I built this website. From scratch. Including the servers.
I find it terribly amusing, I'm one of the few people who really don't like the Bill ads so I'm glad to see it used against them in a clever fashion like this. ;) No worries, I find the 3 ads even worse so I'm glad to see their campaign raising the bar a little. Is this a first for Sweden? I can't think of any Pepsi vs Coke Hertz vs Avis style fights where they use each others gimmicks to fight each other before... It made me smile anyway. Wonder how Tele2Comviq will respond? Suddenly these campaigns are funny!
hehe, I don't think so - shame else I'd try out. My first real bike was a Raleigh, I could be the idiot suffering extreme computer withdrawel symptoms [though I'm trained in wax and paste] constantly cutting my fingers with a x-acto and reminiscing about my purple Raleigh at all times.
worst drivel ever. ugh. That The serial montage and the myth of communicative transcendence site that Slate links to is a gem though.
Mach3 Power review - cowboy X has tried the vibrating battery-operated razor.
Here's a new twist, according to Wall Street Journal this ad has been withdrawn by Cokes own Donald Keough who didn't think it suited Cokes shiny happy family image. The ad was supposed to run for more than three months, but has been cut shortt, at the same time Brandrepublic claims that this particular ad scored really high in recall and popularity amoung the young demographic, higher than all the other Coke ads in the past ten years.
you can get that ad on a t-shirt at changetheclimate.com
Oh, and the good news is; stopthedrugwar reports that the law used to stop the ad was declared unconstitutional.
But US District Court Judge Paul Friedman ruled that Istook's law violates the First Amendment by infringing on the free speech rights of Change the Climate. "Just as Congress could not permit advertisements calling for the recall of a sitting mayor or governor while prohibiting advertisements supporting retention, it cannot prohibit advertisements supporting legalization of a controlled substance while permitting those that support tougher drug sentences," wrote Friedman. "The government has articulated no legitimate state interest in the suppression of this particular speech other than the fact that it disapproves of the message, an illegitimate and constitutionally impermissible reason."
"I'm delighted with the ruling," said Joseph White, the Massachusetts-based businessman who founded Change the Climate. "Now, we can continue to advertise our message about marijuana reform on transit systems and billboards, and now we can do that in every transit system in the country. Before the ruling, we were barred from presenting an alternative point of view to the government's position," he told DRCNet.
Looks like we aren't - eleven million visits? jebus! Well deserved Dab, Claymore, Robblink, Caffeinegoddess and everyone else who posts don't think I haven't noticed marcomp and Hidden and all the other new faces - I would like to thank the academy of surfing peers for giving the prize to the oldest, biggest and best creative gossip site out here. Nothing, but nothing, compares. Take a bow everyone. Now, who brought the bubbly?
There are currently 0 users online.
Adland® is a commercial-laden heaven and hell for advertising addicts around the world.
This advertising publication was founded in 1996, built on beer and bravery, Adland® now boasts the largest super bowl commercials collection in the world.
Adland® survives on your donations alone. You can help us out by buying us a Ko-Fi. Adland® works best in Brave browser