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There isn't much Charley Pritchett hasn't done. Disc jockey, air traffic controller, publisher, university instructor ... and ...
The real "Most Interesting Man in the World" didn’t sell Dos Equis; Eliot Elisofon took pictures. And yes, Elisofon was allowed to touch the artwork in the museum, because he gave it to them.
When Dos Equis hired Jonathan Goldsmith in 2006 for their new ad campaign, called The Most Interesting Man in the World, nobody knew that it will turn into one of the most successful advertising ...
During his time as the aforementioned “ Most Interesting Man in the World,” Goldsmith’s character (based on his sailing buddy, the Argentinian movie star Fernando Lamas) was seen as a rugged ...
While the Most Interesting Man in the World managed to buck those two biases, Dos Equis likely wants to align its campaign with America's changing demographics. Back when Goldsmith debuted the ...
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Amazon S3 on MSNWhatever Happened To The Most Interesting Man In The World, Jonathan Goldsmith?
As "The Most Interesting Man in the World," Jonathan Goldsmith was a ubiquitous presence on TV screens for nearly a decade. Then, just like that, he was gone. So whatever happened to him?
“The most interesting man in the world has to be a bit, let’s say, seasoned,” said Andrew Katz, the vice president of marketing for Dos Equis, said an interview.
I've never liked the Dos Equis's "Most Interesting Man in the World" commercials. Some ad agency took the viral appeal of Chuck Norris facts (or, if you go back further, the Bill Brasky sketches ...
Ask Jonathan Goldsmith, an American actor who until recently was the Dos Equis man in the beer ads, AKA “the most interesting man in the world.” For almost ten years, his persona has greatly ...
As a result, the tan, suave, impressively bearded "Most Interesting Man in the World" is about to embark on his final journey over the next few months before fading into the pantheon of ...
"I promise I'm not the most interesting man in the world," Goldsmith is quick to assure in his husky baritone, "I'm just fortunate enough to play him." The modesty is warm and genuine.
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