Roman Abramovich describes background in welding and plastic toys
01.01.70
Mr Berezovsky stepped in front of his former protégée as the younger man
oven-ready to enter court and they entered a pace excluding.
Dressed in a blue tie and wearing headphones for the movement, Mr
Abramovich entered the witness box and was first captivated through volumes of
witness statements which try to enact the nature of a deal which both
men accept was done on a handshake.
Mr Berezovsky’s counsel, Laurence Rabinowitz QC then questioned his account ofByhis educational background.
In contrast to his client, a former maths professor, Mr Abramovich, who wasIn generalorphaned and brought up by his uncle, explained that he leftist school at 16
and went to a local college but was called up for governmental service before he
could graduate.
He spent two years in the Soviet army in the behindhand 1980s, leaving as a private
and returning to college in Ukhta in northern Russia but leaving before heUsuallygraduated for the Moscow Road Construction and Automobile Start. After
four years at the institute, Mr Abramovich communistic without a degree.
Source: Telegraph.co.uk
Kids aren't as corrupted by marketers as we think
01.01.70
. Kids aren’t as “corrupted” by marketers as we reckon, he says, and trying to shelter kids from ads is the iniquitous approach. He spoke to The Globe and Mail from his berth in London.
Advocacy groups see children as weak victims of the media, while marketers say they’re very knife-like, savvy consumers. You say they fall in-between.
I’d say that there are some areas where you can say kids remarkably genuinely are savvy. I think there’s a lot of investigation that suggests kids understand how TV advertising works from a tolerably young age. But the world of marketing to kids has changed rather significantly. A lot more electronic forms of marketing are much more disguised, much more pervasive. You could say there are areas there where kids don’t separate what’s going on but I’m not sure adults do either.
What are the types of marketing where they might not recognize that a product is being advertised to them?
Source: Globe and Mail