TRAVELOCITY: FOR THE BIRDS

We see office-appropriate shoes walking purposefully in all directions. We hear the sounds of a busy city street.

CUT TO: A triage-flash of street signs: New York, Singapore and Sydney.

CUT BACK: To the shoes. One of the shoes steps in bubble gum. Its owner reaches down to scrape off the gum with a gold credit card. An angle swap reveals its owner is wearing a suit. He has the body of a human but the head of a pigeon.

WIDE PAN PIGEON MONTAGE: Everywhere we look, we see business people with human bodies and pigeon heads. On the subway nodding off in big headphones. Getting a haircut (barber holds up a mirror to show the back of their pigeon head.) Scanning into the office with an access card (picture has pigeon head.)

STILL: An oil painting of an aristocratic family. The parents have pigeon heads.

CUT TO: A woman and child hold hands on a subway platform. The child (human head) smiles up at their mom (pigeon head.)

The train passes, uncovering a colorful mural of a palm tree. It says “The Bahamas.”

CUT TO: Pigeon woman pulling up Travelocity.com on her smartphone. We see her click a button that simply says “Good deal.”

DRAMATIC SPIRAL TRANSITION

We see the pigeon-headed woman reclined in a beach chair drinking a fruity cocktail. Her child builds a sandcastle in the slightly blurry distance.

She looks up and meets the eyes of another beach-goer with a pigeon head. They salute one another.

Text appears: Travelocity. For the birds.