See also:
- Brand-stretching - - - the use of tobacco brand names on non-tobacco merchandise or services - as a means of promoting cigarettes when faced with a ban on direct tobacco advertising.
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- Getting dirty - - Critique of a Shield soap commercial, by Mark Crispin Miller.
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- The Sweeps - - Seasonal campaigns by TV network affiliates aimed at boosting ratings in order to maximize advertising revenue.
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- The contrition peddlers - - When you're a big corporation and you step in racial doo-doo, you call Chisholm-Mingo -- your full-service agency for repentance, prevention and brand-burnishing. Salon article. (July 20, 1999)
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- Smoke gets in your eyes - - Are cigarette manufacturers not just placing ads but also creating magazines for their own advertising? Article from Salon. (December 15, 1997)
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- Gandhi was no pitchman - - Why Apple chose the wrong icon to promote their product. Article from Salon. (November 4, 1997)
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- Malt liquor marketing to Latinos - - The malt-liquor industry, drunk on high-octane sales to the black hip-hop nation, has set its sights on the Latino youth market. (October 2, 1997)
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- let's English! - - English has become the lingua franca of global merchandise, but does it mean anything? Salon article. (September 16, 1996)
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- Enlightenment to go - - One man's teaser ad campaign is another's otherworldly obsession. Salon article. (August 22, 1996)
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- Call to distraction - - How to tell the difference when there is no difference to tell. Salon article. (August 12, 1996)
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- Talk dirty to me, Nike - - The shoe company's new ad campaign gives new meaning to "Just Do It". Salon article. (July 22, 1996)
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