(WSVN) - You see them on the street twirling signs. They’re paid to take their advertising to a whole new level. They’re in the 7 Spotlight. Here’s Karen Hensel. Max Durovic, AArrow Sign Spinners: ...
“We hate it when you call it sign twirlers,” says Caleb Jordan, who has worked in the industry six years and is the general manager for AArrow Advertising. Come blistering heat or pouring rain, the ...
The Sign: To most, the art of selling is just that – an art. For the AArrow Sign Spinners, though, it's a sport. All the pertinent information is there on the signs: the company name, phone number and ...
In the summer of 1999, Max Durovic and several friends got jobs as sign holders. In order to make their jobs more entertaining and attract more attention from potential customers, they began dancing, ...
Over 11 years and 570 episodes, John Rabe and Team Off-Ramp scoured SoCal for the people, places, and ideas whose stories needed to be told, and the show became a love-letter to Los Angeles. Now, John ...
Blog ads or cable television? E-mail marketing or direct mail? When you're sizing up advertising options, don't underestimate the power of riding a big red arrow like a bucking bronco. Sidewalk sign ...
JEREMY White was holding a sign advertising $5 pizza deals at Little Caesars in North Hollywood when two young men stopped their white pickup truck. After noticing his strong arms and athletic frame, ...
In a crowded market, companies have to work hard to grab customers’ attention. Watching someone throw a 6-foot sign in the air, do a handstand, then catch it — that’ll get your attention. Jackson ...
TAMPA — On a cloudy afternoon in Tampa's V.M. Ybor neighborhood, four young men with eyes squinted in concentration stood clutching duct-taped edges of signs printed with offers for a free Metro PCS ...
AUSTIN (KXAN) — There are multiple ways to spin this story. “No two spinners spin the same,” said Laramie Rosenfeld, general manager of The AArrow Sign Spinners in Austin. “You’re gonna see some ...
LOS ANGELES, Calif. — Jeremy White was holding a sign advertising $5 pizza deals at Little Caesars in North Hollywood when two young men stopped their white pickup. After noticing his strong arms and ...
How an 18-year-old kid took $500 and built a guerilla marketing agency with franchises in 30 cities and $4.5 million in revenue.
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