Prague Metro British English Explainer (with music)
Description
Vocal Characteristics
Language
EnglishVoice Age
Young Adult (18-35)Accents
British (England - South East - Oxford, Sussex) British (General) British (Received Pronunciation - RP, BBC)Transcript
Note: Transcripts are generated using speech recognition software and may contain errors.
Prague has 1.3 million inhabitants. It is both the biggest city on the capital of the Czech Republic. Suburbs on one million people daily are connected through the historical centre by subway lines, A, B and C. Every fifth person who commutes by subway thinks they are protected against HCV by vaccination. Commuters usually don't know each other, but they have one thing in common since October 2014. They know that C isn't just subway line. Symbolism of line see on hepatitis C enabled a clear and simple link between two Visual ad with its semblance of a new subway line immediately attracted attention. New subway line See provided a quick, witty, illustrative. And most importantly, a clear explanation for HCV is a symptomatic chronic hep attic tattooed viral on. Then it can also be terminal one million Prague inhabitants daily 136 banners on Metro Line C for 14 days. Half a 1,000,000 readers off the daily Metro, 6550 unique visitors off the interactive microsite. In the 1st 17 days, 223,000 reach on Facebook. 21 outputs in top tier media passenger awareness of the disease increased by 9%. Awareness off the fact that no vaccine exists against HCV increased by 7%. The campaign was also successful internally and externally. Winning two Presidents awards on the prestigious Emir Saver Award for consumer Health Campaign managed to get a complex and serious message through to a large number of people. In just a few seconds, the Prague subway terminates in the city suburbs. But thanks to Abby in 2015 and 2016 campaign will roll out to the whole Czech Republic and Slovakia because see really isn't just a subway line anymore.