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Click here to visit the new home of Politics Daily!FORT COLLINS, Colo. (Dec. 8) -- A Buddha-shaped handhold hangs on an elementary school climbing wall, and the children are taught to rub his belly for luck. A plump Buddha candle purchased at Whole Foods has basset-like ears and a chubby smiling face that melt away as it burns. From Gotama skis to the guitar-playing Buddha on the waistband tag of True Religion Brand Jeans (made in the U.S.A.), Buddha makes a heck of a pitchman -- ironically so, since the world's 400 million Buddhists believe that self-denial is one of the steps enabling the soul to reach nirvana. Since today is Bodhi Day, ...
(Oct. 25) -- A racy Calvin Klein ad showing a nearly naked female model being straddled and held by the hair has been banned in Australia, where officials say it encourages rape and violence. The government's Advertising Standards Bureau has ordered the controversial billboards be removed after declaring the images were "demeaning to women by suggesting that she is a plaything of these men," Australia's Herald Sun reported. Calvin Klein This Calvin Klein ad was banned in Australia because it was deemed "demeaning to women." The black-and-white photo shows supermodel Lara Stone, wearing ...
(Sept. 14) -- Many American commuter roads are dotted with aesthetically ugly and morally dubious small advertisements for loaning agencies, weight-loss plans and other invitations to the gullible and desperate. "Bandit signs," they're called. Now, Atlanta-based artist John Morse has posted 500-some counter-signs throughout his home city, reports the New Yorker: [His] signs came with a unique twist: they were written in the form of a haiku, the traditional Japanese poem that consists of 17 syllables when written in English. Instead of images of nature and the changing seasons, Morse's poems ...
Surprise surprise. Yet another study pathologizes a common and trivial life disappointment -- bad hair days. So says Wall Street Journal, reporting on a new Procter & Gamble study. The company wants to know why their Pantene brand is not selling better. Wall Street Journal writes: "Scientists at the consumer-products giant surveyed women and found they felt less 'hostile,' 'ashamed,' 'nervous,' 'guilty' or 'jittery,' depending on the hair products they used, while at other times they said they felt more 'excited,' 'proud' and 'interested.' Users of a new version of Pantene, one researcher ...
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