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・ Joe Sorren
・ Joe Sosnowski
・ Joe Sostilio
・ Joe Soto
・ Joe Soucheray
・ Joe South
・ Joe Souza
・ Joe Sova
・ Joe Sowerbutts
・ Joe Scuderi
・ Joe Scudero
・ Joe Scully
・ Joe Sealy
・ Joe Sebok
・ Joe Secord
Joe Sedelmaier
・ Joe Seely
・ Joe Seerane
・ Joe Seiders
・ Joe Seiwert
・ Joe Seliga
・ Joe Sellwood
・ Joe Seneca
・ Joe Seng
・ Joe Senser
・ Joe Sentieri
・ Joe Seremane
・ Joe Serna, Jr.
・ Joe Sestak
・ Joe Sevario


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Joe Sedelmaier : ウィキペディア英語版
Joe Sedelmaier
Joe Sedelmaier (born John Josef Sedelmaier on May 31, 1933 in Orrville, Ohio). Recognized as the director of some of television's best known and most honored commercials through humorous spots like Fed Ex's "Fast Talking Man" and Wendy’s "Where's the Beef?". Sedelmaier contended, "A commercial is something you watch when you sit down to watch something else--you should at least be entertained."
"Beginning in the 1970s, Sedelmaier, a former art director for Young & Rubicam and J. Walter Thompson, gained notice for fundamentally changing the way television spots were cast and filmed--replacing the actors who seemed like plastic, too perfect mannequins with offbeat people like Clara Peller. He directed them in a manner doing for television advertising what directors like Preston Sturges did for Hollywood comedies."--Stuart Elliott, New York Times.
Sedelmaier’s commercial work has garnered countless Clio awards, Golden Lions (Cannes) and numerous awards for the One Show, the Art Directors Club of New York, Communication Arts, Britains AD&D, and the Hollywood MBA. In 2000 he was inducted into the Art Directors Club of New York Hall of Fame. His film “OpenMinds” was an official selection in the 2003 Sundance Film Festival.

==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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