Word: manifestoes
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...prepare for the M5 project, Coke's global brand manager from Mexico, Eugenio Mendez, traveled the world to see what kids are drinking and what styles and products they favor. Meanwhile, senior vice president Marc Mathieu put together a secret marketing playbook called The Manifesto, highlighting Coke's pop-cultural branding history--from the famous Santa series to its man-on-the-moon ads. Hoping for a more modern hit, the company sought out hot design firms to deliver a new image...
...site was made in The Crimson, and the blog received no coverage from the news board or the editorial page. Weird, though, that no other publication has picked up the story—after all, if Golis’s figures are accurate, 900 people read his manifesto last week, and if the site’s publicity campaign keeps going, that number will rise. It’s most certainly newsworthy, and you’d think The Crimson’s competitors would have jumped all over...
...first my interest was voyeuristic. Allen and I read crazy quotes aloud to each other, laughing at their sheer absurdity. Allen proceeded with characteristic skepticism. But the more I read Dianetics, the less I laughed and the more I was seduced. In Hubbard’s manifesto I had expected to find the psychopathic derangement Cruise had recently taken to exhibiting, or at least a monolithic definition of the good life...
...Japan's harsh military presence in China from 1931 to 1945. The events were also timed to coincide with two Sino-Japanese competitions in volleyball and an Oriental game called go. But the dissident students gave their protest an additional twist by dubbing the rally Democracy '85. In a manifesto circulated before the demonstration, organizers declared that "it will be impossible to realize our personal ambitions and careers without a conducive democratic atmosphere." University authorities responded with a series of public meetings to criticize the manifesto and discourage students from joining the protest...
Given his intellectual ferocity, any book by Schneider might well have turned into a manifesto. Yet this posthumous memoir, completed nine days before its author's death, is distinguished more by self-criticism and generosity toward actors than by its hostility to the theater establishment of producers, critics and other spokesmen for popular tastes. Like Schneider's productions, his autobiography displays an earnest search for truth at whatever cost to the seeker...