I tried an experiment, changing the ad copy in two publications in very subtle ways, just changing the superlatives I used to describe the product. In one publication I said it was flexible, in the other I said programmable, for example. Sure enough, when the editorial came out in each pub, they used the adjectives I had used in my ads. Exactly the same ones. It was as if they wrote the editorial by massaging my ad copy.
Also it was amazing to me how often my ads ran adjacent to editorial about the products.
All these are indicators, but not proof, that advertisers have at least some control over what appears in editorial. —Dave Winer —Doc on Ad Age (Scripting News)
Similar:
I’m thinking this is a still from the cringey Season 1 episode of TNG where the natives bu...
There’s No Longer Any Doubt That Hollywood Writing Is Powering AI
Sorry, not sorry. I don't want such friends.
Despite its impressive output, generative AI doesn’t have a coherent understanding of the ...
Will Journalism Be a Crime in a Second Trump Administration?
As part of an ongoing feud over the rights to use a particular shade of ultra-black paint,...