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Advertising Week

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303 Magazine

The tech-wielding, social media-savvy millennial workforce has arrived in full force, and with it, new ideologies, new expectations, and new ways of doing business. Millennials – defined as people born after 1980 – are entering and molding workplaces all around the globe, and while the popular narrative has them pegged with unbefitting labels like lazy, entitled and impatient, many have begun to swat away the negative stereotypes and proffer a more realistic look at what was handed over to the millennial generation on a not-so-silver platter: a post-recession job market.

It’s been said before; “ageism is the next frontier in advertising.” Why? Today’s creative industry is at a crossroads – largely thanks to the digital era – which often places innovation and novelty at a higher value than seniority and experience. The problem then, is the misconception that youth and innovation are mutually exclusive.

While it’s true there’s been plenty of concern around the value and impact of the CMO on business, largely because marketing impact has been woefully hard to measure to date, surely that’s not a basis for the brash assumption that the role was entirely on its way out the door?

An interview with Crispin Porter + Bogusky's Chuck Porter about the state of creativity in advertising, and what it means to be a leader in today's industry. 

An interview with Farrah Storr, Editor in Chief of Cosmopolitan UK, and Bob Safian, Editor of Fast Company.

A for-sale 5-acre lot with run-down buildings 11 miles outside of Byers on the Eastern Plains might not look like much, but it holds a kind of magic over James Johnson.

“I just remember driving by and thinking, “Wow, that’s cool,’ ” current owner Johnson said. “There’s just something about it that’s always drawn me to it — it’s a real Route 66-looking ghost town, and I know it must have meant something to someone.”

More than 100 displaced residents gathered in the gymnasium of Nederland Middle-Senior High School on Sunday to find out if the day’s unnerving weather conditions would steer the flames of the Cold Springs fire in the direction of their homes.

A 4-month-old kitten named Sonic whose abnormal leg has prevented him from acting like the average cat will be given a second chance — and a new prosthetic — thanks to cutting-edge technology and a collaboration between some of Denver’s finest in the arts and sciences.

Yvonnie Webb-Phillips had a particularly bizarre case of deja vu Sunday morning while witnessing Aurora firefighters help her daughter give birth in the back of an ambulance, just as she had done 22 years earlier.

After a day-long sit-in protest on the floor of the House of Representatives over gun control, U.S. Rep. Diana DeGette brought the battle back home to Colorado for a rally on the steps of the Denver City and County Building on Sunday

What if a wind turbine knew to shut down when a bird was too close? That vision is the goal of ongoing research in Golden, and birds themselves are helping develop a solution. 

The National Renewable Energy Laboratory has been conducting avian research alongside various industry partners to drastically reduce avian deaths by collisions with wind turbines.

The state Senate passed a resolution Monday meant to highlight the lack of benefits for some Vietnam veterans possibly exposed to Agent Orange. Sponsored by state Sen. Laura Woods, R-Arvada, the non-binding resolution encourages Congress to pass legislation introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives and in the U.S. Senate last year.

Although not unlike what we’ve seen previously when talent mixes with drugs, Asif Kapadia’s tragic retelling of the nervy and vivacious Amy Winehouse in the new documentary “AMY” hits home in a different way. While the cumulative effects of substance abuse are what eventually led to her early demise, “AMY” seeks to paint an earlier portrait of the soul singer, sans beehive and winged liner, revealing a gawky and fresh faced teen straight out of North London’s Jewish quarter.

For anyone still grappling over the departure of comedy greats Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert from the world of fake-news, you can rest easy. The pseudo-journalism genre has a new face, and in case you haven’t heard — he’s becoming quite a big deal.But if the new face looks somewhat familiar, you’re not far off. John Oliver, the star of HBO’s sophomore series “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver,” previously served as guest host on “The Daily Show” on Comedy Central.

Ever wondered what the purr of a 450-pound cat sounds like? The Denver Zoo is bringing that up-close experience to visitors beginning this summer.The zoo unveiled the name and official logo Wednesday morning for a tiger exhibit tentatively scheduled to open in late June.

Despite a zoning lawsuit and some uncertainty from neighbors, the new homeless center in the Ballpark neighborhood downtown is off to a big start — seeing as many as 800 people in a day.​

The new Denver Rescue Mission's Lawrence Street Community Center, an $8.6 million day center built adjacent to the mission's homeless shelter, initially raised concerns with neighboring communities that another center would only expand the existing homeless population, and new concerns have arisen that the facility is attracting more illegal camping.

A bull walks into a china shop — sort of. 

For more than 70 years, the Brown Palace Hotel has welcomed the National Western's Grand Champion steer to walk a red carpet through its elegant lobby during afternoon tea — a long-standing tradition that draws hundreds of spectators.

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