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The Advertising Council, commonly known as Ad Council, is an American nonprofit organization that produces, distributes, and promotes public service announcements or PSAs on behalf of various sponsors, including nonprofit organizations, non-governmental organizations and agencies of the United States government. [5]
The ad was the first ever campaign by the Ad Council, "which directs and coordinates public service campaigns on behalf of Madison Avenue and the media industry", to address any GLBTQ issues. [7] The campaign was done pro bono by the New York office of Arnold Worldwide. [7]
Launched in 2008, with the support of partner advertising agency Leo Burnett Worldwide, the new print ads demonstrate a creative approach to food photography. Each ad brings to life one of the 29 cuts of lean beef as a landscape such as flatlands, beach, cliff, mountain, canyon and river.
Below the text is an Ad Council logo and an image of two people smoking marijuana from a pipe. The post was shared on March 10 by the page Psycho '78 Productions and the photo has over 900 shares ...
Clear Channel Outdoor Chicago Earns Ad Council's Silver Bell Award CHICAGO--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Clear Channel Outdoor Holdings, Inc. (NYS: CCO) today announced that the company's Chicago office was ...
According to the Ad Council, in 2018, 80% of outdoor recreationists correctly identified Smokey Bear's image, and 8 in 10 recognized the campaign’s public service announcements. [8] Smokey Bear's name and image are protected by the Smokey Bear Act of 1952 (16 U.S.C. 580 (p-2); previously also 18 U.S.C. 711). [9] [10] [11]
The Ad Council, an American non-profit organization that distributes public service announcements on behalf of various private and federal government agency sponsors, has been labeled as "little more than a domestic propaganda arm of the federal government" [by whom?] given the Ad Council's historically close collaboration with the President of ...
The phrase was created by the War Advertising Council [4] and used on posters by the United States Office of War Information. [3] This type of poster was part of a general campaign to advise servicemen and other citizens to avoid careless talk that might undermine the war effort.