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I found this ad through my gmail: Yoga Booty Ballet.

Yoga Booty Ballet is a dynamic fusion of yoga, booty sculpting, and dance that will make you feel strong, confident, and beautiful! The workouts are so fun, you won’t believe you’re also losing weight and sculpting long, lean muscles.

Poor yoga, it’s the exercise equivalent of the even poorer poodle, bred with anything and everything because nothing sells like a prefix/suffix. So like the labradoodles and schnoodles, we have Yo-chi (yoga/tai chi) and Yolates (yoga/pilates). At least they didn’t call it Yollet.

A friend once made me seriously jealous of Germans when he described their perfectly designed windows and moderately priced but sexily utalitarian cutlery. How wonderful to live in a country where quality is evident in everyday basic gear. They are so the Japanese of Europe (without the cool craft books). Okay, I have a bit of a “basics” fetish. But check out this VW factory in Dresden, aren’t the Germans just the coolest?.
dresden vw factory
I think that is where they probably film all their “we’re in the VW factory” commercials (and maybe some of the IKEA ones too!*), maybe all the other VW factories are dank and dingy holes.

For more cool worksites: 10 seeeeeriously cool workplaces and Eric Staller’s Conference Bike! (workcover incident waiting to happen?).

* Swedes, Germans, same diff.

Why are you and I surrounded by Idiots (In fact, sometimes I’m not sure about you….) - it’s a website - relaid a couple of reports from security lab F-Secure. Apparently in Japan, “McDonald’s Japan shipped 10,000 MP3 players as prizes in a competition they organized with Coca-Cola” which “were also preloaded with a variant of the QQPass password-stealing trojan” [link]. Bingo, you’ve won your life savings being stolen from you through your online banking.

The other report was that Apple managed to install the RavMonE.exe virus on a “small percentage” of their ipods in the factory. I wonder if it was anything like the “small percentage” of ipods that Apple said had battery and hard drive problems (when I had to return my first one within months because of refusal to charge, the Apple techie said that it was by no means an uncommon problem even though Apple insisted it was only a small number of units that had been affected). Anyway, it’s reported on the Apple website, as F-Secure point out, it is constantly referred to as a “Windows virus” as if somehow the blame lies with Microsoft for creating such a sensitive creature in the first place rather than their own clear negligence.

Roche has published a press release announcing their new advertising relationship with the animated film “Happy Feet”:

Happy Feet presents a wholesome storyline in a wintry backdrop that serves as an ideal platform for communicating to consumers, especially moms, about the flu,” said McGuire. “The Flu Facts campaign represents a new approach for the industry, combining disease awareness and education with pop culture and creativity.” Roche is the only pharmaceutical company partnering with Warner Bros. to feature the Happy Feet characters in advertising. The Happy Feet stars will appear in unbranded Flu Facts print ads beginning in November magazines, with national television ads starting October 23. The television ads include :30 and :60 second spots, which will air on all major networks and cable stations… Happy Feet is slated to hit theatres on November 17, just around the time when cold and flu season begins in the U.S…. Antivirals can help prevent flu following exposure to an infected person, and as a treatment, they reduce the duration of illness. [link]

Of course, Roche manufactures those antivirals. Backup to this campaign is the Flu Facts website, down the bottom there is a Roche logo, but how many people would be scrolling down? If it’s such an important message, why aren’t they just upfront about who is doing it, rather than relying on subconcious associations? Do they think that maybe we won’t trust it because they have a vested interest in us buying more drugs? Hmmm…

They did a similar thing in Australia, where the regulating body allowed them to run these unbranded ads prompting you to talk to your pharmacist about weight loss pills and because there was no brand name, it actually looked like a public health service announcement. It was tagged “Lose Weight Gain Life” which is not that different from our government sponsored “Life Be In It” campaigns. Strangely, there was a lot of green and white and later unbranded green and white packs started turning up in the windows of pharmacies. Lo and behold, Xenical has green and white packaging. Oh wow, I’ve just got all these subliminal impulses to trust it. This is despite criticism from the Dietician’s Association of Australia and the consumer advocate, Choice. Much like the Flu Facts campaign, the campaign had a “Lose Weight Gain Life” website. It now just redirects to the Xenical brand page, but here’s what Pharma Watch had to say about the campaign at the time:

Roche has conducted an extensive advertising campaign for orlistat, which is marketed for weight loss. The campaign included television advertisements, advertisements in magazines, glossy brochures displayed in community pharmacies, a free call number and a web site (www.loseweightgainlife.com.au). In this campaign the public was told the story of ‘Linda’ who took a ‘life-changing decision’ and states ‘I spoke to my doctor about modern innovative approaches to weight loss. That was 18kg ago!’. Other advertisements showed photos of Linda at the swimming pool and stated ‘Two years on and Linda is 30 kilos lighter and a whole lot wiser’. Concurrent mailings to doctors inform them about the ‘Lose Weight Gain Life Program’ which is in its ‘3rd successful year’ and includes reproductions of consumer advertisements and a letter with the logo ‘Xenical Lose Weight. Gain Life’. The advertisements to consumers do not mention the name of the drug and so are not banned under the current Medicines Australia Code of Conduct. The benefits of orlistat are exaggerated as a systematic review of the clinical effectiveness of orlistat found that the mean weight loss observed with orlistat was only 3.2 kg more than with placebo after two years.5The advertising campaign does not link with national initiatives, such as Active Australia, which encourage participation in physical activity. This campaign may raise false hopes in many people and may put general practitioners under great pressure to prescribe orlistat even if not clinically appropriate. [link]

The technology now exists for you to have your own face on characters that you play in games. I blogged about it briefly on Andrew’s blog. It’s a new frontier in technology, but also a new frontier in the effect on gamers’ psyches. It’s all a bit scary, but too cool. I hate that with technology, things you could only dream about are starting to become real possibilities and actualities which rocks but they also come with lots of new ethical dilemmas which really sucks. Ah the tradeoffs, I feel for those beetles.

I love this game so much that I am (almost) considering buying a PSP just to play it. You can play a lovely demo on the official site or download speccy stuff from the Loco Roco myspace page. There’s even a threadless loves t-shirt comp for it (entries close 1 Nov). Some favs:

the forces of gravity - Threadless, Best T-shirts Ever J-O-Y - Threadless, Best T-shirts Ever locco bubbles - Threadless, Best T-shirts Ever Fish and Water - Threadless, Best T-shirts Ever Cheers Mom. - Threadless, Best T-shirts Ever

And here’s a video: Loco Roco