest commercial has Aishwarya Rai turning a possibly menacing encounter on its head. |
It's going to be a hot summer indeed, what with cola ads featuring hot Bollywood stars. Even as audiences were grappling with Pepsi's "kinky" CafeChino ad with Kareena Kapoor and Priyanka Chopra, Coca-Cola has kicked off its summer campaign: "Thande ka tadka" with the sensuous Aishwarya Rai in an all new avataar. |
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While the 45-second commercial broke on cricket channels this weekend, it will roll out full steam across all channels and theatres early next week. |
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Conceptualised by Prasoon Joshi of McCann-Erickson, the commercial uses an unglamorous Aishwarya as a salwar-kameez clad college-goer who gets whistled at by a bunch of roadside rowdies. |
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But instead of scurrying away and letting the boys define the scenario, she takes them by surprise by turning around and giving them a lesson on the real art of whistling. More than her talent (such musical note abandon!), it's her attitude "" the "Thande ka tadka" "" that has them scrambling for cover. |
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"It's this attitude "" the new found confidence of the Indian youth that the Coca-Cola brand campaign encapsulates," says Vikas Gupta, vice-president marketing, Coca-Cola India. |
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It's the language of an empowered generation that would rather lead circumstances than be led by them. Concurs Prasoon Joshi: "The overall mood of the country is buoyant, which is what I want to convey in the ad. It presents a serious issue of eve-teasing being handled in a lighter vein, with repartee and humour." |
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The Aishwarya ad, incidentally, happens to be the first of a series of commercials that Coke plans to launch in the ensuing months. Meanwhile, the new "Tadka" series, maintains Gupta, is a natural progression on the earlier theme featuring Aamir Khan that ran so well. |
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"While the 'Thanda Matlab Coca-Cola' campaign celebrated our Indianness," says Gupta, " 'Piyo sar utha ke' went a step forward to bring out the bold optimism of the new India. With 'Thande ka tadka', we've gone deeper with the consumer connect to bring out the youth's confidence in a refreshing manner." |
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Ad veteran Joshi claims the satisfaction of having used Aishwarya in a rare performance-led role (in a commercial). "I've taken the glamour quotient out of her persona," says a jubilant Joshi, "and utilised her acting abilities to communicate." |
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