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Gravestones Advertising Video Games?

An anonymous reader writes "In an insane bid to drum up publicity The Guardian tells of Acclaim Entertainment who are seeking to enlist the help of the recently bereaved, well the poorer ones anyway, to help promote their latest game." My favorite comment is a spokesman for the Church of England who said they wouldn't allow it saying "There was enough fuss with plastic flowers in churchyards." Anyway, I just found this really surreal.

10 of 188 comments (clear)

  1. Of course those ads will never be useful by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 4, Insightful


    If Acclaim was able to put their adds on gravestones they wouldnt get much benefit out of it.

    People that go to graves are usually not young and even if they are they usually associate the experience with sad feelings.

    Who would want to be reminded of that when playing a game?

    Thats one of those marketing tricks, where the purpose of the whole excercise is to get denied and get in the papers.

  2. I always miss out on these things... by Champaign · · Score: 4, Funny

    First I wasn't fast enough to get an advertisement driven PC, then I couldn't get a dot-com to give me a VW Beetle painted with their colours... now I'm too alive to cash in on this...

    back to exchanging goods and/or services for money for me

  3. sample tombstone by y2dt · · Score: 5, Funny

    John Smith
    born 11/12/1980
    fragged 5/15/2002

  4. Last rites at these grave yards: by JoeLinux · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Dearly beloved, we are gathered here today to mourn the loss of Frank Jones, who in his life-time, talketh and layeth the smack down like in WWF Smackdown. While troubles seemed to come his way like chairs at the Undertaker, he handled it gracefully, like those fine manager chicks...."

    Fun stuff. Liven up any Eulogy...

    JoeLinux

  5. Sometimes I think Slashdot should be chumpdot. by Neck_of_the_Woods · · Score: 5, Interesting

    You played right into the hands of the marketing dingbat that thought this up. You think they are really going to do this. No, but you just handed them more hits and advertisement to there target market than they would have ever had any other way.

    They tricked you, you tricked us, they got the word out. How many people clicked on this, and now know what shadowmanII is, what it is for, and who made it.

    Nice job, you should charge them for click throughs....

    --
    Neck_of_the_Woods
    #/usr/local/surf/glassy/overhead
    1. Re:Sometimes I think Slashdot should be chumpdot. by Have+Blue · · Score: 5, Funny

      You think Slashdotters actually READ these articles? You're new around here, aren't you?

  6. Wow... by nurightshu · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ObDisclaimer: The first bit of this may seem to wander a bit offtopic, but it'll be relevant by the end. <UsedCarSalesGrin> Trust me.</UsedCarSalesGrin>

    I once had my best friend tell me I was morbid and quite possibly insane when I detailed what I want done with my corpse.

    It's not all that terrible, I think. For the past three years or so, I've really thought that it would be cool to have a webcam mounted inside my coffin (powerlines and networking cable and all that run to it too, of course). After I die, I want people to be able to log on to a website and check my decomposition.

    The University of Tennessee, I believe it is, maintains a forensic "Body Farm" where hundreds of corpses are decomposing in various conditions. It's closed to the public (for obvious reasons), but I think there should be a little more openness in society about the mechanics of death. It's fascinating because it's so secretive. I think by mounting a small light and a webcam inside my coffin, it might give the world a fresh perspective on thanatology.

    Of course, maintaining the site would cost some money, and I won't exactly be around to earn any. Thanks to Slashdot, I now know that Acclaim will be the first company for whom I'll do a salespitch. Any other takers?

    --
    They that would sacrifice their .sig space for that cliched Franklin quote deserve neither.
  7. Re:Why all the fuss? by SomeoneYouDontKnow · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Agreed! If some of these marketing people had their way, we'd be exposed to ads 24/7.

    As for ads in the bathroom, check out your local bar. I've seen many with miniature billboards on the wall behind the toilet. I guess they figured if people read what folks scrawl on the bathroom walls, they'll read anything. Although, I'm not sure if I'd want my product associated with a bar bathroom.

    And we can't forget about the scheme Swatch cooked up in which they were going to beam ads from a ham radio satellite, blatantly in violation of regulations stating that ham radio frequencies are noncommercial.

    Then there was the one where this company would wrap your car with ads in the same way that city buses are done. At least they were going to pay a decent amount for it. I guess they were a victim of the dot-bomb fallout.

    As for ads on the moon, I don't know about that, but I do know there was a plan back around the late 1980s to launch a huge plastic sheet into low orbit. It was supposed to be visible in the evening sky. I think the original one was supposed to be a green dot, but real ads were to follow if that one was successful.

    I'm waiting for some company to see if they can cut a deal with the government to put ads on money. After all, we handle a lot of it (well, some people do, anyway), and it passes from person to person quite often. It's only a matter of time, I'm guessing.

    --
    That light you see at the end of the tunnel might be from an oncoming train.
  8. Advertizing on gravestones? by NeMon'ess · · Score: 5, Funny
    Over my dead body.

  9. Re:Grave slashdot by DennyK · · Score: 5, Funny

    Athiest geek's headstone:

    mv John.Smith /dev/null

    ;-)

    DennyK