Title | 720 HOURS OF YOUTH |
Brand | Y!MOBILE |
Product / Service | Y!MOBILE |
Category | A13. Excellence in Audience Engagement & Distribution Strategy |
Entrant | HAKUHODO KETTLE INC Tokyo, JAPAN |
Idea Creation | HAKUHODO KETTLE INC Tokyo, JAPAN |
Idea Creation 2 | HAKUHODO INC. Tokyo, JAPAN |
PR | MATERIAL Tokyo, JAPAN |
Production | AOI PRO. INC. Tokyo, JAPAN |
Production 2 | BABEL LABEL Tokyo, JAPAN |
Production 3 | AID-DCC Osaka, JAPAN |
Production 4 | TOW Tokyo, JAPAN |
Name | Company | Position |
---|---|---|
Shota Hatanaka | Hakuhodo Kettle | Creative Director |
Katsuya Aonuma | Hakuhodo | Planner |
Kentaro Muraishi | Freelance | Planner |
Shinya Ota | Hakuhodo Kettle | Planner |
Koga Shimura | Hakuhodo Kettle | Art Director |
Mana Hisamatsu | AOI | Producer |
Hisato Yamada | BABEL LABEL | Producer |
Takahide Suzuki | AOI | Producer |
Kiyoshi Inoue | sacca | ScreenWriter |
Erei Hagiwara | sacca | ScreenWriter |
Michihito Fujii | BABEL LABEL | Director |
Kentaro Shima | BABEL LABEL | Director |
Hiroto Hara | BABEL LABEL | Director |
Masami Ishitsuka | KOIKE JIMUSHO | Cinematographer |
Yukihiro Miyagawa | Freelance | Cinematographer |
Ryohei Abe | Freelance | Lighting |
Shinya Endo | BLAUGULANA | ProductionDesigner |
Tastuhiro Okamoto | Freelancer | Mixer |
Yusuke Yamanaka | AID-DCC inc. | Producer/Planner |
Kojiro Matsumoto | AID-DCC inc. | Producer |
Daiki Koyama | AID-DCC inc. | Web/SNS Director |
Kenjiro Nakayama | AID-DCC inc. | Designer |
Takanobu Noso | AID-DCC inc. | Developer |
Yoshitatsu Yamada | Yamada Japan | Stage maneger / Scriptwriter |
Hiroki Takeshita | TOW Co., Ltd. | Producer |
Yoko Araki | TOW Co., Ltd. | Producer |
Kenta Yamaguchi | Material Inc. | PR Planner |
Sayaka Asahi | Material Inc. | PR Planner |
Tomihiro Okada | Hakuhodo | Account Manager |
Junya Oguchi | Hakuhodo | Account Executive |
“720 HOURS OF YOUTH” This is the world’s longest teen drama lasting 24 hours a day, for 30 days delivered through mobile phones, a necessity for teens. The characters are high school students that are a month away from their graduation. This is a unprecedented drama experience, following their remaining high school life for 24 hours, 30 days, crossing over various media platforms. such as YouTube, Twitter and Instagram. “720 HOURS OF YOUTH” was the non-stop drama that mirrored teens lives.
The drama starts from SNS posts of the characters. In the morning, they go to school, at the same time as real students. On breaks, they enjoy their time with classmates. At 4:00 pm everyday, a YouTube drama series starts. Users can peep into the characters’ after school life, where the story majorly progresses. The whole story connects through the characters’ SNS posts and YouTube dramas. For example, an Instagram “Stories” post of a date, leading to a fight between the characters in the YouTube drama series the next day. Or a lie revealed in the YouTube drama, exposed from a location information on a photo posted on “Twitter”. The drama continued for 30 days, crossing over various media platforms. At the day 30th, graduation day, the story’s finale was played out in public as a ”live drama”. Finally the characters that were on screen came to life.
The drama that carried on for 720 hours continued to raise conversations on Y!mobile throughout the month-long spring high season. In addition, the new content experience that synced with the active hours of actual teenagers created a deep engagement with the brand. Detailed results are as follows. - Became a trending topic on Twitter and Google in Japan. - Exceeded a total of 30 million views on YouTube. - Gained over 120 million social impressions. - The brand mentions increased to 390% compared with last year. - YouTube Channel Subscribers of the brand increased to 500%.
Because “720 HOURS OF YOUTH” became the world’s longest drama entertainment. Unlike conventional TV dramas where the story cuts at the end of every week, we delivered the non-stop story continuously for 24 hours and 30 days through Twitter, Instagram and YouTube, synchronizing with the daily lives of actual teenagers.
Today's teens are always on social media and they’re looking for fun, jumping from one thing to the next. so it is being more difficult for contents to keep them hooked. So crossing media platforms like Twitter, Instagram and YouTube, we delivered a continuous story according to the 24 hour life cycle of actual teenagers. Unlike conventional TV dramas where the story cuts every week, we created the non-stop content experience lasting 24 hours a day, for 30 days.