AltWeeklies Wire

Atlanta's School for Mad Mennew

The Creative Circus teaches its students how to be Don Draper without being an asshole.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Eric Celeste  |  05-11-2012  |  Education

What Happens in Vegasnew

A look back at the advertising magic of "What Happens Here, Stays Here."
Las Vegas Weekly  |  John Katsilometes  |  09-29-2011  |  Media

Nouveau Ambulance Chasers And Justice for Allnew

There was a time not that long ago that lawyers got clients by joining clubs, wearing funny hats, shaking hands like third-place politicians, or coaching little league. Then the Supreme Court ruled that attorneys could advertise, and guys like my father, for good and bad, truly changed the landscape.
San Antonio Current  |  Tim Maloney  |  03-03-2010  |  Crime & Justice

Colorado Springs Utilities Spends Millions to Reach an Already Captive Audiencenew

Today, trying to get attention that way is like whispering in Times Square. So what do you do? Blog? Tweet? Issue press releases? Go on radio? TV? YouTube? Colorado Springs Utilities does all of that and then some, at a cost to ratepayers of $3.25 million this year.
Colorado Springs Independent  |  Pam Zubeck  |  01-12-2010  |  Media

Lottery Promotionnew

The lottery finds itself in a somewhat awkward position on advertising. Officials want to maximize sales, but they have to be wary of targeting specific demographic groups, even if national experience indicates some might be more fertile markets.
Arkansas Times  |  Arkansas Times Staff  |  12-10-2009  |  Economy

Wieden+Kennedy's Briliant Pitch or Epic Failnew

Deep within the labyrinthine layers of Wieden+Kennedy's Pearl District headquarters is the secret responsible for the company's three-decade run of screaming creative success. It’s a record that is the envy of every madman in the ad game.
Willamette Week  |  Aaron Mesh  |  12-04-2009  |  Media

Feminists vs. PETA: 'Sexist' Ads Draw Portland Protestnew

The loosely knit Portland Feminist Action League organized the "flash protest" via the internet, criticizing PETA for its "sexist and offensive" animal rights campaigns. PETA's protests have featured nude women in cages, and most recently, the organization produced a billboard that pictured a fat woman in a bikini that read, "Save the whales! Lose the blubber. Go vegetarian."
The Portland Mercury  |  Sarah Mirk  |  08-28-2009  |  The War on Women

A Girl's Best Friend Is Her Yogurtnew

"Just turn on your TV," says Current TV commentator Sarah Haskins. "Day and night — but mostly day, unless you’re watching Lifetime — there’s gonna be some ladies just chilling out, eating some yogurt, and appealing to our inner woman, to get us to do it too."
Boston Phoenix  |  Caitlin E. Curran  |  03-27-2009  |  The War on Women

A Seattle Entrepreneur Fizzles in Walla Walla Wine Countrynew

Paul Willms, mastermind behind last year’s Gary Locke-endorsed China 8, leaves another trail of unpaid bills.
Seattle Weekly  |  Mark D. Fefer  |  03-09-2009  |  Business & Labor

A New 'Ban' Would Allow 20 Areas Citywide Thick With Billboardsnew

The Los Angeles city planning department’s proposed outdoor-advertising rules and billboard ban is not much of a ban at all.
L.A. Weekly  |  Christine Pelisek  |  01-30-2009  |  Housing & Development

LA's Digital Billboards Become a Bohemian Blasphemynew

The neighborhoods of Silver Lake, Hollywood, the Valley and Westside are all taking on City Hall's anti-green transformation of Los Angeles.
L.A. Weekly  |  Christine Pelisek  |  11-21-2008  |  Environment

How a Throwaway Idea at the Barkley Ad Agency Became the 'Sonic Guys'new

The campaign was supposed to last just four months, from September 2003 to the beginning of a new campaign in January 2004. Five years later, the campaign is still going and has become a pop-culture phenomenon. The commercials have given the quirky drive-in an identity and made Sonic as recognizable as McDonald's, Burger King and Wendy's.
The Pitch  |  Justin Kendall  |  07-08-2008  |  Media

Ad Campaign Latest Effort to take Smithfield Foods to Tasknew

Faith leaders, elected officials and Smithfield workers will gather in D.C. to unveil a series of advertisements decrying working conditions at the company's sprawling hog processing plant in North Carolina. The ads will soon begin appearing on the sides of buses and metro station walls across the D.C. metropolitan area.
Port Folio Weekly  |  Vernal Coleman  |  06-18-2008  |  Business & Labor

An Internet Campaign Against Camel Cigs Goes Nationalnew

Jenny Decker has been infiltrating parties and concerts sponsored by R.J. Reynolds around Portland, gathering free trinkets and promotional products in hopes of exposing how R.J. Reynolds does guerrilla marketing to entice young women to smoke. Her humble MySpace page has now turned into a nationally recognized campaign that anti-tobacco experts say is accomplishing that goal.
Willamette Week  |  Shefali Kulkarni  |  04-09-2008  |  Science

Virginia College Newspapers Get OK'd for Booze Adsnew

U.S. District Magistrate Judge Hannah Lauck ruled that a Virginia law banning ads for alcohol in student newspapers and another that limits words in ads violate the First Amendment.
C-Ville Weekly  |  Scott Weaver  |  04-09-2008  |  Media

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