[x_section style=”margin: 0px 0px 0px 0px; padding: 45px 0px 45px 0px; “][x_row inner_container=”true” marginless_columns=”false” bg_color=”” style=”margin: 0px auto 0px auto; padding: 0px 0px 0px 0px; “][x_column bg_color=”” type=”1/1″ style=”padding: 0px 0px 0px 0px; “][x_image type=”rounded” src=”https://launchyoungadults.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/click-to-find-out-1.jpg” alt=”” link=”false” href=”” title=”” target=”” info=”none” info_place=”top” info_trigger=”hover” info_content=””][x_text]There’s no coupon for self esteem.
They don’t advertise where you can purchase kindness.
Determination and financial literacy have never won, best Super Bowl commercial.
Today sucked and it’s ok has never been an ad spot on the radio.
But those are the interruptions worth having.
Those are the breaks in our thinking we need… repeatedly.
Commercials air repeatedly to drive home their message, and they run on cycles to avoid losing their potency. So, instead of being thrown 21 pitches about how much cooler, faster, and stronger a sugary drink will make you, how about I inform and reinforce that the things you’re afraid to go after are the very things that you should pursue. That your life isn’t much different from everyone else’s and therefore you aren’t the first person to fail and you won’t be the last person to succeed.
Something real amidst the scripted. A change in the dynamic where you go to the bathroom during the show so that you can be back in time for the commercial interruption.
Why do people hate commercials? Because they are interruptions to what they really want to see. They are sales pitches for things we already buy, don’t want or need, or can’t afford. They don’t add value to our lives; they offer an exchange of money for product or service, but ultimately, we always end up with the depreciating end of the deal.
I interrupt your program life to bring you things money can’t buy.
#interruption
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