Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
SMITH, formerly called Ascentium, is an advertising agency with headquarters in Seattle. [1] As of November 2012 Smith employs over 300 people in Seattle, Portland, Spokane, Atlanta, Ottawa-Gatineau and Toronto. [2] In 2012, the company was rebranded as "Smith" and relocated its headquarters to Seattle. [3] [4]
The Gobbledok stalking some Smiths chips. The Gobbledok is a fictitious television character used to promote The Smith's Snackfood Company brand potato chips in Australia. A light brown alien from "Dok the Potato Planet", the Gobbledok was known for its multi-colored mohawk hairstyle, its obsession for eating Smith's potato chips, and its catchphrase "chippie, chippie, chippie!"
Smith's Food and Drug, or simply Smith's, is an American regional supermarket chain that was founded by Lorenzo Smith in 1911 in Brigham City, Utah. Headquartered in Salt Lake City with stores in Utah , Nevada , New Mexico , Arizona , Montana , Idaho , and Wyoming , Smith's became a subsidiary of Kroger in 1998.
Smith and Andrade believe Case to be largely behind the ad campaign. Emails obtained through the legal settlement provide messages sent back and fourth between Case and Zubaly as the mailer is ...
This post has spoilers from the first batch of Love Is Blind season 6 episodes. Amber Desiree “AD” Smith was caught in a love triangle (or square, rather) on Love Is Blind season 6, and now ...
The Valley star Jesse Lally is explaining his connection to the late Anna Nicole Smith. “I met her. [We] did a photoshoot for TrimSpa in Miami, and we remained friends for, like, a year and a ...
1952 – Johnson Smith Co. publishes a 96-page catalog of 2,800 of its most popular items. Company sales and circulation increase, enabling the company to buy and sell merchandise for less. 1955 - Mad Magazine runs a zany lampoon of Johnson Smith ads on the cover of its March issue #21 [8] that creates even more business. [citation needed]
The Johnson Smith Company placed advertisements for gadgets and toys [2] that appeared on the back cover of many historically significant comic books, including Action Comics #1 (June 1938) [3] (the first appearance of the character Superman) and Detective Comics #27 (May 1939) (the first appearance of the character Batman).