Heineken Hides Message in Barry Can't Swim Show at Amsterdam Dance Event Calling for People to Put Away Their Phones

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Heineken
Heineken

Heineken Boring Phone Hidden Message

Person takes photo of message - invisible to the naked eye but visible on phone screens - Heineken has hidden in Barry Can't Swim's DJ set at Amsterdam Dance Event opening party to encourage people to be in the moment - not on their phone - when socialising
Person takes photo of message - invisible to the naked eye but visible on phone screens - Heineken has hidden in Barry Can't Swim's DJ set at Amsterdam Dance Event opening party to encourage people to be in the moment - not on their phone - when socialising

Heineken Boring Phone Hidden Message

Heineken hides secret message, invisible to the naked eye but visible on phone screens, at Amsterdam Dance Event opening event with Barry Can't Swim to encourage people to be in the moment - not on their phone - when socialising.
Heineken hides secret message, invisible to the naked eye but visible on phone screens, at Amsterdam Dance Event opening event with Barry Can't Swim to encourage people to be in the moment - not on their phone - when socialising.

Heineken Boring Phone Hidden Message

Heineken launches Boring Mode app at Amsterdam Dance Event opening event with Barry Can't Swim to help people feel more in the moment when socialising.
Heineken launches Boring Mode app at Amsterdam Dance Event opening event with Barry Can't Swim to help people feel more in the moment when socialising.
  • Barry Can’t Swim has teamed up with Heineken® to encourage fans to put their hands, not phones in the air at one of October’s biggest music events ADE.

  • Heineken installed innovative technology that delivered a hidden message only visible on phone screens during the opening party at The Loft, headlined by Barry Can’t Swim.

  • Follows research that reveals 41% of Gen Z and Millennials find it frustrating to see a crowd of phones in the air when out at a gig or concert.

  • To help people better enjoy times IRL with friends, Heineken has launched The Boring Mode app that will turn any smartphone boring - silencing apps and dialling down distractions for truly quality social moments.

Heineken x ADE x Barry Can't Swim x Boring Mode - 1
Heineken x ADE x Barry Can't Swim x Boring Mode - 1


AMSTERDAM, Oct. 18, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Amsterdam Dance Event have teamed up with Heineken to encourage people to minimise phone use on the dance floor at this year's global music event.

During Barry Can’t Swim’s DJ set at the ADE opening event, Heineken hid clever technology that delivered a message via infrared lighting, invisible to the naked eye but revealed when people held up their phones to film the performance. Fans were encouraged to turn their smartphones ‘boring’, keeping the moment in their memory, not on their phone.

Amsterdam Dance Event expects to welcome over 500,000 visitors from 146 countries to see acts such as Four Tet, Peggy Gou, Eats Everything, Gorgon City and Jamie Jones.

The same technology was also implemented by Heineken at Live Out Festival in Mexico, attended by 50,000 people earlier this month. Heineken wants to encourage people around the world to stay in the present and live their social lives to the fullest, no matter where they are.

Heineken’s hidden message follows a growing trend of performing artists and DJs asking fans to be more present in the moment across tours, festivals and club nights this summer.

But it's not just artists that are craving digital disconnection, in recent years there has been a growing trend of consumers, particularly Gen Z’s and Millennials, wanting to tune out from their phones so they can tune in to what is happening right in front of them.

Over a third (35%) of Gen Z and Millennial smartphone users across the UK, US and the Netherlands said they check their phones more often than they should when socialising and six in ten (60%) think they’d enjoy music events more if they could disconnect from their device.

Two fifths (41%) said they find it frustrating to see a crowd of phones in the air when out at a gig or concert. More than half (55%) admitted that they had prioritised capturing a video of a performance rather than being present in the moment, even though 13% also said they rarely watch back the videos they capture anyway.