TV commercials TV commercials designed for women may be the most effective means of product marketing and advertising. 99% of American homes are equipped with television, and the average blackout is 7 hours a day. (Http://www.envirolink.com/) TV viewers are a variety of viewers and guarantee that manufacturer's product ads will correspond to all customers. Clearly, not all products are manufactured for all consumers.
Commercial television is programmed by a few people to maximize demographics. Traditionally, public access has evolved democratically, but I have designed (or do not mind) the size of the audience. These conflicting ways have resulted in different evolution. To my surprise, some of the most influential experiments are actually not huge cable companies, they come from publicly-recognized access centers with fund shortage. In Northern Massachusetts, the access center reconstructed the town of Minecraft in collaboration with local youth, and now 40 creative teams cooperatively caught the lost ark as part of the crowdourcing cinema program Intruder . "San Jose is an access center where CreaTV is building a new state-of-the-art complex. In Brooklyn, we will launch BRICS TV on September 24th, bringing the whole season of handmade original series, local filmmakers, news, comedy, music and so on.
Actually, we may already have a television. Fox 's "Imperial" Last season, the character was about to join Pepsi's advertisement. At the latter stage of the series, the characters actually used Pepsi's commercial as part of the plot. This is a natural conclusion that disappeared between advertisements and entertainment. But now, if you look at the episode of Hulu subscription, the Pepsi sequence has been deleted. You can no longer experience the original episode (Yes, there is a DVD, but the format will die soon.)
Movie actress Joan Crawford and PepsiCo's Alfred N. Steele became Pepsi spokespersons, representing advertisements, TV specials and TV beauty contest companies. Crawford also emphasized the image of this soft drink in some of her subsequent films. When Steele died in 1959, Crawford assumed office as PepsiCo until 1973, but was not a member of the Board of Boards of Big Pepsi founded in 1965.