Feb. 2, 2009 We interrupt this teens in tech series for a Superbowl snapback. Yes, it’s Ground Hog Day, and like the Bill Murray movie I feel it’s a ‘repeat’ of Superbowl advertising analysis veering into the pain-n-pummel anger management sphere to see how a $3 million media buy in a recession can boost buzz with the requisite angst-driven adults fielding more tantrums than … [Read more...]
Superbowl Sunday: Random Acts of Violence, Kiddies?
Filed Under: Advertising, Branding & Consumerism, Growing up too soon, Marketing Shaping Youth, Media Literacy, Product Placement, Shaping Youth, Stereotypes & Diversity Tagged With: Add new tag, cartoonish violence, chuck it, crashing snowglobes, Danica Patrick, Doritos ad, e-trade baby, Ka-pow, Kids, kids and media, pretty tough, sexist ads, She's geeky, ShesGeeky, snowglobes, Superbowl 2009, Superbowl ad revenue, superbowl ads, teens in tech, violence, violence and video games, violence studies
United Nations Association Film Fest: Not Your Ordinary Kids Flicks!
Is it me, or is the 11th United Nations Association Film Festival (UNAFF) a screamin’ deal and a fabulous find? (tix here) Yah, yah, I know…documentary schmockumentary, too heavy when finances are in the commode, spirits are tankin’, kids are feelin’ the second-hand stress, and we want to lob humor and fun into the mix…(Well, we DO have … [Read more...]
Filed Under: EcoKids-Environment, Emerging trends & STEM, Media Literacy, Positive Picks, Pro-Social & Positive Picks, Shaping Youth Tagged With: 11th United Nations Association Film Festival, Amy Kalafa, Amy-Jussel, Blue Planet, cause marketing, children in no mans land, China, cinematography, documentaries, documentary, Environment, film festivals, Film Screenings, food, grassroots activism, Green Planet, human rights, humanitarian, kids and media, Michealene Cristini Risley, Screen a movie make a difference, Stanford Film Society, Stanford-University, Sundance, Tapestries-of-Hope, touring films, tree of life, Two Angry Moms, UNAFF, United Nations Association, war and peace, waste, young people