Note too, that this tactic of pushing a narrative isn't just perpetuated by gaming journalists, the New York Times or journalism in general. The New York Times (surprise) published a story today where a study of social science studies has concluded that 60 out of 100 findings did not hold up. In fact, there has been an increase in retractions of studies whose findings aren't holding up. In other words, it's not just the bias in journalism, pushing the narrative, but bias in social sciences, too.
This ad doesn't bother me at all. If anything it's playing off of the one edge that supposedly Randy Moss has and that's his height. Unlike another version of himself. This is no different than Scrawny Arms Rob Lowe in the campaign. Honestly, people need to chill the fuck out.
This ad is as boring as it is uninformative. After gogling SFW sites, i found out the difference between regular free and premium is ad-free experience, higher resolution and get this: soon-to-be VR capability. For all the oculus rift/Cardboard nerds.
Speaking about this purely objectively in terms of what makes a good ad, if you've actually got a USP why not use it?
Like really use it.
Use it hard.
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