For actor Bill Oberst Jr., it was an unpaid gig starring in a Web-only video that’s just two minutes long. An Emmy and a Webby Award later, he says “Take This Lollipop” is the best job he’s ever taken ...
Remember that interactive Arcade Fire video last year that used Google Maps to create a nostalgic reminiscence about your childhood home and fill you with warm fuzzies? Well, take that, sub in ...
‘Take This Lollipop’ is back, nine years later, to show you how even more vulnerable to digital manipulation we’ve become in the last decade. Marketing So Good It’s Scary: 12 Experiential Horror ...
Well if you weren’t already nervous about the dangers of sharing your information online, Take This Lollipop will make sure you are. The Facebook application pulls various pieces of your information ...
Anyone who has seen the short film Take This Lollipop knows what an absolutely unique and downright chilling piece of interactive filmmaking it is. Apparently the Academy recognized it as well as Take ...
Wanna get creeped out? No, seriously... Do you really wanna get creeped out? Arriving just in time for Halloween, the web site Take This Lollipop is spreading like wildfire online after being profiled ...
With ever-growing audiences, social networks have become a great place to share things with your friends, meet new people and find new and interesting things to do, both on and offline. However, ...
In one of a series of interviews with the creatives behind Cannes frontrunners, Co.Create asked Tool of North America director Jason Zada to discuss the genesis of Take This Lollipop, an interactive ...
“I dare you.” These are the words on the homepage that greet visitors of the website “Take This Lollipop.” Along with it is a picture of a razor-embedded blue sucker, enticing the site visitor to take ...
If 'Halloween' were updated for the modern age, Jason would have a smartphone to friend his victims on Facebook and then wait for them to post "I'm heading to a creepy cabin with a bunch of friends ...