Clemenger Melbourne’s ‘Graham’ reaches millions as TAC campaign goes global

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Screen Shot 2016-07-27 at 8.19.53 am.jpgThe face of the Transport Accident Commission’s latest campaign via Clemenger BBDO Melbourne, has lit up screens around the globe as tens of millions tuned in to meet Graham and learn about human vulnerability on the roads.

Within hours of being introduced to the world at the State Library of Victoria last week, Graham – an interactive sculpture depicting what humans might look like if they had evolved to survive a crash – had captured the imagination of readers from Melbourne to Mumbai.

He quickly became a social media phenomenon and was one of the top-trending stories on Twitter and Facebook over his first weekend. He continues to make headlines in the world’s biggest newspapers and news sites, with articles appearing in publications including the New York Times, London’s Daily Mail, the Washington Post, BBC, CNN, India Today and Al Jazeera.

Less than a week after Graham’s reveal, the meetgraham.com.au website had attracted more than 10.4 million page views and some of Victoria’s biggest news websites reported unprecedented traffic as Victorians scrambled to learn more about him.

To produce Graham, the TAC collaborated with world-renowned Melbourne artist Patricia Piccinini, Royal Melbourne Hospital trauma surgeon Christian Kenfield and Monash University Accident Research Centre crash investigation expert Dr David Logan.

Trauma surgeon Christian Kenfield said he hopes Graham will help people to understand how vulnerable the human body is on the roads.

Says Kenfield: “On a nearly daily basis I see the devastating effects motor vehicle accidents have on the people involved and their family and friends.

“Almost every time I see or hear the helicopter land on the roof of the Royal Melbourne Hospital, it is someone coming from a car crash in regional Victoria.”

TAC chief executive officer Joe Calafiore said Graham was designed to remind Victorians that their bodies are exposed to potentially fatal forces every time they use the roads.

Says Calafiore: “Graham and the concept of human vulnerability goes to the heart of everything we do in road safety.

“People didn’t evolve to cope with the amount of force we are exposed to when something goes wrong on the roads and that’s why we need to be safer drivers, drive safer cars and build safer roads.”

Between now and Christmas, Graham will take the vulnerability message to every corner of the state on a regional roadshow of galleries, where visitors will be able to look beneath his skin using the latest digital technology and learn why he looks the way he does.

A school curriculum has been developed, enabling teachers to take Graham’s message back into the classroom where students will learn more about the physics at play on our roads.

Says Calafiore: “We recognise this campaign is very different to what people have come to expect in road safety education but we need to do things differently if we are to realise our vision of a future where no person is killed or badly hurt on our roads.

“By making people confront the reality of their own vulnerability, Graham helps us to consider our own roles in road safety and how our own choices can protect us in the event of a mistake.”

After leaving the State Library of Victoria on August 8, Graham roadshow will visit the following:

    Geelong Gallery (August 11 – September 15)

    Bendigo Gallery (October 5 – October 30

    Ballarat Gallery (November 02 – November 24)

    Latrobe Regional Gallery (November 27 – December 15)

    Mildura (September 15 – October 4)

    Shepparton (date and venue TBC)