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Whatever the girl in the brown top did at the bachelorette party.... It was really funny for the other girls much later in the drive home. Maybe she danced on the bartop with ten male strippers or threw her drinks on the bouncer. Who knows. Since she's looking a bit 'I don't wanna think about it', it was probably good in a bad way. Maybe it's a girl thing?
Slashdot is on it - with some gem comments, like: If you can't legally buy it, you should be able to freely trade it around.That's right! Where is my free weed? - there are some serious comments there too. Found via this post The Public Domain Enhancement Act
NBC13 writes about it not sure what date this was posted.
The footage is certainly compelling enough, with the handheld camera recording a flurry of rocket-propelled grenades flying past the fleeing Americans. It all has a rough, immediate feel to it, similar to what viewers experienced when they first saw "The Blair Witch Project."In fact, that's an apt comparison, because like "Blair Witch," this footage is part of an upcoming movie.
The site seems to be a bit of viral marketing for "September Tapes," a blend of movie and documentary that is scheduled to be released in August.
The movie's official Web site, located at SeptemberTapes.com, contains some footage that appears to be strikingly similiar to the clip posted by the mysterious Eric Bruderton. They both appear to include some of the same faces, and some of the surroundings also appear to be very similiar.
The film is described by the film's distributor as "a rare and controversial look behind the scenes of war-torn Afghanistan, where documentary filmmaker Don Larson traveled to the troubled country six months after 9/11 and followed a bounty hunter on the trail of Osama bin Laden."
"Much of the film
Hunter gatherer version of Prism on a nice black t-shirt.
Miller Brewing Co. said Monday it would no longer try to force its chief rival to pull an ad calling Miller Lite the 'Queen of Carbs.'
The ad was part of a larger Anheuser-Busch Cos. campaign targeted in a lawsuit filed by Miller Brewing last month in federal court in Milwaukee.
Miller spokesman Scott Bussen said the company would continue with its lawsuit, which claimed Anheuser-Busch was making false and misleading statements about Miller Lite in its ads.
'The rest remains in place, and we'll proceed according to the court's timeline,' Bussen said.
A federal judge was scheduled June 29 to hear the Milwaukee brewer's request for a restraining order against the 'Queen of Carbs' ad. Miller Brewing will not pursue a preliminary injunction because Anheuser-Busch's campaign 'failed to slow Miller Lite's momentum,' according to a company statement Monday.
Anheuser-Busch said in a statement the company was pleased with Miller Brewing's decision.
'We do not feel that lawsuits and injunctions are the way to compete in the marketplace. We agree it's time to get back to selling beer,' the statement said.
Last month, U.S. District Judge Lynn Adelman ordered Anheuser-Busch to pull one set of ads but allowed the St. Louis maker of Budweiser and Bud Light to continue to run two others.
The ads ordered pulled were posters displayed in liquor stores that stated Miller is owned by South African Breweries. Philip Morris sold Miller to South African Brewers PLC in 2002, which formed a new company called SABMiller PLC, based in London.
The nation's two biggest brewers have been making unusually pointed references to each other in recent advertising for their light beers, as consumers look for lower carbohydrate alternatives.
Miller also alleged Bud distributors put stickers on Miller Lite products, calling it the 'Queen of Carbs' and 'Owned by South African Breweries.'
Anheuser-Busch agreed to send a memo to all distributors reminding them that stickering or defacing competitors' products is illegal, but the company did not admit any guilt.
Anheuser-Busch, the world's biggest brewer, held 50 percent of the U.S. beer market last year. Miller, the world's second largest brewer by volume, had 18 percent.
It's looking to dust off its Wisk laundry-detergent brand with a rare TV-free campaign that uses teaser ads on billboards and wild postings, a Web site promoting dirt and support from former Baltimore Orioles shortstop Cal Ripken Jr. The idea is to get moms talking to each other about dirt and Wisk as they collect "Wisk points" in hopes of winning a visit from Mr. Ripken, who will makeover a tired Little League ballpark into a "dream field."
The product placement in Shrek 2 is simply hideous. The brand names are smuggled in via olde fairytale jokes (Barneys Old York, Versachery, Pork Illustrated, Tower of London Records) and one or two of these gags would be fine, but the film is larded with in-jokes, mouldy movie spoofs (that From Here to Eternity beach scene yet again), cover versions of hit songs, and a glut of pop-culture references. (the DreamWorks boss Spielberg gets two homages.)Before the film
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