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‘Aqua Teens’ Promo Causes Boston Chaos, Updated

An ill-conceived marketing campaign went dreadfully awry today in Boston, likely giving the sometimes-shaky reputation of the word-of-mouth marketing industry a tarnish it didn’t need.

At least nine electronic devices were planted at bridges and other spots throughout Boston, resulting in highways, bridges and a section of the Charles River being shut down, reports the AP. Bomb squads eventually reported that the devices were harmless. Turns out they were a marketing tactic, courtesy of Cartoon Network, to promote the cable network’s TV show Aqua Teen Hunger Force. A film based on the television show is slated for release in March.
“The packages in question are magnetic lights that pose no danger,” Cartoon Network parent Turner Broadcasting said in a statement.

The devices consisted of blinking lights wired to a circuit board designed to project an animated cartoon image, according to Reuters.

The company said the devices have been in place for two to three weeks in 10 cities, including Boston, New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Atlanta, Seattle, Portland, Ore., Austin, Texas, San Francisco and Philadelphia.

Ultimately, 38 of the devices were removed in Boston, a later AP story reported. When Turner heard about the furor in that city, it notified officials in the other cities and told them where the devices in those cities were located.
Boston authorities arrested two men, hired by Interference Marketing Inc., who placed the electronic promotions.

A rash of phone calls to authorities beginning around 1 p.m. yesterday originally alerted authorities to the devices. Police Commissioner Edward Davis said, when asked if the calls could have been coordinated as part of the campaign, that, “There’s no indication it came from panicked residents.”

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Rush Limbaugh Renews Contract w/Premiere and CC Radio

Hyper-conservative Rush Limbaugh - heard weekly by nearly 20 million listeners on about 600 radio stations nationwide - renewed his contract with Premiere Radio Networks and Clear Channel Radio, continuing syndication of The Rush Limbaugh Show.

The deal also includes…

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WSJ.com Reaches Audience High, Site Traffic Nearly Doubles for June

WSJ.com’s traffic soared an impressive 94 percent in June compared to the same month last year, according to the company’s internal traffic numbers.

Total page views ballooned 45 percent, to 150 million, compared to the same month last year, writes Mediaweek.…

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Game-Day Pudding Works Well at Shea; Some Fans Grumble

Kozy Shack, maker of rice and chocolate pudding, is sponsoring the New York Mets, with tubs of the pudding being sold individually at Shea Stadium as well as being included in children’s meals. And the snacks are selling so well…

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U.K. 2008 Ad Spend Growth Revised Downward to 4%

Though U.K. advertiser investment committed for 2008 is staying put, discretionary spending is becoming shorter-term, at or slightly short of budget; still, WPP’s GroupM forecasts 4 percent growth in 2008 and 3 percent in 2009 for the U.K., thanks to internet…

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Direct Partners: Email Top DR Tool for Big Biz

Email is the most popular form of direct response marketing, with 35 percent of companies using it - compared to 25 percent that use traditional direct mail - according to a new survey conducted by Direct Partners (via Adweek).

The survey…

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Spam Still a Problem; ‘Finance’ Tops Spammers’ Favorite Topics

 Without spam protection, the average web user can expect to get 70 spam messages each day, according to a survey by McAfee, the BBC reports (via MarketingVOX).

For the McAfee spam test, 50 people worldwide were asked to web-surf without a spam…

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