U.S.

10/10/2012

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N.Y. Man Gets Watch Back 53 Years After Theft October 22, 2012 RSS Feed Print ENDICOTT, N.Y. (AP) — A man in upstate New York finally has his wristwatch back, 53 years after it was stolen.

Ed Grigor says he had long ago forgotten about the 23-jewel wristwatch stolen when he was in the Navy.

[PHOTOS: America's Elite: Navy SEALs]

Then last month the Binghamton-area man got a call from a Las Vegas couple. They were able to track down Grigor because his name was engraved on the back of the watch.

The Press and Sun Bulletin of Binghamton (http://press.sn/XJqC6c ) reports that the mother of the woman who tracked down Grigor owned a guest house frequented by Navy servicemen stationed in Virginia Beach. When they ran low on money, she would hold collateral until they paid their bills, but some never came back.

When the woman's mother died, the watch was found among her possessions.

Grigor now calls his watch Time Traveler.

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No Damage Is Reported From a Quake in Maine By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Published: October 16, 2012
PORTLAND, Me. (AP) — An earthquake hit southern Maine on Tuesday evening, rattling New England as far as Boston and Connecticut.

The United States Geological Survey first estimated the magnitude at 4.6 but later downgraded it to 4.0.

The quake, which occurred around 7:15 p.m., was centered about three miles west of Hollis Center, which is 20 miles west of Portland. The depth of the quake was about four miles, the Geological Survey reported.

The Maine Emergency Management Agency said it had received no immediate reports of damage or injuries.

Officials at the Seabrook Station nuclear plant in New Hampshire, about 60 miles from the epicenter, declared an unusual event but said the facilities were not affected. The plant has been offline for refueling.


The giant leap for Red Bull by Ilse Grabe
22 October 2012
Go big or go home! Red Bull’s space jump stunt with Felix Baumgartner has been calculated to yield over £100-million (about R1.4-billion) in return on exposure for the brand.

This was calculated after only four days, while the impact of the incredible feat is still reverberating through all media channels.

The jump was a very risky marketing move for Red Bull – but they had the courage of their conviction and it paid off handsomely.

The marketing impact is not just about being on the news, printed in newspapers and spoken about – it is about ruling the waves with funny, serious and viral memes.

Had the jump been unsuccessful, for any reason, I have no doubt the amount of exposure and return would have been similar but not necessarily positive.

Advertisers need to identify strong media platforms that fit their brands and be courageous in execution. In today’s integrated media space you can create massive impact when a big idea is executed in an epic way, whether risky or not.

The rule is that you must stay true to your key brand benefits, which must come across very strongly. The jump was a proof point of the idea that Red Bull gives you ‘wings’. And because of the fact that extreme sport like this is second nature for Red Bull, they became marketing pioneers through the stunt and literally give their own brand ’wings’.

From water sports and motor sports to base-jumping athletes, Red Bull’s single-minded support for extreme sport gives them phenomenal value.

The jump at its peak had eight million people watching live on YouTube, breaking the previous record of 500 000 concurrent views, according to AllThingsD.

The video received over two million views with 24 hours of the jump, which is 1 388 views per minute. Gone are the days that global stunts and events are viewed later; the Web has changed the way we consume live events, and within seconds consumers are generating content around them and before you as the marketer or advertiser.”

Not to be outdone, some brands used quick-thinking ambush marketing to link their brand own proposition to the stunt.

American snack foods company Slim Jims, known for their comedic campaigns, responded with ‘the world’s shortest free-fall’ on a popular American late night show, while Lego shot a short stop-motion film that recreated the stunt using a range of their space themed construction toys.

Confectionary company Kit Kat capitalised on the tension preceding the jump, attaching a chocolate to a weather balloon and sending it up, with their tagline ‘Have a break’, for Felix Baumgartner.

 Ilse Grabe is business unit head at media agency Carat.

Mr. Laine
10/10/2012 05:00:22 pm

Once all 3 news stories are posted, the questioners should then add two questions about EACH of the three news stories here in the comments. So there will be six questions in total.

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10/17/2012 10:35:51 am

Is the process of transforming cheap metals into valuable metals an expensive process.?

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10/17/2012 10:37:41 am

What does Midas touch mean?

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10/17/2012 10:41:44 am

Has their been any other earthquakes prior to the one reported recently in Maine?

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10/17/2012 10:48:00 am

What is the largest earthquake ever to hit Maine?

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10/17/2012 10:54:33 am

Will the capture of the Daughter help the U.S authorities capture the "Mexican Drug Lord" himself ?

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10/17/2012 10:59:49 am

Does El Chapo deal drugs all over the world or just in North America?

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