Pterodactyl eggs in Cardiff?

Usually, my commute to work is pretty uneventful. I gaze at the beautiful stretches of sand and blue water, I take deep breaths of the sea air, and I get ready for the day to come. Last week, I was confronted by a surprise of prehistoric proportion when I looked out my window while waiting at a stop light in Cardiff. As luck would have it, I had my iPhone ready and captured the scene with Instagram.

While I puzzled over the appearance of Pterodactyl eggs, a clue appeared that provided a much bigger perspective on an eye-opening grassroots marketing stunt.

Get a behind the scenes look at the Cardiff Kook Dinosaur attack in this video, or read all about it in the UT article.

Federal Judge Topples ‘I Heart Boobies’ Ban

Zenzi’s longstanding client The Keep A Breast Foundation takes an innovative approach to educating teens about breast cancer, with grassroots education and awareness program including the wildly successful ‘I Heart Boobies’ campaign. Recently, a Federal court case overturning a school district’s ban against the bracelets has resulted in incredible top tier national media exposure, including the thought-provoking article below.

Baby-pink ribbons they are not. But a federal judge in Pennsylvania has ruled that “I ♥ Boobies” bracelets — worn as breast cancer awareness accessories — are not lewd, either, and overturned a ban on them at a public middle school there.  After the Easton Area school board’s vote on Wednesday night to appeal the decision, school districts around the country are watching the case, in part to learn the fate of their own prohibitions against the bracelets. But the dispute could also set a precedent for administrators’ authority to determine what is too lewd or vulgar for their schools.

The Keep a Breast Foundation has been making the bracelets since 2004, said Kimmy McAtee, a spokeswoman for the foundation, a California-based nonprofit, but interest in them has been on the rise over the past two years. Their intent is to spark conversations among girls and women ages 13 to 35, Ms. McAtee said.

Read the full article in the New York Times here.