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Archive for October, 2006

October 28th, 2006

OK, It Doesn’t Have to Be a Logo — It Just Has to Be THIS Size

Let’s call it a bug. Here are a few perfect examples; thanks Eric, Ike and Mike. Here’s also the MO logo in the correct size.

OK, now send us yours. NOW!

October 28th, 2006

Pick of the Orchard 10.28.06

  • Who Made The Sleaziest Ad? (Couric & Co.)
  • Avon Breast Cancer Awareness (AdverBox)
  • PR Leap It Is (The Article Writer)
  • Funny Commercials (Brainmade Branding)

    Technorati tags: , , , , , , ,

  • October 27th, 2006

    PR, Media and Ad Bloggers: Send Us Your Logos — Now

    We’ve got a new secret project we’re planning to unveil Monday (fingers crossed), and if you’d like to be part of it (no questions asked), we need you to send us a small file with your blog’s logo (stat).

    Specs:

    JPEG or GIF
    77 x 27 pixels (width x height)

    It’ll be worth it. Just send it.

    Grazie.

    October 27th, 2006

    Unfortunate Typo at Our Alma Mater, the Dallas Observer

    Thanks to Oilman for pointing this one out.

    Update: Not a typo after all. We’re dumb. Sorry.

    October 27th, 2006

    Some People Are Allergic to Apologies


    Partial transcript from the Rush Limbaugh show on Thursday:

    RUSH: I want to make an apology here. You have number seven from the audio sound bite roster ready to go? All right, let her rip.

    FOX: The symptoms that I had in the ad that I did, that’s called dyskinesia, and that’s actually from too much medication.

    RUSH: Okay, I need to apologize, I was wrong because I speculated either he didn’t take his medication or he was acting. I never said the word faking. Now, if you people on the left want to equate acting with faking, I mean, go ahead, George Clooney would be a faker, all your favorite actors, we’ll call them fakers. I never used the word. But I was wrong. He did take his medications. Now he took too much medication.

    The point is, he did something differently to appear in this ad than when he appears on Boston Legal. And that was my first human reaction. “Whoa! I’ve never seen this. I have not seen this before.” Now I gather, from the past three days, that we are to believe that this is the normal condition that poor Mr. Fox has to live with each and every day. That’s the impression that they’re leaving, is it not? That this is how his life is now, but he himself said he took too much medication. He didn’t do that when he went on Boston Legal, but it happened for the taping of this ad. I think the reason for that is so you would really, really hate Republicans, because Republicans don’t want to cure it. Jim Talent doesn’t care. Michael Steele doesn’t care. No one in the Republican Party cares. They don’t want to cure these things. They’re happy, in fact, to see people suffer like Mr. Fox is in this ad.

    You’ve convinced us, Rush. You’re obviously very caring.

     

     

     
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