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Commercial advertising in Argentine television (including cable channels operated from the country itself) is limited to 12 minutes per hour. In-programme advertising is allowed, but counted toward the 12-minute quota, means that if a 60-minute show has 2 minutes of in-programme advertising, the commercial breaks have to be limited to 10 minutes for that specific hour, otherwise the station ...
Advertisers need to follow a defined set of guidelines for showing alcohol advertisements on TV and radio. These ads are permitted from noon until 3 pm on school days and from 8:30 pm to 5 am every day. The ads cannot be targeted at kids and are not allowed during the broadcast of Children's (C) or Pre-school (P) classified programs on any day ...
The majority of these households had Sky+ and data from these homes (collected via the SkyView [20] panel of more than 33,000) shows that, once a household gets a DTR, they watch 17% more television. 82% of their viewing is to normal, linear, broadcast TV without fast-forwarding the ads. In the 18% of TV viewing that is time-shifted (i.e. not ...
In a festive new commercial for Garage Beer, ... from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. ... This popular vitamin C serum is on sale for just $10: '60 is the new 40' ...
The only thing more hyped up than the biggest football game of the year are the commercials that air during it. While the title of the "best" Super Bowl ad is often hotly debated the day after the ...
The popularity of the series led to many of the commercials being traded on peer-to-peer file sharing networks [15] and bootleg recordings of the ads being sold on eBay. [5] In 2003, Anheuser-Busch released a collection of 20 ads on CD, titled Bud Light Salutes Real Men of Genius, Vol 1, to be sold in the company's online store. Two additional ...
An AI-generated commercial for a fake beer brand, created by production company Private Island, goes viral for being creepy and nightmare-inducing.
The Force is with Cristal Beer [1] (Spanish: La Fuerza está con Cerveza Cristal) is a series of television commercials made for Cristal (owned by Compañía de las Cervecerías Unidas (CCU)), broadcast in Chile in December 2003 during broadcasts of Star Wars movies on Canal 13.