The holiday serves as the unofficial end of summer and, for ARLnow, represents the start of our busiest advertising season.
If you’d like your company’s message to reach the widest possible Arlington audience — young and old, south and north, renters and owners — while supporting essential local journalism, we should talk. And soon.
Despite the pandemic, much of the local economy has remained resilient. We anticipate running low on advertising inventory again this fall, as we have over the past couple of years.
While you're here, how about this:
SB793: Flavored tobacco ban supporters call opposition ads 'lies' - Los Angeles Times
Supporters of legislation to ban the sale of flavored tobacco in California are speaking out against a new advertising campaign from tobacco companies that claims the bill discriminates against Black and Latino smokers, saying that the ads disingenuously portray the industry as an ally of communities of color.
On Monday, a group of Black leaders, including academics, and youth activists held a press conference on Zoom to denounce the opposition ad campaign as an attempt by the tobacco industry to deceive lawmakers and the public.
Biden's campaign to run ad seizing on Trump's Goodyear comments - CNNPolitics
(CNN) Joe Biden's presidential campaign is launching an ad Monday seizing on President Donald Trump's comments calling for a boycott of Goodyear tires that will play in the battleground states of Ohio and North Carolina -- states the President won in 2016.
Biden’s Campaign To Run Ad In Ohio Seizing On Trump’s Goodyear Comments – CBS
(CNN) — Joe Biden’s presidential campaign is launching an ad Monday seizing on President Donald Trump’s comments calling for a boycott of Goodyear tires that will play in the battleground states of Ohio and North Carolina — states the President won in 2016.
* * *
“An American company with a 122-year history, thousands of American workers and competitors, all over the world,” a narrator says, “and a sitting President who’s spinning out of control would risk American jobs to try to save his own.”
While you're here, how about this:
Trump campaign launches massive digital ad buy for convention week - Axios
The Trump campaign is going all in on digital advertising for the Republican National Convention, with plans to again take over the YouTube masthead and flood Facebook, Google and streaming services like Hulu with pro-Trump messaging.
Details: Starting at 12:01 a.m. Monday, the campaign is running a series of ads on the YouTube masthead, prime online real estate, all four days of the convention — for a total of 96 hours.
Ads supporting the repeal of House Bill 6 are about to launch
House Bill 6 appears to be the law that just keeps giving – at least to television stations and other advertising outlets across Ohio.
HB 6, which bails out Ohio's two nuclear plants and assists two coal plants with about $150 million annually in ratepayer subsidies, has been at the center of an alleged $61 million bribery scheme that prosecutors say secured its passage. The scandal has cost the accused ringleader, former Ohio House Speaker Larry Householder, his leadership position and resulted in at least three pieces of proposed legislation that would repeal HB 6.
Democratic groups launch $7.5 million campaign to encourage voting by mail – NBC Palm
Two Democratic super PACs are launching a $7.5 million advertising campaign on Monday to encourage voters to request mail-in ballots in several states crucial to their party’s hopes of winning the White House and flipping control of the Senate.
The new campaign by Priorities USA Action and the Senate Majority PAC, reported first by CNN, marks the first major advertising push by these deep-pocketed groups to encourage Democratic voters to cast mail-in ballots and is part of a larger, multi-pronged vote-by-mail messaging effort by Democrats in the run-up to Election Day.
Galloway campaign runs first TV ad in Missouri race for governor | Politics | stltoday.com
JEFFERSON CITY — State Auditor Nicole Galloway's campaign for governor released its first television ad on Tuesday, targeting Gov. Mike Parson for what she describes as his lack of urgency in tackling the COVID-19 pandemic.
Galloway, a Democrat challenging the Republican governor in the Nov. 3 election, says in the 30-second spot that Missourians need a "sense of urgency" from leaders.
"But we're never going to get it from him," she said as the ad cuts to photo of Parson, who took office in 2018 after the resignation of Gov. Eric Greitens.
Happening on Twitter
Can't believe Fall Party Cakes season is almost here LittleDebbie (from Collegedale, TN) Wed Aug 19 19:35:35 +0000 2020
No comments:
Post a Comment