Let’s just rename Spirit Airlines “Britney Spears,” because—oops—it did it again. Already known for its l
ove of puns and
gimmicky, sometimes
controversial advertising, the latest effort from the discount carrier parodying the
Secret Service prostitution scandal perhaps went too far.
Spirit pulled the ad, in addition to offering an apology. Reading “More Bang for Your Buck,” the promotion offered one-way flight fares to Cartagena, Colombia for as low as $19.80.
Speaking of gimmicky advertising, check out
this billboard in South Atlanta by Racquel Bailey, an aspiring actress who’s out to be the next Tyler Perry Presents … you fill in the blank.
It seems Spirit wasn’t the only company that found itself in familiar, controversial waters. Urban Outfitters, a retailer that’s already ignited fires with
Native Americans, the
LGBT community, and
the Irish, can now add people of Jewish heritage to the list. The clothier
has drawn criticism from the Anti-Defamation League for selling a T-shirt adorned with a design comparable to the Star of David—the kind that the Nazis forced Jewish people to wear.
Meanwhile, an eyewear brand in China could soon catch heat for deciding to
name its line of sunglasses after notable deaf and blind figure Helen Keller.
I wouldn’t expect to hear an apology from Urban Outfitters or the Chinese eyewear brand, but they’re not the only ones keeping apologies under wraps.
The New York Times explains that while newspapers often issue retractions, their counterparts on television stay mum when it comes to correcting journalistic errors.
Although the ingredient wasn’t specified on the alleged
secret menu, Starbucks has decided to appease its vegan faultfinders by
recanting its use of crushed beetles to dye its Strawberries and Crème Frappuccino.
Don’t get crushed has always been the name of the game when it came to playing Frogger, but now t
he arcade classic has received a Fifth Avenue facelift.
Speaking of facelifts, CollegeHumor hilariously showcases how to give the ordinarily boring Facebook profile page
an inspired Instagram makeover.
Vogue Spain’s social media team, on the other hand, provides an example of
how a brand should NOT use Instagram, and by that, we mean to rip off the work of a famed New York-based street photographer.
And amid the rise of a social networking-crazed generation, some products must fall.
24/7 Wall St. touches on eight such products that people will no longer buy.
Something we didn’t buy, and that has landed daily discount site Groupon in trouble again, is
a deal it offered for a tour of Kink.com, a local porn studio in San Francisco.
Speaking of the city by the bay, because it was such a proponent of
banning the Happy Meal, it would probably agree with
Advertising Age’s observation that in these modern days, Ronald McDonald and his cohorts are to obesity and fast food what Joe Camel was to lung cancer and the tobacco industry.
If Ronald is the new face of our nation’s dietary dilemma,
who is the voice of American politics today? Where news columnists of the 1960s (such as Joseph Alsop) were once trusted advisories of presidents and government leaders, the continuous chatter of the blogosphere today has made it impossible for an irrefutable opinion on such matters to exist.
One of those competing voices is certainly Fox News, although even one of the network’s own shows, “The Simpsons,” seems to get its news elsewhere. The cartoon
took a less than subtle jab at the news outlet while simultaneously congratulating its shared parent company on 25 years of broadcasting.