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WSJ to Increase Color Pages 17%

Beginning in January 2009, the number of color pages offered to advertisers by the Wall Street Journal will increase to 168 pages a week - an increase of 17 percent.

The newspaper will spend the next two years upgrading and refitting its printing plants - a $30 million project. The last time the Journal expanded color pages was 2002.

“We project rapid growth in color demand in excess of current Journal capabilities,” said L. Gordon Crovitz, executive vice president, Dow Jones & Co. and publisher, The Wall Street Journal. “Actual color demand has significantly exceeded advertising forecasts since the 2002 color expansion. We expect to meet the color demands of our advertisers with this upgrade.”

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AMC Makes Emmy History with Best-Series Nod

AMC’s Mad Men snared 16 Emmy nominations, including best drama - the first time a basic cable series was nominated in the best-series category.

The show received the most nominations of all dramatic TV series. FX’s Damages also received a…

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‘Vogue’ Follows Fresh Young Models for Reality Web Series

Vogue will follow the lives of three young women as they enter the world of top modeling, pulling video together for a web-based reality series called Model.Live. Clothing retailer Express LLC paid in the low seven figures to be the…

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Mitchum Boosts Purchase Intent with Hanger Ads

Antiperspirant manufacturer Mitchum is launching a promotion, kicked off in the Pacific Northwest this month, that offers consumers $1 coupons attached to hangers that come from dry cleaners.

This is the third time Mitchum has partnered with EcoHangers - a company…

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