Cherokee Posted May 10, 2006 Share Posted May 10, 2006 You're very welcome Kayo. I was on a webpage and that was at the bottom. I busted out laughing and thought of you instantly. Kayo just has to have that froggy with all those teeth!! Glad you like it. Thanks Jem! Gosh...for once I did something right! ...Guess those gremlins are getting tired! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jem Posted May 10, 2006 Author Share Posted May 10, 2006 I'm told another HANSO commercial was seen on ABC. It featured this site. http://www.sublymonal.com/ If you keep clicking on the spinning screens you are taken to another screen. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kayo Posted May 11, 2006 Share Posted May 11, 2006 The code word is: heir apparent Take that code and visit the hanso foundation website. Look for a place to enter the code- hint: think people who is that CREEPY girl (when you click on her she turns around...yikes!)...Persephone? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jem Posted May 12, 2006 Author Share Posted May 12, 2006 Before I forget. Anyone gone to Hanso and the Bio Page and clicked under Alvar Hanso's picture? Click October 28, 2003. Keep clicking the writing and it takes you to another page. You'll work out the rest. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kayo Posted May 23, 2006 Share Posted May 23, 2006 As posted on the ABC/Jimmy Kimmel website: Wednesday, May. 24: Actor/director Jon Favreau, Bass Champion Mike Iaconelli,Hugh McIntyre, Musical guests Elefant. Bust Stop Giveaway: New York City. Hugh McIntyre is one of the board members listed on the Hanso Foundation website, and as this is also the LOST finale night and Jimmy K. is a huge LOST fan, I'm thinking this could be a must-watch to see what's up! An important clue for "The LOST Experience" maybe? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Daisyflower Posted May 24, 2006 Share Posted May 24, 2006 Sounds like I need to go play around with the Hanso website some more. I didn't find any of the cool stuff you guys seem to be finding Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jem Posted May 26, 2006 Author Share Posted May 26, 2006 Commercials get 'Lost' Can promotions like ABC's "Lost Experience" game keep viewers and advertisers happy? By Paul R. La Monica, CNNMoney.com senior writer NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) - ABC's cult favorite "Lost" ended its second season on Wednesday night in typically frustrating fashion. Plenty of questions were answered but many more were raised for loyal viewers, who now have to wait until September for new episodes. Fortunately for them, the show's producers have devised an elaborate interactive game called the "Lost Experience" that involves a bunch of bizarre Web sites providing more about the mythology behind the hit show. But this game is more than just a way for "Lost" nerds (like yours truly) to keep themselves occupied during the summer. It's also a way for ABC to try and keep viewers from fast-forwarding through commercials and milk more advertising dollars out of the show. And now a word from our sponsor: For the past four weeks, ABC has included an ad for the fictitious Hanso Foundation during commercial breaks on "Lost." These ads have featured phone numbers and Web sites that viewers need to check out for more clues about the game. But a closer look at the ads and the game itself show that there are actually some marketing tie-ins. The Hanso "commercials" have actually featured small print showing that they are paid for by well-known corporations. The labyrinthine network of "Lost Experience" web sites includes references to brands such as Coca-Cola's (Research) Sprite, DaimlerChrysler's (Research) Jeep, Verizon Wireless and Monster.com. Mike Benson, senior vice president of marketing for ABC, said that the decision to include real companies in the game was a bid to satisfy marketers who need new methods to reach viewers. "Our partners see it as an innovative, different way to approach potential customers by becoming part of the story," he said. So the question that begs to be asked is will the "Lost Experience" actually be an effective marketing tool for advertisers that are tired of seeing their 30-second spots skipped by viewers with a digital video recorder and an itchy remote-control trigger finger? "Advertisers are starting to think more like a programmer. How do I create content that people will watch?" said Tracey Scheppach, vice president and video innovations director for Starcom USA, a media buying firm. But ABC isn't the only network experimenting with games to keep viewers watching commercials. CBS (Research) announced last week that it is partnering with reality guru Mark Burnett and AOL, the online portal owned by Time Warner (Research), on a promotion called Gold Rush this fall. (Time Warner also owns CNNMoney.com.) Viewers will be able to find clues during CBS shows and commercials, as well as other forms of media, that will help them identify where more than $2 million's worth of gold is hidden in the U.S. And the new CW network, created from the merger of CBS' UPN and Time Warner's WB, showed advertisers last week a concept that it called "content wraps": blocks of commercial time during shows that actually tell a brief story and can include product placement. Innovative or annoying? Whether or not these novel ways of advertising will actually work remains to be seen but it's clear that the TV networks and marketers have to do something to combat the growing tendency of DVR-owning couch potatoes to skip ads. "This is an attempt by media companies to grab hold of a market they are losing control of," said Doug Ryan, chief marketing officer of Y&R Chicago, a subsidiary of ad agency Young & Rubicam. The big risk that networks and advertisers may face is that they irritate audiences. "Lost" fans for example apparently have an insatiable appetite for more clues about the show. To that end, "Bad Twin" a novel supposedly written by one of the passengers on the doomed plane in the show is currently among the top 50 best-selling books on both Amazon.com and Barnesandnoble.com. The book was published by Hyperion, which, like ABC, is owned by Walt Disney (Research). But do fans want more information packaged alongside messages telling them to "Obey their Thirst?" One of the "Lost Experience" sites is called subLYMONal, which is a reference to the so-called lemon-lime (hence lymon) taste of Sprite. "This blends into entertainment and product integration," said Scheppach. "I would hate to see it forced, where advertising feels unnatural in terms of the viewer experience. How deeply can you embed advertising messages in 'Lost' programming?" Brian Wieser, vice president and director of industry analysis with MAGNA Global USA, a media buying firm, said that sponsored programming during commercials could work as long as it's entertaining. "If it's creative, fun and novel it will get viewers' attention. It will definitely add to the engagement for people watching TV without DVRs and maybe it will deter people with DVRs from skipping commercials," Wieser said. But Adam Hanft, founder and CEO of Hanft Unlimited, branding and advertising consulting firm, is skeptical. He said that marketers need to tread carefully and that things like "The Lost Experience" and "Gold Rush" could backfire. "The gimmickry of it is so on the surface that it may alienate consumers. It shows how desperate traditional advertisers are to get people to watch their commercials," he said. Still, ABC's Benson is not concerned about any viewer backlash about the mention of brand names in the "Lost Experience" since advertising is just a fact of life that consumers have come to accept. "We are trying to grow the audience for the show in a way that is ultimately compelling and entertaining to the audience. People can be cynical about the ads but the show wouldn't be what it is if it didn't have advertisers running commercials," he said. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jem Posted June 16, 2006 Author Share Posted June 16, 2006 DHARMA's Acronym Revealed! Department of Heuristics And Research on Material Applications Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CeCiMom Posted June 16, 2006 Share Posted June 16, 2006 Translation on aisle six, please??? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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