First-Ever Ad Campaigns Yield Communication Arts Student Showcase Awards
Communication Arts is one of the top publications for visual communications worldwide. Each year, the magazine honors students with Communication Arts Student Showcase Awards for outstanding advertising, design, photography or illustration work. The winners are selected based on their unique approach to creative problem-solving and for producing work at a professional level.
This year, out of 14 student winners nationwide, four are advertising majors. And two of them are from the .
Tori Aragi 鈥24 and Jordan Leveille 鈥24, art directors in the Newhouse creative advertising program, won for five advertising campaigns they created in Portfolio 1, the first course for at Newhouse. One campaign by Aragi came from Portfolio III, the final course in the creative advertising track. Aragi and Leveille鈥檚 first-ever advertising campaigns were shown in the March/April 2024 print edition of Communication Arts.
鈥淭he fun of Portfolio I is that many students come in with no experience,鈥 says , a professor of practice and Aragi and Leveille鈥檚 instructor in Portfolio I. 鈥淭hey tell me they鈥檝e never created an advertising campaign before, and I tell them, 鈥楾he work created in this course often goes on to win creative advertising student awards.鈥 Time and time again, this proves to be true. In my Portfolio I course, I don鈥檛 just teach students how to create ad campaigns; I teach them how to create compelling campaigns that are memorable.”
The Award-Winning Campaigns
鈥淭oo Tired to Function鈥 for Raycon Wireless Earbuds

Aragi鈥檚 鈥淭oo Tired to Function鈥 campaign for Raycon Wireless Earbuds includes three print ads and was developed in her Portfolio I course. It is one of her three campaigns featured in this year鈥檚 print edition of Communication Arts. This campaign highlights Raycon鈥檚 superior battery life by showing Apple AirPods 鈥渇alling asleep鈥 during inconvenient travel times and uses visual solution advertising to tell this story, altering visuals to communicate the concept of the ad campaign.
鈥淭his was my first-ever advertising campaign,鈥 Aragi says. 鈥淧rofessor White taught me how to blend visuals and copy to create this compelling story.鈥
鈥淗ydroscape鈥 for Hydro Flask

Leveille鈥檚 鈥淗ydroscape鈥 campaign for Hydro Flask, created in Portfolio I, similarly uses a visual solution approach, transforming Hydro Flask bottles into frigid, icy landscapes to represent how well the product keeps liquids cold. This concept visually links Hydro Flasks to glaciers, a recognizable symbol of cold water.
鈥淭his is a clever way of visually showing how the water bottle keeps water cold for a very long time,鈥 White says. 鈥淛ordan is strikingly adept at using visual solution advertising.鈥
鈥淏ad Hair Day鈥 for Aveeno

Leveille鈥檚 鈥淏ad Hair Day鈥 campaign for Aveeno, created in Portfolio I, takes a playful approach with its visual solution. It depicts the torment of dealing with untreated, damaged hair by transforming the hair into a monstrosity. This campaign shows how Aveeno鈥檚 Oat Milk Hair Treatment can 鈥渢ame鈥 unruly hair, thus positioning the product as the solution to achieving hydrated, healthy locks.
鈥淔ries Over Friends鈥 for McDonald鈥檚

Aragi鈥檚 second featured campaign, 鈥淔ries Over Feelings,鈥 created in Portfolio I, captures the universal sting of someone swiping your McDonald鈥檚 fries. Aragi turned this everyday betrayal into a memorable ad series, blending serious undertones with exaggerated humor. Her long-form ads amplify the drama of the stolen fries by incorporating clever comedic twists.
鈥淧rofessor White鈥檚 guidance on copy-based advertising was crucial in developing this idea and its comedic touch,鈥 says Aragi.
鈥淚鈥檓 Thirsty鈥 for charity: water
For charity: water, a nonprofit dedicated to providing clean drinking water where many do not have access to it, Leveille came up with the idea in Portfolio I to create drinking water cans with no tab on them, making the water inside completely inaccessible. These cans would be placed in vending machines that appear to dispense free cans of water.
The can鈥檚 design is meant to give consumers a glimpse of what it鈥檚 like for people who lack access to clean drinking water, aiming to generate empathy for the 370 million individuals facing this challenge daily.聽The cans lack tabs, so people cannot access the water. This design gives consumers a glimpse into experiencing first-hand, even if it鈥檚 just for a few seconds, what it鈥檚 like to have no access to clean drinking water.
Each can reads, 鈥淏y making this can of water impossible to open, we have restricted your access to clean drinking water. Now you can relate to the 10% of our population who lack access to clean water daily. It shouldn鈥檛 be this difficult for anyone to quench their thirst.鈥

This campaign is notable for its innovative use of experiential advertising, creating a powerful and original experience for the consumer.
鈥淭he charity: water campaign tangibly recreates water inaccessibility through a completely sealed and visually identifiable can, allowing consumers to experience an issue that many typically don鈥檛 in their daily lives,” White says.
鈥淛ust Let It Go鈥 for eBay
Aragi鈥檚 third campaign, 鈥淛ust Let It Go鈥 for eBay, was created in Portfolio III. Collaborating with copywriter Kayla Beck 鈥24, Aragi targeted Generation Z in the United Kingdom with this cheeky campaign.

Through their research, Aragi and Beck said they found that Gen Z struggles to let go of preloved items, even when they have outgrown them. From there, the creative advertising students created a campaign that gives people the snarky shove they need to realize it is finally time to let go.
鈥淧rofessor White always stressed the importance of simple ideas and cohesive campaigns, which helped me to create this project,鈥 Aragi says.
2024 marks the sixth consecutive year Newhouse creative advertising students have won Communication Arts Students Showcase Awards.