Both campaigns were filmed against a plain white background. The Get a Mac campaign is the successor to the Switch ads that were first broadcast in 2002. Both the British and Japanese campaigns also feature several original ads not seen in the American campaign. Several of the British and Japanese advertisements, although based on the originals, were slightly altered to better target the new audiences. The British campaign stars comedic duo Robert Webb as Mac and David Mitchell as PC while the Japanese campaign features the comedic duo Rahmens. The American advertisements also aired on Canadian, Australian, and New Zealand television, and at least 24 of them were dubbed into Spanish, French, German, and Italian. The original American advertisements star actor Justin Long as the Mac, and author and humorist John Hodgman as the PC, and were directed by Phil Morrison. The aim of this commercial film series is to associate PC users (namely Windows users) with the "unpopular nerd" cliché, while representing Apple Mac users as young, creative, attractive, and lucky. The earlier commercials in the campaign involved a general comparison of the two computers, whereas the later ones mainly concerned Windows Vista and Windows 7. The two then act out a brief vignette, in which the capabilities and attributes of Mac and PC are compared, with PC-characterized as formal and somewhat polite, though uninteresting and overly concerned with work-often being frustrated by the more laid-back Mac's abilities. They open to a plain white background, and a man dressed in casual clothes introduces himself as an Apple Macintosh computer ("Hello, I'm a Mac."), while a man in a more formal suit-and-tie combination introduces himself as a Microsoft Windows personal computer ("And I'm a PC."). The Get a Mac advertisements follow a standard template.
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