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You need to find a person's email address, perhaps an old friend, but you have no idea what their address is. What can you do?
Well, the most obvious answer is you could just ask them what it is. But since you have come online searching for the answer to this question, we will assume that this option is not available for you. In this case, you will need to try some other tactics.
If this is an old friend who you went to school with or someone you used to work with or maybe just a chat buddy you used to talk to online, it is possible to just ask someone else what their address is, maybe a mutual friend.
If that doesn't work, you will want to start compiling a list of all the things you know about your friend. What school did they go to or what school are they attending right now, where do they work, who are their previous employers, what nicknames do they go by, what other last names have they used, and what are their hobbies. The reason and you will compile this list is because you can put these things into the search engines online and see what comes up. A lot of times people will put this information into profiles at different places on the Internet, and this is one way that you can find a person's email address.
If these methods don't work and you still need to find your friend's email, you may have to resort to one of the paid services. The good thing about these services is you can input a name and have the address in a minute or two. It's a lot less hassle and you can find just about any person's e-mail address you need in just a moment.
If you need to find someone's email address, all you have to do is click here!
Give it a try and you'll have that address in a moment or two.
Infomercials Turn 25 ... and Still Can't Get No Respect!
I'm hardly the first to call infomercials the Rodney Dangerfield of advertising, but 25 years after the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) eliminated restrictions on how much advertising TV stations could air in an hour, I feel oddly compelled to tug on my necktie and give my head a quick shake.
It's a love-hate relationship America shares with my favorite format. Given sales figures for products from Proactiv Solution to P90X, the love is indisputable. Even in our blemished economy, advertisers spend around $1 billion on half-hour time slots alone — and viewers make plenty of purchases to justify it. What's more, millions who haven't (yet!) bought infomercial products have likely made time to watch parodies on YouTube, or perhaps even made one themselves.
But parodies are not always kind. In jest, they make fun of Billy Mays' yelling and Vince Offer's headset. More cutting, they attack the utility of mattresses, stain cleaners and wealth-building strategies. By extension, they ridicule the people who purchase them. They get no respect either — no matter how efficient their kitchens or stain-free their carpets.
An online "Infomercial Trek" reveals a growing handful of Web sites that drip with venom far worse than the snake oil they purport to illuminate. Unambiguously-named sites like http://Infomercial-Hell.com/ and http://InfomercialScams.com/ are hardly fair and balanced (the latter doesn't post "reviews," it posts "complaints")
Only when you go boldly to more general forums does the commentary start to mirror behavior. A Minnesota-themed blog featuring an "Infomercial Sucker Poll," for instance, returned more positive comments about As-Seen-On-TV products than it did negative ones — including the delighted (and delightful) admission: "It actually really worked."
Infomercials thrive by making good first impressions and by delivering products that solve common consumer problems. So it's ironic that their reputation still is bogged down by a past generation's mindset. In movies, infomercials often serve as shorthand to illustrate the sleaziness or emptiness that define hapless characters' lives. It's what downtrodden schlubs watch at the motel, or what captivates the drunken numbskulls in Old School.
From that intellectual giant we call "movies," this is harder to swallow than sawdust. What's truly empty-headed is singling out infomercials as deceptive and silly. Sleazy? DRTV is the most transparent selling format out there. Want to know what that steam mop costs? We'll tell you 10 times. That 12-pack of Coors shown in Sunday's baseball game commercial? Sorry. You have to hop in your car to find out.
No product that can support a half-hour of scrutiny can be that bad of a product. Just imagine what an infomercial for a soft drink might look like. After "it tastes good," you're pretty much grasping at "it's bubbly," and "it's not as bad for you as beer." So who's fooling whom?
Happily, after 25 years, we industry veterans can enjoy the last laugh. The chronic displays of disrespect remain tiresome, and the haters are tedious nags. But suck as they do, they don't do it nearly so well as a Fantom, a Shark or an Oreck. As millions of consumers can tell you ... they actually really work!
About the Author
Author of over 175 published articles, Tim Hawthorne is Founder, Chairman and Executive Creative Director of Hawthorne Direct, a full service DRTV and New Media ad agency founded in 1986. Since then Hawthorne has produced or managed over 800 Direct Response TV campaigns for clients such as Apple, Braun, Discover Card, Time-Life, Nissan, Lawn Boy, Nikon, Oreck, Bose, the Heifer International. Tim is a co-founder of the Electronic Retailing Association, has delivered over 100 speeches worldwide and is the author of the definitive DRTV book The Complete Guide to Infomercial Marketing. A cum laude graduate of Harvard, Tim was honored with the prestigious "Lifetime Achievement Award" by the Electronic Retailing Association (ERA) in 2006.
Need Help On A Gaming Decision PLEASE?
okay so i am in a tight situation right now. i am in middle school, and i currently have a sony playstation 3. i think its a pretty great system. but the only problem is that i think the xbox 360 games are way better, and EVERYONE at my school has one. so it makes me feel left out that i cant chat with them and challenge them to like gears and halo and cod, because i have a ps3. i was thinking about selling my ps3 and all of the games and everything i have for it like controllers and a bluetooth headset, but is it the right move. both systems are good in my mind, but i heard that the xbox 360 gets broken alot. but i also wanted to know if i get one now, would a new one come out again soon, and id be bvuying an old system? or if i get it now, will people still be playing games like gears and cod and halo 3? i dont noe what to do, please help me!!!
well, i love the 360, and if you want to sell your ps3 then your making a good descision. plus everyone exaggerates about how the 360 breaks all the time.Also, the games are very good, its not too much of one thing like the ps3, games are more balanced out. i hope i helped
A purr-fect day for Carolina Panthers fans
Assistant principal Travis Smith kicked a 25-yard field goal at Bank of America Stadium Saturday.
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