terça-feira, 1 de novembro de 2011

Bad Science and Why People Believe

This came to me while reading a book "Autism's False Prophets Bad Science, Risky Medicine, and the search for a cure" By: Paul Offit M.D. Throughout time there has always been bad science. They used to tie bells on dead bodies in case they came back to life. At one point people believed in blood letting and all kinds of strange treatments that could never be proven. In today's society we have plenty of bad science of our own. People are up in arms about vaccines. Even though the initial study was shown to be flawed (Dr was paid by a lawyer to get the results, data gathered in a very unprofessional/scientific method) people still want to believe vaccines are bad. They want something to blame something to reason what happens when there just isn't an answer available yet. So instead they don't vaccinate their kid and then the kid gets measles and dies. Who to blame there?

Bloodletting


Anything you can think of we have had some strange science come about. We used to treat women with depression by locking them up and shocking them. Really all I am trying to say here is we need to look at the science and not just believe everything that comes out. Look at how many drugs get put on the market only to be pulled because they do nothing or kill people.





How about using your own urine to whiten your teeth. How about to cure step thought or a broken bone. While most of us would say no there are some people who believe in it.

Urine Therapy.
need white teeth try your urine?


How about Mrs Winslow's soothing syrup. Which really is just a deadly cocktail of heroin, pot, morphine and who knows what else. Its purpose is to help relax kiddos. More like knock them out for days.

Mercury you know the stuff that has the worst reputation on earth right now. Was once seen to be therapeutic. Forget the fact that ingesting it really didn't lengthen ones life as they believed it would it just killed them.

The best one I saw out there on the big internet was a cure for impotent men. It was an electrical shock to well you know and was supposed to work I guess like viagra cialis online pharmacy pharmacy works today. I just don't see men lining up for that one.



Virility Belt.
Any Volunteers to try this one?
How about a lobotomy. Looks like fun. But it was once believed to work and I think it may still be used today in very rare cases. Not as common as it once was.

Or how about some psychic surgery where someone will take your money and pretend to perform surgery removing the bad out of your body.

sábado, 29 de outubro de 2011

For the love of Cialis

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Looks like fate has brought me back to this blog and I find myself updating again. It has been over a year since I last posted, and I say it over and over, but it's hard to believe how fast it's gone. I find myself in marketing today, doing all sorts of marketing work, advertising, promo stunts, subliminal messages, direct brainwashing etc. but that makes me by no means an expert yet...

Hilariously, I come back to this humble blog to find Viagra spam in the comments below. Now, I would be quick to dismiss this as shady and ineffective advertising (and fucking annoying), but my friend Luke was quick to derail this train of thought with a marvellous gem of lateral thinking.

Name two penis enhancing drugs that you know of?

Most of you will say 'Viagra' and 'Cialis'. Consider me blown away. It's actually marketing genius.

terça-feira, 3 de maio de 2011

New Use for Active Ingredient of Cialis

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The FDA has approved a new use for tadalafil, which is the active ingredient in the erectile dysfunction drug generic viagra. Tadalafil, sold as Adcirca, is now approved to improve exercise ability in people with pulmonary arterial hypertension, which is a rare, life-threatening lung disorder that causes high blood pressure in the lungs.
Adcirca comes in 40 milligram tablets; patients take one tablet per day.
In 2005, the FDA approved Revatio, a pulmonary arterial hypertension drug made with sildenafil, the active ingredient in the erectile dysfunction drug Viagra. Revatio pills are taken three times daily at 20 milligrams per pill.
Adcirca, which will be available in August, is made by the drug company Lilly, which also makes generic cialis. Adcirca will be marketed in the U.S. by United Therapeutics Corporation.
The FDA approved Adcirca based on a clinical trial in which pulmonary arterial hypertension patients either took Adcirca (given as two daily tablets, with each tablet containing 20 milligrams of tadalafil) or a placebo pill for 16 weeks.
At the end of the study, the patients walked for six minutes; during that time, patients taking Adcirca walked 33 meters farther than patients in the placebo group. Patients taking Adcirca also had less clinical worsening of their pulmonary arterial hypertension during the study than patients taking the placebo, according to a news release from United Therapeutics.
The most common side effects during the clinical trial included headache; muscle pain; flushing; colds and other respiratory tract infections; nausea; pain in the arms, legs, or back; upset stomach; and nasal congestion. United Therapeutics states that those side effects were generally brief and mild to moderate in intensity.

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Viagra: A Brand That Won't Go Away (by Molly Sunderdick)

Viagra: A Brand That Won't Go Away (by Molly Sunderdick)

Remember That Brand? Well It’s Back! One would have to travel to the back woods of the Appalachians or perhaps to the cave dwellings in the Southwestern canyons to find anyone who has not heard of Viagra. Viagra, the market-leader of male erectile dysfunction prescription drugs, continues to occupy valuable space in the mind of the male consumer. What is so enchanting about an erectile dysfunction pill? How does Viagra have such appeal when it is the focus of late night comedy and radio morning shows? As consumers we seldom question a successful product. (Or maybe we just would rather not have to address or explain male erectile disorder more than we have to).

The consumer is exposed to a pill with a split personality. Viagra lives a double life:
one of in-your-face comedy and one of universal solution. Despite the advertising
that continually tests our comfort elasticity, Viagra’s brand works harder than any
other “miracle drug” to be accepted by the tempestuously self-conscious male
population. Viagra’s branding adheres and accommodates to the male population as
a whole, not only to males with sexual difficulties. Viagra evaluates precepts
regarding acceptance and community before considering the shock thresholds of
consumers in general.

No one was prepared for the introduction of male erectile dysfunction pills into the
mass market. No one anticipated the chain-reaction commercials of multiple
brands, all of which utilizing paradoxical humor to attract attention. Even
consumers desensitized to long lists of side-effects had to turn their heads at the
possibility of a “four hour erection.” That kind of threat stops the music and eye
contact among the group of people in the room is avoided like the plague until the
“funny guy” severs the tension by making a crass comment about a baseball bat.
The Viagra brand applauds him.

Viagra, the pioneer pill for erectile dysfunction, assumed an initially subtle
brandface of advice, information, and medical concern. This initial brand messaging
tossed Viagra into the big black cauldron with Claritin, Lipitor, and other drugs. The
brand was not reaching out to the male population effectively and subsequently had
to consider how men think, feel, and most importantly, what they believe to be true.

What do advertising agencies and mass media companies do best? Raise the stakes
and provide entertainment, which are characteristically male standards. Viagra had
to exude coolness. Viagra had to force the brand into the public eye, and the best
solution was laughter. Consequently, Viagra’s logo was slapped onto the hood of
Mark Martin’s number six car, spokesman Bob Dole’s stiff posture took on a whole
new meaning, and professional baseball star Rapheal Palmero of the Baltimore
Orioles assured men that it was okay to be batting a little below average. With
slogans like “Remember that guy? Well, he’s back!” Viagra took the market by storm
and made erectile dysfunction look as “hip” as possible. In turn, Viagra became the
laughing stock of the drug market. Afflicted males enthusiastically bought into the
brand, embarrassed as ever.

Cialis, Levitra, and a few others surfaced, invading the market with imitations. purchase cialis
and Levitra soon became the Miller and Coors of male erectile dysfunction,
producing the same, if not more over-the-top messages in order to compete.
Levitra featured Mike Ditka coaching affected men to “stay in the game to come out
champions.” Levitra also launched an attack from the female perspective. During
halftime the consumer would see a highly attractive woman on the screen reveal
how her man can last longer than the Energizer Bunny. Levitra pulled out all the
stops to compete with Viagra, and they were not alone. cheap cialis, the brand that
suggests, “He will never know when a moment will become the right moment,” took
up arms. After all a man never knows when his soldier will be called to duty.

Viagra is consistently in the consumers considered set for prescription drugs, and
more importantly, Viagra has secured a positive space as “the solution” in the minds
of all men. The male ego does not allow men to admit disability to anyone,
including himself. Viagra’s brand targets precepts of acceptance and community in
a seemingly unorthodox manner, making jokes, providing endless comedic material.
Viagra breaks consumers with its initial shock value and quickly proves to be a
catalyst, lowering the anxiety of men wanting help.

A man is more likely to go into a physician’s office and request a prescription for
Viagra than he is to ask for a solution for his erectile dysfunction. He is also more
likely to ask for Viagra than to seek information for himself on the Internet or in a
magazine. Perhaps Viagra provides security in the way that it labels the solution as
opposed to describing the problem. Men with erectile dysfunction want to feel as
though they are suffering from something ordinary like arthritis. Everyone has it.
Everyone accepts it. Everyone gets help for it. The importance of “everyone,” even if
everyone is laughing at Viagra, is significant enough to raise the consumer
temperature.

Viagra’s commercials drops jaws, and erectile dysfunction is still taboo in our sex-
crazed society, but Viagra will go down in history as one of the most influential
drugs of all time because the brand succeeded in dropping anchor in the mind of
the male consumer. The acceptance of Viagra confirms that the precepts prevail as
miracle drugs for products of even the most self-conscious nature. The consumer
may gaze at the screen contemplating how much money Viagra pays its spokesmen,
but at least he knows that everyone is watching.

Molly Sunderdick
Brand Strategist
Stealing Share, Inc