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ADVERTISEMENT Every company in the world wants to increase their name recognition; after all, people cannot buy products from you if they do not know you exist. However, sometimes companies’ marketing stunts are so absurd, so questionable that it leads us to think there may actually be such a thing as bad publicity. Below are ten [...]
Posted by Gregory Myers on Sunday, April 21, 2013 at 12:01 am
Filed under Advertising, Bizarre · Tagged ads, Advertising, alcohol, balloon boy, Bizarre, brewdog, bull testicle, bull testicle beer, Burger King, Business, colorado brewery, Come Together, commercials, corporations, denny's, denny's wedding chapel, marketing, never mind the anabolics, never mind the anabolics beer, olympic games, olympics, Oprah, PETA, pontiac, public relations, publicity, publicity stunts, rocky mountain oyster stout, sea kittens, speedo, Starbucks, steroid, steroid beer, steroids, subservient chicken, taco bell, taco bell speedo, Television commercials, The Olympic Games, the Olympics, Whopper
For many, Mario is the embodiment of great gaming. In the vast majority of video games featuring the bouncing plumber, the game-play has been life absorbing and the graphics have often pushed the boundaries of technology in their time. They have been the beating heart of the continuing success of Nintendo consoles and dominate the [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Monday, August 15, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Games, Health · Tagged 2012 Olympic Games, bouncing plumber, Bowser, Donkey Kong, Entertainment, London, LTD., Mario, Mario Land, Nintendo, Nintendo Co., olympic games, plumber, Princess, Princess Peach, Sonic, Super Mario 64, Super Mario Bros., Super Mario Kart, Super Mario World, The Olympic Games, the Winter Olympics, Toad, Toadstool, United States, Yoshi
Did you know that each winter one septillion (1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000) of snow crystals drop from the sky and that it takes about a million little droplets to make one snowflake? As common as it might seem at first glance, snow is actually a very complex type of precipitation. If you are wondering which is the world’s [...]
Posted by Timeea on Thursday, February 24, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Nature · Tagged Air transportation, America, Atmospheric sciences, canada, Cascade volcanoes, Champagne powder, china, Colorado, Connecticut, energy equivalent, Finland, Fort Keogh, Georgetown, Gillam, Harbin International Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival, Heilongjiang, Heilongjiang Province, Human Interest, Jefferson Snowstorm, Johannes Kepler, Manitoba, Massachusetts, Meteorology, Montana, National Climatic Data Center, National Snow and Ice Data Center, New Jersey, New York, Ontario, Oulu, Oulu Province, Outdoor sculptures, Peawanuk, Portland, Precipitation, Rene Descartes, Robert Hooke, Russia, Silver Lake, snow, Storm, The Olympic Games, Types of snow, United States, Washington, weather, Wilson A. Bentley, Wilson Bentley, Winter storm