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The Big Big Picture -Ron Burgundy rules New York - Printable Version

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The Big Big Picture -Ron Burgundy rules New York - SteveG - 11-27-2013

I don't know about you, but I find this a little bit unsettling.




Re: The Big Big Picture -Ron Burgundy rules New York - MGS_forgot_password - 11-27-2013

Well that escalated quickly...


Re: The Big Big Picture -Ron Burgundy rules New York - DP - 11-27-2013

If he's as funny in the movie as he is in the Durango ads, then it's doomed already.


Re: The Big Big Picture -Ron Burgundy rules New York - bazookaman - 11-27-2013

The best Dodge Durango commercial EVER -----> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zgm5e_u-FEY


Re: The Big Big Picture -Ron Burgundy rules New York - gabester - 11-27-2013

What's unsettling is that the movie company gets to deduct the expense of that advertising from their income thereby decreasing the taxes they owe.

Advertising should NOT be a tax-deductible expense.


Re: The Big Big Picture -Ron Burgundy rules New York - $tevie - 11-27-2013

Why not? What makes that different than any other tax-deductible expense? Not to mention the old "job creation" defense.


Re: The Big Big Picture -Ron Burgundy rules New York - gabester - 11-28-2013

$tevie wrote:
[quote=gabester]
Advertising should NOT be a tax-deductible expense.
Why not? What makes that different than any other tax-deductible expense? Not to mention the old "job creation" defense.
'Cuz advertising is just plain evil? Exhibit A is the abomination that started this thread. I've ranted about this before here and irked quite a few fellow forum members so I don't want to get into it now... but I will qualify it this time by saying "advertising beyond a certain percentage of revenue should not be allowed to reduce profit by counting against revenue."

Much like excessive salary/compensation packages for executives should not be allowed to reduce profit / taxable income by counting against revenue. We have this thing called the tax code, why not leverage it to actually improve some of the disparate economic situations identified as problematic today?

Just think what might happen if some of the dollars spent on fruitless ad campaigns instead went to fund useful research that in turn benefitted humanity?