From Altoids to Zima : the surprising stories behind 125 brand names / Evan Morris.
Publication details: New York : Simon & Schuster, 2004.Description: 199 p. ; 18 cmISBN:- 0743257979
- 658.8/27 22
- HD69.B7 M667 2004
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Book | NMC Library | Stacks | HD69 .B7 M667 2004 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 33039000726371 |
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HD69 .B7 B733 2009 Brands and branding / | HD69 .B7 G86 2016 Kids and branding in a digital world / | HD69 .B7 H346 2004 Brand royalty : how the world's top 100 brands thrive and survive / | HD69 .B7 M667 2004 From Altoids to Zima : the surprising stories behind 125 brand names / | HD69 .B7 Q37 2003 Branded : the buying and selling of teenagers / | HD69 .P75 B382 2006 Integrated project management / | HD69 .P75 B47 2008 Making things happen : mastering project management / |
"A Fireside book."
Includes bibliographical references (p. [198]-199).
Publisher description: Ever wondered what the Ms in M&Ms stand for? If Scotch tape was invented in Scotland? Why a cereal that contains neither grapes nor nuts is called Grape Nuts? Who thought Gap was a good name for a clothing store? From the Adidas we wear to the Volkswagens we drive, the daily lives of Americans are dominated by the manufacturers' trademarks that adorn nearly everything we own. Food, clothes, cars, household furnishings, even cell phones are all chosen by brand name. Yet many of these trademarks and product names pose mysteries. But not when Evan Morris, creator of the award-winning The Word Detective website, is on the case! In From Altoids to Zima he reveals the fascinating, often wacky stories behind 125 brand names. Organized by product categories -- food and drink; clothing; technology, toys, and assorted bright ideas; cars; and drugs and cosmetics -- the story of each product is told with Morris's trademark wit and humor, complete with sidebars that highlight brand names that have become "genericized" (aspirin); a "What Were They Thinking?" honor roll of strange and often disastrous product names (Edsel); what happens when good brand names go bad (Kool-Aid after the Jonestown mass suicide); and debunked urban legends (the combination of Pop Rocks and soda that was rumored to be lethal).
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