The Goldman Sachs Hearings: A Sh**ty Deal For Taxpayers
What more is there to say about this week’s financial hearings? Goldman Sachs executives, including the infamous “Fabulous Fab” Tourre, were grilled, lectured, and scolded by members of a Senate panel in a much-anticipated spectacle this week. But, instead of Watergate redux, the hearings played out more like a group of middle school principals rebuking eighth-graders. Sure, the […]
Read MoreCrenshaw Communications Named PR Agency For avast! Security Software
We’re delighted to announce that Crenshaw has been named PR agency of record by avast! Antivirus Software. Headquartered in Prague, Czech Republic, avast! is a leading security software provider with over 100 million registered customers. It is marketed in 33 languages for home, small business, and enterprise users. Read all about it here.
Read MoreBanned Ads Are A Robust PR Opportunity
It played out like a publicity stunt. Not one as blatant as the annual Super Bowl banned-ad PR-fest. But, at first it seemed a little, well, overblown. The sexy Lane Bryant lingerie commercial featuring curvy model Ashley Graham was rejected by both ABC and Fox for showing “too much cleavage” and being therefore too risque for the family […]
Read MoreWeb Anonymity And The Future of Reputation
The anonymous Web is like Freud’s id – a seething mass of pure impulse beneath a civil surface, in constant need of tamping down. While I believe wholeheartedly in free speech, it’s pretty clear that our Constitution’s framers didn’t envision ChatRoulette… or even the anonymous online comments section of the average newspaper. The balance between privacy […]
Read MoreWall Street’s Apology – So Far, Just PR?
Two former banking executives got another workout last week. So did the “apology PR” movement. This time it was Citibank ex-CEO Charles Prince and former director Robert Rubin. Under the hot glare of cameras – and the even more heated glares from the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, each expressed the most sincere-sounding contrition to date […]
Read MoreCan ProPublica Save Journalism?
The Pulitzer Prizes were awarded this week. Though most of the winners for journalism were traditional, major-market newspapers, there were some notable exceptions for 2010. ProPublica, the independent, not-for-profit journalism group dedicated to investigative reporting, became the first non-traditional media organization to bring home the prestigious award. Barely a year old, ProPublica won for “The […]
Read MoreWhen Brands Try To Be Cool (Part 2)
Brands trying to be cool is an obsession of mine, and I’ve noticed how they seem to come in clusters. The latest rash of high-stakes rebrandings is in cable and Internet services. In February, Comcast renamed its TV, Internet and phone services as Xfinity. The PR picture wasn’t pretty. Bloggers and branding experts pounced on […]
Read MoreAfter Sea World and Nestle, How Risky is Social Media?
I once had a client whose CEO was so PR-averse that his response to requests for media interviews was the Zen-like platitude, “The spouting whale gets harpooned.” That unfortunate phrase popped into my head as I read stories like “Shamu Attack Exposes Social Media Risks.” The Orlando Sentinel and others recounted how @Shamu, the Twitter feed set […]
Read MoreFacebook Wants You To Like This – All Over The Web
Does Facebook have a problem with commitment? Or, on the flipside, has it fallen in like so hard that it wants to own both the word and the concept all over the Web? There are a couple of ways to look at this week’s announcement that the Facebook fan page will soon be a thing […]
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