Subtract The Noise: Koto's campaign for The Washington Post brings clarity to our biggest health questions

Koto in New York has partnered with The Washington Post to launch a campaign around its new personal health section, Well+Being, which provides advice and the latest health-related research through articles from trusted neuroscientists, psychologists, nutritionists, and doctors.

Titled Subtract The Noise, the campaign by Koto is rather apt given its prime placement in Times Square and the modern phenomena that is mis-information and confusion when it comes to even the most seemingly trivial queiries about health.

Centred around the questions we might type into Google or DuckDuckGo on anything from recurring dreams to feeling less anxious, the campaign shows that “even in the epicentre of sensory overload, there is a way to cut through the noise and get relief from the answers we seek,” explains Koto’s Creative Director Arthur Foliard.

Subtract The Noise: Koto's campaign for The Washington Post brings clarity to our biggest health questions

Subtract The Noise: Koto's campaign for The Washington Post brings clarity to our biggest health questions

“The Washington Post gave us free reign to amplify the same reader-submitted questions that ground their articles – questions that illustrate the noise within at a time when life is riddled with so many curiosities in regards to health, fitness, parenting, and so much more,” he says. These questions might be ‘Why am I hangry?’ or ‘Is work-life balance real? or even ‘Can stress damage my brain?’

Underscored with a pastel-coloured palette, liberal use of classic emojis and range of speech bubbles and browser windows, the designs have a touch of nostalgia – perhaps adding to the sense of trust and authority The Washington Post’s new health section seeks to evoke – while remaining friendly and approachable.

To add further interest and bring the campaign to life, Koto appointed Manchester-based animator and motion designer James Huson to make the creative move. The campaign has since been rolled out to bus shelters in Washington DC and San Francisco.

Subtract The Noise: Koto's campaign for The Washington Post brings clarity to our biggest health questions

©

Related Posts

Subtract The Noise: Koto's campaign for The Washington Post brings clarity to our biggest health questionsSubtract The Noise: Koto's campaign for The Washington Post brings clarity to our biggest health questions
8 slang terms every creative should know...
...
Read more
Subtract The Noise: Koto's campaign for The Washington Post brings clarity to our biggest health questionsSubtract The Noise: Koto's campaign for The Washington Post brings clarity to our biggest health questions
LEGO’s 4,154-Piece Tropical Aquarium Transforms Brick Building...
LEGO has moved beyond nostalgic recreation and entered the realm...
Read more
Samsung - HW-B550D 3.1 Channel B-Series Soundbar with Wireless Subwoofer on an abstract backgroundSamsung - HW-B550D 3.1 Channel B-Series Soundbar with Wireless Subwoofer on an abstract background
Take 40% off a Samsung soundbar and...
SAVE $120: Today at Best Buy, the Samsung HW-B550D 3.1...
Read more
Casa Cody Photo Lance Gerber Yellowtrace 03Casa Cody Photo Lance Gerber Yellowtrace 03
Casa Cody, a 1900s Hotel in Palm...
Photo by Lance Gerber. Photo by Lance Gerber. Photo by Lance Gerber. Photo...
Read more
Subtract The Noise: Koto's campaign for The Washington Post brings clarity to our biggest health questionsSubtract The Noise: Koto's campaign for The Washington Post brings clarity to our biggest health questions
S&P 500 Returns by Components 1900-2020: Earnings...
In the previous post How Much of Historical Stock Returns...
Read more
Subtract The Noise: Koto's campaign for The Washington Post brings clarity to our biggest health questionsSubtract The Noise: Koto's campaign for The Washington Post brings clarity to our biggest health questions
Why I Regret Selling My Rolex Submariner...
I regret selling three particular watches over the years: the...
Read more