Grill'd Burger Vigilante | STASH MAGAZINE

Meet the Grill’d Burger Vigilante

Three new 80s-cartoon-flavored spots from WIZZ director Gary Levesque and Unlisted help build the case against unsustainable, unhealthy, and unnatural practices of fast-food giants for Australian burger chain Grill’d. [Watch]

King + Country Title Design Emmy The Good Lord Bird | STASH MAGAZINE

King + Country Take Home Main Title Design Emmy for “The Good Lord Bird”

From the release: The Television Academy presented King + Country with the 2021 Creative Arts Emmy® Award for Outstanding Main Title Design for The Good Lord Bird, an American historical dramatic miniseries, based on the 2013 novel of the same name by James McBride. [Watch]

IRC Alone Boys Can’t Build The Future Jocie Juritz | STASH MAGAZINE

IRC “Alone Boys Cannot Build The Future” Brand Film by Jocie Juritz

Jocie Juritz: “In July, the International Rescue Committee talked with schoolgirls in Afghanistan about their fears for the future, and hopes of getting an education despite the country’s turmoil and repeated threats of violence.” [Watch]

B&Q Later Means Never Sam Gainsborough8 | STASH MAGAZINE

B&Q “Later Means Never” by Sam Gainsborough

Blinkink mixed-media maven Sam Gainsborough and London’s Uncommon celebrate the idea “that anyone can improve their home to make life better” in this poetic new stop-motion work for British DIY and home improvement retailer B&Q. [Watch]

Arrow Innovating Mobility Coat of Arms | STASH MAGAZINE

Arrow “Innovating Mobility” Brand Film by Coat of Arms

CDs Clara Lehmann and Jonathan Lacocque at Coat of Arms (Helvetia, WV, and Chicago): “This video, part of a series to be released over the next few months, celebrates the technological advances Arrow Electronics is making in personal freedom as it relates to semi-autonomous mobility. [Watch]

A-Dearly-Bought-Kiss-short-film-Christa-Jarrold | STASH MAGAZINE

“A Dearly Bought Kiss” (or a Legal Lesson for Lechers) by Christa Jarrold

Illustrator and animator Christa Jarrold in London: “Told through the voices of modern teens (with a twist of trap music), this 60-second film recounts the story of Saverland Vs Newton, a case that set a legal precedent in 1837.” [Watch]