$69. It also depends how many titties are in the commercial. Overall it is relatively inexpensive because Basketball is for crack addicts
2 Million.
The BBC is currently funded by the licence fee - not commercials.
saw a website that said 1200 euros in holland- not sure if that is average or expensive! (March 2008)
he didnt do much he sat and had tea
In Elizabethan England the term madness was oft used to denote something similar to the current Merriam-Webster definition of the term - "behavior or thinking that is very foolish or dangerous." But much the same as it's usage today, the term is subjective. It usually specified a lack of ability to reason. And to be reasonable at the time was to conform to the Christian/Aristotelian world view that included a reverence and appreciation of virtue and condemnation of sin as essential to the preservation of earthly and by extension cosmic order.Further reading on the understanding of the Elizabethan world view:The Elizabethan World Picture - E.M.W. Tillyard
According to a new york times article, "...between $8o million and $90 million in 2009 March Madness"... http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E01E1DD173FF936A15750C0A9639C8B63&sec=travel&spon=&pagewanted=all
1,000,000.00
Voice and pronounciation sound very much like Stephanie March
$1,000,000 for 30 seconds.
Up to 4 million dollars.
A 30 second commercial in Super Bowl XXXV cost $2.1 million.
hopeless
3 Million for 30 secs.
Approx $100,000 per second.
"Much Madness" by Emily Dickinson is an example of alliteration, which is the repetition of initial consonant sounds in neighboring words. This literary technique is used to create emphasis and convey the speaker's message about the presence of madness in the world.
two and a half million for a half minute
enough to stay insane