Word: trademarking
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...theaters, Berry has read for the lead role in an upcoming Paris stage comedy about obsessive-compulsive neuroses and behavior tics called Toc-Toc. Another comic film, Those Happy Days, is due out in 2006. By then, Berry hopes fans will have come to recognize her for her own trademark talents, not just for her likeness to her mother...
...Branded has several broad brushes, a bucket of the watery adhesive called wheat paste and a stack of his trademark cartoonish bunny posters. His first target is a utility box on La Brea. With a friend stationed nearby to watch for police, Branded, 30, brushes a layer of paste on the box and slaps up the poster. Then he whips open his cell phone, snaps a picture and e-mails the shot to flickr.com a photo website on which artists post their work...
...from 2003’s guitar-rock-oriented “It Still Moves.” As the track draws to a close, singer/guitarist Jim James channels Elton John’s howling vocals over a tight soul-funk rhythm. The most remarkable thing about James’ trademark voice is that he does not even need to sing actual words for his songs to feel meaningful, nor do his lyrics need to be particularly creative. Much of the album recalls songs such as the sprawling “Cobra” off the band?...
...young people. But Jehmu Greene, president of Rock the Vote, noted that the work of celebrities such as Springsteen or Diddy (who led the “Vote or Die” campaign) led to a historic turnout of young voters. Tom Brokaw moderated the event, employing his trademark baritone and witty style to keep the confab of luminaries loose. He pondered “what success I might have had,” if not rejected by the Harvard admissions committee decades ago. “I didn’t realize that Brokaw was funny...
...With its trademark three-pronged star and celebrated German engineering, Mercedes-Benz has been the brand of choice for generations of celebrities, both actual and aspiring, from the late Pope John Paul II to Scarlett Johansson. It's a brand mystique most competitors can only dream about, and it has turned Mercedes, part of the DaimlerChrysler conglomerate, into an industry colossus with annual sales of more than 1 million cars and revenues exceeding $60 billion...