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Topic: Ban (deodorant)


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In the News (Fri 10 Jul 09)

  
 What Do YOU Want to Ban?
Ten lucky winners' designs will be featured in the next national Ban(R) antiperspirant/deodorant advertising campaign, with one of them winning the focal point of the Ban(R) advertisement and an afternoon with Hilarie.
The Ban(R) brand will select nine lucky winners and feature their designs in the next national Ban(R) antiperspirant/deodorant advertising campaign to appear in national magazines.
Ban(R) and actress Hilarie Burton are hosting an online contest from September 15th to November 15th on www.feelbanfresh.com to design the next Ban(R) advertising campaign, voicing what girls of all ages want to ban.
www.prnewswire.com /cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=109&STORY=/www/story/09-15-2005/0004108243&EDATE=   (670 words)

  
 Smells Like Teen Spirit
Some 4,000, in fact, for Ban deodorant, which ran a contest giving teenagers the chance to “ban” the things in life they just don't like.
The Ban It contest was specifically geared for tech-savvy teens.
Of 4,000 entries, nine finalists and one grand-prize winner were selected; the group is set to appear together in a print ad in the March 20 issue of US Weekly.
promomagazine.com /contests/marketing_smells_teen_spirit/index.html   (656 words)

  
 Skidoo
One advert is for deodorant, strange only because Harry really did record an advert for Ban Deodorant.
These are instrumental excerpts from the soundtrack - each has a strong Nilssonian (or Tiptonian) flavour.
Rhyming 'asparagus' with 'marry us' is one thing, describing a conversation between ham and lettuce quite another.
www.marcharry.com /skidoo.htm   (656 words)

  
 Stanford Magazine > March/April 2002 > Feature Story > Mighty Mouse
Hovey, the mouse project’s informal head, says he “hacked together” the first conceptual prototype in a weekend—using the ball from a bottle of Ban Roll-On deodorant and a butter dish purchased at the Palo Alto Walgreens (“the mouse parts store,” he calls it).
The mouse’s evolution “from the laboratory to the living room,” as one of its designers puts it, is not well known—even some Apple fanatics aren’t familiar with it—but it reveals something of the personalities of its designers, the Stanford program that trained them and even the history of Silicon Valley.
“The fact that the mouse was unobtrusive and natural is the result of a lot of work.” Few users ever notice the heft of the cord, or the effect the connector linking the cord to the mouse has on the mouse’s agility, or the silence of the ball as it moves across the desk.
www.stanfordalumni.org /news/magazine/2002/marapr/features/mouse.html   (3005 words)

  
 ACSH > Facts & Fears > Archives
--Assemblyman Scott Stringer (D-Manhattan) introduced a bill to ban the sale of cosmetics -- nail polishes, shampoo, deodorant, lipstick, and more -- which contain chemicals called phthalates, widely used for years in toys, wall coverings, blood transfusion bags, medical tubing, and personal care products.
Stringer and the environmental activists advising him warned that tests on laboratory rodents show that these chemicals cause cancer and birth defects.
But there is no indication whatsoever that human health is in anyway jeopardized by using cosmetics such as nail polish (assuming you are not ingesting them in huge quantities) or any other phthalate-containing product.
www.acsh.org /factsfears/newsID.569/news_detail.asp   (379 words)

  
 Boing Boing: What was in Buddy Holly's plane-crash overnight bag?
A lighter was found at the scene and returned to Jay Richardson.), a Ban lotion deodorant tube, and a few other assorted items, most in pieces.
Buddy Holly died in a storied plane-crash in 1959, but it wasn't until 1989 that his overnight bag -- recovered at the scene and long forgotten under Buddy's brother's bed in Lubbock, TX -- was opened and cataloged.
I've been a Buddy Holly fan ever since reading Bradley Denton's comic science fiction masterpiece Buddy Holly is Alive and Well on Ganymede, which I rate as one of the best comic novels ever written.
www.boingboing.net /2005/08/23/what_was_in_buddy_ho.html   (211 words)

  
 Stanford Magazine > March/April 2002 > Feature Story > Mighty Mouse
Hovey, the mouse project’s informal head, says he “hacked together” the first conceptual prototype in a weekend—using the ball from a bottle of Ban Roll-On deodorant and a butter dish purchased at the Palo Alto Walgreens (“the mouse parts store,” he calls it).
The mouse’s evolution “from the laboratory to the living room,” as one of its designers puts it, is not well known—even some Apple fanatics aren’t familiar with it—but it reveals something of the personalities of its designers, the Stanford program that trained them and even the history of Silicon Valley.
“The fact that the mouse was unobtrusive and natural is the result of a lot of work.” Few users ever notice the heft of the cord, or the effect the connector linking the cord to the mouse has on the mouse’s agility, or the silence of the ball as it moves across the desk.
www.stanfordalumni.org /news/magazine/2002/marapr/features/mouse.html   (3005 words)

  
 Stanford Magazine > March/April 2002 > Feature Story > Mighty Mouse
Hovey, the mouse project’s informal head, says he “hacked together” the first conceptual prototype in a weekend—using the ball from a bottle of Ban Roll-On deodorant and a butter dish purchased at the Palo Alto Walgreens (“the mouse parts store,” he calls it).
The mouse’s evolution “from the laboratory to the living room,” as one of its designers puts it, is not well known—even some Apple fanatics aren’t familiar with it—but it reveals something of the personalities of its designers, the Stanford program that trained them and even the history of Silicon Valley.
“The fact that the mouse was unobtrusive and natural is the result of a lot of work.” Few users ever notice the heft of the cord, or the effect the connector linking the cord to the mouse has on the mouse’s agility, or the silence of the ball as it moves across the desk.
www.stanfordalumni.org /news/magazine/2002/marapr/features/mouse.html   (3005 words)

  
 Win a golden gecko from Geico :: AdLand ad-rag.com :: by the adgrunts for the adgrunts advertising blog commercial archive
It is as if our pal caffeinegoddess summoned this when she wrote the article Brands get consumers involved in advertising, about timex, converse, Ban deodorant and Chrysler all are running competitions where the punters make the ads and can win something.
Geico wants you to submit a trailer with a concept for a feature-length film featuring the gecko, and you could win a golden gecko, a trip to Hawaaii or a bigger TV to watch these punter-made ads on.
I mean love or hate the gecko, it would be fun to make a little movie and if I win the trip to Hawaii plus a bunch of cash and prizes to boot....sign me up.
ad-rag.com /124757.php   (757 words)

  
 If You're Ready! The Best of Dunwich Records, Vol. 2 - Listen, Review and Buy at ARTISTdirect
Seven of the tracks here are previously unissued masters, and these, along with radio spots by H.P. Lovecraft and the American Breed -- one of them for Ban deodorant!
Dunwich was a small concern, run by three jazz heads, who nonetheless managed to tap into Chicago's fertile teen scene of the mid-'60s and get the very best groups down on tape at the city's best studio, Universal.
Although "Gloria" by the Shadows of Knight was their only major national hit, they were one of the few labels that steadily catered to this kind of teenage racket; the quality of their releases was very high and many of them have reached legendary status.
www.artistdirect.com /nad/store/artist/album/0,,204501,00.html   (293 words)

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