Heroes, Bones, and Alias all featured scenes in which a character rhapsodized about the amazing features of their brand-new car. (Apparently, Priuses are great for stake-outs and surveilance because of their quiet engines.)
Myka on Warehouse 13 developed a hitherto-unmentioned addiction to Twizzlers for an entire season (which vanished without explanation the following season).
Quite. I also plug Xerox Ventura Publisher . . . decades after it ceased to be a supported product. And while it might be possible, if I had to go whole-hog on self-publication, to get free use of a PDF-to-offset-plate system, and enough plates to print the thing, in exchange for a plug for the vendor (my protagonist's father is a job printer, a decision I made long before I even knew that the International Printing Museum even existed), my own ethics would forbid me to even try.It's only product placement if they pay you to do it -- hence the "placement" part.
Hmm. And in the first (but chronologically last) scene Sondheim's Merrily We Roll Along, the audience is introduced to the inventor of the telephone answering machine . . . and then, as the show progresses (regresses?) a few focal points downtime, that same bit-part character is asking a Broadway producer to back his invention, and is immediately rebuffed, with the producer pointing out that there are answering services that will do that. (And yes, that's a plug for Merrily, the theatrically-released proshot of which is now available on DVD. And no, I don't get paid for the plug.)There's an old Batman episode where Barbara Grayson spends a few minutes showing off her snazzy new answering machine to Chief O'Hara. ("Saints preserve us, what will they think of next!"

(Apparently, Priuses are great for stake-outs and surveilance because of their quiet engines.)
The worst extreme of this was Eureka devoting a whole season arc to the town doing research products with Degree antiperspirant, culminating in a finale where the product was vital to saving the day by being slathered onto the hero to protect him against an artificial sun's heat -- which paralleled the gimmick in the Degree commercials that aired in the breaks, but was the exact opposite of how antiperspirants actually work, since they prevent perspiration and would thus make the user more vulnerable to heat if they covered the entire body.
I've quite literally never heard the VSP of my 2018 Nissan Leaf. The backup chime, yes, but not the VSP. If I had my druthers, I'd have my VSP hacked to sound like an idling steam locomotive: generator whine, escaping steam, an air brake compressor pumping a few strokes every half a minute or so, and even the occasional safety valve popoff. And that's just when it's standing still: steam exhaust when it's moving slowly, timed at one beat every 90 degrees of axle rotation.electric car making it's legally-mandated Simpsons-Cult-Leader-Blowing-Through-a-Comb flying saucer noise
I've quite literally never heard the VSP of my 2018 Nissan Leaf.
Does running off on tangents about organs, graphic arts, and trains, for no apparent reason constitute an "annoying habit"?
Except that there isn't one. One of the times I took my Leaf in for preventive maintenance, I specifically asked them to check the VSP, and they said it was fine, in spite of the fact that it's completely inaudible to me. Whereas I can easily hear the VSP on my dad's Kia Niro* hybrid, when it's running on battery power, and I've heard EVs from a number of different manufacturers, and I'm pretty sure they don't all sound exactly the same.But I suppose from a safety standpoint, to alert pedestrians, it would be preferable to have a consistent, recognizable sound.
*I've never understood why Kia would name a vehicle after the misspelled name of a somewhat disreputable Roman emperor. Are they going to name one after Caligula, too?
This is definitely true.Then let's just keep it to "Don't assume reader reviews are necessarily reliable." That applies in plenty of ways, like when people give a book a bad review because the cover was creased in shipping or whatever.
This is definitely true.
The last couple of our book club books have really good ratings on Good Reads, but all but one have been duds this year.
Heroes, Bones, and Alias all featured scenes in which a character rhapsodized about the amazing features of their brand-new car. (Apparently, Priuses are great for stake-outs and surveilance because of their quiet engines.)
I'm reminded of the secret message plugging Ovaltine in A Christmas Story.
And, yeah shameless product placement bits were all over the place not too long ago. Among some highlights:
Heroes, Bones, and Alias all featured scenes in which a character rhapsodized about the amazing features of their brand-new car. (Apparently, Priuses are great for stake-outs and surveilance because of their quiet engines.)
Myka on Warehouse 13 developed a hitherto-unmentioned addiction to Twizzlers for an entire season (which vanished without explanation the following season).
And pity poor Alison Mack on Smallville who had to deliver the immortal line: "Acue-Vue contact lenses to the rescue!" (And they spent a whole episode plugging some brand of chewing gum as well.)
I once read that the one star reviews are best to be ignored. They haven't read the book. The two star reviews, where they have read the book, are the ones to look out for.See also the folks who post bad reviews because they weren't paying attention and had no idea what they were reading:
"This young-adult novel is too juvenile. One star."
"This short-story collection is not a novel. One star."
"Blood Orgy of the Living Dead is not family-friendly! One star."
A lot of car companies were doing product placement at this point in time. Eureka was all about Subarus.I didn't mind the Cisco Systems product placements in Eureka's first season, since communications systems were something they actually had reason to use. And the car sponsorship they did in one season was pretty typical for basic-cable product placement at the time. But the Degree thing was just ill-conceived all around.
like Kirk's BWM motorcycle in the 2009 movie
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