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“Why would you passively absorb the ubiquitous inanity known as advertising when you could blog about it? Steve Hall pulls together the questionable, the absurd, the new and the noteworthy found floating around in the commercial media and shares the love over at Adrants. For someone who’s in the business, he ain’t afraid to pull his punches.”

This glowing comment from the folks over at Veer.

If you regularly visit Adrants, you might want to sign up for the newsletter and get all the “questionable, the absurd, the new and the noteworthy” delivered straight to your Inbox. Just think, everyday, you would be treated to commentary on the wacky world of advertising. Oh sure, there’s a serious side to it but the wacky side is more fun.

And today marks the addition to two new features to the Adrants Daily email newsletter. Both are already part of this web site over to your right. They will now be included in the Adrants Daily newsletter.

The first, called Advertising Headlines, is a rolling list of advertising related headline links aggregated from many sources. The second, called Online Advertising Headlines, lists headline links pulled from MarketingFix, another website Adrants is associated with. The focus of these headlines is strictly online advertising related.

To sign up, click on the Subscribe link over in the right column, or just click right here.

Tech Note: The content of the column will appear in all Microsoft-related email programs. If the content of the column does not appear, you are most likely using Yahoo, Hotmail, or AOL. We are working on fixing that and do apologize for the inconvenience as well as out technical incompetence:-)

Please feel free to offer comments positively and/or negatively to comments@adrants.com.

Enjoy.

Picture of Steve Hall

Steve Hall

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I’m 73 and I just realized I have no close friends — not because I’m unlikeable, but because I spent forty years being pleasant to everyone and deep with no one, and now I don’t even know how to start

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The difference between people who age into bitterness and people who age into warmth often comes down to one thing — Whether they treated happiness as something they deserved or something that grew naturally from how they chose to live each day

The difference between people who age into bitterness and people who age into warmth often comes down to one thing — Whether they treated happiness as something they deserved or something that grew naturally from how they chose to live each day

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The people who seem most at peace in their 60s and 70s didn’t find happiness by searching for it — they built lives where meaning, routine, and genuine connection left room for happiness to show up on its own terms

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The generation that grew up in the 1950s and 60s wasn’t given a childhood — they were given a rehearsal for adulthood, handed responsibilities before they had finished being children, and then spent the rest of their lives wondering why they felt robbed of something they couldn’t quite name

The generation that grew up in the 1950s and 60s wasn’t given a childhood — they were given a rehearsal for adulthood, handed responsibilities before they had finished being children, and then spent the rest of their lives wondering why they felt robbed of something they couldn’t quite name

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The real reason boomer women who raised children, worked full-time, and cared for aging parents without complaining now struggle to accept help isn’t pride — it’s that their entire sense of worth was built around being the person who could handle everything, and slowing down feels like becoming irrelevant

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Psychology says people who truly know their worth don’t announce it or defend it — they operate with a quiet certainty that makes negotiation, justification, and proving themselves feel like a language they no longer speak

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