green screen


Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

Simple Ways to get Complex Shots

REALLY Simple Marketing Solutions

This is a series on marketing solutions. Often the simplest solution is the best. Here’s one you might find interesting.

Are you surrounded by people who just can’t keep themselves from making things as complex as possible? They’ve got this idea that for something to be worthwhile it MUST be complex and very hard.

We don’t work that way.  Hey.  It may be our experience or we just like to have fun or some of both.  We think there is always a way to get what you want simply and easily.

This Norm Taylor spot is a good example. It was a difficult TV commercial to do.  The storyboard called for a distraught woman in a car which had broken down at night on the freeway.  She almost gets hit a number of times.  Her car’s a lemon and, as the narrator says, she needs to call Norm Taylor to get her money back.

Well, as you may know, it costs a godzillion dollars to close a freeway, plus permits, traffic cops, firemen etc. Even renting a piece of asphalt big enough for background trucks and cars to zoom past in the background was pricey and we would have to rent a generator to fake the lights overhead.

So, we decided to shoot the foreground of the woman in the car against green screen and then marry it to a background shot of freeway traffic at night.

We thought it’d be fun to shoot a time lapse of the green screen shoot so we didn’t bore you to death.

We call the time lapse video “Gone in 60 Seconds”.

Our pro’s really did an excellent job.  Better than some of the green screen in Die Hard 3.   If you want to see the final spot, click the picture below.

Written by: Fletcher Murray of The Association

President of The Association

Fletcher Murray

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Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

Lemon Law TV Spots Pull 216 Leads After 5 Runs.

We’re smiling about a new set of TV spots we produced for local Lemon Law attorney, Norm Taylor. In their first run, the spots aired 5 times and produced 216 leads for Norm in the Los Angeles area.

So we averaged about 43 leads each time a spot ran.

The cost per lead (CPL) is at a low, low $13.88.   Amazing when you consider some law firms pay $350 and up for a lead!


Here is one of the spots which features a woman in distress on the freeway in her broken down “lemon” car.  We used a green screen process to combine the woman’s shot with night time busy freeway scenes.  It worked out great, check it out:

How did we achieve these fantastic numbers?


Well, it starts with knowing the target audience.  Our research specialist, Tracy Locke, in her surveying of the target audience, discovered unbelievable intellectual AND emotional data.  Thus, our Creative Director, Rick Rogers could conceive TV spots that connect with the viewer not only on an intellectual level but on the emotional level, as well.

Connecting on an emotional level is what triggers people to take action. We motivated them emotionally and intellectually. The phone rang. It’s that simple.


If you want your phone to ring in 2010, if you want leads coming in the door, you’ve got to pick up the phone and call us.

Or email us at fletch@theassociation.tv.

Don’t let 2010 get the better of you. Take action right now.

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