August 30, 2005 in Media Orchard, Technology PR by sbaradell@ideagrove.com
Going Rate for "Creative Geniuses": $40-50K


Current job listing on craigslist:

Creative Genius
———————————–
Date: 2005-08-30, 2:13PM CDT

You are a conceptual genius.
You are a print design guru.
You have years of experience.
You have Agency experience.
You might have a couple Addy’s on your trophy shelf.
You play well with others.
You have killer portfolio.
You have some Interactive experience.
You rock out to iTunes.
You have wicked sense of humor.
You are not above doing your own print production.

WE NEED YOU!

Job location is Plano
Compensation: 40-50K Based on experience

I think that’s how Van Gogh got his start…of course, I ear that didn’t end well.

 
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August 30, 2005 in Media Orchard, Media Relations, Public Relations by sbaradell@ideagrove.com
Great Course: Students Learn That PR Is "Something Mercenary and Without Honor"

From Purdue University:

Professor Uses ‘Novel’ Way to Teach Advanced Public Relations

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind., Aug. 30 (AScribe Newswire) — Purdue University public relations students are learning that fiction can prepare them for reality.

“I traded in textbooks for novels in three of my advanced public relations classes,” says Josh Boyd, associate professor of communication. “Even though the stories are fiction, the characters and plot can reinforce theories, ethics and the realities of working in a career such as public relations.”

Boyd also assigned two novels, Carl Hiaasen’s “Native Tongue” and Christopher Buckley’s “Thank You for Smoking,” for class discussions and papers.

“Native Tongue” is about a veteran journalist whose career stumbles, and he ends up working an entry-level writing job at an amusement park in south Florida. The author portrays public relations as “something mercenary and without honor.” Buckley’s novel is about how a spokesperson for the Academy of Tobacco Studies handles working with smokers’ rights groups and antismoking groups while trying to promote tobacco.

“This was a great way for students to learn, to at least some extent, what it’s like to work in the field, and that is valuable for those who may have little internship experience,” says Boyd, an expert in corporate rhetoric.

“Students learned about crisis management and how to address the media when something goes wrong, as well as how these fictional public relations professionals handled ethical problems. Instead of just talking about ethical standards or spin theory during class, we had real examples of professionals working with different kinds of news media, such as ‘Larry King Live’ and the ‘Today Show.’”

“The novels put advanced students in the shoes of a fictional professional.”

I’m sure there’s a joke in there somewhere about how PR practitioners write fiction for a living anyway…ha ha.

 
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August 30, 2005 in Media Orchard, Media Relations by sbaradell@ideagrove.com
Apple Still Knows How to Create Buzz With Style

From Silicon.com:”Apple is preparing a major announcement next week, dropping hints of something as critical to the company’s future as the release of the original iPod in 2001. The company sent an invitation to reporters on Monday morning for a ‘special event’ being held on 7 September in San Francisco. The invitation reads: ’1,000 songs in your pocket changed everything’, referring to the release of the first 5GB iPod nearly four years ago. ‘Here we go again.’ As with any planned announcement from Apple, details are scarce and rumours are running rampant.”

This is how to do PR. Steve Jobs learned from Regis McKenna well.

 
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August 29, 2005 in Media, Media Orchard by sbaradell@ideagrove.com
Photography That’s Just a Touch (Up) Away From the Truth

Yes, we know that most celebrity journalism isn’t really journalism. And we know that magazines routinely touch up celebrity photos. But still….THIS is fascinating. (Via Cruel Site of the Day.)

 
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August 29, 2005 in Media Orchard, Media Relations, Public Relations by sbaradell@ideagrove.com
This Spin Doctor Turns Dark Into Light


The AP reports on a poultry science professor who is a true spin doctor:

“Daniel Fletcher has found a way to transform dark meat chicken into white, a scientific advance some purists say has gone too far … The recipe involves adding excess water to ground-up dark meat to create a kind of meat soup, then spinning the mixture around in a tub at high speed. The centrifugal force makes the mixture settle into layers of fat, water, and extracted meat, which can be molded into breast-like patties of all-white meat.”

I’m sure there’s an unflattering PR metaphor in there somewhere…

 
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