Strip club undresses Seattle in ad complaint
Can't they just leave Jiggles alone already? The Seattle strip club took out a half-page ad in The Stranger (aka "Seattle's only newspaper") this week complaining that the city is trying to shut them down over little things like not having the proper permit and being in violation of zoning laws. "The city apparently hates people who create jobs," says the great first line of copy, under the mildly suggestive headline "Jiggles needs your support." Lending hers to the cause is scantily clad "Serenity," presumably one of the club's entertainers. Jiggles is casting the squabble as a political one, urging readers to "come on in and check us out tonight, show your support of the First Amendment!" The Jiggles owners have shown themselves to be a pretty creative bunch ever since they named the establishment. Jiggles opened at the site of a former comedy club called Giggles.
- Yahoo Board Approves $1.1 Billion Tumblr Purchase
- Gevalia Aims for a Buzzy Social Partying Weekend
- Would Yahoo or Facebook Make a Better Tumblr Parent?
- Former Publicis COO Richard Pinder on Reimagining Global Networks
- Meet the Sleepy's Creative Finalists
- Yahoo Adding Tweets to Homepage
- Embattled Abercrombie CEO Backpedals on Exclusionary Comments
- NBCUniversal Expands Licensing Deal With Amazon
- Yahoo Board Approves $1.1 Billion Tumblr Purchase
- Goodby, Silverstein Brings the Funny for YouTube's First-Ever Comedy Week
- Dove Hires Criminal Sketch Artist to Draw Women as They See Themselves and as Others See Them
- Yahoo in Talks to Acquire Tumblr
- California Winery's Ads Pair the Product With Sex, Drugs and More Sex
- The Story Behind 'This Is Water,' the Inspiring Video People Can't Stop Watching
- Former Publicis COO Richard Pinder on Reimagining Global Networks
- How BBH Perfected the Twist Ending for the Year's Best Beverage Ad
AdFreak is your daily blog of the best and worst of creativity in advertising, media, marketing and design. Follow us as we celebrate (and skewer) the latest, greatest, quirkiest and freakiest commercials, promos, trailers, posters, billboards, logos and package designs around. Edited by Adweek's Tim Nudd. Updated every weekday, with a weekly recap on Saturdays.


Email
Print







