The Wall Street Journal
Advertising
General Motors said it will forgo advertising in the next Super Bowl rather than swallow a price hike, a surprising reversal of strategy that comes as the auto maker overhauls its global marketing operations.
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Martha Stewart was named nonexecutive chairman of the company she founded, Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, eight years after she resigned amid charges that she lied to investigators about a stock sale.
It may not be the start of a new golden age for American manufacturing. But at a Whirlpool factory in Greenville, OH, a small number of jobs that previously went overseas have come back home. WSJ's Neil Hickey reports.
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Comcast, Time Warner and three other large cable operators agreed to give customers access to each other's wireless Internet hot spots.
It's a train. It's a barge. All aboard and ahoy! Take an exclusive trip on the last working carfloat in New York Harbor with WSJ's Barry Newman.
Three years after a spectacular financial collapse, Iceland is coming back, largely on the strength of its strong exports. Video and reporting by Charles Forelle from the island of Vestmannaeyjar.
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As Linda Yaccarino enters her first "upfront" season as head of ad sales for NBCUniversal's cable properties, she will try to accomplish the same feat she did in nearly two decades at Turner Broadcasting System—lift ad rates.
Dish Network released a DVR feature that can automatically skip commercials from nationally broadcast prime-time shows, a move that threatens billions of dollars in broadcast television advertising and risks the ire of the networks.
Pepsi is resurrecting Michael Jackson to try to pump life into its flagship cola, three years after the singer's death and more than a quarter century after his sponsorship deal to become the brand's voice.
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CNN is faring poorly in the hyperpartisan cable-TV culture of recent years, losing viewers while the audiences are growing at cable rivals MSNBC and Fox News.
Avon has been slow to harness the Internet to build sales in the U.S. Sales representatives say the cosmetics seller isn't doing enough to help them win customers through new tools like social media, smartphones and tablets.
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The lights will go out on the Kodak name in New York's Times Square if the imaging company wins bankruptcy-court approval to transfer the lease to its giant digital billboard there.
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After years of touting the superiority of online ads, Google is taking a different approach to promote itself against rivals.
Kraft is naming its spinoff global-snacks company Mondelēz International, leaving some scratching their heads.
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