Friday, April 27, 2012

Advertising london olympics

  • London organizers and the International Olympic Committee are policing everything from dogs to body paint in an effort to protect their 53 sponsors and Olympic partners from unauthorized advertising.
  • (Huffington Post)
  • London organizers and the International Olympic Committee are policing everything from dogs to body paint in an effort to protect their 53 sponsors and Olympic partners from unauthorized advertising.
  • (Bloomberg)
  • The 2012 London Olympic Games coverage in the U.S. includes large bandwidth In domestic markets, ATT Advertising Solutions and ATT Interactive are known for their leadership in local search and advertising.
  • (Yahoo Finance)
  • Hundreds of homeowners are circumventing real-estate brokers by advertising on websites like campinmygarden.com, Gumtree.com and Craiglist's London to advertise space on couches and in backyard campsites to Olympic tourists only to find demand lacking.
  • (Businessweek)
  • NEW YORK, NY — YR Advertising and VML, along with Cohn Wolfe, announced today the official launch of their integrated communications campaign for the U.S. Olympic Committee.
  • (msnbc.com)
  • With the London summer Olympics just 100 days away chief innovation officer at Leo Burnett, a unit of No. 3 advertising agency Publicis, referring to the last summer Olympics.
  • (Stuff)
  • Now, however, with the boundaries between art, science, literature, sport and just about everything else being redefined in the wake of the digital revolution, the idea of a multi-disciplinary Olympics once again feels relevant.
  • (Daily Telegraph)
  • Other Olympic items sold Wednesday included a vintage poster advertising travel to the first London Olympics in 1908 and an Olympic torch from the 1948 Games, also held in London.
  • (ABC News)
  • A spokesperson for SAW commented, "The London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games create a unique The London Art Wall Group has their own team of professional advertising designers and painters.
  • (YAHOO!)
  • The collection was expected to sell for between £3,000 and £5,000, but was bought for £39,650. An Olympic advertising poster from the first London Games in 1908 was the first lot to be sold at the auction on Wednesday for £15,000.
  • (BBC News)

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