Guest post: Precious PR hacks and why they do their clients no good

Editor Jason Whittaker has had enough of PRs who try to tell him how to do his job.

My chances of a date with one of the most beautiful women in the world, admittedly slim to start with, have all but evaporated. And I may never be allowed in one particular retail outlet again.  

I’m not surprised, of course. I’ve agitated more people as a journalist than I care to remember. But is it just me, or are you marketing types becoming even more precious of late, if that is even possible?

I recently wrote an innocuous story on the backend operations of a particular retailer that will remain nameless to protect the petty. Naturally, we chose to illustrate the story, in part, with photos of the store’s glamorous spokeswoman (her name we’ll also withhold to protect the vacuous). A beautiful red carpet portrait of said professional model, logos of the store displayed prominently in the background, adorns the cover of this particular national business title. The photos were acquired, under licence, through a professional photo library. Without a mouse-click of airbrushing the pretty clotheshorse looks smashing.

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