Clorox Tries to Bleach the Sin Out of Las Vegas With Outdoor Ads 'Some girl just ______ed all over my _____'
Las Vegas is a cesspool. Clorox is bleach. It's a match made in heaven. Last week during CES, DDB West began touting the brand's efficacy at cleaning up bodily fluids in a series of clever if fratty fill-in-the-blank taxi-top ads and billboards around Sin City. (Sample: "I ______ed all over my hotel room.") Because digital tie-ins are now obligatory, the billboards are interactive at bleachitaway.com/vegas, where Clorox's rabid fans, known for their partying, can submit their own unsavory phrases, then get a picture of an outdoor placement with their mad libs plugged in (and then share it with their friends). Because what happens there, stays there … until you plaster it across your Facebook page, where all the Clorox in the world won't get it out. Read all the variations below.
"I ______ed all over my hotel room."
"I woke up in my own ______."
"I ______ed myself last night."
"I just ______ed my pants."
"Is that _____ on my skirt?"
"Some girl just ______ed all over my _____."


- The 5 Time Slot Showdowns Will Look Like This
- Our Picks for the 5 Best and 5 Worst New TV Shows
- Yahoo Board Approves $1.1 Billion Tumblr Purchase
- The Biggest Web Series Opportunity for Brands Wasn't at the NewFronts
- Undertone Releases Responsive Design Cross Platform Ad Format
- Shopper Marketing Is Going Mainstream
- Would Yahoo or Facebook Make a Better Tumblr Parent?
- Former Publicis COO Richard Pinder on Reimagining Global Networks
- Is Cable Finally Getting Parity With Broadcast?
- Goodby, Silverstein Brings the Funny for YouTube's First-Ever Comedy Week
- Our Picks for the 5 Best and 5 Worst New TV Shows
- This Summer Could Be the Breakthrough in Mobile Advertising
- The 5 Time Slot Showdowns Will Look Like This
- Yahoo Board Approves $1.1 Billion Tumblr Purchase
- This Is What We Saw at the TV Upfronts This Year
- Dumb Ways to Die Is Now a Video Game for the iPhone and iPad
AdFreak is your daily blog of the best and worst of creativity in advertising, media, marketing and design. Follow us as we celebrate (and skewer) the latest, greatest, quirkiest and freakiest commercials, promos, trailers, posters, billboards, logos and package designs around. Edited by Adweek's Tim Nudd. Updated every weekday, with a weekly recap on Saturdays.


Email
Print







