Twitter's Testimony on Russian-Linked Accounts 'Inadequate on Every Level'


Twitter Inc. disclosed details about suspicious activity on its network during the U.S. election after it met with two congressional committees conducting probes into Russian meddling, but a top Democrat slammed their presentation as “deeply disappointing.”

Twitter said Thursday it disabled 22 accounts after reviewing information from Facebook Inc. showing connections to 450 bogus accounts on that company’s social network. It also said it is taking steps to prevent efforts to manipulate its network.

Company representatives met with both House and Senate intelligence panels behind closed doors on Thursday.

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Banana Split: Court Fight Breaks Out Over Halloween Costumes


This Halloween, you’ll probably see someone in a banana suit. Yes, he or she will be outfitted in a bright yellow costume, their face filling a hole in the middle of the fruit as arms and legs poke through the polyester peel. Hilarious.

Turns out, those bananas are big money, so much so that one seller has gone to federal court to defend its banana designs. The phrase “banana suit” now has a dual meaning thanks to a complaint filed in New Jersey federal court. Silvertop Associates, a costume manufacturer which does business as Rasta Imposta, sued Kmart Corp. and Sears Holding Corp. on Wednesday, alleging copyright infringement, trade dress infringement, and unfair competition.

Since 2008, Kmart has purchased costumes from Rasta Imposta, but the two companies failed to reach an agreement this year and Kmart said it would use “another vendor” to fulfill banana costume orders, according to the complaint. “Shortly thereafter, Rasta Imposta discovered that Kmart had begun offering the infringing costume, which is a direct replication and knockoff of Rasta Imposta’s copyrighted Banana Design,” the complaint states. “Kmart is not free to simply appropriate Rasta Imposta’s intellectual property for its own business advantage without Rasta Imposta’s consent.”

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Wrigley’s: Waiting Rooms


Film
Wrigleys

For many years, dentists have recommended to regularly chew Wrigley’s Extra to keep teeth healthy and clean. The campaign shows the long-term effects of this decade-long proposition: empty and sad looking dentist waiting rooms, because patients are missing. Every room displays a little pack of Wrigley’s Extra Professional.

Advertising Agency:BBDO, Düsseldorf, Germany
Creative Directors:Andreas Breunig, Darren Richardson
Photographer:Stefan Viehbacher, Berlin
Production:Craftwork Düsseldorf
Audio Production:Studio Funk, Berlin

Wrigley’s: Dentist

Outdoor, Print
Wrigleys

For many years, dentists have recommended to regularly chew Wrigley’s Extra to keep teeth healthy and clean. The campaign shows the long-term effects of this decade-long proposition: empty and sad looking dentist waiting rooms, because patients are missing. Every room displays a little pack of Wrigley’s Extra Professional.

Foolishly recommended by dentists since 1987

Advertising Agency:BBDO, Düsseldorf, Germany
Creative Directors:Andreas Breunig, Darren Richardson
Photographer:Stefan Viehbacher, Berlin
Production:Craftwork Düsseldorf
Audio Production:Studio Funk, Berlin

Kit Reed, Author of Darkly Humorous Fiction, Dies at 85

In novels and stories that hopscotched across genres, happy endings were no more likely than they are in life.

Hefner’s Mansion Embodied Hedonistic Fun and Darker Impulses

Seemingly everyone in Hollywood has a story about the Playboy Mansion. Some of them are ugly.

Von Miller Took a Knee, Then a Sponsor Drew Scrutiny

A car dealership in Denver faced an internet backlash after a retracted TV news report saying it had fired him. The facts were more complicated.

Cidade da Islândia aposta em faixa de pedestre 3D para evitar acidentes

China e Rússia também começam seus testes com a faixa de pedestres 3D

> LEIA MAIS: Cidade da Islândia aposta em faixa de pedestre 3D para evitar acidentes

Aston Martin trabalha em projeto de submarino

Criado em parceria com Triton Submarines, Project Netuno quer tornar submarinos atrativos para o mercado de luxo

> LEIA MAIS: Aston Martin trabalha em projeto de submarino

Nova propaganda da Audi coloca palhaços para cometer erros de direção

2017 é sem dúvida o ano em que os palhaços ficaram por cima na cultura pop, seja no cinema pipoca com “It: A Coisa”, na televisão com a nova temporada de “American Horror Story” ou no Brasil com “Bingo: O Rei das Manhãs”. Por coincidência do destino ou planejamento de publicidade bem apurado, a Audi […]

> LEIA MAIS: Nova propaganda da Audi coloca palhaços para cometer erros de direção

Local Media, Agencies in Puerto Rico Meet to Take Inventory and Make Plans


The heads of Puerto Rico’s main media outlets and ad agencies met today for the first time in San Juan to figure out which media are currently able to operate on the devastated island, and what audiences they are reaching.

From now on, the group will conduct a daily inventory of available media and distribute it by email and a WhatsApp group to agencies, who will cut-and-paste the information and send it to clients, said Edgardo Rivera, CEO of DDB Puerto Rico, after the meeting held at Telemundo’s San Juan offices. (Cell phone service is functioning at about 30% of its usual capacity, and Rivera was able to make a call from his iPhone outside the Telemundo building).

An unprecedented degree of cooperation between competitors is also developing. Telemundo, for instance, is letting another channel, WAPA, use its signal, he said. And agencies including DDB, which didn’t suffer major hurricane damage, are offering work space to shops whose offices were flooded. The DDB office is only open for half the day, between 7 a.m. and 1 p.m., to conserve hard-to-get diesel fuel for the back-up generator. (Rivera says he can’t park his car on the street, due to the risk of thieves puncturing the gas tank to steal the fuel).

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'Facebook Was Always Anti-Trump,' According to Trump


Be sure to tune into “Fox & Friends” tomorrow morning to find out just how collusional the anti-Trump collusion may have been. For instance, was Tinder involved too? Whisper? And what about MySpace?

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The Three Saddest American Brands Right Now


What does it take to really, truly reimagine a brand? And which major American brands most urgently need to be reimagined? Here are my thoughtsand my (sad, pathetic) shortlist:

McDonald’s

In the course of writing this column, I visited the three McDonald’s within a half-mile walking distance of Media Guy HQ in downtown Manhattan. There had been four, but over the summer one shut down; right across the street from it, a Shake Shack is about to open. McDonald’s and/or its franchisee apparently saw the writing on the wall in my rapidly gentrifying neighborhood.

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AT&T Asks Supreme Court to Nix Net Neutrality


AT&T and other broadband providers asked the Supreme Court to overturn the Obama-era “net neutrality” rule barring internet service providers from slowing or blocking rivals’ content.

The appeals, filed Thursday, will put new pressure on a rule enacted in 2015 when the Federal Communications Commission was under Democratic control. Filing a separate appeal from AT&T were the United States Telecom Association, a trade group, and broadband service provider CenturyLink.

Now under Republican leadership, the FCC is already considering a plan to replace and weaken the rules. FCC Chairman Ajit Pai wants to remove strong legal authority that critics say over-regulates telephone and cable providers and that defenders say is needed to enforce fair treatment of web traffic.

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Taco Bell and Forever 21 Team Up for Latest in Food Fashion


Taco Bell and Forever 21 are collaborating on a clothing line. Yes, you read that right.

The collection will include items such as tops, bodysuits, cropped hoodies and anoraks in hunger-inspiring prints. They’ll be available at select Forever 21 stores and on the retailer’s website starting Oct. 11, following an Oct. 10 preview in downtown Los Angeles with a late-night runway show, music from a band supported by Taco Bell’s Feed the Beat initiative and, of course, a taco truck.

The seemingly unlikely pairing is only the latest of its kind as food marketers realize the potential in expanding into the closet. This summer we saw the introduction of a KFC Ltd. collection including jewelry, pillowcases, shirts and socks, quickly followed by McDonald’s and Uber Eats giving out items including Big Mac onesies and pillowcases to promote delivery. It’s not just fast-food chains trying to up their fashion cred. Cheetos has its own line of everything from clothing to pricey jewels, while Kellogg’s and State Bicycle Co. rolled out Froot Loops-inspired wheels.

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Watch the Newest Ads on TV From Popeyes, PlayStation, Macy's and More


Every weekday, we bring you the Ad Age/iSpot Hot Spots, new TV commercials tracked by iSpot.tv, the real-time TV ad measurement company with attention and conversion analytics from millions of smart TVs. The ads here ran on national TV for the first time yesterday.

A few highlights: PlayStation hypes the upcoming (Nov. 17) release of “Star Wars Battlefront II: Elite Trooper Deluxe Edition.” Macy’s wants you to know that it’s offering deep discounts on furniture, mattresses and rugs during its current Home Sale. And Popeyes promotes its limited-time-only $4 quarter-pound Popcorn Chicken box, which comes with a side and a buttermilk biscuit.

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Why the 'Pivot to Video Has Failed'


There’s been a lot of gnashing-of-teeth about video-pivoting lately, but perhaps the most scathing take was published this week by the Columbia Journalism Review in the form of an essay titled “The secret cost of pivoting to video,” by Heidi N. Moore, a veteran of The Guardian U.S. and The Wall Street Journal. Moore cites a recent Digiday post by Ross Benes, “Side effect of the pivot to video: audience shrinkage,” and then declares that,

Hundreds of journalists have lost their jobs while shiny-object-chasing publishers are no closer to creating cohesive video strategies to replace the traffic those writers were producing. … Publishers must acknowledge the pivot to video has failed, find out why, and set about to fix the reckless pivots so that publishers focus on good video.

The pivot-to-video thing has, of course, been going on for quite awhile nowsee, for instance, Ad Age’s story “Huffington Post Cuts Dozens of Employees as Part of Video Pivot” from January of last year, as well as “Fire Writers, Make Videos Is Latest Web Recipe for Publishers” (about, in part, Mic) from just last month. But Moore systematically deconstructs publishers’ presumptions about the supposed cure-all pivot-to-video strategy and compellingly lays out her argument in four subheaded sections: “A quicksand of metrics,” “Publishers are trusting frenemies too much,” “Constant strategy shifts undermine the quality of video” and “User experience is lacking, particularly around advertising.”

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Hugh Hefner, Between the Headlines

Newspapers, including The Times, could not help but follow Mr. Hefner’s exploits. His story was the story of changing attitudes toward sex.

The Met Opera Offers Buyouts to Its Staff as Its Season Opens

Citing “economic challenges,” the Metropolitan Opera, the nation’s largest performing arts organization, offered early retirement to some employees.

Snapchat opens up its AR lenses to advertisers

Snapchat has made its 3D World Lenses available for advertisers allowing brands to sponsor fun AR characters Snapchatters to play with.