Claritas®, a data-driven marketing leader that leverages a proprietary identity graph to help marketers achieve superior Roi, today announced the acquisition of ArtsAI, an AI-powered solution leader that Inc. 5000 recently ranked as the fastest-growing private Ad Technology company for the second consecutive year. The acquisition, which will integrate ArtsAI’s patented, performance-enhancing technology into Claritas’ all-in-one marketing solution will accelerate client success by enhancing users’ ability to predictably drive highly personalized and profitable campaigns. Claritas and ArtsAI collectively serve over 1,300 clients, including brands like Progressive and T-Mobile, agencies like Horizon, MediaCom and Hearts & Science and publishers like iHeartMedia and Sxm.
Claritas’ acquisition of ArtsAI is the fourth in a series the company has made during its mission-based, five-year transformation to become the top closed-loop service provider in the industry. Leveraging an industry-leading proprietary identity graph, Claritas addresses the massive multichannel marketing sector’s need for an independent, 3rd party suite...
Claritas’ acquisition of ArtsAI is the fourth in a series the company has made during its mission-based, five-year transformation to become the top closed-loop service provider in the industry. Leveraging an industry-leading proprietary identity graph, Claritas addresses the massive multichannel marketing sector’s need for an independent, 3rd party suite...
- 9/13/2023
- Podnews.net
The Masked Singer has quickly become one of the wildest singing competition shows on the air. Fans of the show know all about how the various clues help the judges figure out who the contestants are, but the process is even more complicated than each episode shows.
‘The Masked Singer’ pits disguised celebrity guests against each other in a singing competition Season 8 star of The Masked Singer, Hedgehog | Fox via Getty Images
Each season of The Masked Singer boasts a bevy of celebrity guests who compete against each other as singers. The trick is each contestant is wearing an elaborate costume that keeps the judges — Robin Thicke, Jenny McCarthy Wahlberg, Ken Jeong, and Nicole Scherzinger — and the audience from knowing who’s performing.
Hints are given to the viewers about who each performer is, and the judges can ask questions to the contestants, but each clue and answer is pretty...
‘The Masked Singer’ pits disguised celebrity guests against each other in a singing competition Season 8 star of The Masked Singer, Hedgehog | Fox via Getty Images
Each season of The Masked Singer boasts a bevy of celebrity guests who compete against each other as singers. The trick is each contestant is wearing an elaborate costume that keeps the judges — Robin Thicke, Jenny McCarthy Wahlberg, Ken Jeong, and Nicole Scherzinger — and the audience from knowing who’s performing.
Hints are given to the viewers about who each performer is, and the judges can ask questions to the contestants, but each clue and answer is pretty...
- 4/22/2023
- by India McCarty
- Showbiz Cheat Sheet
Dr. David Shiffman is a Liber Ero Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Conservation Biology at Simon Fraser University, where he studies shark conservation and management policy. Follow him on Twitter @WhySharksMatter, where he’s always happy to answer any questions that anyone has about sharks.
In 2013, the Discovery Channel’s long-running documentary series “Shark Week” aired a show called “Megalodon: The Monster Shark Lives.” The premise of this show is that Carcharocles megalodon, the largest predatory shark that ever lived, is actually not extinct—and that scientists and the government know that and are lying to you. It was completely fictional, featuring CGI video, photoshopped images, and actors claiming to be scientists, government officials, and family members of victims.
Many viewers believed it to be real, which was not surprising because it aired on non-fictional educational television and included only a brief, vaguely worded disclaimer at the end of the credits.
In 2013, the Discovery Channel’s long-running documentary series “Shark Week” aired a show called “Megalodon: The Monster Shark Lives.” The premise of this show is that Carcharocles megalodon, the largest predatory shark that ever lived, is actually not extinct—and that scientists and the government know that and are lying to you. It was completely fictional, featuring CGI video, photoshopped images, and actors claiming to be scientists, government officials, and family members of victims.
Many viewers believed it to be real, which was not surprising because it aired on non-fictional educational television and included only a brief, vaguely worded disclaimer at the end of the credits.
- 8/12/2018
- by David Shiffman
- Indiewire
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