Sentences with phrase «latest television advertisement»

Bruce Grieshaber is featured in the Faso campaign's latest television advertisement, where the father shares the tragic story of his daughter Jenna's murder, and the work that Faso did to ensure passage of a law named in her honor.
Nintendo of America's marketing push for the Wii U continues, as their latest television advertisements for the console's software have emerged.

Not exact matches

I've walked the fields of mega-tournaments, watched countless instructional DVDs and books, appeared on television to promote new football helmets, and, over the years, have turned down the chance to promote hundreds, if not thousands, of products, many making claims that could not be backed up by peer - reviewed studies, some whose advertisements were later found to be misleading by the Federal Trade Commission.
If you ever stumbled across a late night television advertisement promising cash — maybe with a catchy jingle — then you might have unwittingly heard the sales pitch from a lawsuit lender.
The latest filings show Sheehan loaned $ 162,000 to her campaign to fund a television advertisement, with total expenditures rising to $ 193,492.
A year later, some of the images are resurfacing once again and will almost certainly be used against lawmakers in television advertisements over the next five months.
Nearly a decade later, meeting people online has become an accepted practice, with advertisements on subway walls and primetime television that target a large variety of singles.
FilmJunk points us towards this new DirecTV advertisement which features the late comedian Chris Farley «s performance from Tommy Boy, with David Spade «s performance digitally altered to promote satellite television.
You only need to watch television now to see the latest advertisement for the iPad 2 and the Motorola Xoom.
He later collaborated with Kazumi Mitome to fulfil his ambition to score movies at last with Konami's science - fiction film Specter and created some music to accompany the television advertisements for two BOSE DVD players.
The late conceptual photographer was a member of what critic Douglass Crimp called the «Pictures Generation» — a group of artists in the late»70s who rejected the predominant values of object - based Minimalism in favor for a return to imagery, or more specifically, commercial imagery related to advertisements and film / television.
The world was ablaze with billboards, advertisements, magazines, television commercials, comic strips and product packaging that, to many artists of the late - 1950s, possessed a graphic dynamism and popular appeal that rendered the prevailing artistic trend of Abstract Expressionism elitist and increasingly irrelevant.
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