A bunch of positive and negative things can happen within just one hour, one can get yet more in a single day—to say nothing about seven billion people living on the planet now. Vimeo, WWF, UN, Water.org, American Red Cross, The International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement and around 60 humanitarian organizations are supporting the One Day on Earth project, which is launched to showcase the life of people across the globe in 24 hours. Everyone is invited to contribute their voice to the project by sending in footage about how they and people around them live on 11.11.11. The registration is now running on the OneDayOnEarth.org website.

Intel is known for its strong tie-up with smart art—the brand supports a plethora of projects to help aspiring creators express themselves through technology and adds an artistic twist to its own marketing initiatives. Earlier this year, the technological giant has teamed up with Amsterdam Worldwide to launch a campaign of several short films promoting the second generation Intel Core Processor family. Since January 2011, the brand has unveiled a series of short videos—‘Batik Fractal,’ ‘The Sartorialist’ and ‘Kitty & Lala’ to name but a few—to highlight the important role technology plays in a human life and tell now it blends with diverse traditions around the globe. Now, the tech giant presents another installment in the series, putting a new country and its culture into the spotlight.

Coke Zero is kicking off a new global campaign to support the launch of the long-awaited fourth installation of the Mission Impossible franchise, just like it did two years ago promoting Avatar and in 2010 supporting Thron: Legacy release. The new movie ‘Mission: Impossible—Ghost Protocol’ will premier in nearly two months, in December, but the bubble drinks’ promotion, which includes TV spots, in cinema advertising, product packaging and digital activation, will be rolling our across the world over a few weeks.

To appeal to different categories of consumers effectively, some brands use different promotional concepts for similar products, tailoring the positioning to the tastes of target audience. The iconic carbonated drink Dr Pepper has finally launched its Dr Pepper Ten, a 10-calorie soft drink, which has been testing on the U.S. market since early year, across the country. Basically, the new product is another version of the brand’s diet drink (though, with its calories and sugar it differs from Diet Dr Pepper, 10/2 in Dr Pepper 10 vs. 0/0 in Diet), but its low calorie background was not highlighted here since, as researches state, male shoppers don’t think that diet products are ‘manly’ enough.

Not only people watch television, pets do that to, but the content they see doesn’t usually tug at their heartstrings. Nestlé Purina, which last year released a first-ever movie shot by cats under its Friskies brand, now is about to launch a 23-second TV commercial designed especially for dogs in Austria this week after broadcasting it in Germany this summer. To create an advert for Beneful, the brand teamed up with pet behavior experts from the USA, who guided the production team, consulting on what sounds really can make the canines turn their faces to the screen.

Jameson, one of the biggest fans of cinema in the world of alcohol brands, is offering its consumers once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to collaborate with a Hollywood celebrity on a short movie. The brand, which has presented a bunch of initiatives related to the world of cinema (Jameson Short Film Award and John Jameson Production are just a few of them), is now inviting emerging filmmakers to visit its Jameson First Shot website and enter the competition for a chance to get Kevin Spacey cast in a short film, based on their script and directed by them.