Almost forgot: S.C.A.T. is used in a “humorous” way, the ad copy folks evidently unaware that the word doesn’t only function as something you say when the cat jumps on the counter…
Battle Mountain, Nevada has the town’s initials spelled out in white on a nearby hillside.
“BM” in big letters.
Yeah that’s kind of what I took away from it immediately. Knowledge is learnt and factual. To apply that knowledge in new and different ways requires imagination.
I think it’s quite a cool quote, actually
Agreed.
Still agreed, if we’re talking about the whole quote, not that snippet. I’d want to see the discussion point out, though, that while the exciting part was imagination, imagination can be much more exciting and useful if you have the knowledge - Einstein was able to think his paradigm shifting thoughts only because he knew stuff first to build on.
And yet more agreement! Woot! My :rolleyes: attitude was not towards Mr. Einstein, but the school using that snippit of quote. Which, taken out of the full statement he made, makes little sense to me in an institution of learnin’.
You are right. Unfortunately, it usually is presented out of context and, I’d bet, often interpreted in a way old Al would not have liked: “So what if I made a D in Introduction to Calculus? I have a great imagination, and that’s what’s important.”
I passed a Christian Assembly church yesterday and noted that this Sunday’s sermon was going to be about some passages from the Book of Mark. “Christiaholics Anonymous” was also on the reader board.
Seeing that, I said to myself, “Huh?” Folks who attend Alcoholics Anonymous are working on avoiding alcohol. At Narcotics Anonymous, they’re working on avoiding drugs. So at Christiaholics Anonymous meeting, wouldn’t one be working on avoiding Christ? Wouldn’t a Christian church be the last place you’d want to be? (Of course, I suppose the dreaded, oh-so-addicting and soul-destroying christia has reared its ugly head once again, though I thought the last of that was well and truly stamped out decades ago. But if its back and that church offers a cheap place to meet with fellow sufferers, then it’s all good.)
Anyway, that’s my best sighting lately.
It’s not a slogan, just the name of a local business in Beavercreek OH.
Beaver-Vu
Wouldn’t that be Wobelis?
There was a non-chain hardware store I used to go by often that had the following slogan painted on the side:
Home of great values and more!
Everytime I saw it, it made me think: some things are great values, others pure rip-offs.
CTV news used to use the slogan, “If it matters in your world, it’s news to us.”
They belatedly considered what that phrase means in popular use, and retooled it as “If it matters in your world, it’s news for BC.” Which was just run-of-the-mill lame.
I noticed that too. I think they left out the eels.
Maybe Wolf, BEar, LiOn, Scout – WBELOS, with an extra ‘e’ thrown in to assist pronunciation? Maybe it wasn’t thought out fully in more ways than one.
Delta gets you there. United’s was/is ‘Fly the friendly skies of United’.
This one doesn’t apply anymore: PanAm. We’re flying better than ever.
You can be indifferent to SaraLee and still not be a person who doesn’t like it, but you can’t be indifferent and be a person who does like it.
So the slogan “Nobody doesn’t like SaraLee” is actually less supportive of the product than “Everybody likes SaraLee” would be, since it leaves open the possibility that most people don’t give a damn about SaraLee.
Exacitaly!
(Sorry, that’s my 3 year olds favorite new word. It’s catching.)
My point was simply that the two statements are not equivalent.
Yes, “Everbody likes SaraLee” is a more positive statement. However, the whole slogan was “Everybody doesn’t like something, but nobody doesn’t like SaraLee.” Substituting “everybody likes SaraLee” would not scan nearly as well, IMO.
I think one of our local news stations here in Cincinnati stole that and riffed on it. Unfortunately, it doesn’t sound much better:
“If you care about it, it’s news to us.”
Truer words were never spoken, though. Most of their reporting is so utterly inane, I couldn’t care less. I guess they’re aware that a significant portion of locals share the same sentiment.
My contribution is for Always feminine products:
“Have a happy period”
Screw you, P&G! There’s nothing about my period that makes me happy other than fact that I’m not pregnant. Well, it’s actually more like mildly relieved…but still annoyed, damn it.
Ironically, P&G, you left off the period in your statement. You know, punctuation; it’s incredibly useful.