The yellow pages works wonders when you are looking for something.
Not exact matches
And here's the big trend that's causing this: In the past, companies could outsource their advertising and marketing to agencies, and even
Yellow Page and newspaper / radio ad reps. Today, that just doesn't
work.
Earlier in the week a photo was posted on reddit's WTF
page by a man
working in a body shop and painting purple tiger stripes on a
yellow Lamborghini Gallardo.
AT&T is already
working with developers to create prototypes for other real - world applications — a
yellow pages application for the iPhone, for instance — and expects to make more announcements about the future of this technology in the next few months.
But Last Days
works only when it deviates from this pattern, as it does in a hilarious scene depicting the rock star's friendly yet indifferent agreement to buy space in the
yellow pages from a clueless door - to - door salesman (Thadeus A. Thomas, the movie's only perfectly cast actor), or when it focuses on other members of Blake's entourage, or when the camera retreats at a snail's pace from the mansion for what feels like eternity.
It has some fairly ancient animation cels, an actual
Yellow Kid
page, some classic Gene Colan art, a lot of Ed Hannigan
works (and he is the beneficiary of a party on Friday evening), and a whole heaping lot of Batman stuff right now.
You could spend hours scouring the
yellow pages and
working the phones.
The
works on view at Eleven Rivington have long since distanced themselves from this beginning, having appeared in an artist book, then haphazardly rearticulated through three - color process paintings (cyan,
yellow, and magenta), scanned and digitally distributed on his and others tumblr
pages, and presently re-photographed through a PDF generating application on his phone, the images from which provide the basis for this exhibition.
The typed
pages, heavily annotated and edited by Huillet using
yellow, green, blue, and red markers shows the filmmakers» creative
working process, majestically transforming typed
pages into a series of abstract drawings.
Kevin O'Keefe: In essence it helps lawyers do a type of
work they want to do for the type of clients they would like to do it for, and the Internet is a powerful tool in order to get that
work, because the best lawyers I've been aware for 35 years practice or 17 and the best
work comes by relationships and word - of - mouth, it doesn't come from advertising or pushing your message out and the feeling on most lawyers» part in most legal marketers» part is that they are talking about getting attention and that goes back to the days of Billboards, TV ads,
yellow pages that type of thing, which is okay, which you may not have to resort to that or to fall to that, with the advent of the Internet.
We used to spend gajillions on
yellow pages but that doesn't
work like it used to and we have cut way back on that in recent years.
When you hire the TV or
yellow pages lawyer, are you
working with them throughout the case or are they going to ship your case out to another lawyer who you do not even know if they can't settle your case?
OTB
works with a lot of consumer bankruptcy firms who spend a lot of money advertising (used to be
yellow pages, but is now mostly Internet marketing).
Work the
yellow pages or go online to search for good ones.
You could spend hours scouring the
yellow pages and
working the phones.
If you need an electrician to do some
work in your house, you won't pick up the
yellow pages and blindly flip through the
pages until you find someone who might be qualified.