
New Zealand ad campaign to make country ‘best place in the world to have herpes' wins top prize at Cannes Lions
A public health advertisement that campaigned to make New Zealand 'the best place in the world to have herpes' has won a top prize at the Cannes Lions – one of world's most prestigious advertising awards.
The campaign, launched by the New Zealand Herpes Foundation in October last year, attempts to challenge decades of entrenched stigma around genital herpes – a condition that affects up to 80% of New Zealanders at some point in their lives, the foundation said.
The cheeky take on a retro-style tourism video features former All Blacks coach Sir Graham Henry lamenting the loss of New Zealand's clout on the international stage – the sheep to human ratio is 'embarrassingly low', pies are 'pushing seven bucks' and the country's pride is 'less than outstanding', he opines.
'We need something new to be proud of, something big and brave to put us back on the map – it's time for New Zealand to become the best place in the world to have herpes,' Henry says.
The promotional video is followed by a 'Herpes Destigmatisation Course', fronted by prominent New Zealanders such as former director-general of health Sir Ashley Bloomfield, former All Black Sir Buck Shelford and boxer Mea Motu.
The campaign – developed alongside Auckland-based agency Motion Sickness and Sydney agency FINCH – was awarded the Lions health and UN foundation grand prix for good, for 'unabashedly [using] humour to tackle a challenging subject and stigmatisation'.
'Our 2025 awardee took a taboo topic and turned it on its head – showing that with a great strategy, a big, bold crazy idea, and humour for days, that anything is possible,' said David Ohana, Cannes Lions jury president.
Claire Hurst, one of the foundation's founding trustees, told the Guardian herpes is mostly medically insignificant but that 'a lifetime of societal conditioning' around the word 'herpes' makes coping with a diagnosis difficult for many.
Never in her 30 years of doing this work has a campaign to destigmatise the infection had such cut-through, Hurst said.
'As soon as you just put it out there, and people can just say 'you see, it's cold sores' and 'yeah, a lot of us have them and most of us don't know', then it stops being the big bogey man.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
40 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Little-known signs of world's most infectious disease EVERYONE must know - as pandemic health chief issues chilling warning
The warning signs of measles have been highlighted as a top scientist has raised the alarm on declining vaccination rates. Science minister Lord Vallance of Balham warned that parents had forgotten just how deadly the world most contagious infection was before the invention of vaccines. 'People have forgotten that measles kills. They think, "Oh, measles—that's a pretty benign disease". It's benign because we've got vaccination', Lord Vallance told The Times. The 65-year-old added that to see people—most often children—die from entirely preventable disease was 'tragic'. 'People used to have 12 children because they knew five were going to die. It just doesn't happen like that anymore and vaccination has been a really major, major part of it,' he said. Measles usually starts with flu-like symptoms, including fever, cough and runny nose and is often followed by a tell-tale rash which starts on the face and behind the ears before spreading to the rest of the body. But it can trigger more serious and even fatal health complications if it spreads to the lungs or the brain. The incredibly contagious disease can infect 9 in 10 unvaccinated children in a classroom if just one classmate is infectious. One in five children who catch the disease will be hospitalised, according to estimates, with one in 15 developing life-threatening complications like meningitis or sepsis. Lord Vallance, who became a household name during the Covid pandemic, was speaking in the wake of a surge in measles in England. Measles cases soared in 2024 with 2,911 cases confirmed in England—the highest number on record since 2012—and tragically one death recorded. Despite surging rates of infections uptake of a vaccine designed to protect children against the disease has fallen. Less than 84 per cent of five-year-olds in the nation had both recommended doses of the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) jab last year. Experts have labelled the figures concerning and urged parents to vaccinate their children to avoid the 'life-long consequences' of potential measles infection. But it's not just the MMR jab. Lord Vallance's warning comes as data shows none of the 14 childhood vaccines offered on the NHS met the 95 per cent uptake target needed for herd immunity. Herd immunity is a public health concept where enough people are vaccinated that it stops diseases spreading rampantly through the population as a whole. Experts have blamed post-pandemic scepticism and vaccine fatigue for the rapidly declining rates, with Vallance also pointing the finger at, now thoroughly debunked, rumours linking the MMR jab to autism for causing 'huge problems around the world'. Now, together with health chiefs, he is urging parents to get their children vaccinated—with two doses of the MMR jab offering up to 99 per cent protection. It comes as concerning figures released last week revealed nearly half of children in some parts of England haven't had both MMR jabs by the time they turn five. Data shows just 52.7 per cent of youngsters that age in Kensington and Chelsea in west London are fully vaccinated. London remains one of the least vaccinated parts of the country—taking up a staggering 19 of the top 20 spots for low MMR jab uptake. Outside of London, Nottingham was worst with just 71.4 per cent of children jabbed. Dr Doug Brown, Chief Executive of the British Society for Immunology, told MailOnline: 'Vaccination is the safest and most effective way to protect your child against measles. 'Measles is a serious disease that can make children very ill and cause life-long consequences. 'In the 2024 measles outbreak in England, 1 in 5 children who contracted the disease needed to be admitted to hospital for treatment. 'To be fully protected against contracting measles, it is essential that children receive two doses of the MMR vaccine at the correct timepoints. 'We need to redouble efforts to implement the NHS Vaccine Strategy and engage with communities to ensure that all children receive the MMR vaccine and are protected against these nasty diseases. 'It is never too late to get vaccinated—if you're concerned that your child has missed out on a vaccination, contact your GP surgery.' Lord Vallance became a household name during the pandemic, appearing next to Boris Johnson and his esteemed colleague Sir Chris Whitty during tense Downing Street briefings to talk the nation through the crisis. But he also earned the nicknamed 'Dr Doom' during the crisis for being the face of bleak projections from scientists.


Sky News
2 hours ago
- Sky News
Heatwave live: Wimbledon set for record-breaking heat; amber heat health alerts in place; 'severe' fire risk in London
The UK Health Security Agency has put out its second amber heat health alert in two weeks, with highs of 34C forecast today. It could be hotter than Mexico, Barbados and Jamaica. Follow the latest advice and updates below.


Sky News
4 hours ago
- Sky News
Heatwave live: Amber heat health alert in place for much of country; 'severe' fire risk in London; Wimbledon set for scorcher
The UK Health Security Agency has put out its second amber heat health alert in two weeks, with highs of 34C forecast today. It could be hotter than Mexico, Barbados and Jamaica. Follow the latest advice and updates below.