Poster Miley
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HANNAH MONTANA #34 NEW pin-up / mini poster ***READ MY MILEY CYRUS SPECIAL OFFER US $3.99
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Miley Cyrus Pop Rock Singer Girl Sexy Silk Poster 20'' US $4.99
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Another great place to shop for Poster Miley products is Amazon. They have more than just books! Here are some more information for Poster Miley: It is not a great mystery why celebrities often find themselves supporting a cause or promoting a particular brand of product or service. There is the slew of very famous people sporting the Omega and Tag Hueur watches in magazines and print posters. Then you have popular models walking the runway for different clothing brands. Even Manolo Blahnik shoes found their way to fame by having Sarah Jessica Parker wear them in her Sex and the City series. David Beckham became very famous having his body exposed in large poster printing of Calvin Klein underwear. The fact remains that celebrities make any product look good and delectable. There is a certain appeal to consumers when they find their favorite celebrities endorsing a product or service that they would definitely buy these things even without checking whether it would work for them or not. Whether you can afford it or not, having the same products worn or used by famous celebrities makes you sort of fashionable and famous, too. As a business owner and marketer, you should take advantage of this great strategy to ensure that you get as many target clients to buy your products. But before you hire your first A-lister to endorse your product, you have to become an expert yourself on the celebrities you would want to use. This means researching on the celebrity personal like and dislikes; what he or she believes in. Where do they go for their food? Where are they entertaining, shopping or travelling? Where are they spending their time and money, and on whom? When you know these things, only then will you be able to have successful marketing with celebrities. So how do you decide who to hire for your business endorsement? Start with looking at these factors: Age. Depending on the demographics of your target audience, you should also consider the age of your celebrity endorser. Surely you should not get Brooke Shields to wear your babydoll dresses, unless it is her daughter you want. Your babydoll dresses would better appeal to mothers if they see Brooke or even Katie Holmes dressing their daughters with your clothes. In the same manner that your rainbow colored sneakers would never be worn by Cate Blanchett as opposed to Miley Cyrus or Dakota Fanning. This just means that your celebrity endorser should also match the demographics of your target clients. If you plan to attract the teenagers for example, then its better you get somebody who they know, and a much better fit to your products. Style Choices. Always choose the celebrity that goes with the style you are promoting. How celebrities show themselves in public is important as these would tell you who would be appropriate to carry the product you are offering. If you have classic lines in your dresses, you are much better off with Annette Benning than Avril Lavigne or Amy Wineheart. Ethnic Roots. Promote your ethnicity with celebrities that have the same roots as yours. If you are Latina, J Lo or Eva Mendez would be the best choice. If you are black American, Queen Latifah, Halle Berry and Jada Pinket-Smith can be your best bet. Most celebrities find it appealing to work with people of the same racial affinity as theirs. There are many more factors you can consider. But always remember one thing: when celebrity marketing, separate fact from fiction. Get accurate information by being more observant and always verify the details you get every time. For comments and inquiries about the article visit: Poster Printing Janice Jenkins is a writer for a marketing company in Chicago, IL. Mostly into marketing research, Janice started writing articles early 2007 to impart her knowledge to individuals new to the marketing industry. Since I wrote a novel based around sex education, I've tried to pay attention to other books and movies that do the same. I reviewed Tom Perrotta's The Abstinence Teacher, which I thoroughly enjoyed. This time, I'm reviewing Juno, a movie I enjoyed so much I saw it twice, the first time with my wife, the second time alone, so I could take a more insightful look at the story. Juno is the story of a pregnant teenager who is trying to make sense of her difficult circumstances. Ellen Page, who plays Juno, makes the movie. She's not only funny, but she appears wise without taking things too seriously. Juno is the geeky guy's best friend, someone you can talk to, jam with, but you'd forget she was a girl unless she reminded you - and that's how she gets pregnant. She reminded the cheese on her macaroni, before he ever knew he was. I enjoyed Juno because it was different; it was not a formulaic high school drama of fill-in-the-blank (studs, geeks, misfits, beauty queens, etc) against the cliques or the teachers. Nor was the movie a preachy lecture where everyone in one person's life imposes values and passes sentence. Juno was not held up as a poster child for teen sex gone wrong. That would have lost the teen/college audience for sure. Instead, Juno is a movie that a father and teenage daughter can watch together, and share laughs at each other's expense after it ends. Election (1999), which starred Matthew Broderick, and was based on another Perrotta best-seller, is the only other high school based movie that comes close to the same achievement. No surprise; I saw both movies in person and they played well to all ages. I could open my old high school yearbook, or anyone else's for that matter, and probably find one girl like Juno, maybe two, but certainly no more. She's noted as an oddball, but doesn't stand out in any special way - except for her wit - and her untimely pregnancy. During a rare scene in school, pregnant Juno attracts silence and stares as the crowds allow her to pass undisturbed, although it is clear that she has been branded a marked woman. But Juno is remarkably poised for her age; she's thought through what she wants to do - put the baby up for adoption - and she's handling the pain with surprising humor. Juno is the bravest girl in school, and she's considered the freak. It's unclear why that happens; Juno's boyfriend/best friend's mother was the only person who had given Juno a reputation. Maybe Juno's classmates are afraid, not for her, but themselves. Maybe the movie's writer's have left that for us to figure out. It's good meat for a father-daughter talk after the movie's over. After seeing Juno for the second time, I picked up a book, Restless Virgins, a non-fiction story about teenage hook-ups at a nationally respected New England prep school. This was a rare opportunity to take a back-to-back look at a movie and book along similar themes. The authors of Restless Virgins, Abigail Jones and Marissa Miley, both graduates of the school, told a true story that appeared to be more like the formulaic high school movies: take the social cliques of the school, peer pressures, and mix them in with a scandal reminiscent of the Duke Lacrosse case. Only this time, the boys are expelled while the girl's reputation is embarrassingly showcased in court. The school is spared no embarrassment as well; a headmaster is forced to concede that hooking up has been par for the course for some time. I understand why a publisher took on Restless Virgins; the school is one of the nation's elite and its' students considered among the best of the best at gaining admission to the most selective colleges. We expect to be surprised when they behave just like "public school kids" who lack the same advantages. We expect them to abide by a code of conduct, inside and outside school, for the good of the institution, and for the sake of tradition. But Restless Virgins showed me that the elite are just like anyone else, except that they can afford better lawyers. All high schools, public or private have their cliques and they change, while the traditions that should probably die take a long time to go away. This came out quite strongly in Virgins. The students were ready to ignore, or let go of the school's past, while the administrators were asleep at the switch, incapable of cleaning up the mess. Unlike Juno, there were no pregnant young women in Restless Virgins. But Juno MacGuff didn't see sex as a game, or something she had to do, but something she wanted to do, with a guy she really cared about. The fictional Juno was far more mature, and also far more interesting, than the real-life cast in Restless Virgins. About the Author does anyone have a miley cyrus poster that is signed and they don't want it any more?????????????? your in luck i do ACADEMY AWARDS LIVE | Oscar's Night Round-Up from Los Angeles Thanks for visiting!
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Juno And The Restless Virgins
Stuart Nachbar has been involved with education politics, policy and technology as a student, urban planner, government affairs manager, software executive, and now as author of The Sex Ed Chronicles. Visit his blog,
Educated Quest
James Cameron's futuristic 3D thriller "Avatar" and Kathryn Bigelow's intense Iraq war drama "The Hurt Locker" are among the ten film's vying to be named the Best Picture of 2009. indieWIRE's Minute-by-Minute Academy Awards coverage includes occasional updates leading up to the start of the ceremony at 5:30 p.m. PST (8:30 p.m. EST) and then non-stop reports as the winners are announced. THE ...
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