Funny Business
- How Stock Investors Can Play Holiday Travel
- Time Lapse World Series Is A Great Play
- Hirschhorn: Greed...or Fear
- My Top 10 Tech Toys for the Holidays
- iPhone a Better Gaming Platform Than Android?
- May Day For Dendreon
- 100% Mortgage Financing From USDA
- Holiday Tipping: Who And How Much
- Deep Discounts Should Make It a Very Tech-y Holiday
- This Season: Everybody's A Scrooge
- Senate Democrats at Odds Over Health Care Bill
- What if a Recovery Is All in Your Head?
- Thanksgiving Week Stuffed With Economic News
- A Taxpayer's Must Read: The Fed Waltz With AIG
- Newspaper Circulation May Be Worse Than it Looks
- Investors to Goldman: Be Less Greedy
- Scientist: Leak of Climate E-mails Appalling
- 10 Tips to Get Out of Debt
RSS FEED
CNBC Correspondent
You may have noticed that Yahoo! [YHOO
Loading...
()
] is trying to get your attention with a new promotional campaign, trying to convince web surfers that Yahoo! is all about Y!ou. Actually I don't care if it's all about me. I just want a search engine that's fast, accurate, and gives me desired results. I like Yahoo's front page, as there is often some story there which piques my interest, but too often with the new Yahoo! my cursor accidentally enlarges something from the left hand menu and I go somewhere I don't want to go. Yes, operator error, but help me out here. It didn't happen before.
![]() |
Getty Images Kimberly Caldwell |
My favorite is "Metal 2".
Today Yahoo! is holding live yodeling auditions in Mumbai, India. Monday the company held them in New York and London. In New York, celebrities like Jewel, LeAnn Rimes, Randy Jackson, and Pete Wentz helped "mentor" would-be yodelers in Times Square. The company donated $10 to charity for every entrant. So does the winner get the official yodeling gig? Well, not really. Instead, the company announced that winning participants may be featured in Yahoo's new ad campaign.
Ok, so you probably don't really have a shot at replacing the current Yahoo! yodel. Maybe because the company would like to avoid a repeat of what happened with the original yodeler? Country music singer Wylie Gustafson says he was paid about $590 to belt out the Yahoo yodel back in 1996 for one commercial. He later sued Yahoo! for $5 million for continuing to use of his voice in various ad campaigns without permission. Sounds like a country song. Both sides later settled.
This time around, many would-be "yodelers" aren't really yodeling, but that's ok.
It's fun to watch people let loose.
Here's a snippet of some of the people trying out in New York, as Jewel observed that they were sharing "their most prized possession," their yodel.
Some gifts are best not given. As amusing to me as some of the yodels was the reaction of celebrity mentors. Jewel and LeAnn Rimes clearly knew what Yahoo was expecting from them, while Fall Out Boy's Pete Wentz seemed a little uncomfortable. "I can't actually yodel in a real way," he said.
Questions? Comments? Funny Stories? Email










