| Published
July 21, 2009 |
Volume
17, Number 7
|
The Licorice Tree
Productions Tap Online Promotion
Power

|
| Jonathan
White, Joe Madden, and EJ Heiser of The Licorice Tree. |
By Nicole Zaro Stahl
NETWORK Editor
The Licorice Tree, the production arm of Hacienda-based Goal Line
Productions, which operates a state-of-the art studio at 5959 Coronado
Lane, observes its fifth anniversary this month. Over the years it has
been steadily building its portfolio in commercial production,
corporate communications, documentaries, TV specials, and feature
films. It has also been venturing out of the traditional broadcast
mode, migrating to the new territory of online promotions.
The
Internet as a distribution channel has become a very powerful promotion
tool, especially as it liberates commercial production from the
standard 15- to -30-second time constraint, observes The Licorice Tree
creative director EJ Heiser. “Really creative new forms of commercials
without the old limitations can take on a life of their own, catching
fire, going viral,” he states. They are also very attractive
economically. “You can very easily track how many people look at
something on the Internet. Blogging gives you a direct response from
the people viewing. This is wonderful information for brand managers,
and we’re still at the beginning of this new, cost-effective way for
our clients to promote their brands.”
One of The Licorice Tree’s
big attractions is its roster of directors. “A production company is
all about the creative services it provides, and directors are the
bread and butter,” Heiser continues. Among the luminaries in its
arsenal is Mark Teitelman, known in the industry as T-Man, a
“marvelously skilled” veteran of Monday Night Football, where he
directed the dynamic opening each week. Working with The Licorice
Tree, in February Teitelman directed an online promotion for
Electronic Arts’ Red Alert video game. The promo was a scene-by-scene
re-creation of the “Obama Girl” music video so popular on You-Tube, but
instead of Obama, the presidential figure is a fictitious character
from the video game, played by J.K.
Simmons. “It was
a clever way to garner interest, and Teitelman knocked it out of the
park,” Heiser comments.
Many of the commercials and
productions that The Licorice Tree produces are filmed in-house, but
not all. In May the company wrapped a two-week shoot in Georgia filming
a documentary for Milk-Bone. The story centers on a young woman with MS
who, in need of a helping dog, ultimately started a Canine Assistant
program, with Milk-Bone a chief underwriter. A project late last year
involved traveling to Buenos Aires to film a commercial for Clorox’s
Glad brand. “Sometimes with the financial incentives offered abroad,”
says Heiser, “it can be more cost-effective to shoot there, even given
travel costs.”
The Coronado Lane facility was built in 1995 as a
private studio to serve the production needs of the Emmy-winning
broadcaster, John Madden. Joe Madden, the son of the NFL Hall of Fame
Coach, took over as Goal Line president in its early days. He and
Heiser started The Licorice Tree in 2004 to spotlight their production
capabilities. The new company’s unusual name pays tribute to Heiser’s
father-in-law, who formulated the Red Vines candy for the American
Licorice Company.
For more information, contact Anton Laines at (925) 474-1000.
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