As you might have heard by now, AdJab is shutting down effective today. This is, of course a sad day for all of us on the AJ team but all good things, I suppose, must come to an end. In order to give the site the send off it deserves I've asked the guys who are currently on that team to write out their thoughts below.As for myself, I'd just like to say that writing for AdJab, something I started doing back in May of 2005, has been an absolutely great experience. It went from something that I did just for a lark to a project that I felt deeply passionate about and, to some extent, responsible for. I've gotten to know some great people and have hopefully created some content that has provoked thought, upset a couple of status quos and been entertaining and informative to read. Those have, at least, been my goals.
Not only have the men and women writing for AdJab been an asset, but the site would not have been half as strong as it was without it being part of a larger ad/marketing/PR online community. The folks behind sites like AdRants, Jaffe Juice, AdFreak, Beyond Madison Avenue, ClickZ, MediaPost, MarketingVox and, literally, countless others have been neighbors, collaborators, critics and friends to AdJab. If one can be judged by the company one keeps than I think AdJab measures up against any site on the 'net.
Oh, and can I just say, "HE'S CUT!!!! THE RUSSIAN IS CUT!!!"
-- Chris Thilk
Wow, tough decision here, on whether to have fun, AdJab style, or get all sniffly about the situation. From back in 2004, when the idea came up to build AdJab and try and develop a community around advertising-related content, until now, I think that this crew has done just as good a job, if not a better one, in some cases, than a lot of folks who are writing in the same space in that they've tried to bridge the gap between folks in the industry (or related ones) making fun of themselves and their cohorts over to what the average person who watches, sees, or listens to advertising has to say.
I'm happy to have been a part of it from day one, and be responsible for messing up someone's launch campaign (sorry, don't put Easy Buttons on your nationally known websites if you don't want people talking about them), been able to successfully go after marketing efforts that I thought were an abject failure, and get to take part, along with Chris Thilk, in interviews on AOL's Sports Bloggers Live, about advertising, even after spending an entire day drinking beers and writing blog entries about advertising. You just can't beat that. So, so long, dear AdJab readers, and we'll see you on the flipside, or something like that.
-- Tom Biro


Procter & Gamble has made the decision to not buy any advertising time during this year's Academy Awards telecast. Commercial time for this year's telecast is running at about $1.7 for a 30-second spot, a far cry from the Super Bowl's $2.6 million. P&G had used last year's Oscar broadcast to promote its Olay Regenerist skin-care product. Procter & Gamble is still advertising on Oscar.com, the awards show website. The discrepency between TV and online attitudes is emblematic of a thought-shift at P&G that emphasizes interactive ads over the traditional model.
Forget what you might have heard about
A combination of cheap kid's meals and Xbox games means
Stephen Baker at BusinessWeek
Online news aggregator and the Tribune Company have announced a deal that will have the companies producing a free-to-use, co-branded online classifieds sites. The site, which will allow users to upload ads and photos at no charge, will debut on BaltimoreSun.com and then branch out to the other 11 Trib Co. sites between now and May,
DVR subscription company wants to get into the TV metrics reporting business. It will begin offering data on both the programming and commercial viewing habits of its subscribtion base, data that would cover both live and time-shifted viewing. The new service, dubbed StopWatch, would provide second-by-second viewing data, something Nielsen has refused to do, likely because it hasn't figured out how to. Starcom has signed on as the first subscriber to TiVo's data.
There's about to be an advertising
Networks are about to see sharp spikes in the number of young people Nielsen reports as having watched their programming. That's because the metrics firm has begun collecting data on college students who are away from home. Previously such students were discounted entirely from the Nielsen process.
If you were looking for a signal flare to go up that YouTube would begin running pre- or post-roll ads on the videos put on its site this is it. Co-founder Chad Hurley says that the company will soon begin sharing revenue with its users. The article doesn't explicitly say that advertising will be added to the user-generated videos but it's not too far of a stretch.
The
Here's something that might shock and dismay you all, unless of course you were paying attention. SpiralFrog, the service that was going to offer people free music downloads that were ad-supported, has run into some trouble. Its CEO was ousted last month, which is when it was supposed to have launched, and is now sending an attorney around to industry conferences and such. It has also failed to get buy in from two big music labels, Warner Music Group and Sony BMG.
In an effort to ratchet up the allure of its theme parks, Disney has embraced the power of celebrities. Specifically, beautifully shot celebrities in fantasy settings. (And no, I'm not just talking about high-production value porn. At least I'm not talking about it now. See me later about that - it's all quite tasteful.) Disney has had famed photographer Annie Leibovitz shoot famous folks from David Beckham to Scarlett Johansson as they recreate Disney characters in a series of ads that will run in high-end lifestyle magazines such as W, Vogue and The New Yorker as well as Cookie, the Disney-owned parenting title. In one ad, Johansson plays Cinderella as she runs down a staircase in full formal wear.
Microsoft is on the 






