Thursday 26 June 2008

Library exhibit celebrates real men and women of advertising








NEW YORK - "Does she or doesn't she?" "I can't believe I ate the whole thing." "Where's the beef?"

Before these slogans became lodged in our brains, they were dreamed up by advertising copywriters and executives with a knack for tapping into the spirit of the times.

A new exhibit at the New York Public Library celebrates the creators of some of the most successful ad campaigns of the last 80 years - from a fresh-faced girl selling Palmolive soap in the 1920s to today's silhouetted figures with iPods.

The exhibit "The Real Men and Women of Madison Avenue" was conceived partly as a response to "Mad Men," the critically acclaimed TV show about the relationships and intrigue at an advertising agency in the 1960s.

"We just sort of wanted to say, 'Well, these are the actual people, and this is who they are,"' said co-curator Ann Cooper.

The show at the NYPL's Science, Industry and Business Library - on Madison Avenue, appropriately - features print ads and TV commercials plus recorded interviews with the people behind them.

"Rather than just making a big deal out of the work, it sort of puts it in a time frame," said Ed McCabe, whose work with Scali McCabe Sloves in the '60s and 1970s is in the exhibit.

McCabe was at the library Monday on the eve of the show's opening to talk about accounts such as Volvo and Perdue Chicken. He said it was his idea to build the Perdue campaign around the company's president, Frank Perdue.

"It became inevitable that he be the guy and that it be about all the lengths he goes to to make a better chicken," said McCabe, 69, who works as a consultant. "The idea of doing that wasn't so original. It was the idea of doing it for chicken with a guy that looked something like a chicken and sounded something like a chicken."

"Mad Men," which starts its second season July 27 on AMC, relegates women to typing and filing.

But "The Real Men and Women of Madison Avenue" highlights influential women in advertising such as Phyllis Robinson, who joined Doyle Dane Bernbach when it opened in 1949 and came up with "It lets me be me" to sell hair colouring.

"It seemed very simple and straightforward and not pretentious," Robinson, 86, said in a telephone interview from her Manhattan home. Robinson said no one held her back because she was a woman.

"Not in the least," she said. "I slid right in and did my stuff."

Mary Wells Lawrence started as a copywriter in the 1950s and founded her own agency, Wells Rich Greene, in 1966.

"People are always saying, 'Wasn't it a male business?' It was not a male business," Lawrence said. "You would think that we were all cowering under the desk."

Lawrence said she is proud of how her agency handled the "I Love New York" campaign, which drew on people's buried affection for New York City and state.

"It was a time that was so bad for New York," said Lawrence, speaking by phone from the islands of British Columbia on the boat where she spends several months of the year. "But even though people were very angry because there was garbage on the streets and the teachers were quitting, in their hearts they loved New York."

The library exhibit opened Tuesday and is co-sponsored by the One Club, a trade association that bestows awards for excellence in advertising. The men and women whose work is on display are members of the club's Creative Hall of Fame.

"I think it's important to recognize that people made these ads," said Mary Warlick, CEO of the One Club and co-curator of the exhibit. "They didn't just appear."

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On the Net:

http://www.nypl.org/

http://www.oneclub.org/










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Wednesday 18 June 2008

Twinemen

Twinemen   
Artist: Twinemen

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   



Discography:


Sideshow   
 Sideshow

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 11


Twinemen   
 Twinemen

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 10




From the ashes of Morphine came Twinemen, a trinity as well boasting singer/songwriter Laurie Sargent. The vocalizer began her vocation fronting the transient mid-'80s work Face to Face in front spending a few old age as a solo creative person in the recent '90s. She adds her see to that of Billy Conway and Dana Colley, the onetime drummer and saxist, respectively, for Morphine, world Health Organization disbanded in 1999 afterwards the last of singer Mark Sandman. The trey began acting in the Boston expanse, maintaining a abidance at the Lizard Lounge, in front teaming with Hi-N-Dry to exit its self-titled debut record album in 2002.






Monday 9 June 2008

Today's SIFF lineup

There are a number of intriguing documentaries on the SIFF lineup today: "Song Sung Blue" shines a light on a pair of Milwaukee-based celebrity impersonators; "Call Me Troy" chronicles the life of an LGBT activist in Los Angeles; and "Billy Strayhorn: Lush Life" celebrates the pioneering jazz composer.



Today's schedule



Egyptian



4 p.m. — "Mad Detective"



7 p.m. — "Song Sung Blue"



9:30 p.m. — "You, the Living"



Harvard Exit



4:30 p.m. — "Shadow of the Holy Book"



7 p.m. — "Call Me Troy"



9:30 p.m. — "Billy Strayhorn: Lush Life"



Pacific Place Cinema



4:15 p.m. — "Blind Mountain"



6:30 p.m. — "Island Etude"



9:30 p.m. — "Sparrow"



SIFF Cinema



4:30 p.m. — "Alexandra"



7 p.m. — "Night Tide"



9 p.m. — "August"



Uptown



4:30 p.m. — "Strangers"



7 p.m. — "Magnus"



9:30 p.m. — "Shall We Kiss?"








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Tuesday 3 June 2008

Angelina Jolie - 15 Million Bidding War Over Jolie Twins Picture

America's biggest magazines have launched a bidding war over the first photograph of ANGELINA JOLIE and BRAD PITT's twins - and are willing to pay up to $15 million (GBP7.5 million) for the exclusive snaps.

The Tomb Raider star and longtime partner Pitt are currently expecting twins - their fifth and sixth children.

And according to TMZ.com, magazines People and OK! are desperate to land the first exclusive shot of the twins.

A spokesman for People says, "We'd love to see the photos in People. We wish the family well".

Meanwhile, OK!'s representative admits the publication would be "foolish" not to bid for the photos.

In 2006, the couple offered the first pictures of daughter Shiloh through distributor Getty Images. People magazine paid more than $4.1 million (GBP2 million) for the North American rights, while British magazine Hello! obtained the international rights for $3.5 million (GBP1.75 million). All profits were donated to an undisclosed charity by Jolie and Pitt.




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