#WeThe15 paints the town purple
In an audacious project for the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) and multiple international organisations, adam&eveDDB and Pulse Films' Sam Pilling provide a voice for the 1.2 billion people with disabilities.
Credits
powered by- Agency adam&eveDDB/London
- Production Company Pulse Films/London
- Director Sam Pilling
-
-
Unlock full credits and more with a Source + shots membership.
Credits
powered by- Agency adam&eveDDB/London
- Production Company Pulse Films/London
- Director Sam Pilling
- Service Production in Bangkok Indochina Productions
- Editor Ellie Johnson
- Editor Liam Bachler
- Post Production Untold Studios
- Grade Simon Bourne
- Audio Post Production 750mph
- Music Soundtree Music
- Chief Creative Officer Richard Brim
- Global Creative Director Laura Rogers
- Campaign Creative Team Edward Usher
- Campaign Creative Team Xander Hart
- Film Creative Team Selma Ahmed
- Film Creative Team Genevieve Gransden
- Creative Technology Director Hash Milhan
- Deputy Head of Production Jack Bayley
- Producer Rebecca Holt
- Producer Hannah Needham
- Integrated Assistant Producer Richard Bailey
- Managing Director and Executive Producer James Sorton
- Executive Producer Lucy Kelly
- Executive Producer Davud Karbassioun
- Producer David French
- DP Alex Barber
- 1st AD James Sharpe
- Production Manager Tom Nutting
- DP Shaun Harley Lee
- Executive Producer Nicholas Simon
- Post Producer Tomek Zietkiewicz
- Audio Engineer Sam Ashwell
- Audio Engineer Mark Hellaby
- Music Supervisor Jay James
- Music Producer Neil Athale
Credits
powered by- Agency adam&eveDDB/London
- Production Company Pulse Films/London
- Director Sam Pilling
- Service Production in Bangkok Indochina Productions
- Editor Ellie Johnson
- Editor Liam Bachler
- Post Production Untold Studios
- Grade Simon Bourne
- Audio Post Production 750mph
- Music Soundtree Music
- Chief Creative Officer Richard Brim
- Global Creative Director Laura Rogers
- Campaign Creative Team Edward Usher
- Campaign Creative Team Xander Hart
- Film Creative Team Selma Ahmed
- Film Creative Team Genevieve Gransden
- Creative Technology Director Hash Milhan
- Deputy Head of Production Jack Bayley
- Producer Rebecca Holt
- Producer Hannah Needham
- Integrated Assistant Producer Richard Bailey
- Managing Director and Executive Producer James Sorton
- Executive Producer Lucy Kelly
- Executive Producer Davud Karbassioun
- Producer David French
- DP Alex Barber
- 1st AD James Sharpe
- Production Manager Tom Nutting
- DP Shaun Harley Lee
- Executive Producer Nicholas Simon
- Post Producer Tomek Zietkiewicz
- Audio Engineer Sam Ashwell
- Audio Engineer Mark Hellaby
- Music Supervisor Jay James
- Music Producer Neil Athale
Launching prior to the Tokyo 2020 Paralympics, adam&eveDDB and International Paralympic Committee (IPC)'s bold and venturesome #WeThe15 sets out to become the world’s biggest ever human rights movement for the world’s 1.2 billion persons with disabilities.
Led by a terrific film from Pulse Films' Sam Pilling, which takes on numerous voices to express the normality of disability (a topic prevalent in Channel 4's Super. Human. too), the campaign is propelled by an unmissable global launch moment, in which 125 landmarks across 6 continents around the world will light up in purple, including the Empire State Building, the London Eye, the Colosseum, Niagara Falls and the world’s tallest tower, Skytree in Tokyo.
What's more, the movement is will be given extra prevalence with dozens of organisations and brands, including Allianz, Coca Cola, Facebook, Twitter, Intel, BP, Visa and many more, showing their support by sharing bespoke content, updated logos, and their plans for progressing the inclusivity agenda, as well as Pilling's film being screened by multiple broadcasters around the world including Channel 4 and NBC during the Paralympic Games and broadcast live to an audience of over 250 million worldwide during the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games Opening Ceremony.
Above: Examples of the lights, in situ.
Pentagram designer Harry Pearce’s striking identity for #WeThe15 includes a wordmark, a symbol, and sonic branding by Yuri Suzuki. The wordmark echoes the hashtag (to ensure maximum visibility across social media) and the symbol is a clear visual representation of what the percentage actually looks like. Throughout the Paralympic Games, athletes will wear temporary tattoos made from the #WeThe15 symbol.
The movement, #WeThe15, takes its name from the 15% of the global population who have a disability: the world’s largest marginalised group forgotten by the inclusivity agenda. For these 1.2 billion people, access to basic human rights such as healthcare, education and employment, are at best limited and at worst non-existent, making it harder for people with disabilities to live, work, thrive, or even survive.
Spearheaded by the IPC and International Disability Alliance, #WeThe15 sees the largest-ever coalition of organisations unite behind this cause – 20 in total, including UN Human Rights, UNESCO, Special Olympics, and The Valuable 500 - with the goal of putting people with disabilities at the heart of the inclusivity agenda.
Above: Some contextual outdoor creative designed by Pentagram, emphasising the scale of the community of persons with disabilities.
“WeThe15 gives a voice to the biggest unheard group in the Inclusion agenda," comments Mat Goff, CEO at adam&eveDDB. "This Tokyo 2020 launch campaign is just the start of a movement that will drive real change for over a billion people worldwide.
"The more brands and organisations and people that get involved in this movement, the louder that voice will be and the faster the change will come.”
“At the IPC we believe that Change Starts with Sport and through #WeThe15 we want to change the lives of the world’s 1.2 billion persons with disabilities," adds Craig Spence, Chief Brand and Communications Officer at the International Paralympic Committee.
“By partnering with multiple international organisations to launch #WeThe15 ahead of the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games we want to use the platform of the world’s third-biggest sport event to spark a decade long transformation for the world’s largest marginalised group.”