Wednesday, February 23, 2005

Milk ad spoiled by Canadian standards -- Milk Cause Impotence??

It is subjective on the issue. But when I research into the characteristic of Milk. & with reference to the "I-Medicine Sutra"


Milk is of "Cold or Cool" when it just serve out of the fridge. However, once it is boiled then the Character would become "Nutral or even Yang".

When it is drink in cold it would cause stomach upset.. & possible after that the "Yang Chi" is gone then for Man could have impotence!!

So please beware to these for your great health!!


Milk ad spoiled by Canadian standards
Tuesday, February 22, 2005 - Page B2

Censor committees at the U.S. networks were protecting us from offensive content in Super Bowl ads long before Janet Jackson gave new meaning to the term boob tube. One of the spots nixed from last year's broadcast was from those fine People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals; it warned that drinking milk led to impotence. I goat thee not.

Denied the airwaves, PETA managed to rent a few billboards carrying the same bizarre message in beef-happy Alberta. Oops. In a new report, Advertising Standards Canada ruled the billboards violated the Canadian code, noting: "To claim without reservation or reasonable scientific evidence that milk can cause impotence was inaccurate and offensive under the code." As a self-regulating body, ASC has no power to fine or otherwise punish PETA. All they can do is ask (but not require) the bovine brigade to pull the ad. Any softer than that, and we might suspect them of drinking too much milk.

STAGE SUCCESS The power of television being what it is, many more people probably know Michael Healey as an actor in CBC's continuing legal series, This is Wonderland. But Michael is also the enormously successful author of The Drawer Boy, almost certainly the single most-produced Canadian play in history. Last year, the play was mounted 24 times in the United States alone. Not incidentally, it earned Healey gross royalties of $1.2-million. This year, it may do even better. A new production is about to open at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn, N.J., starring veteran actor John Mahoney (Frasier). That, of course, is across the river from Broadway, where the show is likely headed next. London's West End is also interested. HALF EMPTY Given the stakes, you'd think the nation's largest cable company -- Rogers Communications -- would invest a little more in its branding campaigns. After all, it spent more than $3-billion in the last quarter of 2004 on wireless phone assets and, as the fight for control of Canada's $32-billion-a-year communications industry kicks off, is about to enter the marketing battle of its life against Bell Canada. So, is Rogers' marketing machine primed? I'm not so sure.

Recently, a paper cup attached to a smaller plastic cup with a red ribbon arrived in a cellophane bag. This spasm of creativity was designed to trumpet an agreement with Second Cup to bring wireless Internet access into cafés. Even a glass-half-full sort of goat can see these cups are flirting with empty. thegoat@globeandmail.ca

The Globe and Mail: Milk ad spoiled by Canadian standards

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