EXCLUSIVE: The West Coast Hip-Hop collective kicks off another leg of the How the Grouch Stole Christmas Tour on December 11 in Santa Ana, California. The Grouch is at his Los Angeles home taking a ...
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has officially approved achievement in casting as a competitive Oscar category, marking the first addition to the awards lineup since best animated ...
In case you missed it, global film superstar Tom Cruise won his first Oscar—almost three weeks ago. The Oscar wasn’t for a single performance. Rather, it was a lifetime achievement award given by the ...
Once upon a time, commercials were all extremely catchy and funny. We actually didn’t mind those breaks and, to this day, many of us Gen Xers and Millennials can quote lines from the commercials of ...
Oscar is a tough mini boss on the Astra Malorum Zombies map in Black Ops 7 that is pretty darn hard to kill. When this funky lookin' fella spawns, he's immune to everything you throw at him, including ...
Celebrating the chore of taking out the garbage, trash bag marketer Glad has teamed up with “Sesame Street”’s Oscar the Grouch. Reviving the Clorox brand’s “Don’t Get Mad, Get Glad” tagline with a new ...
Glad, the maker of trash bags and food wraps, has revived its decades-long campaign, “Don’t Get Mad. Get Glad.,” to feature “Sesame Street” icon Oscar the Grouch, according to a press release. Key to ...
In the mid-1970s, Glad ran a TV commercial featuring actor James Cromwell touting its new large-size sandwich bags and a voiceover song declaring “Don’t Get Mad. Get Glad!” (the actual “Don’t Get Mad.
Glad is proving that trash doesn't have to add to the mess. Who better to turn trash frustration into fun? "No one feels more strongly about trash than Oscar the Grouch, so we knew we had to reach out ...
The 'Sesame Street' muppet stars in the new campaign, which brings back the tagline that was ubiquitous through the 80s, 90s and 2000s, and a new version of Oscar's 'I Love Trash' song. By Alex Weprin ...
Eight-year-old Merlin Holland was walking down Shaftesbury Avenue in London with his father one day in the summer of 1954 when he noticed the name Oscar Wilde on a theater billboard. “Oh, Daddy, isn’t ...