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Apostrophe Podcast Network
S6E25 - Bookmarks 2017
This week, it’s our annual Bookmarks episode. The research team at Under The Influence does a lot of reading over the year, and finds a lot of great stories - many of which don't fit into our regular season. But that doesn't mean they shouldn't be told. We’ll look at why Sting laughs at the beginning of Roxanne, how the U.S. military learned a lesson in branding when it got soldiers to eat their vegetables and the interesting story behind which car was the first ever to feature…a cup holder. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:2722/06/2017
S6E24 - Cannes Creative Advertising Be Effective?
This week, we journey to Cannes, France for the Cannes International Advertising Festival. It’s the most revered advertising competition in the world, with 90 countries submitting over 40,000 ads. We’ll analyze the entries and answer the age-old question: do award-winning commercials really sell product? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:4015/06/2017
S6E23 - Now Splinter Free: How Marketing Broke Taboos
This week, we explore how some of society's biggest taboos were broken by marketers. We’ll look at why toilet paper was a hush-hush product in the 19th century, which publication was the first ever to print an ad on its front page and how Lysol was originally advertised…as contraception. Some taboos were broken years ago, some more recently than you may realize. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:4608/06/2017
S6E22 - The Lean Mean Money Machine: How Marketing Affects Sports
This week, we analyze how marketing affects the sports world. We’ll look at the massive influence that comes with owning the rights to the Olympic games, how the recent uptick in gambling sponsorships affects athletes and what happens when major advertisers threaten sports leagues. It’s a lucrative, but tricky business. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:4401/06/2017
S6E20 - The Most Interesting Adman in the World: The Story of Albert Lasker
This week, we tell the story of the most interesting adman in the world - Albert Lasker. Lasker had a hand in influencing professional baseball, Planned Parenthood, North American breakfast and not one, but two presidential elections. And he just happened to change the world of advertising in the process. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:5518/05/2017
S6E19 - Brand Envy: #CANADA150
This week, it’s our annual episode where we explore brands I admire. And in celebration of Canada’s 150th birthday, this year’s brands are all Canadian. We’ll look at what may be the most successful global retailer Canada’s ever built, a television pioneer worshipped and revered by generations of Canadians and a world-class brand that operates out of the smallest village in New Brunswick. We’ve certainly bred some amazing brands up here in the Great White North. Happy birthday, Canada. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:0911/05/2017
S6E18 - Grab Your Wallet: When Brands Go Political
This week, we explore how brands are becoming political for the first time in history. We’ll look at what happens when major retailers decide to “Dump Trump”, the controversial Super Bowl ad that challenged an immigration policy and crashed the Internet and how even Pepsi could drop the political ball. Years ago, most advertisers would have never dreamed of offending anyone with a pulse and a wallet. But all that is changing. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:4105/05/2017
S6E16 - Guys and Dolls: Gender Marketing, Part II
This week, it’s part two of our Gender Marketing show. In this episode, we’ll look at how companies that have historically marketed to one gender switch gears to target another. We’ll analyze how Harley Davidson got women on two wheels, why a 13-year-old girl convinced Hasbro to make an Easy Bake Oven for boys and how Barbie targeted…dads. By and large, most products are gender-neutral. It's just the marketing that's not. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
26:4720/04/2017
S6E15 - Guys and Dolls: Gender Marketing, Part I
This week, we delve into the controversial world of Gender Marketing. How did it all start? Why are aisles and products separated by gender? Why do some companies charge women more than men for identical items? Marketing different products to different genders leads to profit but also to big consequences. It’s not a black-and-white issue, but it’s definitely pink and blue… Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:0113/04/2017
S6E14 - Selling The Dream: Real Estate Advertising
This week, we look at the fine art of selling the dream. The world of Real Estate Marketing has its own rules, its own techniques and its own unique breed of salespeople. We'll tell the story of how the word "Realtor" was reluctantly blessed by Merriam-Webster, why so many real estate agents use photos of themselves as a marketing tactic and what happens when the real estate business tries enticing buyers using...humour.It's a form of marketing that touches all of us and it usually involves the biggest purchase of our lives. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:0906/04/2017
S6E13 - The Wizarding World of Influencer Marketing
This week, we peek into the emerging world of influencer marketing. Today, the most popular social media Influencers aren't celebrities, they're regular people. Bloggers, Instagrammers, YouTube stars and Snapchatters have amassed millions of followers, promoting products using only the trust of their fans as currency. We'll look at a single YouTube review that shot Patti Labelle to the top of the baking industry, why J.K. Rowling only needed seven people to promote the biggest movie attraction of the year and exactly what happens when influencers break the trust of their loyal followers. It all comes down to integrity and transparency. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:4030/03/2017
S6E11 - The Frankenstein Factor: Inventors Who Regret Their Inventions
This week, we analyze inventors who later came to regret their inventions. Sometimes it's because the product ended up being harmful. Other times it's because of the way their product was used. And in most cases, the creators simply lost control of their creations. We'll look at why the inventor of the K-Cup doesn't own a Keurig machine, why the creator of Mother's Day later tried to have it rescinded and how the Wright Brothers lost control of the airplane. It's one of the most unwieldy aspects of marketing - you create a product, you inform the public, you put it into the marketplace, and it's out of your hands. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:2416/03/2017
S6E10 - The Odd Couple: Unlikely Marketing Collaborations
In this episode, we look at what happens when seemingly unrelated companies decide to partner up. By pooling their resources and, more importantly, by leveraging each other's strengths, unlikely brands collaborate to achieve much more than they could have achieved alone. We'll look at a hotel that partnered with an animal rescue organization by bringing dogs into the hotel, a budget-priced car that redefined the term "luxury vehicle" by teaming up with Prada and how NASA got the public to support the space industry using...a toy. Sometimes, odd couples click. And what they create together is highly unusual and unique. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:1110/03/2017
S6E09 - The Elephant In The Room: Humane Marketing vs. Profit
In this episode, we explore the controversial topic of Humane Marketing. From circuses to SeaWorld to fashion runways to fast food restaurants, each industry is dealing with mounting issues when it comes to the ethical treatment of animals, and their marketing is being affected as a result. This week, we'll look at how Ringling Brothers started using humane storytelling to draw customers, how Armani tipped the scales in the burgeoning "vegan clothing" world and the 2016 movie that may change the way animals are used in film forever. In this day and age, you can't ignore the elephant in the room. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
28:0003/03/2017
S6E08 - Brands In Cars Getting Coffee: Sponsorship Marketing
This week, we enter the delicate world of Sponsorship Marketing. Close to 20 billion sponsorship dollars are spent each year in North America. That money can keep a brand afloat, or it can cause a lot of tension. We'll look at how a single phone call from Coca Cola changed Christmas tradition forever, how Barbie helped save the Girl Scouts and what happens when a sponsor has to weather the demands...of the sponsee. The reason brands pick certain programs or events to sponsor is always strategic – and always interesting. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:4624/02/2017
S6E06 - Lead Balloons: When Negative Brand Names Work
This week, we peek into the emerging world of influencer marketing. Today, the most popular social media Influencers aren't celebrities, they're regular people. Bloggers, Instagrammers, YouTube stars and Snapchatters have amassed millions of followers, promoting products using only the trust of their fans as currency. We'll look at a single YouTube review that shot Patti Labelle to the top of the baking industry, why J.K. Rowling only needed seven people to promote the biggest movie attraction of the year and exactly what happens when influencers break the trust of their loyal followers. It all comes down to integrity and transparency. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:3410/02/2017
S6E05 - Judgment Day: Super Bowl Advertising
This week, we take a look at the biggest day of the year for the advertising industry: The Super Bowl. The only sporting event where viewers pay as much attention to the commercials as they do the game. We'll analyze a tiny but ambitious brand that bet its entire marketing budget on one single Super Bowl commercial, a website that created a purposefully banned ad to generate free buzz and a company that created the most famous Super Bowl commercial of all time one year, then aired another the next that was such a flop, they sent the ad agency packing. That's why they call it "Judgement Day" - because careers and accounts hang in the balance on Super Bowl Sunday. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:3503/02/2017
S6E04 - What A Difference A Difference Makes: Standing Out In The Marketplace
This week, we look at brands that separate themselves from the herd. In the world of marketing, standing out is the most critical thing a company can do. Having a distinct personality gives shoppers a reason to remember a brand and a reason to buy. We'll analyze a wrestler who used a delicate flower to intimidate his opponents, a single eyepatch that gave one company a $28M bump in sales and a motorcycle brand that succeeded by taking the fun out of the ride. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:3027/01/2017
S6E03 - Passport Revoked: When Brands Fail Internationally
In this episode, we explore why some big brands fail when they attempt to expand internationally. It’s always interesting when massive companies with marketing firepower move into a new country and end up packing up their tents and going back home. Sometimes those companies succeed in other countries, but one just trips them up. We’ll look at how Home Depot and eBay originally struck out in China, why Germany didn’t take well to Walmart and we’ll dive deep into the real reasons Target failed in Canada. Amazing success stories at home, failures abroad. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:3020/01/2017
S6E02 - LIVE: Unforeseen Circumstances: How Companies Are Affected By Chance
This episode explores what happens to brands when a completely unexpected event occurs. Most companies tightly control every aspect of a brand - but occasionally, an unforeseen circumstance rears its head. And it’s always interesting to see how the company reacts and what happens to their business as a result. We’ll look at what happened to Ford Broncos after the OJ Simpson slow-speed car chase, what happened to Red Lobster after Beyonce gave it a sexy callout in a song, and what happened to James Bond when JFK gave the books a ringing endorsement. The Podcast for this show was recorded at the first ever live performance of Under The Influence at the Hot Docs Podfest. We do a Q&A with the record after. It was fun. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
52:4120/01/2017
S6E01 - The Crazy World of Trademarks
In this episode, we explore the crazy world of Trademarks. The key to success in marketing is to stand out from the crowd. One of the best ways to do that is with trademarks. Brands try to create logos or slogans or design features that they can protect legally, giving them unique marketing tools. In this episode, we'll look at a lawsuit between Disney and a music performer over a mouse trademark, we'll listen to how companies trademark sounds, we'll talk about a ring announcer who earned over $400 million from trademarking a single sentence and how shock rocker Marilyn Manson saved his career by trademarking his name. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
26:5906/01/2017
S5E25 - Ask Terry 2016
This week, we take a peek into the risky, yet delicious world of commercial parodies. Some spoof ads are created just for the laughs, while others are sharp critiques of questionable products, overzealous advertising claims and self-congratulatory corporations. We'll look at a magazine that satirized one of the most controversial court cases of the century, a company that parodied the competition, then sued another company for parodying their parody, and unpack the Saturday Night Live skits that brought commercial parodies into the mainstream. Commercial parodies didn't just lampoon the ad industry, they influenced it. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:0724/06/2016
S5E24 - Commercial Parodies
This week, we take a peek into the risky, yet delicious world of commercial parodies. Some spoof ads are created just for the laughs, while others are sharp critiques of questionable products, overzealous advertising claims and self-congratulatory corporations. We'll look at a magazine that satirized one of the most controversial court cases of the century, a company that parodied the competition, then sued another company for parodying their parody, and unpack the Saturday Night Live skits that brought commercial parodies into the mainstream. Commercial parodies didn't just lampoon the ad industry, they influenced it. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:3617/06/2016
S5E23 - When Madison Avenue Met Broadway: The World of Industrial Musicals
This time, we explore the little known and surprising world of Industrial Musicals. In an unexpected collision of Madison Avenue and Broadway, companies in the '50s began staging full-fledged musicals in an effort to inspire their employees, parade new product lines and boost morale. We'll look at one company that tripled the production costs of My Fair Lady to inspire its sales team, another that unknowingly funded one of the most iconic novels of our time, and the handful of companies that still practice the art of Industrial Musicals today. Nothing inspires a marketing department quite like choreographed tap dancing. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:0910/06/2016
S5E22 - Bookmarks 2016
The research team at Under The Influence does a lot of reading over the year, and finds a lot of great stories - many of which don’t fit into our regular episodes. But that doesn’t mean they shouldn’t be told! This week, we’ll tell the story of how Stephen King’s wife fished a story out of the wastepaper basket that changed their lives, how Engelbert Humperdinck’s manager tricked his record company into signing him, how Rocket Richard taught an enforcer a lesson, and we’ll tell an emotional story about one of the most memorable scenes from M*A*S*H. Then, we’ll extract the marketing lessons from each of those incredible tales. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
26:4503/06/2016
S5E21 - Persuasive Perks: The World of Loyalty Programs
This time, we explore the world of loyalty programs. In this day and age, marketers do everything possible to encourage loyal customers, and loyalty programs are one of the most effective ways to retain them. We’ll go back in time to see how the first loyalty programs started, and we’ll analyze the marketing strategies behind today’s programs to see how they really work. Loyalty cards may give shoppers points, miles and merchandise, but what they give marketers is fascinating. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:2127/05/2016
S5E20 - Radio Still Makes Waves
This week, we take a trip to five different countries to listen to some astonishing radio advertising. From a theatre company in Switzerland that sponsored the traffic in a whole new way, to a radio campaign that tried to bore you to sleep, to an amazing radio ad that asks you to donate your voice to help other people - all of these amazing campaigns are turning radio on its ear. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:3220/05/2016
S5E19 - Strange Bedfellows: Advertising & Porn, Part II
It’s part two of our Strange Bedfellows episode. It’s not just smaller brands that are beginning to advertise on porn sites, Hollywood has come knocking, too. Large audiences and cheap ad rates are making advertisers ignore the risk in the hunt for reward. At the same time, porn sites are starting to advertise in mainstream media, and are trying to entice advertisers with analytics, public service messages and even college scholarships. It’s an interesting crossroad and a very dangerous intersection. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:0313/05/2016
S5E18 - Strange Bedfellows: Advertising & Porn, Part I
In this show, we explore the increasingly blurry line between advertising and porn. There has always been a line advertisers wouldn’t cross to promote their wares - but now some marketers have tiptoed over that line to advertise on porn sites. From food companies to fashion brands to Hollywood movies, marketers have breached the final frontier in their search for bigger, more affordable audiences. And on the other side of the tracks, porn sites are beginning to advertise in mainstream media. It’s a big risk for these strange bedfellows. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
26:2806/05/2016
S5E16 - Brand Envy 2016
This is our annual episode where Terry tells some interesting stories about the brands he admires. This year, it includes the very first toy ever advertised on television in 1952, a teen magazine dedicated to heartthrobs, the only trailer people can name-check on highways, and a book that can be found in every hotel room.Each of these brands has a special reason why it has survived and thrived. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
26:4422/04/2016
S5E15 - Business As Unusual: The World of B2B Advertising
In this show, we explore the world of business-to-business advertising. It used to be the most boring advertising in the world - where green copywriters cut their teeth, and washed-up copywriters ended their careers. But all that changed when B2B companies dared advertise on the Super Bowl, and showed the marketing world that advertising industrial equipment could be as sexy as advertising a sports car. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
29:3715/04/2016
S5E14 - World's Oldest Brands
This week, we search for some of the world’s oldest brands. 80% of companies fold after 18 months, the ones that survive average a 50 year lifespan - then there are the ones that manage to last 100, 300 or sometimes even 600 years. We’ll look at a retail store that began in 1670, a brewery that poured its first beer in 1366, and the oldest fast food joint that used root beer to attract drinkers during Prohibition. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:1408/04/2016
S5E13- Bouncing Back: How Marketers Survive Debacles
This week, we look at how marketing companies bounce back from blunders and epic missteps. Yes, most apologize, but what happens after the apology? We find out by telling the story of an airline that mistakenly offered business class tickets to Europe for $39, the cautionary tale of a company that made fun of a very serious Twitter hashtag and paid the price, the way a major candy bar company was forced to pull a global campaign off the air but came back even stronger, and the odd story of how a mattress company offended almost everybody with an ad, then apologized, then took the apology back. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
26:3701/04/2016
S5E11 - Liar For Hire: And Other Strange Service Companies
While there are many strange products in the world, there are even stranger service companies. This week, we talk about a company that rents wedding guests, a company you can hire to actually cuddle you, and we’ll explore a company that promises to cure your hangover in just a few hours. And if you need an alibi to go with that hangover, there’s a company that markets lies, too. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:2118/03/2016
S5E10 - Live and Let Buy: Where You Live Dictates What You Purchase
The most interesting cultural differences aren’t country to country, they are province to province, state to state, and even city to city. This week, we explore how and why people living in different locations buy such vastly different products. British Columbia likes to show off luxury cars, Toronto likes big homes, and New York likes luxury watches. The most pampered pets live in Saskatchewan. Last year, the city that bought the most sex paraphernalia was Victoria, this year it’s a city out east. Join us to find out which one. Live & Let Buy: where you live dictates what you buy. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:2111/03/2016
S5E09 - Achilles Heel Advertising: Repositioning The Competition
This week, we explore when a smaller advertiser attacks the weak spot in a bigger advertiser’s marketing. It’s a strategy of brinksmanship, because it means a smaller company not only chooses to attack a larger company, but it attacks the weakness in a bigger company’s strength. It takes surgical precision, but when done well, the smaller advertiser gains market share, while diminishing the bigger company’s reputation at the same time. We’ll talk about how Avis aimed an arrow at Hertz, how Tylenol overtook the much larger Bayer Aspirin, how Scope used a slingshot to battle the Goliath in the mouthwash category, and the amusing story of how a potato chip company battled a competitor by finding the soft spot in its ingredient list. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:1004/03/2016
S5E08 - Movie Merchandising
In this episode, we explore the marketing of movie merchandise. From the earliest days of merchandising book characters, to the true beginning of movie merchandising with the birth of Mickey Mouse and the Disney Studio, the marketing of toys and games became a critical strategy for movie and television studios. We chart the milestones in entertainment merchandising, how those milestones became a marketing strategy to build loyal audiences, and how the biggest merchandising breakthrough in a galaxy far, far away changed everything. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:1826/02/2016
S5E06 - Words Invented By Marketers
This week, we explore words invented by marketers. Many of those words found their way into the dictionary and have become part of our daily language, like “Dependability” and “Halitosis.” While some other familiar words like Retsyn and Fahrvergnugen were around for a short time, then disappeared into the annals of commercial history. We’ll also get to the bottom of Corinthian Leather. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:4712/02/2016
S5E05 - Small Move, Big Gain
This episode explores how small moves can result in huge business gains. While much of the business world spends its time looking for the big idea, many companies enjoy massive results with tiny moves and subtle tweaks. We’ll look at how a hit movie that was turned down by every studio in town was finally sold thanks to a small change in the way it was pitched, how Obama used a small tactic to beat John McCain, and how broccoli made a small move to become popular during the infamous OJ Simpson trial. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:3005/02/2016
S5E04 - When Marketers Lie
This week, we look at the consequences when marketing companies lie. From the Volkswagen scandal, to a promotion that brought Hoover to its knees, to a company that promised super-charged sexual enhancement, each was a case of fraud with disastrous repercussions. Join us as we explore what happened, and whether those companies could ever regain the trust of their customers. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:5229/01/2016
S5E03 - Zombie Brands
This week, the topic is Zombie Brands - products and companies that had a long run of success, then ran into difficulties, and were either shut down or slipped into bankruptcy - only to rise from the dead and exist yet again. We’ll look at an airline grounded 25 years ago that has taken flight again, a retailer that died and came back, a television show that was cancelled then resurrected to become one of the most successful of all time, and an automobile that once ruled the road, was then discontinued, then exhumed. All zombie brands that still roam the earth. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:1422/01/2016
S5E02 - Promise Less, Profit More
Most products offer customers as many features and benefits as possible in order to lure shoppers toward a purchase. But then there are some companies that offer you less, and profit more. We’ll look at a book company that eliminated their books and made millions, an electronics company that broke all the rules by eliminating the recording function from a tape machine and made history, and how two companies looked at a shoe and made millions by throwing away the laces. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:5915/01/2016
S5E01 - How Marketing Created Rituals
In our first episode of 2016, we look at how the marketing industry created many of our everyday rituals. We don't think twice about having bacon & eggs for breakfast, or taking a coffee break, or using soap to wash our hands. But each of those routine rituals was invented by marketing companies to sell more product. You may even be surprised to learn that when our kids trick or treat has a marketing story behind it. Join us as we explore how these and many more rituals began and how they influence your life. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:2808/01/2016
S4E25 - Ask Terry 2015
This is the final episode of our 10th season on CBC. And to celebrate, we turn the show over to you. That means Terry will be answering listener questions. He’ll talk about why he chose advertising as a profession, how political marketing differs from product marketing, whether the jingle is definitely dead, why some bad commercials actually work, and how he would advertise marijuana if it ever became legal. The questions are fun, insightful and amusing. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:0621/06/2015
S4E24 - Selling Yourself: The Art of Personal Branding
This week, we take the marketing lessons from big brands and apply them… to you. If you have to sell yourself, sell your services, if you want more “likes” and followers, or if you’re looking for a job - this episode explores how to manage your social media, how to pick the best profile photo, how to maintain a consistent tone of voice, how to avoid cliches in your resume. It’s time to overhaul your personal brand. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
26:5714/06/2015
S4E22 - The Internet of (Marketing) Things
This week, we look at the impact of the Internet of Things on the world of marketing. Soon, most of the devices in our lives will be given a digital voice. Your fridge will be doing your weekly grocery shopping for you - and that means marketers will have to send discount coupons to your appliances now. Your car will be able to make appointments with a mechanic all by itself, and you can now order laundry detergent, coffee and bathroom tissue with the push of Wi-Fi Amazon Dash button in your home. We’ll look at the fine line between convenience and intrusion, and why marketers are looking forward the Internet of (marketing) Things. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:0831/05/2015
S4E21 - Bookmarks 2015
This is our annual episode dedicated to great stories from our Under The Influence research books that didn’t make our regular season. We’ll tell the story of why Tim Hortons always chooses brown bricks for their stores, how Best Buy helped men set up their electronics without offending their manhood, an amusing story about the problem of Ronald McDonald taking naps between scenes of a television commercial, and how Levis sold a product to the teenagers of Europe that they didn’t even want - but eventually loved. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:3424/05/2015
S4E20 - Sue Me, Sue You Blues: Famous Advertising Lawsuits
This week, we look at Famous Advertising Lawsuits. Because the stakes are so high in the world of marketing, it leads to some interesting - and odd - lawsuits. We’ll tell the story of how an elderly woman sued McDonald’s because her coffee spilled on her lap and why she won the case, how Microsoft came gunning for a 17 year-old Mike Rowe's website with the domain name www.MikeRoweSoft. com, how a Hollywood actress sued a store for tweeting a photo of her shopping there, and the amusing story of Hall & Oates suing a company over a cereal called Haulin’ Oats. Everyone rise, court is in session. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
26:2517/05/2015
S4E19 - Even In The Dark: How Packaging Persuades You To Buy
This week, we explore how Product Packaging influences what you buy. We'll tell the story of how the famous Coke bottle was born, how the psychology behind packaging designs influence you in grocery stores, and how Tropicana and Tide learned the hard way that package design can be bad even when it's good. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:2810/05/2015
S4E17 - Show Me The Money: The World of Product Placement
This week, we explore the world of product placement. From the first product placement in a movie in 1927, to E.T., to the latest movies and TV shows, advertisers look for opportunities to give their products starring roles. We’ll look at the history of product placement, how it evolved, and the most famous examples of how it went right - and how it went horribly wrong. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:3026/04/2015