Wednesday, September 05, 2007

Jeff Jarvis Made a Doody



Ha! This is just funny to me. Jeff Jarvis, new media evangelist and blogger, has an advertisement for what seems a technologically advanced toilet seat on his site. I have no great comment about this, only some juvenile snickering.

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Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Amanda Congdon Really Sells Out

I wonder if Amanda Congdon, fomerly of Rocketboom, expected any blowback from doing these DuPont commercials? Industrial chemicals don't really seem like her kind of product. By contrast, Dove’s ad campaign is a better fit. She's a young, well-endowed, attractive, woman. Acting as a spokesperson for what is essentially a beauty product makes total sense for her. But DuPont and Amanda make a strange juxtaposition. This could be what's causing the current hubbub.

Personally, I have essential problems with DuPont’s business practices, its corporate ethics, political influence, and its status as a world polluter. But that's not the point here. Despite a concerted effort by their PR team, DuPont has had, and continues to have, chronic problems with pollution. Since Amanda Congdon is on the record as a supporter of things ‘green’ it makes you seem like a disingenuous spokesperson to do their web spots.

Her self-defense on her blog seems to be digging her deeper and deeper into an ethically compromised hole, claiming that because she is not an official journalist (she's a blogger thank-you-very-much) she doesn't have to follow the ethical guidelines that hedge in the mainstream media. Instead, she feels can write her own rulebook, redefine her own paradigms, and pretty much get away with anything she wants to do. To me this attitude doesn't represent the vanguard of new media, but the tactic of a selfish opportunist who is justifying actions she already knows are questionable by retroactively changing the context in which she originally made her decisions.

It's clearly a bluff, she probably doesn't believe herself either. Her actions speak too loudly. By associating herself with DuPont, Amanda Congdon is clearly in it for the money.

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Friday, February 23, 2007

The Work of a Subversive Graphic Designer?


Like many read William Burroughs as a teenager, I have a healthy obsession with the number 23, a number which seems to reoccur in history and popular culture. Skeptics say that its seeming frequency is due to that fact that we are looking for it, pick any other number and you'll see it pop up in the newspaper with shocking regularity. But those of us in the know have experimented, observed, and tested...and there certainly seems to be something to it. But this post isn't about that, it's about the upcoming movie 23 with Jim Carrey.

Take a look at the selection from the movie poster. Do you see what I see? Maybe it's like the number itself and I am imagining something that really isn't there, but that little alphabetic squiggle just above Carrey's left eyebrow certainly looks suspicious. Somewhere, a graphic designer might be smirking at his juvenile prank...or maybe I can only see it because I'm looking for it.

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Monday, December 18, 2006

Liberal Opinion Can Be Bought

Over at the Huffington Post we find a section in which Ariana and a handful of the site's celebrity bloggers endorse the Toyota's Prius, a hybrid vehicle. The section is sponsored by Toyota.

In the advertisement, Bill Mahr says that driving a hybrid is about "terrorism and the environment." Ariana says that driving the Japanese-made vehicle is "patriotic." Both of these ideas are reprehensible tactics intended to motivate the purchase of a consumer product.

It's pretty clear that these manipulative opinions have been purchased by Toyota's ad dollars, yet they are being presented as unvarnished opinion. After all there are other hybrids out there, so why endorse just one corporation's offering?

Unbiased liberal opinion, my ass. By doing this the HuffPo just looks like a shill for any company with deep pockets. Keep your eyes open.

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