Copyrights do not and cannot trump publicity rights, they are mutually exclusive
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publicity
/publicity-quotes-and-sayings
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About the publicity quote collection
The publicity page groups 30 quotes under one canonical topic hub so readers and answer engines can cite a stable source instead of fragmented search results.
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Quotes filed under publicity
I know my career is going badly because I'm being quoted correctly.
We need to make the private public.
a great publicity is a high way to remote customers and a universal key to the gate of ignorance
If something is built to show, it's build to grow.
The happiness of being envied is glamour.Being envied is a solitary form of reassurance. It depends precisely upon not sharing your experience with those who envy you. You are observed with interest but you do not observe with interest - if you do, you will become less enviable. In this respect the envied are like bureaucrats; the more impersonal they are, the greater the illusion (for themselves and for others) of their power. The power of the glamorous resides in their supposed happiness: the power of the bureaucrat in his supposed authority.
It is now certain that the public does know. It is not so certain that the public does care.
Don't think for a minute that bad publicity and endless criticism don't leave their claw marks on everyone concerned. Your friends try to cheer you up by saying lightly, "I suppose you get used to it, and ignore it." You try. You try damned hard. But you never get used to it. It always wounds and hurts.
The public good must come before private interests.
interview from Ross E. Cheit about The Witch-Hunt Narrative: Politics, Psychology, and the Sexual Abuse of Children (Oxford University Press, February 2014).In the foreword to your book you mention a book titled Satan__ Silence was the catalyst for your research. Tell us about that. Cheit: Debbie Nathan and Michael Snedeker solidified the witch-hunt narrative in their 1995 book, Satan__ Silence: Ritual Abuse and the Making of a Modern American Witch Hunt, which included some of these cases. I was initially skeptical of the book__ argument for personal reasons. It seemed implausible to me that we had overreacted to child abuse because everything in my own personal history said we hadn__. When I read the book closely, my skepticism increased. Satan__ Silence has been widely reviewed as meticulously researched. As someone with legal training, I looked for how many citations referred to the trial transcripts. The answer was almost none. Readers were also persuaded by long list of [presumably innocent] convicted sex offenders to whom they dedicated the book. If I__ dedicating a book to fifty-four people, all of whom I think have been falsely convicted, I__ going to mention every one of these cases somewhere in the book. Most weren__ mentioned at all beyond that dedication. The witch-hunt narrative is so sparsely documented that it__ shocking.
I'm a professional writer and I consider it part of my job to publicise my work and these days part of that job is done online.
You can kill a book quicker by your silence than by a bad review.