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The logos that get more air time - Times Online

javamanjoe rated 5 months ago
FLOATING CLOUD LOGOS GET AIR TIME. LEXINGTON Francisco Guerro, a former magician and co-founder of SnowMasters Inc, watches one of his floating logos - branded Flogos - drift away, above. Mr Guerro has developed a machine that can send foamy clouds as wide as 4ft and shaped like corporate logos drif...

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6 Reviews

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trill42 rated 5 months ago
Interesting and yet... awful. Aside from the foam's claimed lack of environmental impact (and I suppose the planes don't need fuel), it's an innovative way to pollute our environment. It produces more advertising blight, and by forcing something natural into the shape of an artificial corporate logo. How tacky.
onreact-com rated 5 months ago
Not a single inch of earth will remain free of advertising. Capitalism colonizes even the sky. This is why I'm into SEO. I assist people in finding what they seek instead of force feeding them branding where they expect untainted nature.
javamanjoe rated 5 months ago
FLOATING CLOUD LOGOS GET AIR TIME. LEXINGTON Francisco Guerro, a former magician and co-founder of SnowMasters Inc, watches one of his floating logos - branded Flogos - drift away, above. Mr Guerro has developed a machine that can send foamy clouds as wide as 4ft and shaped like corporate logos drifting into the sky. The Walt Disney Company will use it next month to make Mickey Mouse-shaped clouds at Walt Disney World in Florida, he said. Mr Guerro, whose firm in Lexington, Alabama, makes fake snow for Hollywood, says the foam is environmentally safe and pops like bubbles when it lands. (AP)
smtrader rated 5 months ago
Mr Guerro has developed a machine that can send foamy clouds as wide as 4ft and shaped like corporate logos drifting into the sky.
john-sampson rated 5 months ago
Now there's a useful invention. From the page: "Francisco Guerro, a former magician and co-founder of SnowMasters Inc, watches one of his floating logos - branded Flogos - drift away, above. Mr Guerro has developed a machine that can send foamy clouds as wide as 4ft and shaped like corporate logos drifting into the sky. The Walt Disney Company will use it next month to make Mickey Mouse-shaped clouds at Walt Disney World in Florida, he said. Mr Guerro, whose firm in Lexington, Alabama, makes fake snow for Hollywood, says the foam is environmentally safe and pops like bubbles when it lands."
SmallFuel rated 5 months ago
A very interesting machine that can turn a logo into a floating cloud.