Conversationality is a brand communication concept intended to replace traditional marketing communication with the ability to make a meaningful connection with people by talking about things that are truly interesting and relevant to them. Conversationality is about creating a two-way conversation around these passion points rather than a one-way stream of marketing messaging bombarding the receiver.
The term was coined in March 2005 by Steve O'Connell, Creative Director and Founder of Philadelphia-based advertising agency STICK and MOVE, and is a core philosophy reflected in STICK and MOVE's approach to advertising.
The term was coined in March 2005 by Steve O'Connell, Creative Director and Founder of Philadelphia-based advertising agency STICK and MOVE, and is a core philosophy reflected in STICK and MOVE's approach to advertising.
This is a list of celebrities who at some point have appeared nude in photos or on film. It excludes those celebrities whose fame first and foremost depends on exposing their bodies, such as erotic/pornographic models or actors. The definition of nudity is that normally employed by such agencies as the Motion Picture Association of America or the Federal Communications Commission: genital/pubic area, as well as nipples in the case of women.
Pornography on the internet is a multi-billion-dollar industry, and sites containing celebrity nudity make up an important part of this business. Celebrities appearing nude in one context or another is often an event notable enough for even mainstream media to take notice of.
The phenomenon carries with it certain complications, however, and several individuals – such as Jennifer Aniston and Alyssa Milano – have taken legal action to prevent the publication or dissemination of their images. Furthermore, many of the images circulating on the internet claimed to be genuine celebrity nudes are actually fakes, though the distinction can in many cases be difficult to make. This list is intended to give a non-commercial, factual account of which celebrities have been portrayed naked in one form or another.
The list is broken down into a page of each letter to reduce the size.
Pornography on the internet is a multi-billion-dollar industry, and sites containing celebrity nudity make up an important part of this business. Celebrities appearing nude in one context or another is often an event notable enough for even mainstream media to take notice of.
The phenomenon carries with it certain complications, however, and several individuals – such as Jennifer Aniston and Alyssa Milano – have taken legal action to prevent the publication or dissemination of their images. Furthermore, many of the images circulating on the internet claimed to be genuine celebrity nudes are actually fakes, though the distinction can in many cases be difficult to make. This list is intended to give a non-commercial, factual account of which celebrities have been portrayed naked in one form or another.
The list is broken down into a page of each letter to reduce the size.
Addison Roswell Thompson, known as A. Roswell Thompson, (November 14, 1911 - February 15, 1976) was a minor segregationist candidate for governor of the U.S. state of Louisiana and for mayor of New Orleans, during the 1960s and first half of the 1970s. He was described in his New Orleans Times-Picayune obituary as "a self-proclaimed racist and wizard of the Ku Klux Klan." Thompson ran a small taxicab company until he retired in 1972, but became known through his quixotic political campaigns.
Thompson declared himself the Imperial Wizard of his own one-man KKK, the Universal Klan or the Fraternal Order of the Klan, as Thompson often termed it.
Thompson sought the governorship thirty-two years before former Klansman David Duke, running as the unendorsed Republican candidate, lost the 1991 general election to Democrat Edwin Washington Edwards, who secured his fourth nonconsecutive term in office. Thompson ran in the Democratic gubernatorial primary in December 1959 and December 1963, having polled 4,000 and 3,343 votes, respectively, finishing with less than 1 percent of the vote. The winners of those elections were James Houston "Jimmie" Davis and John J. McKeithen, respectively. Then Thompson filed in the Democratic mayoral primaries of 1965 and 1969, having received 2,121 votes (1.3 percent) and 1,248 ballots (0.73 percent), respectively. The winners of those elections were the incumbent Victor H. Schiro and Maurice "Moon" Landrieu, respectively. He ran again in 1973, when Landrieu, who forged a coalition of African Americans and white liberals, handily secured a second term. In all, Thompson ran for office fourteen times as an avowed Klansman.
In February 1967, Thompson served as master of ceremonies for a meeting of the Crescent City chapter of the National States' Rights Party. The main speaker at the meeting was the anti-Semitic and anti-African-American J. B. Stoner (1924-2005) of Tennessee and Georgia, a strong critic of both national parties in regard to race relations in the United States
On January 19, 1972, Thompson and his friend-mentor, the late Colonel Rene LaCoste, had a run-in with a group of Black Panthers at the Robert E. Lee Monument in New Orleans. The two segregationists were there to celebrate Lee's birthday.
Thompson's last political race was in November 1975, when he entered the first ever jungle primary for governor. Still filing as a Democrat, Thompson polled .4 of 1 percent, as the incumbent Democratic Governor Edwin Edwards coasted to a second second consecutive term.
Thompson was never reconciled to the racial integration of American society.
Thompson declared himself the Imperial Wizard of his own one-man KKK, the Universal Klan or the Fraternal Order of the Klan, as Thompson often termed it.
Thompson sought the governorship thirty-two years before former Klansman David Duke, running as the unendorsed Republican candidate, lost the 1991 general election to Democrat Edwin Washington Edwards, who secured his fourth nonconsecutive term in office. Thompson ran in the Democratic gubernatorial primary in December 1959 and December 1963, having polled 4,000 and 3,343 votes, respectively, finishing with less than 1 percent of the vote. The winners of those elections were James Houston "Jimmie" Davis and John J. McKeithen, respectively. Then Thompson filed in the Democratic mayoral primaries of 1965 and 1969, having received 2,121 votes (1.3 percent) and 1,248 ballots (0.73 percent), respectively. The winners of those elections were the incumbent Victor H. Schiro and Maurice "Moon" Landrieu, respectively. He ran again in 1973, when Landrieu, who forged a coalition of African Americans and white liberals, handily secured a second term. In all, Thompson ran for office fourteen times as an avowed Klansman.
In February 1967, Thompson served as master of ceremonies for a meeting of the Crescent City chapter of the National States' Rights Party. The main speaker at the meeting was the anti-Semitic and anti-African-American J. B. Stoner (1924-2005) of Tennessee and Georgia, a strong critic of both national parties in regard to race relations in the United States
On January 19, 1972, Thompson and his friend-mentor, the late Colonel Rene LaCoste, had a run-in with a group of Black Panthers at the Robert E. Lee Monument in New Orleans. The two segregationists were there to celebrate Lee's birthday.
Thompson's last political race was in November 1975, when he entered the first ever jungle primary for governor. Still filing as a Democrat, Thompson polled .4 of 1 percent, as the incumbent Democratic Governor Edwin Edwards coasted to a second second consecutive term.
Thompson was never reconciled to the racial integration of American society.
SmallWiki is a Smalltalk-based wiki that runs in VisualWorks and Squeak Smalltalk.
Version 2 is called Pier and is undergoing active development on top of the Seaside framework.
All pages of the wiki are stored in the Smalltalk environment as objects, permitting the manipulation of the objects with standard Smalltalk programming. In this way, SmallWiki is completely object-oriented. To save the SmallWiki environment, the Smalltalk image needs to be saved.
SmallWiki powers a number of popular Squeak sites, including http://www.squeak.org (Squeak home page) and http://www.seaside.st (Seaside home page).
Version 2 is called Pier and is undergoing active development on top of the Seaside framework.
All pages of the wiki are stored in the Smalltalk environment as objects, permitting the manipulation of the objects with standard Smalltalk programming. In this way, SmallWiki is completely object-oriented. To save the SmallWiki environment, the Smalltalk image needs to be saved.
SmallWiki powers a number of popular Squeak sites, including http://www.squeak.org (Squeak home page) and http://www.seaside.st (Seaside home page).