Premed student who became top art director: How he made the leap
From medicine to art, 22-year-old Eboy Fernandez shares his life-changer
From medicine to art, 22-year-old Eboy Fernandez shares his life-changer
No one defaced the advertisement supporting “all kinds of love,” an executive of Bench said.
A two-day “creativity conference” at the Ateneo de Manila promises to debunk a persistent myth.
Ave! I speak this word, thick with meaning and emotion, in honor of my very good, no, my very great friend, Minyong Ordoñez. To others, HGO. To some, Mr. O. Or simply, Minyong.
The CLIO Awards celebrated its 55th year in New York. Emmy, Grammy, Tony and Oscar winner Whoopi Goldberg opened the show to “wit perfection.” “You guys made me buy a Fiat. You make products look good even when they’re really not,” she quipped.
Circa 1967, while I was working in a small startup agency, Link Advertising, we created an ad for Adler, a German-made typewriter. It had this headline: “Heil! Adler!”
Every day, there are people who make our lives happier. Never does a day go by that we don’t thank them, yet we don’t even know their name. Coca-Cola believes that it is time for us to know them better.
The ’60s to the late ’80s were the golden years of Philippine advertising. I was in the right place at the right time. I was compulsively active as president and chief creative officer during those years.
How do you afford your rock ’n’ roll lifestyle?” is alternative rock band Cake’s caustic ditty about poser rock fans “drinking what they’re selling.”
Coca-Cola is printing the most popular Pinoy nicknames, terms of endearment, and group names on personalized Coke bottles—now that the carbonated soft drink’s campaign that has been adapted in more than 50 countries is finally in the Philippines.
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