Elizabeth35
Brilliant_Rock
- Joined
- Sep 24, 2011
- Messages
- 755
Marketing is changing, and companies are pushing limits with ad campaigns these days. I just passed a bus in town plastered with a huge "SIZE MATTERS!" banner. I did a double-take and learned it was for an apartment complex. Several months ago I received an email from KMart with a picture of a baby wearing only a diaper with the poop emoji imposed on top of the baby's backside. They were promoting a diaper sale.
I'm not sure how I feel about the Leibish slogan. It makes me uncomfortable, but if I saw it I would definitely remember the product advertised.
I wrote a radio spot last year for seamless guttering. And yes, I made an innuendo about having one's mind in the gutter. The company actually had to pull the ad 3 days into the campaign because they were overwhelmed with business. My ad was attention-getting and it pushed limits here in Conservative-Land. And it worked.
I imagine depending on how much exposure you get, someone might not know what the phrase means. Like the term "netflix and chill."
There is also something on Twitter that the younguns are using about letting someone choke them to death. Apparently it means to admire a certain celebrity a lot. Anyway it is rather disturbing but they use it a lot on Twitter and it's a "good" thing! I was horrified when I first saw it thinking these poor millennials must really have issues!
Hahaha I'm a millennial and I don't know many of these terms! Although not in the US so maybe that's why..![]()
snip...she's ignorant to the colloquial nature of the statement within black culture as a whole. it has evolved into an empowering statement that represents a prideful celebration of how wonderful African Americans really are. In short, black people are so great, once you love one of us you will love all of us. It is a phrase that celebrates blackness in the same way the phrases “black don’t crack” or “black girls rock” do. People who use it are not looking to put other races down; they are simply complimenting a race that has historically been subjected to criticism for centuries.
OMG! I never saw that and I love it!Yup, I thought this ad on tv was pushing the limits memorable, especially because it was Kmart.