Remember Verizon’s “can you hear me now” guy? That’s right, he was the one in the carrier’s TV ads that went around the country testing the network’s signal, repeatedly asking, “Can you hear me now?” ...
Beyoncé had a surprise for Super Bowl fans: She’s releasing new music. The singer used her ad for Verizon to hint at new music, and promptly updated her website and social media with teasers for a ...
Counterproductive From the Start TechDrit's Mike Masnick can't understand why AT&T decided to sue Verizon in the first place, as the move was bound to raise the profile of the Verizon ad campaign: ...
Since DVRs have basically eliminated the need to sit through commercials, we turn our attention to YouTube. That’s where Verizon’s first iPhone commercial has cropped up. It’s 30 seconds of clocks ...
After a string of social media teasers and clues in Verizon ads, Beyoncé dropped two new songs and announced a new album during the big game. Beyoncé scored major points during Sunday's Super Bowl ...
This is 2003 all over for Verizon Wireless and they did the same thing when the launched Push to Talk with Nextel. Verizon ads were all about the bigger push to talk coverage are compared to Nextel.