Eddie Gartsman

ORCAM MyEye by GITAM BBDO

MyEye is a revolutionary device that uses a revolutionary technology that identifies objects and texts

and converts them into audio, to improve the lives of many visually impaired.

Most of the blind people are not exposed to the latest technological updates and it’s extremely difficult to reach them.

Israeli startup OrCam, which has developed devices to assist the blind and the visually impaired, will make its technology available at dozens of polling stations in Israel on election day on Tuesday, April 9, in a pilot project that will enable visually impaired people to vote without the need of an escort for the first time ever.

The company partnered with the Central Elections Committee and the Center for the Blind in Israel to implement the project. OrCam’s artificial intelligence-based device, which snaps onto glasses and reads out to users what they are seeing, was chosen after a tender was issued two years ago to find accessibility technologies for the elections. The polling stations were selected so they could serve Jewish, Arab and ultra-Orthodox citizens, the statement said.

OrCam’s MyEye artificial vision wireless product is basically a little camera with a mount attached to a computing device, weighing less than an ounce and the size of a finger, with a personal speaker on the other end. When the OrCam camera is attached to the frame of a pair of glasses, users can point to text on any surface, and the speaker transforms the image into words and reads them out. That way, users can “read” newspapers, restaurant menus, or books — and now ballot slips.

“The device will instruct the users and read them what is written on the ballots, so they can identify the one they want,” said Ziv Aviram, the CEO and co-founder of the Jerusalem-based startup in a Facebook post. The initiative is “the first of its kind in the world.”

There are some 24,000 blind citizens in Israel, out of whom 22,000 are eligible to vote. Another 100,000 are visually impaired, OrCam said in a statement. Voters who are blind or visually impaired will now be able to vote in two ways: at a regular polling station with an escort or at one of the polling stations in the pilot, using the device or their escort, if need be.

Advertised brand: Orcam
Advert title(s): MyEye
Headline and copy text: The Blind Votes
Media: Experiential – Real Life Interaction or Engagement Advertising
Advertising Agency: GITAM BBDO, Tel Aviv, Israel

Chief Creative Officer: Eran Nir
VP Creative: Eddie Gartsman
Art Director: Amir Assayag
Copywriter: Chen Federing
Chairman GITAM BBDO: Ido Har-Tuv
CO CEO GITAM BBDO: Yuval Vaingest
CEO BBDO IM: Omri Harush
VP BBDO IM: David Anolik
VP Strategy: Guy Vaingest

Latet ‘Skip A Meal’ by BBR Saatchi and Saatchi

It’s September and the High Jewish Holiday season is here. Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur and Sukkoth will all be taking place in the space of just two weeks. And for those of you who have never been to Israel during the high holidays, you should know they are the ultimate ‘get-together-time’ and the ultimate cause for uniting around a table filled with goodies.

But unfortunately many Israeli families do not have the means to celebrate. They simply can’t afford the food and are forced to skip a meal. That was the exact message Latet – an Israeli organization that distributes food packages to the needy – wanted to communicate to the public. So it decided to capitalize on a unifying behavior that characterizes all internet users: ad skipping.

People who chose to skip our mouthwatering decoy pre-roll ads, were served up with the following message: “You skipped a meal out of choice but thousands of people in Israel skip it because they have no choice. Make someone’s holiday. Donate a meal”

 

Watch our case here:

 

Credits:
Agency Credits: BBR Saatchi & Saatchi
CEO: Yossi Lubaton
CCO: Idan Regev
Creative: Idan Levi, Eddie Gartsman, Carmel Gilan
Production: Dorit Gvili, Bosmat Ben David
Account Supervisor: Aviv Ben Zikri
Account Manager: Matan Dadush
Strategy: Moran Nurok