
LaGuardia Airport promotes the
"Montreal Expressway" with six non-stop flights a day to the Canadian city. Redbook magazine touts "Young Mamas spend more than Big Daddies." And calling phone number CH4-0700 gets "keyed-in
executives" reservations at any Sheraton Hotel in the world.
Step into a time machine as The New York Times revisits these ads through its newly released digital archive platform
for vintage ads called Madison, a reference to Madison Avenue, still often used as a shorthand way of referring to the advertising business.
The archive resurrects every print ad from every edition of The Times in the 1960s, with additional decades will be opened up later.
This initiative
was inspired by the newspaper's TimesMachine, a similar platform where subscribers can read complete issues of The New York Times in their original context, says Alexis Lloyd, Creative Director
of The New York Times Research and Development Lab. "When TimesMachine was being developed, I was browsing through old issues of The New York Times and I would find myself
completely entranced by the ads. They are such a textured and visceral reflection of history, revealing social mores, technological changes, and more. I knew that Times readers would find them
equally compelling and wanted to find a way to make our historic ads more searchable and discoverable."
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The platform shows all the portions of New York Times pages that editors think
might be ads -- that is, everything that isn't either an article or an image or photograph that ran with an article. "In most cases those are ads, but they can sometimes be other visuals or content
that isn't tagged as an article (like the masthead or hockey scores)," says Lloyd.
"When Madison visitors 'find ads,' they help us to affirmatively identify which of those assets are in
fact ads, so that they can then be tagged and transcribed."
Indeed, what’s really unique about this collection is its reader engagement feature. The paper is inviting readers to peruse
the archive, identify ads and even transcribe them. To encourage participation, Madison allows users to track the progress they’ve made and “level-up” – achieve titles
after completing certain tasks. The ads are also all fully shareable via social media.
In addition to engaging its readers with a rich and under-viewed part of its archive, editors also
created a flexible, modular platform for developing crowdsourcing projects. This platform, called Hive, will be released in the next few weeks and will allow others - both inside and outside of
The Times - to create new experiences around their own unique collections.