Or, ad nauseum, everything is a commercial (strictly).

I write what I am sending on the back of last year's
South Park page-a-day calendar, and yes, I personally
endorse South Park.  But I also use factory made
padded envelopes, which carry the manufacturer's name,
and of course the discs themselves all say Hypermedia
(why use anything but the best?).

So if you have easy access notepads with your
company's letterhead on it, I wouldn't sweat it.  But
I've never been sued yet either, and eventually, it's
gotta be your turn.

One of the neatest things I got in a b+p package was a
guy's business card - it is shaped like an old
computer punchcard, made me grin, it's still on my
fridge.  Cuz I love commerce cultcha.

Anthony

ps- If anyone who likes good things wants a b+p of
Michael Ray & the Cosmic Krewe with Trey and other
special people 2-3-95 Johnson, VT, send me an email. 
It is a certified dank soundboard.  I don't see it
circulate like it should, so I wouldn't mind uploading
to a server or two, but I upload at ~14KB/s, so have
patience.



>hi,

>On Tue, 5 Mar 2002, Josh Chasin wrote:

>> How about using my company's letterhead to include
>>a setlist?
>

>i don't really know what the "rules"  are here but i
>think that
>piggybacking _any_ commercial communication          
>(including letterhead) on 
>a
>product that a band could theoretically sell but is
>giving away for
>nothing is a predatory practice ... it seems to me
>that by associating
>your commercial enterprise in _any_ way with a band's
>product you are
>creating an association between your company and the
>band that is 
>probably
>not welcomed by any of the bands that are
taper->friendly

>just my 16/8 cents

>cheers,
>kevin
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