2008 Top Five Posts from Corporate Babysitter
Wednesday, December 31st, 2008Isn’t this better than a Top Ten list? Ranked by number of pageviews:
1. A thousand words: Not a post at all; rather, this was an image that first appeared in Feministe. Most hits came because it was linked to in a book review on Salon.com. The photo of the Hooters girl in training toddler-sized t-shirt elicited a collective wtf? heard round the world.
2. Target Corporation assumes feminism is dead; dismisses bloggers and
3. Why the Target “snow angel” ad matters: Bringing the discussion back to parenting and corporate responsibility: Two posts I have no desire to revisit here, after all, it’s New Year’s Eve and there are some things about the year I’d rather forget. But hey, it got me on local television (and therefore lots of hits) and put Target on its own top five list by Joseph Jaffe. It’s been a year since I’ve stepped foot in a Target and I haven’t missed it a bit.
4. Children’s online virtual worlds create dull mini-capitalists: A personal favorite. Hits came mostly from web searches on children and virtual worlds. Got the attention of The Guardian’s Aleks Krotoski. Hoping it affected at least some parents’ views.
5. Helping kids see past commercialism: Another wonderfully written, informative, and helpful post. But I didn’t write it. Tiffany at Nature Moms Blog did. Her original post also has one of the best photo-illustrations I’ve ever seen. Thanks, Tiffany, and hope you got as much traffic from your post as I did.
I also took a quick look to see the top corporate or public relations visitors:
1. Target Corporation
2. Edelman Public Relations
3. Carmichael-Lynch
4. CBS Inc.
5. Procter and Gamble
6. Disney Worldwide Services
7. Kellogg Company
8. CBS Corporation
9. Scholastic Book Fairs
10. General Mills
All in all, a good year for Corporate Babysitter and Parents for Ethical Marketing. Thanks for being a part of it!






