AltWeeklies Wire

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

Microsoft Brings Jerry Seinfeld Back to Prime Timenew

For $10 million, he'll apparently appear in ads with Bill Gates for Microsoft Vista. The Cutting Room can just imagine what these spots will be like...
Seattle Weekly  |  Brian Miller  |  09-02-2008  |  Comedy

'Mad Men': The Champagne of Showsnew

I want a black Cadillac with fins like a shark. I want a shot of Seagram's in the calm hour after a rough day. I want to take a long drag on a short Camel to soothe my T zone; there'll be no irritation, four out of five doctors agree.
INDY Week  |  Lisa Sorg  |  08-07-2008  |  TV

Fiberglass Giants: Chicago's Last Bastions of Marketing Kitschnew

During the 1960s and 1970s, the sight of massive pop-art fiberglass figures greeted drivers on streets and smaller highways across the country. From California to Maine, drivers and their families were alerted by figures in the forms of hotdogs, hamburgers, cowboys, clowns, alligators and oranges, lobsters and loons.
Chicago Newcity  |  David Witter  |  08-06-2008  |  Art

Can Location-Specific Advertising Generate Revenue for WiFi?new

When NAC took over EarthLink's Philly network, it proposed a hybrid business model: steady revenue from wired broadband for large businesses combined with a free public access network that could generate revenue from advertisements. This latter part is particularly interesting, because, while it sounds promising, no reliable model exists for ads on a WiFi network.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Timothy J. McLaughlin  |  07-22-2008  |  Tech

It's a (Mad) Man's Worldnew

Mad Men is about a segment of society so drunk on its power and influence that the better part of a decade passes before it realizes its time has come and gone.
San Antonio Current  |  Luke Baumgarten  |  07-09-2008  |  TV

TV Ads Signal a Widening Divide in Video Game Marketingnew

Ads for Battlefield 2: Bad Company imply that games aren't just for geeks anymore.
Charleston City Paper  |  Aaron R. Conklin  |  07-09-2008  |  Video Games

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

Reliving 'Mad Men' on DVDnew

Mad Men gets better as it goes along and you realize that it isn't about a murder and does not lampoon the American advertising industry in 1960.
NOW Magazine  |  Staff  |  07-07-2008  |  TV

The Era of TV Advertising in Presidential General Elections is Overnew

To the extent that TV ads have ever had an impact in a general election, that influence has been sharply diminished by the Internet and TiVo Ages. The proof is in the pudding. Remember those great ads from the Bush-Kerry race only four years ago? How about Clinton-Dole or Bush-Gore? Of course you don't.
Boston Phoenix  |  Steven Stark  |  06-26-2008  |  Commentary

Forgotten Cartoon Characters Deserve Sleazy Opportunities, Toonew

Companies are reviving the most parent-safe of the nation's dormant characters to reanimate as sexed-up zombies for today's savvier character-consuming pre-adults. But why not dig up the cartoon has-beens, revive them, and present them as they've become -- they're a cheap get, bound to make the corporations a few bucks.
San Diego CityBeat  |  D.A. Kolodenko  |  06-18-2008  |  Commentary

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

What Happens When Corporate Art Goes 'Urban'?new

Since launching in 2004, the D.C. art collective AM Radio has found some key supporters for their urban art project: People trying to sell stuff to an "urban" demographic.
Washington City Paper  |  Amanda Hess  |  06-13-2008  |  Art

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

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