Health New Zealand’s new campaign, The 80s Calling, uses humour and nostalgia to challenge outdated beliefs about HIV. Created by VML and Good Oil, the campaign centres on a giant 1980s-style mobile phone, symbolising stigma frozen in time, and encourages audiences to rethink misconceptions without shame or judgement.
Health New Zealand has launched a striking new campaign designed to dismantle one of the most persistent barriers faced by people living with HIV: stigma. Titled The 80s Calling, the initiative cleverly employs a giant brick-sized mobile phone from the 1980s as a metaphor for outdated thinking, reminding audiences that while medical science has advanced dramatically, public perceptions have lagged behind.
Developed by VML and brought to life by Good Oil, the campaign highlights the disconnect between reality and opinion. Kim Pick, executive creative director at VML New Zealand, explained that research revealed a sobering truth: “For many New Zealanders living with HIV, the social stigma is actually worse than the virus itself. Thanks to modern medicine, HIV is highly manageable, and when treated effectively, it becomes undetectable, meaning zero risk of sexual transmission. Yet three-quarters of New Zealanders still hold onto fear-based myths rooted in the 1980s.”
Targeting Gen X and Baby Boomers aged 40–69, the campaign acknowledges that many of these attitudes were shaped during the AIDS crisis, when fear-driven messaging dominated. The creative team sought to address this without alienating audiences. Good Oil director Connor Pritchard emphasised the importance of tone: “The joke is never about HIV or about Sarah. It’s about outdated thinking. Sarah is simply enjoying a party with her friends and family. The only thing that needs updating is Joe’s thinking.”
Balancing humour with seriousness was central to the campaign’s success. Pick noted: “A heavy-handed lecture would only cause people to tune out or get defensive. We wanted to hold up a mirror in a way that made people smile, think, and self-correct.” Nostalgia provided the perfect entry point, with the absurdity of 80s relics like oversized mobile phones offering a light-hearted but non-threatening way to engage audiences.
The phone itself became the star of the campaign. Pritchard recalled extensive discussions about its design: “We looked at the iconic Dom Joly phone, but that felt too ridiculous. A normal brick phone wasn’t enough. We landed somewhere in the middle—big enough to get a laugh, but believable enough that Joe could casually carry it around the party.” By treating the absurd as normal, the campaign drew on classic commercial comedy to deliver its message with impact.
The 80s Calling reframes HIV stigma as an outdated relic, inviting audiences to update their thinking just as technology has evolved. With humour, nostalgia, and cultural sensitivity, Health New Zealand and its creative partners have crafted a campaign that challenges misconceptions while celebrating progress, ensuring the message resonates without ridicule.
Discover more from Creative Brands Mag
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Leave a comment