7:02 am By Maegan La Mala · Internet| Marketing| sex · 3 Comments
19 Jan 2009This new viral video ad from Durex condoms leaves me wondering: is this safe or not safe for work? If your boss comes by and sees you watching videos of condom balloon bunnies, don’t say I didn’t warn you…kind of.
Something tells me this ad will be relegated to the Internet and will never see the light of day on TV. At least not in the U.S.
Via / YouTube
5:05 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Brazil| Environment| Marketing · Comments Off
24 Aug 2007Stepping out for a walk in any major city means being bombarded by images and words all with one aim: to get you to want something bad enough to buy it. Call it visual pollution. That’s what the mayor of São Paulo calls billboards and he feels so strongly about it that he made his city the first city outside of the communist world to put into effect a near-complete ban on outdoor advertising. The ban is part of the city’s “Lei Cidade Limpa” or Clean City Law .
Since then, billboards, outdoor video screens and ads on buses have been eliminated at breakneck speed. Even pamphleteering in public spaces has been made illegal, and strict new regulations have drastically reduced the allowable size of storefront signage. Nearly $8 million in fines were issued to cleanse São Paulo of the blight on its landscape.
Wow! I can’t even imagine this here in NYC. See a video story about the ban after the jump.
1:17 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Culture| Marketing| Media| Music · 4 Comments
6 Mar 2006
The topic of “the mainstreaming of Latino” seems to be a popular one this week in media. An article in Billboard entitled “Latino music moves into the U.S. mainstream” is not about what the headline alludes to at all. It’s about the fact that the Latino population itself is mainstream, so much so that Latino performers can now “get away with” not doing Latino music and can “exploit” their Latino-ness for the good of their careers:
Marcos Hernandez barely speaks Spanish. He grew up listening to Barry Manilow, the Temptations, Michael Jackson and U2. And on his debut album, “About Me,” he sings soulful R&B — in English.
6:30 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Internet| Marketing · 2 Comments
29 Nov 2005
A few of us have heard the anecdote about the news site that reported a story about some poor person who had been hacked apart, body packed into a suitcase, only to have Google AdSense serve a distasteful ad for Samsonite luggage next to the article. AdSense works in mysterious ways. And if not mysterious, unpredictable. Sometimes its technology associates keywords placed by advertisers and keywords placed by AdSense participants, like VL, correctly. When that happens, I think it’s just luck. In our case, we are not getting very lucky.
11:32 am By Maegan La Mala · Bilingualism| Magazines| Marketing · 1 Comment
3 Nov 2005
As I was sitting in the doctor’s office yesterday, I picked up a magazine and conducted a quick research study – I guess that’s what happens when you make me wait so long!
The magazine was Latina, and something interesting popped out at me right away. The magazine is written in English – which gives me an idea right away that they must be targeting Latinos born in the US, who often are more comfortable with English than Spanish. So why are so many of the ads in Spanish?
Since I had the time, I counted them. I counted 78 ads overall: 51% were in Spanish, 42% in English, and the rest basically didn’t have any ad copy. Over half of the ads are in Spanish in a magazine that is written in English.
My assessment: This is an issue that we’ve discussed here at VL, from various angles, most recently with La Mala’s post, Aqui We No Watch Espanish. I think these companies say, “Hey, a Latino publication – stick our Latino ads in there. Hmm, but our Latino ads are in Spanish, and Latina is a magazine written in English. Oh well, it’s all the same anyway, isn’t it?”
Maybe there is some strategy out there that I don’t know about. Some detailed market research that would explain this. But my guess is that there is not. What advertising & marketing people are probably beginning to figure out is that the term Latino is very broad, and depending on which market segment they are after, the strategy is going to have to change.
8:02 am By Maegan La Mala · Florida| Marketing| Shopping| Spain| World · 1 Comment
30 Sep 2005Yesterday in Miami, Spain launched a $95 million campaign to promote Spanish products. Considered the #10 economic power in the world, their sales don’t project that image with US sales last year less than $7 billion. The balance is currently tipped in favor of the US with our exports to Spain in 2004 almost reaching $9 billion.
The marketing campaign run by Spain will focus on creating an image of quality and innovation, not just on traditional products such as proscuitto ham and oil, but also on products and services in the technological realm. Also expect to see more advertising for quality Spanish wines, fashion, and Spain as a tourist destination.
El Nuevo Herald article: “España Lanza en Miami una Nueva Campaña.”
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by 2 Mujeres Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse and influential Latino and Latina community in the U.S.
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