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Leo Burnett showcases Top 50 global ads in Cannes Predictions 2005

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MUMBAI: The week long annual International Advertising Festival commences once again on 19 June in Cannes, France. And as it has since 1986 globally and 2000 in India, Leo Burnett released its 2005 Cannes Prediction Reel, which is a compilation of more than 50 commercials that the agency believes stand the best chance of reaping a Cannes Lion.
 

 
The annual Cannes Prediction reel comprises 50 commercials culled from the world’s top 25 award shows over the past year. However no Indian ad figured in the final short-listed 50 commercials that were aired in Mumbai on 10 June at the Leo Burnett Cannes Predictions 2005.
 
 
Ads from UK (14), USA (14), France (5), Netherlands (3), Thailand (2), Argentina (2), Australia (2), Germany (1), Peru (1), Norway (1), South Africa (1), Canada (1), Japan (1), Spain (1) and Brazil (1) were the ones that made it to Leo Burnett’s Top 50.
 
 
The audience was asked to list their Top 20 out of the ads that were aired. If one of their twenty choices wins the Grand Prix, it earns 50 points. For every Gold Lion one chose, they receive 30 points; Silver Lion wins them 20 points and Bronze wins them 10 points. The Cannes Lions winners will be announced at the end of this month.

The Leo Burnett Cannes Predictions contest was started for educational and entertaining purposes and the votes cast bear no influence on the decisions made by the Cannes Lions jury.

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Each year, former worldwide director of creative resources and former president of the International Advertising Festival at Cannes Donald Gunn hosts an internal prediction contest for Leo Burnett employees. Gunn also distributes the reel to the media. The reel became a much-anticipated tradition, informing the press and industry leaders of commercials most likely to win Cannes Lions each year.

After successfully predicting 13 of the past 15 Grand Prix winners, Leo Burnett’s Cannes Predictions Reel is now considered to be the benchmark for commercials that will win at Cannes.

While many ads in the 2005 reel had the audience in splits as humour dominated the script, some others with a public service message surely gave the audience food for thought.

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What’s HOT!

Can’t stop clicking! — Energizer ‘Mano Japonesa’ ad
One of the ads that really went down well with this writer was the Energizer ad (‘Mano Japonesa’ i.e: Japanese Arm) by Grupo Gallegos, USA. The ad features a man who says he had got an arm implant from a Japanese donor and since then he just can’t stop snapping photos. The ad showed the man in various real life situations like in a men’s urinal, at the dining table or sleeping in bed. Now this is the clincher – in all the above mentioned situations, the man is shown clicking pictures away furiously with the Japanese arm! The punch line is that it’s good that he has Energizer batteries. Well directed and subtly shot without wasting too many words, this ad does tickle the funny bone.

‘We just lost our pilot to Bud Light!’
Another ad worth a mention is that of Anheuser-Busch’s beer Bud Light by DDB Chicago. The ad shows a few skydivers ready to take the plunge, when one of them suddenly develops cold feet and refuses to jump. One of his friends then tosses a six-pack of Bud Light out of the plane to entice the intrepid skydiver, only to have the pilot abandon his plane for the brew without dwelling twice on the fact that he wasn’t even wearing a parachute.

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“What’s with their voice?”– Japan’s Ajinomoto Stadium ad
An ad for Japan’s Ajinomoto Stadium titled “Husky Girls” by Dentsu Inc. Tokyo is another well made ad with a funny side to it. A young boy is shown coming to Japan and is awed by the beautiful girls there. The one thing that strikes him wherever he goes is the beauty of the girls. But he is repulsed by every girl he tries to talk to when he hears their hoarse voice. Puzzled, he just moves on and bumps into an ordinary looking skinny girl. She, for one, has a normal feminine voice. He ends up in bed with her and later the girl asks what made him choose her. The shot then cuts to the Ajinomoto Stadium, where all the pretty girls are cheering their favourite football players. Now that explains their hoarse voice and the passion for the game.

NSPCC ad
A public service ad for the National Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC) in UK titled “Ventriloquist” by Saatchi & Saatchi, London is also worth mentioning. The ad revolves around how child abusers control their victims. It portrays a small girl as a puppet controlled by a ventriloquist, who is her abuser. The girl-puppet is left powerless by her abuser – unable to make friends, pay attention at school or speak to her mother about what is happening to her. The ad ends by asking people to call a number to help the NSPCC put a stop to cruelty to children.

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Some of the other ads that did feature in this writer’s Top 20 preferences were Volkswagen Gold (Kids on steps), Germany; FedEx (Top Ten), USA; Virgin Atlantic (Upper Class Suite), South Africa; Sagem-X5 (Tokyo), France; Honda (Yume No Chikara, UK; Pampers.com (Stairs/Crying), Argentina and Pepsi (Surf), Brazil to name a few.

What’s NOT!

Honda’s ‘Grrr’ ad
An ad which just didn’t manage to make it to the favourite list of this writer was an elaborate animated ad emphasizing Honda’s quiet diesel engine amid picturesque beauty – rainbows, flowers, birds, swans and what not. The ad was just too long coupled with a sing-song musical gaga about changing something if you hate something. The ad has been made by UK’s Wieden + Kennedy and is titled “Grrr.”

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It remains only a matter of time till we find out what’s hot and what’s not as the Lions are set to roar in Cannes next week.

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Brands

Big Bowl appoints Lyxel & Flamingo as social and media partner

QSR brand eyes next growth phase after crossing Rs 100 crore ARR milestone

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MUMBAI: Big Bowl, one of India’s largest bowl-format quick service restaurant brands from Lenexis Foodworks, has appointed Lyxel & Flamingo (L&F) as its social and media partner as it prepares for its next phase of growth.

The partnership comes after the brand crossed the Rs 100 crore annual recurring revenue milestone in 2025 and aims to help accelerate its journey towards Rs 150 crore ARR in its fifth year since launch.

Big Bowl currently operates more than 250 kitchens across 50 cities and has emerged as a major player in India’s organised bowl-format food segment. Built around hearty portions and delivery-first convenience, the brand offers a wide mix of Indian, Chinese and fusion bowls designed for quick, affordable and portable consumption.

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As urban consumers increasingly gravitate towards easy-to-carry and value-driven meal formats, the company sees the bowl category as a scalable format aligned with modern eating habits.

With the appointment of Lyxel & Flamingo, Big Bowl plans to consolidate its social media and digital media operations under a single partner. The move is intended to sharpen its digital reach, strengthen youth-focused storytelling and improve performance marketing outcomes.

Lyxel & Flamingo, one of India’s largest independent digital-first agencies, manages more than 350 brands and oversees advertising spends exceeding $100 million across its network.

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Under the mandate, the agency will handle Big Bowl’s social media strategy, content development, digital performance marketing, media planning and buying, as well as campaign amplification across platforms.

Commenting on the partnership, Lenexis Foodworks founder and director Aayush Madhusudan Agrawal said, “Big Bowl has scaled rapidly to cross Rs 100 crore ARR and established itself as one of the largest bowl-format brands in the country. As a delivery-first, digitally native brand, our next phase of growth will be driven by sharper performance systems and stronger brand storytelling. Consolidating social and media with Lyxel & Flamingo allows us to integrate data, creativity and media precision as we scale towards our next revenue milestone.”

Lenexis Foodworks marketing head Vikas Iyer, added that the delivery-led category requires content, media and performance marketing to work closely together.

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“With Lyxel & Flamingo, we aim to build a sharper social voice, stronger acquisition systems and measurable impact, ensuring the brand scales not just in presence but also in precision,” he said.

Lyxel & Flamingo chief executive officer Dev Batra, said the agency will combine data-driven marketing with creative storytelling to support Big Bowl’s growth. “Big Bowl brings the flavour, and L&F brings the fire. Our strategy combines data-led performance with engaging storytelling to help build a strong digital brand presence while delivering measurable business results,” he said.

With this partnership, Big Bowl is looking to strengthen its position as a digitally driven QSR brand, blending brand-building with performance marketing as it scales within India’s rapidly growing organised food delivery market.

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