Friday, October 29, 2010
More Benefit than a Back Rub
What a week for the Media Jolly! – Monday kicked off proceedings in style with a lavish champagne charity event at the Guild Hall, followed on Tuesday by a ‘quiet client lunch’ which ran right thorough to an evening spent supporting the French wine growers of Bordeaux in their dominance of the London market. This was then followed by a truly decadent Wednesday enjoying treatments including a facial and massage at a luxurious spa day kindly laid on by a media owner in thanks for recent business. Now Friday has arrived and it goes without saying that there are hangovers a plenty today following the City am and Media Week Awards last night.
Yes, even though media agencies are no longer quite as liberal in the drink trolley department as those portrayed in the ever popular Mad Men, the Media Jolly remains a firm favourite pastime. But is this penchant for wining, dining and entertaining merely an indicator that media types like to indulge themselves more than the norm? Or are there other benefits to be gained from such seeming frivolity?
In recent years overtly lavish hospitality spending has come under scrutiny as being surplus and inappropriate to the environment in which we have been working – an environment in which companies have folded and people have been left unemployed. Indeed, many traditional fixtures in the Media Jolly calendar have been cancelled over the last year as the industry gave a nod to the sensitivities of the situation; cocktail dresses were left languishing in the wardrobe, tuxedos gathering dust waiting soberly for their next outing…
Because of course there will always be the next Media Jolly to look forward to, no matter what the economic climate. Those with enough vision to realise that the benefit of such events runs deeper than mere personal enjoyment – from the contacts made, information exchanged and gleaned, to the deals done signed and sealed, will always continue to put their hand in their (often rather large) wallets. To my mind it is true that success within the media industry is synonymous with success at building human relationships – both inside the workplace and at the 19th hole when most self-respecting professionals are working slavishly over a keyboard. Therefore experience tells me I can look my boss in the eye with a clean conscience and tell her that I really did get more benefit from my day at the spa than simply just a back rub.
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
i spy with my little i...
... something beginning with i .... 24 years since the last national daily newspaper launch - The first new national daily newspaper goes on sale today in what's described by many as "a last throw of the dice" for its owners.
This morning - The Independent newspaper rolled out it's new publication 'I', dubbed The Indy 'light'.
The 56-page newspaper will draw its content from The Independent, but the articles are shorter with a more populist approach.
Independent executive Andrew Mullins said: "Time-poor newspaper readers, and especially commuters, have been telling us for years that they are inundated with information and just don't have the time to read a quality newspaper on a regular basis."
The last daily nationals to launch were Eddy Shah's Today and the Independent itself, both in 1986.
But unlike the London Evening Standard and the Daily Mail's offspring Metro - to read 'I', readers will have to pay - 20p
Links to articles include ..
http://www.pressgazette.co.uk/story.asp?sectioncode=1&storycode=46192&c=1
Monday, October 11, 2010
Boris Bikes, Barclays and BANKSY
With Banksy across the Altantic working on attaining Global Exposure with the design of the credits for the Simpsons latest episode ... it looks like a disgruntled creative prodigee has been working their magic over the past week or so in the UK ... this time using Boris J's London Barclays bikes as the new canvas.
My personal favourite ..not the version as pictured, but the simple, yet very effective....BARCLAYS BONUS SHAKER
Freedom of speech
So Andrew Marr has outraged bloggers across the sphere with his 'stereotypical' descriptive comments - resulting in 1,000's of rants and defensive comments about not being...
Spotty
Balding
Living in their mothers basement
Constantly musing on blogs whilst drunk
Any or all of the other comments he made.....
Goes to show the power of established macro 'journalists' comment vs personal and so called micro civilian journalism given the coverage it has generated so far.
Friday, October 08, 2010
Adding another dimension to a static medium
Excellent to see the creative use of an 'old fashioned' standard
format 48 sheet poster this week.
A Johnson's World of Softness pop-up billboard was unveiled,
featuring live models advertising 24 hour body lotion, at
Westfield Shopping Centre, in west London. 07/10/10
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