OK, this is so off topic I don't know how to justify this post, other than to say "I just had to share:"
Apparently, a pair Queen Victoria's bloomers were purchased at auction for $9,000.
An article by the AP quotes auctioneer Charles Hanson as saying that Queen Victoria's underpants belonged to "a very big lady of quite small stature with a very wide girth." She was said to be 5 feet tall and had bloomers with a 50-inch waist.
The handmade drawers include the monogram "VR" for Victoria Regina. AP says they are open-crotch style (if you were interested), with separate legs joined by a drawstring at the waist, a popular style in the late Victorian era.
Time is running out to enter the photographic book competition sponsored by our good friends over at Blurb.
So, if you're thinking of submitting an entry for the Photography.Book.Now competition, the time is now!
Entries are due by midnight on Monday, July 14th.
Don’t miss your chance for fame and glory — and a shot at the $25,000 Grand Prize. Details
It has been one of those days. I woke this morning to find that Charter Internet was down, and I had no access. Then, I learned that Twitter has been offline for hours, and finally, word that Amazon.com was closed (involuntarily) for at least an hour. Advertising Age estimates that cost the retailer at least $1.8 Million.
From time to time I share something that is truly off topic. If I could spin this any other way, I'd say to use this video from current.tv as creative inspiration, or perhaps a socio-analysis of Gen Y. But however I present it, I hope you enjoy this digression:
For those of you out there who'll happen to be in San Francisco this evening, my good friend Kevin "Dutch" O'Malley is is putting on what appears to be a good program at the Commonwealth Club. Email him if you'd like to attend (kevin@techtalkstudio.com).
Panel: Collaborating for Change
A diverse group of engineers, designers and activists are raising living standards worldwide
Collaborating for Change: The Open Architecture Network
Maria Giudice, CEO and Founder, Hot Studio; Co-author, Web Design Essentials
Scott Mattoon, Chief Architect, Western U.S. Region, Sun Microsystems
Amy Novogratz, Director, TED Prize
Kate Stohr, Co-founder, Architecture for Humanity; Editor, Design Like You Give a Damn: Architectural Responses to Humanitarian Crises
How can well-designed Web access to open-source architectural plans support sustainable development, help communities rebuild after disaster, and create safer and more innovative structures with partners around the world? Learn how a diverse team of engineers, designers and social activists worked together to create a collaborative design community to help raise living standards around the globe - and allowed a worldwide team to respond to the immediate needs of disaster victims, including the victims of Hurricane Katrina and the recent fires in Southern California.
MLF: Business & Leadership
Location: Club Office
Time: 5:30 p.m. reception, 6 p.m. program
Cost: $8 members, $15 non-members, $7 students (with valid ID)
Program Organizer: Kevin O'Malley
As a marketer, I feel it is wise to keep abreast of the most deadly sins--exactly how is God's law being violated in today's world?
Apparently, the Catholic Church says lust, gluttony and greed aren't the only big time sins out there. The Vatican has just listed pollution, drug use and genetic manipulation among the sins being committed in the modern world.
"If yesterday sin had a rather individualistic dimension, today it has a weight, a resonance, that's especially social, rather than individual," Monsignor Gianfranco Girotti, the head of the Apostolic Penitentiary, whose office deals with matters of conscience and grants absolution.
Let's hope marketing stays out of the Vatican's list of social sins.
Source: The higher authorities at the Associated Press
Sir Edmund Hillary, the man who conquered Mount Everest and considered to be one of the 20th century's
greatest adventurers, has died, New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark announced Friday. He was 88. Source: The New York Times
Adam Morgan: Eating the Big Fish : How Challenger Brands Can Compete Against Brand Leaders
Al Ries: The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing : Exposed and Explained by the World's Two
Alex Wipperfurth: Brand Hijack : Marketing Without Marketing
Diana Lasalle: Priceless: Turning Ordinary Products into Extraordinary Experiences
Douglas Atkins: The Culting of Brands : When Customers Become True Believers
Douglas B. Holt: How Brands Become Icons: The Principles of Cultural Branding
Gerald Zaltman: How Customers Think: Essential Insights into the Mind of the Market
Jim Collins: Built to Last: Successful Habits of Visionary Companies
Jim Collins: Good to Great : Why Some Companies Make the Leap...And Others Don't
Jon Steel: Truth, Lies and Advertising : The Art of Account Planning
Keith Yamashita: Unstuck: A tool for Yourself, Your Team , and Your World