Archive for March 24th, 2010

NCAA Bracket Hours Outnumber Work Hours

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

A study released earlier this morning by the U.S. Department of Labor revealed that from Wednesday, March 17th to Tuesday, March 22nd, the total hours spent filling out and monitoring progress of NCAA Tournament brackets in the workplace outpaced the actual hours of work.  According to the study, approximately 752 million man-hours of work were dedicated to NCAA pools, while a total of 62 hours were dedicated to actual work duties during the same time period.  ”While the numbers may seem shocking out of context,” said researcher Richard Lafever, who oversaw the study, “they’re really nothing to be worried about.  We see the same thing every year: worker productivity always takes a nosedive during the first week of March Madness.  What’s shocking about this year is that Kansas didn’t even make it into the Sweet 16.  If they had won out, I’d be a lock for the Xbox 360, but instead I have to rely on Kentucky beating red-hot Cornell in order to even have a prayer of beating Jim in Finance.”

Keynote Address Thinly-Disguised Sales Pitch

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

The keynote address for the MOMMA Global conference held last week in San Francisco was nothing but a very thinly-veiled sales pitch for the speaker’s company, according to several witnesses who attended the event.  AntEye Social Chief Marketing Officer Randall Smugfellow’s 45-minute speech reportedly focused on the growing importance of Social Media in the overall marketing mix for approximately 4 minutes before launching into a 41-minute “advertisement” for his company’s services, complete with a 32-slide PowerPoint presentation.  According to witnesses, Randall stressed how critical it was for all brands to speak with him out in the lobby to discuss next steps.  ”This is bullshit, man,” said one attendee.  ”I take a day away from the office to get some insight into my industry, and it’s nothing but another sales meeting.  I wonder when they’re gonna offer the timeshares in Boca Raton.”

Funeral For Advertising As We Know It Held

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

A small, public funeral service for Advertising As We Know It was held Tuesday morning at the Evergreens Cemetery in Brooklyn, NY, just five days after it was officially declared dead by SocialLiscious VP of Sales Glenn Schtick at the Digital Social Maven Conference last Friday.  The service, which was attended by 120 friends, family members, and advertising interns, was described as a small, quiet, and somewhat confusing affair.  Many in attendance were still in shock that Advertising As We Know It had finally died.  ”People have been saying that Advertising As We Know It is dead for years,” said junior media planner Seth Epstein.  ”I always assumed it was just pompous ad execs trying to sound smarter than they really were.  But I guess now every time some guy in jeans and a black blazer gets up on a conference stage and makes an edgy blanket statement, we have to assume it’s true.”

Google Like Rubber, Viacom Like Glue

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

Further escalating the three-year copyright dispute between the two media stalwarts, search giant Google publicly announced late last week that they “are like rubber” and characterized adversary Viacom as “glue,” adding that “everything they do bounces off us and sticks” on Viacom.  The statement, issued late last week by Chief Playground Officer Susie Derkins, capped allegations by Google that Viacom committed the very copyright violations it accused Google of perpetuating.  ”Nuh-uh,” said an attorney from Viacom, who refused to be identified.  ”They started it.”  ”Did not,” countered Derkins. “Did too, quitsies,” said the Viacom lawyer.  ”Did not, double quitsies,” said Derkins.  ”Did too, triple quitsies, times infinity!” said the Viacom lawyer.  Judge Wormwood, presiding over the case, declined to comment on the latest accusations, saying only: “Thank God I only have five years to retirement.”