Neil Hoke, administrative assistant to Stewart, quoted an adage of computer men: "Garbage in, garbage out."2008, Roger K. This essay first appeared in the FebruEpoch Times. (computing, information technology) If input data is not complete, accurate, and timely, then the resulting output is unreliable and of no useful value.1963, Raymond Crowley, "Robot Tax Collector Seeks Indications of 'Fudging'," Times Daily (Alabama, USA), 1 April (retrieved 26 July 2010):Officials explained that the quality of the computer's work depends on the quality of the data fed into it. Heavily publicise, promote or market a product. King, may be what happens when we adopt them. The real question, says anthropologist Barbara J. Looking for phrases related to the word 2 Find a list of matching phrases on The Web's largest and most authoritative phrases and idioms resource. To me, it's a livelihood.The moment of God's final judgement on Earth. Yes, President Trumps words tend to be simple and oft-repeated. In his trademark application, Trump said he intends to use the phrase on games, casino services and clothing.īecause Trump owns casinos in nearby Gary, Ind., Brenner said she is worried that her store may become associated with gambling.Ī youth baseball team in the community wears T-shirts with her store name on the back. The show has become so popular that Bloomingdale's began selling T-shirts with the slogan for $36. Known for his gaudy casinos and unusual mane of copper hair, Trump dismisses underlings on the reality television show with a curt "You're fired." Donald Trump's administration has reportedly banned the Center for Disease Control from using seven words and phrases, including 'science-based' and 'transgender,' in documents it is working on. Trump has proven to be a master wordsmith, cutting phrases down to their most basic and honing an attack into a two-word moniker of Lyin’ Ted or Little Marco. Other phrases, such as "Let's roll," "Shock and awe," and "Fair and balanced" are trademarked for a certain product or service. Trump's attempt to trademark a familiar phrase that people use each day is not unusual. There are other pottery and craft stores across the country using the moniker "You're Fired."
That doesn't matter, according to Benn, who says Brenner still has legal rights to "You're fired," particularly in the Chicago area and other parts of the Midwest where the store has a following.īrenner may not be the only small-business owner with a claim on the "You're fired" brand. One problem: Brenner never registered the name of her business with the U.S. "All the money she spent on advertising, all that good will will be taken away from her." "People are associating her with Donald Trump and want to know why she's using his mark," said her attorney, Marvin Benn of Much Shelist Freed Denenberg Ament & Rubenstein in Chicago. Golly, who could have predicted this one, except everybody The Washington Post reports that among the 15 boxes of White House documents the National Archives retrieved from Donald Trumps trash palace, it seems, some of them were clearly marked as 'Top Secret.' The Post says that, according to 'two people familiar with the matter,'. So Brenner took a page out of Trump's business handbook and called her attorney, who's drafting a letter to Trump seeking to halt his trademark plans. "I just did a mailing to 5,000 people, so we're not teensy," she said. Customers come from as far as Wisconsin to attend pottery painting parties at her store. While she laughs about the situation, she's also concerned about confusion over the store's identity-a brand she has cultivated through hard work and advertising. "Every person who walks into store now says `Oh you're copying Donald Trump,'" Brenner said. A friend suggested the name when she opened seven years ago, and Brenner thought it was a catchy pun.īut the name doesn't sound so funny to her now that Trump has lifted the phrase into the pop-culture lexicon and is trying to legally make it his own.
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Those two words have gained new popularity as the show-stealing line uttered at the end of each episode of NBC's hit TV show "The Apprentice." Last month, Trump filed a trademark application for the phrase.Īs it happens, Brenner owns a ceramics studio and pottery store in north suburban Glenview by the same name. The Northbrook woman could put a wrench in Trump's plans to trademark the phrase "You're fired."