Good policy always trumps bad public relations. And the best PR can't trump bad policy.
The Oscar is the most valuable, but least expensive, item of world-wide public relations ever invented by any industry.
Part of what the food industry does with public relations, just like the chemical industry or the oil industry, is to try to erase their fingerprints from their messaging. So when consumers hear about a recent effort like the "food dialogues" put on by a group called the US Farmers and Ranchers Alliance, do they know necessarily that these "dialogues" are being funded by companies like Monsanto, a large chemical company and the controller of most of the patents on genetically modified seeds? No, they don't.
The Vatican has tried to condemn 'The Magdalene Sisters' as a pack of lies and that I've made it all up - I wish I was that good a dramatist - and in terms of public relations, that was the daftest thing they ever did.
The vogue of the New Negro. . . had all of the character of a public relations promotion. The Negro had to be "sold" to the public in terms they could understand.
Republicans have never been good at public relations.
It doesn't look great if you cancel the reigning Best Comedy Program, you know, you're gonna take a hit from a. . . from sort of a public relations standpoint.
I sense that what you two [Elie Wiesel and Frank Moore Cross] share is that you each have a public relationship to the Biblical text and a somewhat private relationship to the Biblical text.
There is no such thing as bad publicity except your own obituary.
There is far more to transitioning in the public eye than money, public relations, and logistics.
There's no such thing as bad publicity.
Vincent van Gogh's mother painted all of his best things. The famous mailed decapitated ear was a figment of the public relations firm engaged by Van Gogh's dealer.
I understood public relations and always maintained a high profile.