 
| Title | THERE'S NO ONE SOMEONE WON'T MISS | 
| Brand | TRANSPORT ACCIDENT COMMISSION VICTORIA | 
| Product / Service | TRANSPORT ACCIDENT COMMISSION VICTORIA | 
| Category | A14. Public Sector & Awareness Messages | 
| Entrant | CLEMENGER BBDO MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA | 
| Idea Creation | CLEMENGER BBDO MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA | 
| Production | REVOLVER/WILL O'ROURKE Sydney, AUSTRALIA | 
| Contributing | TRANSPORT ACCIDENT COMMISSION Geelong, AUSTRALIA | 
| Name | Company | Position | 
|---|---|---|
| James McGrath | Clemenger BBDO Melbourne | Creative Chairman | 
| Ant Keogh | Clemenger BBDO Melbourne | Chief Creative Officer | 
| Paul le Couteur | Flagstaff Studios | Sound Designer / Engineer | 
| Sonia von Bibra | Clemenger BBDO Melbourne | Agency Executive Producer | 
| Emma Johnson | Clemenger BBDO Melbourne | Senior Agency Producer | 
| Stephen de Wolf | Clemenger BBDO Melbourne | Creative Director | 
| Jim Robbins | Clemenger BBDO Melbourne | Senior Copywriter | 
| Matthew Pearce | Clemenger BBDO Melbourne | Senior Planner | 
| Naomi Gorringe | Clemenger BBDO Melbourne | Group Account Director | 
| Kate Joiner | Clemenger BBDO Melbourne | Senior Account Manager | 
| Lee Simpson | Clemenger BBDO Melbourne | Managing Partner | 
| Sam Cockfield | Transport Accident Commission Victoria | Manager, Road Safety | 
| Jarrick Lay | Clemenger BBDO Melbourne | Senior Account Manager | 
| Luke Thompson | Clemenger BBDO Melbourne | Creative Director | 
| Jessica Truong | Transport Accident Commission Victoria | Manager, Technical & Policy, Road Safety | 
| Jodi Gubana | Transport Accident Commission Victoria | Marketing Manager, Community Relations | 
| The Glue Society (Jonathan Kneebone) | Will O'Rourke | Director | 
| Ryley Brown | Will O'Rourke | DOP / Cinematographer | 
| Helen Morahan | Will O'Rourke | Producer | 
| Mike Lutman | The Butchery | Editor | 
| Eugene Richards | The Butchery | Flame Artist | 
| Rob Law | Freelance | Music Composer | 
249 people died on Victorian roads last year. But it’s hard to imagine that number as anything more than just that: A number. TAC needed to humanise this road toll and get people to think of it not as a statistic, but as 249 loved ones who were torn away from their friends and family. With this in mind, we created a commercial featuring an unscripted man-on-the-street-style interview with real a working class Victorian. In the spot, this Victorian citizen is told that 249 people died on our roads last year, and then asked what he thinks a more acceptable number might be. He responds with 70, but what he doesn’t know is that many of his family members are waiting around a corner. Once he says 70, that exact number of family members emerge. Thus showing him (and the audience) why zero is the only acceptable number.