Candidate Spin Spam
Most of the e-mail messages I get from campaign flaks and other public relations types automatically tag and sort into my “PR Spam” folder. The last couple of days have been especially heavy, with 43 messages through early this morning. The lion’s share have been from the Romney and McCain campaigns.
Every time I write about the topic, such as my “Netiquette” piece for the Politico with Jeff Mascott, or talk to public relations professionals in the government or business sectors, I’m always told how obvious my advice to target and limit one’s message is.
And yet they continue to send dozens of messages a day. Do they really think this is the most effective way to get people on their side?
- Solving the Health Care Crisis Big Government Style
- Rich People Spend Money Despite Recession!
- Mitt Romney on Economics and Energy Policy
- Meaningful Bloggers
- Newspapers vs. Journalism
- UCLA SUX (Oh, and, Free Tibet)
- Iran and Iraq
- Obama Denounces Wright Comments
- A Picture of Hell (Zimbabwe)
- Minnesota to Ban Driving While Texting
- Caption Contest Winners
- National Mall Disrepair
- 10 Taliban Kill Themselves in Botched Bombing
- Poll: Third of Clinton Voters to Stay Home
- Jesse Helms Dead at 86
- Happy 232nd Birthday, America
- Obama to ‘Refine’ Iraq Deadline, Keep it Exactly Same
- OTB Latenight - Leslie Feist
- Giving ‘Stimulus Package’ a Whole New Meaning
- U.S. Constitution: 4th Amendment
Hell James, if it works for spammers why not campaign activists?
;)
Large images like that really screw with the page formatting.
What are you seeing? In both Firefox and IE, it's displaying fine for me. I keep image sizes under 600 pixels so that they don't expand the middle column; this one's 427.
Usually, I specify an image size by a width= command but it doesn't work well for text-intensive images, so I just cropped it.
James,
I think Michael is referring to the fact that the image extends down into the next post.
I think Michael is referring to the fact that the image extends down into the next post.
Thanks. Oddly, it doesn't on my screen and I use fairly large resolution. But, apparently, with very large resolution, it does.
Michael suggested a fix offline that I'm having Ed look into.
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Large images like that really screw with the page formatting. Have whomever is maintaining the site's design add a "clear: both" style attribute to an element after the article, that should fix it.
http://www.w3schools.com/css/css_classification.asp