Honda "Cog": the two-minute Rube Goldberg ad that defined product-led advertising
In April 2003, Honda UK and Wieden+Kennedy London released “Cog” — a two-minute TV ad showing a chain reaction of Honda Accord parts (a cog rolling into a hinge that rolls into a tire that releases a spring) culminating in a completed Accord rolling out of a garage. The ad was filmed in a single 606-take shoot with no CGI. It became one of the most-discussed automotive ads ever made. The campaign turned the Honda Accord brand from a quiet sensible-car position into something audiences actively shared.
- Story: In April 2003, Honda UK and Wieden+Kennedy London released “Cog” — a two-minute TV ad showing a chain reaction of real Honda Accord parts. Filmed in a single 606-take shoot with no CGI. The ad became one of the most-discussed automotive ads ever made.
- Why it matters: “Cog” is the defining example of craft-led production substituting for conventional advertising. The non-CGI commitment was central to the credibility.
- Takeaway: Craft-led production has to be the story, not decoration on a generic concept.
- Takeaway: The “this is real” credibility matters to the audience and justifies the production effort.
- Takeaway: Production budget can't fix a concept that doesn't earn the budget.
Honda Cog — the four-step story
Honda Cog at a glance
Quick facts
Where automotive advertising was in 2002
In 2002, UK automotive advertising was beauty shots of cars on twisting roads with voiceover describing features. Most ads looked similar. Honda Accord was positioned as a sensible reliable family car — a positioning that produced respectable sales but no cultural resonance.
Wieden+Kennedy London and Honda UK wanted something that demonstrated Honda engineering quality without using the usual automotive-ad visual vocabulary. The idea: build a chain reaction from real Honda Accord parts and film it actually working. The chain reaction would showcase precision engineering implicitly — not by claiming it, but by showing it.
The shoot
Director Antoine Bardou-Jacquet and the production team disassembled two Honda Accords and arranged the parts in a roughly 100-foot Rube Goldberg machine that culminated in a completed Accord rolling out of a garage. The 606 takes were necessary because the chain reaction had to work continuously in a single shot — if any element failed, the entire sequence had to be reset.
The shoot took months. The final cut is the 606th attempt. The decision to commit to a non-CGI shoot was unusual for the production budget; most productions would have used CGI for parts of the sequence. The credibility of “this is real” was central to the ad's emotional impact, so the team made the bet that the production effort was worth it.
What grew
The ad was released in April 2003 on UK TV and was almost immediately shared and discussed beyond traditional broadcast viewership. Pre-YouTube (which launched 2005), the ad spread through email forwards, file-sharing, and news coverage. Trade press treated it as a defining piece of automotive advertising. The campaign won multiple Cannes Lions and other industry awards.
Honda Accord brand-equity metrics improved across the campaign period. The ad gave the brand a piece of cultural visibility it hadn't had before. The structural lesson became clear: a single deeply-crafted piece of creative could shift brand perception more than a sustained campaign of conventional advertising.
The “Cog” aesthetic also influenced subsequent automotive advertising broadly. Many subsequent campaigns attempted similar chain-reaction or precision-demonstration concepts. Most produced lesser results because the original’s edge depended on being first and on the production effort being uncommon.
How RGM thinks about craft-led production
When clients ask about premium-production creative, the Honda “Cog” case is useful as a structural example. The conditions for craft-led production to pay back: the craft itself has to be the story (not decoration on top of a generic concept), the “this is real” credibility has to matter to the audience, and the brand needs visibility resources to amplify the work beyond the audience that would have seen a normal ad.
The honest lesson is that craft-led production is risky budget allocation. Honda “Cog” worked. Many comparably-expensive non-CGI productions don't. We tell clients that if they're going to spend at “Cog” production levels, they should commit to the work that's genuinely worth filming — not a generic concept dressed up in expensive production. Production budget can't fix a concept that doesn't earn the budget.
Frequently asked questions
Was the chain reaction actually real?
Yes — the production team has confirmed multiple times that the chain reaction was filmed in real-time with no CGI. The 606-takes figure reflects how often the sequence failed and had to be reset before they captured a complete continuous run.
How long did the shoot take?
Several months including pre-production (designing the chain reaction with engineers to ensure the physics would work) and the shooting itself. The exact production schedule is in trade-press retrospectives but generally agreed to be one of the longer-running single-spot productions of the era.
Did the ad sell Honda Accords?
Honda has described the campaign as commercially successful. Specific sales attribution to the ad versus broader Honda marketing is hard to isolate. The directional brand-equity impact (cultural visibility, brand-perception lift, sustained awareness) is well documented in subsequent retrospectives.
Sources & references
- Honda “Cog” ad (YouTube) — The original 2003 spot.
- Wieden+Kennedy London — The agency that produced the ad.
- Cannes Lions 2003 winners archive — Industry-award recognition.