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Apple sent out boxes (the cover of which is a copy of the "Crazy Ones" original TD poster) that each contained 3 packs (sealed in plastic) of 10 small or miniature "Think different" posters. Educator Set. Albert Einstein; Amelia Earhart; Miles Davis; Jim Henson; Jane Goodall; Mahatma Gandhi; John Lennon and Yoko Ono; Cesar Chavez; James Watson ...
Rob Siltanen's "To the Crazy Ones" manifesto launched "Think Different", a campaign for Apple.The campaign won the 2000 Grand Effie Award for the "most effective advertising in America" [13] and won the Emmy Award for Best Commercial in 1998.
The Crazy Ones is an American television sitcom created by David E. Kelley, and starring Robin Williams and Sarah Michelle Gellar. The single-camera series aired for one season on CBS, from September 26, 2013, to April 17, 2014. It was part of the 2013–14 American television season as a Thursday night 9:00 pm Eastern / 8:00 pm Central entry.
Apple said it no longer plans to run the 60-second ad on TV as a result of the backlash – though it was still available on its official YouTube page as of Friday morning. Apple shares were flat ...
Here's to the crazy ones. The misfits. The rebels. The troublemakers. ...They push the human race forward. ... Because the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world are the ...
An ad for Apple’s new iPad Pro shows a piano, turntables, cans of paint and other tools of creative expression crushed in a giant hydraulic press. Some viewers say it sends a dispiriting message.
Apple Music ads have had a theme throughout recent years. Apple uses celebrities, like dancers and singers to star in their Apple Music commercials along with their ear bud commercials starring dancer like Lil Buck. Recently in 2016, Taylor Swift released her new Apple Music ad that featured a Drake song. Not only was this successful for Apple ...
The Get a Mac advertisements follow a standard template. They open to a plain white background, and a man dressed in casual clothes introduces himself as an Apple Mac computer ("Hello, I'm a Mac."), while a man in a more formal suit-and-tie combination introduces himself as a Microsoft Windows personal computer ("And I'm a PC.").