NYPD Now Scanning Facebook, Instagram Photos to Identify Criminals

If you're thinking of committing a felony in New York City anytime soon, keep an eye on how many photos of you are floating around on Facebook and Instagram. The NYPD's new Facial Recognition Unit is using software to scan faces in social media, and from surveillance-camera footage, and match them to the mugshots of known criminals. The amount of people posting photos online is a veritable boon to modern police investigation. By modern, I mean after 2006. Since the FRU can use only clear, straight-ahead portrait shots, trying this in the days of Myspace would have been impossible. Photo via.

16 Top Twitter Fails in One Infographic

tweet_fails_small.png

Don’t we all love a good Twitter screw up? Of course we do! It makes our days more interesting and gives us a bit of schadenfreude in which to wallow. And who doesn’t love feeling better when the other guy is down?

All the classic fails are here in one infographic created by Social Commerce Today. KitchenAid’s comment about Obama’s grandmother; Chrysler’s commentary on Detroit’s drivers; StubHub’s excitement over Friday and American Rifleman’s Good Morning Shooters.

Check them all out below.

Brand_Fails_Twitter_Lrg.png

7 Steps to Becoming a World-Class Real-Time Marketer

oreo_dunk_dark.jpg

Lately, real-time marketing is the buzzword du jour. While the notion of real-time marketing has been around since the mid-nineties, the practice gained steam after Oreo’s “Dunk in the Dark” ad was created immediately following the power outage during this year’s Super Bowl.

Then, shortly after the Super Bowl — during the Oscars — it seemed like practically every brand was developing Dunk in the Dark-like ads. The point I’m trying to make isn’t that most marketers are lemmings unable to stop themselves from immediately jumping on the next shiny new object. In fact, a little real-time marketing experimentation is definitely not a bad thing, so in this post I wrote for HubSpot, I’ll highlight the necessary steps you should take to be an effective real-time marketer.

More…

16 Humiliating Twitter Brand Fails in One Painfully Hilarious Chart

Twitter is a brilliant place for brands to connect with consumers. It's also a brilliant place—unparalleled, perhaps—for brands to absolutely humiliate themselves with idiotic posts. The infographic below collects 16 of the most notorious Twitter brand fails. You'll recognize many of them, but there are a few gems that have largely gone unnoticed. Who knew, for example, that Vodafone U.K. was, at one point, "fed up of dirty homo's and is going after beaver"? You can't make this stuff up. There are a few stupidly quirky tweets—as opposed to blatantly offensive ones—thrown in for good measure. ("If bleach could talk, what would it say?" Clorox asks dumbly, for example.) Others are more obscure. (The Tesco tweet caused a stir because of the horsemeat scandal that ensnared the British supermarket chain. And the NRA tweet went out hours after the movie-theater shooting in Colorado last summer.) There's no other lesson here than don't be stupid, but apparently it's a lesson that bears repeating. Via Social Commerce Today.

Smirnoff and Absolut Show Their Support for Gay Marriage on Facebook

As thousands of consumers changed their Facebook profile pictures to equals signs Tuesday in support of marriage equality—a topic the Supreme Court is considering this week—two vodka brands led the brand charge in that regard. Smirnoff posted an image of three different drink pairings with the headline, "Every pairing is perfect." And Absolut, which has been gay-friendly for decades, pledged "Absolut Support" in its own Facebook photo. Which other brands have you seen making gay-marriage statements today?

Silent Film Festival’s Trailers Use Instagram Scrolling to Simulate Look of Old Movies

I'm sure some folks will enjoy Cossette's Instagram campaign promoting the Toronto Silent Film Festival, but I think it works better in theory than in practice. The flipbook-style fusion of old and new technologies is a cool concept (check out the trailers here, here and here), but scrolling quickly on my phone in slideshow view to achieve the effect of animating a few seconds of old-timey still images wasn't particularly compelling. Some guy pushes a car! A different guy rides a horse! A man and woman dance! (And it's in black and white. C'mon, at least colorize it!) Boy, films really sucked in 1925, and I for one am glad we live in a glorious cinematic age where creative visionaries like Michael Bay blow up stuff in dazzling HD and obscenities fly off the screen at deafening volume. Now that's entertainment worth $11.50 a ticket! Heck, I'd pay $11.75!

CREDITS
Client: Toronto Silent Film Festival
Project: Instagram Trailers
Agency: Cossette
Co-CCOs, Creative Directors: Matthew Litzinger, David Daga
Copywriter: Sebastian Lyman
Art Director: Pepe Bratanov
Account Team: Jason Melhuish

5 Boring Industries Creating Remarkable Content

old_spice_banner.jpg

A marketer’s job is to make something interesting. That’s easy enough when you work for Red Bull, but what if your client is a soap company? Or a data-storage firm? Not exactly riveting. Let’s face it, some industries are naturally a little more exciting than others. But the best marketing can make anything compelling, even something you never thought would resonate strongly with your audience.

Before you let a boring industry dictate the tone of an otherwise exciting company or write off, check out this abbreviated list of five companies that put an edgy spin on seemingly boring industries. For the full catalogue, download the free ebook 16 Companies from “Boring” Industries Creating Remarkable Content.

1) Old Spice

This company has been competing in the soap and deodorant market for 75 years now. Hey, quit yawning! Though the word ‘old’ is half of their name, this brand has really gotten spicy with their marketing in the past few years. Everyone remembers the 2010 ‘Old Spice guy’. He quickly became the face of the brand thanks to witty commercials that people today are still watch (‘The Man Your Man Can Smell Like‘ has nearly 45 million views). This year, Old Spice is giving the soap industry an even sillier spin with their new mascot, Mr. Wolfdog, who already has a slew of popular videos, banners, and social posts.

Video:

Banner:

old_spice_banner.jpg

2) Dropbox

What could be more exciting than a cloud-based storage platform? Just about anything. Dropbox launched in 2008 as a file sharing platform in the cloud and has since gained traction in the market by being easy-to-use and…charming. The company doesn’t go overboard with its marketing or try to be an exhilarating product that it’s not. Instead, Dropbox has communicated its products’ ease-of-use with simple but cute design across marketing channels. From their error page to a sleek infographic, Dropbox knows how to create a fun experience in a dull market.

Error page:

dropbox_error.jpeg

Infographic: https://www.dropbox.com/brasil

3) Charmin

“One time I threw a toilet paper-themed party”, said nobody ever. Toilet paper is a commodity. There’s nothing notable about toilet paper. Not only is it boring, it can be a little gross. The toilet paper brand, Charmin, can’t be associate with either of those adjectives. Charmin’s marketing is cute, playful, and sometimes cozy thanks to their cuddly bear mascots. The brand’s social media presence and images make going to the bathroom fun. Now, I can throw a party celebrating that.

charmin_tweets.png

4) ZenDesk

Customer service software isn’t exactly riveting. But it can be smooth, easy, and even peaceful. ZenDesk puts a joyful face on customer service- literally. The company uses a giggly Buddha character as their mascot across collateral online and offline. You can’t see this cheery face and not feel a little more…well, zen. Their website features great design and valuable content from their blog to their webinars. ZenDesk is not shy in creating remarkable content across the board.

Website:

zendesk_screenshot.png

Blog:

zendesk_blog.png

5) RSNA

How many kids have you met that say when they want to be an astronaut or a fireman when they grow up? How many have said they want to work for the Radiology Society of North America (RSNA)? Radiology somehow just doesn’t sound as glamorous. The RSNA has found a playful way to engage followers on social media by staying on top of what’s hot. The RSNA posted their own take on the viral Harlem Shake video and jumped on the Superbowl power outage with a funny quip via Facebook (see below).

Harlem Shake video:

Superbowl FB post:

rsa_super_bowl.png

Whether you sell fertilizer or soap, taking a risk in your marketing content can separate you from the pack. The bland, boring pack. Want to see some more risk-takers? Check out HubSpot’s free ebook below or visit our blog for more non-boring (we promise) marketing content.

This guest post was written by Hannah Fleishman who works in Media Relations at marketing software company HubSpot, which has a special partnering program for marketing agencies. Find her on Twitter @hbfleishman.









Imagine um mundo sem ódio

Martin Luther King conquista a reforma da legislação imigratória, Anne Frank ganha o Prêmio Nobel da Literatura com seu novo livro, Harvey Milk expande a igualdade de direitos LGBT, Yitzhak Rabin celebra as duas décadas de paz entre Israel e Palestina.

Esse é o mundo fictício imaginado pela organização Anti-Defamation League, que completa 100 anos de existência. Manchetes que poderiam sair nos jornais de 2013, caso vivêssemos em uma sociedade sem ódio, sem homofobia, sem racismo e anti-semitismo.

Um caso raro em que “Imagine” do John Lennon é usada com propriedade nos dias de hoje.

Criação da Publicis Kaplan Thaler.

ADL
ADL
ADL

Brainstorm9Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
Twitter | Facebook | Contato | Anuncie

10 Steps To A Successful Social Media Strategy

social-media-strategy.jpg

Despite the fact that most Americans have embraced social media, recent studies show that as many as 72% of businesses that have a social media presence do not have a clearly defined social strategy in place. Without a clear social strategy, building a successful social presence that inspires customer loyalty and engagement is nearly impossible.

Is your business one of the 72%? The good news is you are not alone. If you’re just starting to develop your social media strategy, or taking a second look at a strategy that just isn’t paying off, here are some best practices to make the most of your company’s social presence.

1) Pick One Social Channel And Do It Well

If you don’t already have a social strategy in place, it can be daunting to figure out where to start. Facebook, Twitter, Linkedin, YouTube, Google+, Pinterest, Blogging, Slideshare, Tumblr… there are hundreds of social media engagement platforms. First, determine one social media channel that will best suit your business goals, and the level of engagement you are looking to achieve. Choose the channel most popular with your customer demographics. You can always grow your presence further in additional channels, but picking one, and investing the time and resources to get it right, is a great way to get started without being overwhelmed.

2) Being Social = Engagement

Companies that have a beautiful brand presence on a social channel, but do little to interact and engage with social fans and followers are not doing themselves any favors in the long run. If potential customers are coming to your brand’s social pages with questions, comments or stories and are not receiving any response from the company, they will not remain loyal customers for very long. Someone from your company needs to be manning the virtual service counter and actually providing the same level, or better, of service customers would expect to find in stores. Simply stated: when people ask questions on your social page(s), it’s rude to ignore them. If you don’t have the resources to engage in social conversations with the fans you’re cultivating online, you’re not ready to put a social strategy in place.

3) Are You Listening?

We take social listening seriously at LivePerson and we think you should too. There are a number of social monitoring tools available with varying degrees of cost and sophistication. Deploying a comprehensive social monitoring tool is critical for a social strategy. A good tool should be able to track mentions across a variety of digital channels including online articles, blogs, press releases, forums and public social channels. Look for a tool that also tells you who your key audience members/influencers are, provides sentiment analysis and audience demographic details as well. What should you be listening to?

The first monitor to set up should be for keywords associated to your brand name(s). You will find tremendous value if you extend your listening further by monitoring keywords common in your industry, competitor names, product keywords and other relative terms. Knowing what conversations are taking place online can help you understand your customers and their needs better, which means you can sell to them more effectively.

4) Establish an Internal Policy

Whether or not your industry or organization requires you to have an internal policy governing employee participation in social channels, it is important to have one in place. I have seen social media policies that range from a few paragraphs to many pages– different businesses will have different requirements. Independent of any regulations your business may be required to adhere to, it’s a good idea to spell out not just what employees should refrain from talking about on social channels, but, more importantly, spell out how employees are encouraged to participate.

Some of the best social advocates for your business are your employees and they should feel empowered to participate in the social conversation, with a clear understanding of the acceptable boundaries. The business will benefit from employees helping spread corporate messaging across their own networks since this creates increased social reach and engagement opportunities.

5) Eliminate the Noise

As we’ve already seen, many companies rush to the social conversation without a plan, which can frequently lead to accounts that are created then quickly abandoned after priorities fluctuate or internal ownership for social accounts changes hands. If your brand has dormant social accounts, take whatever steps necessary to remove them from social sites. An excess of inactive accounts can create confusion to customers who may be trying to find your real brand presence.

Similarly, it’s important to carefully consider how many corporate accounts your company needs to be effective within the each social channel. For example, some companies have multiple branded twitter accounts to address specific audience needs. Perhaps one for marketing messaging, and another for support messaging, and yet more to target various international audiences.

In most cases, multiple accounts are simply not necessary and should be avoided unless you have specific business goals that warrant multiple communications channels. Streamline your social presence into as few accounts as absolutely necessary to keep communication lines consistent and easy for your audience to find.

6) Be Human

Customers love brands, but they want to communicate and connect with people. Even when posting social messaging in the voice of the brand, it’s good to let your social audience know who is behind the logo. For example, some companies have tweets signed off with a name or set of initials, especially if a number of representatives manage the company’s social stream.

This helps customers feel like they are truly connecting with an actual human being and gives them a better sense of connection with the company’s representatives. It also helps the customer know they have some consistency in their communications, and that they are being taken care of by the same individual over multiple communications. If you are using social for customer service inquiries, adding an element of human touch is particularly useful.

7) Don’t Ignore Social in a Crisis

Things happen. None of us like it, and we all do our best to avoid it, but sometimes things go wrong outside of our control. If you have active social channels, it’s important to have a plan in place as to how social communications will be managed in a crisis situation– before the crisis actually happens. You can’t leave it to chance, as it may only make a bad situation a lot worse. A recent example of success can be found in Con Edison’s Manager of Public Affairs, Kate Frasca’s handling of ConEd’s twitter account during Hurricane Sandy. Their crisis plan won them a lot of points with their social audience, which grew from 800 to 22,300 twitter followers in the span of a week. Again, having a social media monitoring tool in play (tip #3) is essential to managing a crisis successfully.

8) Protect The Brand : Be Careful Who Has The Keys

It is all too easy to accidently tweet something from the corporate account thinking that it’s your personal account, which can lead to disastrous consequences for the brand. It seems like every week the media is highlighting some dire social media blunder. Check out The 20 Biggest Brand Disasters to see how things can really go wrong. Some companies are savvy enough to turn these kinds mistakes into PR wins– check out this Red Cross blunder— but those cases are rare so its best to avoid at all costs. Hire seasoned social media professionals to handle your communications. For more junior staff, put tools in place that require tweets and other posts to be approved before being published to add an extra layer of protection.

9) The Mobile-Social Revolution is Upon Us

If you don’t have a mobile-optimized website or app, having a strong presence on social channels is even more important for your business. According to Nielsen’s State of the Media: Social Media Report 2012, time spent on mobile social apps is up 76% in 2012 from 2011, and 30% of the total time spent on a mobile device is consumed by surfing social networks.

As a result, make sure your social presence addresses the needs of mobile customers. Include maps, directions, phone numbers and other geo-location services on your social sites. Also, since 73% of consumers say they have used their mobile phone in a store for things like product information and assistance with buying decisions, you should offer content through your social sites that cater to in-store consumers.

10) Stay Current

One thing that’s guaranteed about social media is that change is always on the horizon. Sites gain and lose popularity very quickly, new features are popping up all the time, which is both exciting but also a little unnerving. Take a look at Pinterest. A year ago very few of us had heard of it, and now it’s the fastest growing social media site in history, and enjoying as much as a 400% month-over-month growth. Before setting up a branded page on any social site, first try it out as a regular user to get the hang of it.

Then take time to identify business reasons for setting up a branded page and ensure you have the resources to maintain the new account once you get it started. Also, existing social channels are constantly evolving and adding new features for brands– if social channels don’t evolve they will be left stagnating in the dust in a matter of a year or two. Check often to see what new features or plugins might be available to you on channels you’re already using. For example, consider how Citi has brought chat to Twitter to outstanding results. Take a stroll around other brand pages every once in a while to get inspired by the possibilities. It’s fun to learn from others to see how cool features are being implemented.

Social media is undoubtedly still in it’s early stages and continues to rapidly evolve. What the social landscape will look like in one year, 5 years and 10 years from now will be very different than what we see today. Will Facebook and Twitter still be the reigning social king and queen? Understanding this means that all social media professionals have to keep one eye on the present and one eye on the horizon and have a commitment to always be learning.

This guest article was written byTerra Mrkulic, social media manager at LivePerson

Facebook Considers Hashtags For Real-Time Ad Revenue

facebook-hashtag.jpg

The Wall Street Journal has reported Facebook is testing a program that would enable users to click on a hashtag, bringing the social network inline with Twitter. The hashtag would lead people to all conversations that used the hashtag.

While this will allow Facebook to better its ad targeting capabilities, Ad Age posits it’s a play for improving its graph search since users of hashtags are more likely than those who Like to be true fans of a topic. They theorize by saying a person could Like something, view it and then never come back whereas a hashtag user may be more likely to be a fan because of continuous use of a hashtag.

Well, at least now maybe all those hashtags Instagram users apply to their pictures when posting to Facebook will now have a purpose.

Old Spice’s Mr. Wolfdog Is as Skilled as Any Living Creature at Making Banner Ads

It says something about banner ads that the best ones—with a few exceptions, like this and this—are the ones that are laughably, shareably bad. You've seen them. And now Old Spice is parodying them. Or rather, its new marketing chief, Mr. Wolfdog, is parodying them. He posted the five banners below to his Tumblr today, with the same note on each: "I have achieved another mountain of a business achievement. I have made effective banner ads." Wolfdog may be a shameless, talentless moron, but he's not wrong—and in that sense, he may be the most hilariously prototypical CMO ever. Since introducing himself to the world on Monday, Wolfdog—the marketing brains behind the Old Spice Wild Collection "smell products" (influenced maybe a little by Wieden + Kennedy)—has been busy all over the Internet. He's posted more YouTube videos; made a Pinterest page, Vine videos and an album of inspirational business music; hosted Google+ Hangouts with his Twitter followers; posted a toll-free number (866-695-2407) to help those who need to look busy at work; played Call of Duty: Black Ops II on Xbox Live; made animated GIFs; and whipped up websites like worldsbiggestchart.com. In short, he's done everything (and much more) that a marketing director should do in social media—while inherently poking fun at how hollow and rote and mindless it all is. Which of course is what makes it actually amusing and worthwhile. Such self-referential anti-advertising could feel overly cynical, but here it rises above—as usual for this agency and client—by the quality of the writing.


How the New Facebook News Feed Changes Your Content Strategy

how-the-new-facebook-news-feed-changes-your-content-strategy-hubspot.png

Working tirelessly through the night following yesterday’s Facebook announcement about its new News Feed, two diligent HubSpotters, Anum Hussain and Brittany Leaning, have published a new report, How Facebook’s New News Feed Changes Your Content Strategy. The 35 page (don’t worry, there’s lots of pictures) report that aims to educate marketers on how they need to approach content creation for Facebook’s redesigned news feed.

Download the report now and learn how these changes will affect your Facenbook marketing.

OMD! Disney Creates Blog for BuzzFeed-Like Lists Starring Disney Characters

OMG, it's OMD! Oh My Disney is Disney's new blog, and it aims to capitalize on all the Disney legacy it can. You know how every few months some Disney-related quiz floats by, like "Which Disney princess are you?" or "Would you like to relive beloved vestiges of your childhood?" Well, that was other people making clicks off Disney's stuff! Now, with OMD, Disney will be making the bank off important posts like "10 Paperman Gifs to Make You Believe in Destiny" and "You Know You're a '90s Disney Kid When…" It's the right bite-sized strategy for our sharable times and the perfect thing to distract us from the news that Disney has no hand-drawn features planned.

Y&R Sets Up Shoppable Pinterest Boards for Families Who Lost Everything in Hurricane Sandy

Y&R Midwest is trying to steer Pinterest users toward charitable shores, possibly because they're sick of them posting only about food and lingerie. Y&R's idea, called Helpin.It, is a set of Pinterest boards set up for families who lost almost everything to Hurricane Sandy. Each pin links to an Amazon registry where that particular item can be bought and sent directly to the family. The idea was inspired by BBH's work for the African Medical Research Foundation, and I hope it catches on enough to be extended to more victims of Sandy and other disasters. New Orleans could still use a little help, for example.

Doritos Builds Tweet-Powered SXSW Stage That’s More Awesome Than the Acts on It

Doritos has built a 62-foot-tall, tweet-powered concert stage designed to look like a giant vending machine that turns your tweets with the hashtag #BoldStage into a real-time concert-control mechanism at SXSW. Confused as to how? They've made a handy infographic (below) to 'splain. You can not only use your furious tweeting power to choose the opening act at the Doritos gig, you get to choose their playlist, and then, just to mess with them, you control the special effects. That's right—smoke, balloons, pyrotechnics and fricking lasers are all in your hashtagged hands. So, of course, you can also send pictures of yourself having a freaking awesome time directly to the four-story-tall screen in the arena! There's a 9.6-second lag, presumably to make sure you don't tweet your beets. LL Cool J, Public Enemy, Ice Cube and Doug E. Fresh will be sharing the stage with Doritos' awesomely awesome creation of pure LED force. Listen to a low-energy LL ramble about it in the video below. But who really cares about the has-beens on the stage when they'll also be premiering new ads that launch the first Doritos global campaign titled "For the Bold" that will completely change the brand's look and feel?

Leitura Alimenta: Um projeto social que inclui livros em cestas básicas e mata a fome de cultura

Sou apaixonada por leitura desde que me entendo por gente. Um livro na mão me traz muita inspiração, inclusive nos dias de hoje com tanto conteúdo disponível na internet.

E mesmo que o mundo tenha mudado, transformado a roda de amigos em Facebook e o álbum de fotos em Instagram, o livro pode trazer uma experiência diferente de todas as outras.

Através de uma iniciativa colaborativa, agora é possível estender esta experiência aos brasileiros que são carentes de cultura. O projeto Leitura Alimenta convida as pessoas a doar seus livros para serem entregues junto com cestas básicas distribuídas para famílias em todo o Brasil.

Leitura Alimenta

O projeto está sendo realizado pela Livraria da Vila e a distribuidora Cesta Nobre em parceria com a agência Leo Burnett Tailor Made.

Uma ideia com pitada de responsabilidade social que dá gosto.

Brainstorm9Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
Twitter | Facebook | Contato | Anuncie


Advertisement

Why Men Are Cheap on Facebook

facebook_men_cheap.png

According to eMarketer, almost four billion dollars in advertising budgets were spent on Facebook ads during the past year, and that number is expected to grow to more than six billion in 2014.

Meanwhile, Facebook continues to grow its user base as more people join the world’s largest social network and spend more time within its walls. ComScore reports that the average Facebook user spends more than 6 hours on Facebook each month. This report answers questions about how women and men engage differently with ads on Facebook. And the answers are quite surprising.

Download the report now and find out why men are cheap.

Como chocar uma celebridade?

Financiada pela Gates Foundation, a campanha END7 tem como objetivo erradicar sete doenças do mundo até 2020. Apesar da grana do Tio Bill, qualquer pessoa pode ajudar: com a doação de apenas 50 centavos, uma criança pode ser beneficiada por um ano inteiro.

Para chamar atenção para a causa e incentivar doações, a END7 mostrou um vídeo para diversas celebridades, como Emily Blunt, Eddie Redmayne e Priyanka Chopra. A sua reação certamente vai ser a mesma que a deles.

A criação é da Wunderman London.

Brainstorm9Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
Twitter | Facebook | Contato | Anuncie


Advertisement

Honda Awards ‘Oscars’ to Brand Lovers

honda_love_oscars.png

As the Oscars kicked off last night, Honda hosted their own unique virtual awards ceremony dedicated to their fans on Facebook and Twitter. Fans who illustrated their passion were recognized with specialized #HondaLove awards in real-time coinciding with similar category wins as they were announced.

#HondaLove award examples include Best Song, Best Live Action Short and Best Art Direction. About 10 total awards were given out during the awards show. A #HondaLove winner gallery is posted to Honda’s Facebook page.

While not exactly a newsjacking stunt, the work did tie in nicely with the evening’s Oscar content.

This effort extends a series of feel-good surprises, known as “Honda Loves You Back,” most recently for Valentine’s Day.

Campanha contra a escravidão moderna relembra feito de Abraham Lincoln

A ONG Made In A Free World, dedicada a lutar contra todas as formas de escravidão, relembra Abraham Lincoln em sua nova campanha. A intenção é chamar atenção dos senadores norte-americanos, dizendo que eles podem repetir o ato histórico de seu 16° presidente.

O comercial dirigido por Noam Murro retrata a realidade da escravidão nos dias de hoje, dizendo que nunca houve um período na história com tanto trabalho forçado, e que o 113° senado dos Estados Unidos não está fazendo. A campanha incentiva o uso da hashtag #ImWithLincoln.

A criação é da agência barretSF.

Lincoln

Brainstorm9Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
Twitter | Facebook | Contato | Anuncie


Advertisement