notablog
Look out! Pickle! |
Friday, April 13, 2001 12:54 PM |
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If you questioned the sanity of the "McDonald's Hot Cofee Lawsuit" some
years back, you're really going to love this one. A woman sued
McDonald's after claiming "she
was permanently scarred by a hot McDonald's hamburger pickle". Not
only did she sue, saying the the pickle was, uh, "defective", but her
husband also sued, "for losing the services and consortium of his wife."
???
I've also realized that I'd forgotten to mention Sprite's idiotic
commercials the other day when I bitched about stupid ads on TV. Though
I do prefer the taste of Sprite to 7-Up, their ads make me wish I
didn't. Morons standing in front of a camera, rapping incomprehensibly
about meaningless gibberish. Oh yeah, that makes me want to
drink Sprite. What it really does, though, is make me turn the damn
channel.
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Die, television, die |
Monday, April 9, 2001 11:23 AM |
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Worst commercials currently on TV: The Gap's annoying "hallelujah"
campaign, which features girls in jeans who can't dance. Now while
normally I'm not opposed to girls dancing in jeans, the annoying music
combined with their just plain terrible dancing makes this just too
painful to sit through. Even worse, though, is the new Levi's campaign of
karaoke singers who can't sing, and usually aren't attractive either. I
mean, what braindead marketing executive got the idea in his black and
twisted brain that I'd want to listen to some reject of the 70's sing
"Karma Chameleon" so off-key that I had to jam rusty nails into my aural
canals just to retain what shreds of sanity I had left? At least Old Navy
dropped their retch-inducing "Magic the stupid dog" advertising campaign.
Apparently there is a quota of on-air wretchedness that simply needs to be
filled, and Levis and The Gap are simply providing a public service.
Hey, you fucknuts in marketing, why the hell would I buy a product
featured in commercials that make me violently ill? I won't, idiots,
because just getting people to remember your brand name is not enough.
Because when I go to the store, I remember that I HATE your brand.
Now how does that sell jeans?
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RIP mail |
Wednesday, March 7, 2001 10:48 AM |
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Gah. Our local mail system has been dead the past 2 days. Not real
sure how it happened. Anyway, if you sent me a message over the past
two days, best resend it since it probably never got to me.
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One-sided television |
Tuesday, February 13, 2001 11:47 PM |
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I guess I shouldn't be surprised when a show like "The West Wing"
shows only one side of the gun issue, but it still bothers me. One of the
oldest literary methods of persuading your audience to your point of view
is to present two arguing characters, one (the opponent to your viewpoint)
less than competent. Television and movies commonly make use of this
tactic to influence the audience into taking up their own opinions.
On "The West Wing", we have a White House official denying the intent
and meaning of the 2nd Amendment while simultaneously blaming violence on
the existence of guns. No rebuttal is given to these points, no mention
of the fact that the militia, as defined in Federal law (Title 10 USC,
Section 311), "consists of all able-bodied males at least 17 years of
age... under 45 years of age... and of female citizens of the United
States who are members of the National Guard." Kinda makes it hard to
claim that the militia refers to the National Guard, when the very
definition indicates the Guard is merely a subset. No mention made that
Switzerland, one of the countries listed in the show's great roster of low
gun-crime nations, requires that all able-bodied citizens keep an
automatic assault rifle in their homes for defense of the country.
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