Showing posts with label endorse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label endorse. Show all posts

Audi to sponsor Emmy awards


Audi may not be the most recognized automotive luxury brand in the U.S., with only about 5.5 percent of American new car buyers considering it, but the automaker is doing its best to get its name out there.

The German automaker has announced this week that it will be partnering with the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences to help sponsor the 63rd annual Emmy awards, which kicks off on September 18 and will be hosted by actress Jane Lynch.

Audi will serve as the official automotive partner of the event in a multi-year deal that will also see Audi’s cars at a number of lead-up events to the Emmys. High-end models like the new A6 and A7, along with the A8 flagship sedan, will chauffeur select guests to the show and to additional events throughout the television awards season.

Additionally, Audi will once again host its annual pre-Emmy party the week prior to the actual awards event at Cecconi’s Italian restaurant in West Hollywood.

Audi is no stranger to supporting high-profile entertainment organizations, having already worked closely with Britain’s BAFTA group, the “Iron Man” film franchise, The Weinstein Company, and more.

Kim's new limited edition wedding perfume range


Earlier we told you how brand Kardashian (CLICK HERE, if you haven't read that post) is laughing straight to the bank, courtesy marketing techniques and endorsement. Now they are back again in news and this time the patriarch of the brand 'Kim' is holding the centre stage.

If Justin Beiber can make a record sale with his perfume brand than how come the brand Kardashian be far behind.

Kim Kardashian is releasing a limited-edition of her perfume to coincide with her wedding.

The reality TV star is set to wed basketball star Kris Humphries later this month so has decided to create Love by Kim Kardashian to celebrate the upcoming nuptials.

Only 1,000 bottles have been produced and Kim has already taken one so she can wear it on her big day and she also gave an additional 200 bottles to friends and family at her recent bridal shower. Speaking about the romantic scent, Kim said: "I used to think falling in love was the most incredible feeling, but now I see there's nothing more special than the enduring beauty of building a life with your other half and watching your love grow, each and every day."

Following the release of her debut self-titled perfume, Kim said she wanted the fragrance to remind her of success and bring back memories of working hard with her sisters, Kourtney and Khloe. She said: "I collect fragrances so when I smell one that I haven't worn in years it'll bring me right back to that time. This will remind me of success, working really hard and also my sisters. We were all together so much when I was making the fragrance that it reminds me of my TV show."

Demi Moore to endorse Ann Taylor


As a young teenager, before the fame, kids, paparazzi and front-row seats at fashion shows, Demi Moore regularly passed an Ann Taylor store at a local mall, taking note of the clothes.

In the years since, she's been a red-carpet rebel, jeans-wearing mom, bikini globetrotter and Versace model. Now her style evolution has come full circle, and Moore is the star of the Ann Taylor fall ad campaign.

She is the latest Hollywood connection for a company that previously tapped Katie Holmes and Naomi Watts to court its shoppers. "I feel like I've known Ann Taylor since I was a kid. I've watched the clothes move into support for the working woman," said Moore, 48, during a break at a recent photo shoot in L.A. "It used to be a lot of suiting. I've seen as we've changed, that they've changed, reflecting on how we live as modern women, which is wearing things that take us from day to night . from workout to work to weekend."

Looking at Moore's own fashion history, she's changed a lot, too. She has done the menswear thing, the retro siren and many plunging necklines. She's been bald and buff — and totally bare. (Remember the Vanity Fair cover when she was pregnant in 1991?)

In recent years, she has developed more of a signature look — one that's both sophisticated and sultry — which has won her praise from fashion insiders.

"We have to remember it's OK to take risks. Sometimes it will work and sometimes it won't. For me, I know there's a certain kind of balance of criteria. I like things that are classic. I want to know that I'll look in my closet five years from now and that piece still has a place. I don't have room or time for something's that just absolutely of the moment."

She has no problem taking some cues from the past, though. "I look at Katharine Hepburn, from the '30s and '40s, and the women of the '70s, Bianca Jagger," said Moore. "When we're young, we're finding ourselves, what we like. I can say there are certain things that remain a constant. I've always loved vintage. I've rested in a place that's classic, with a twist."

That's the look you see in the Ann Taylor ads, shot by top photographer Patrick Demarchelier at one of Rockefeller Center's rooftop gardens in New York City against a backdrop of towering buildings. In one ad, the star of movies "Ghost" and "A Few Good Men" stands confidently, hands on her hips, wearing a '60s-esque beige wool cape and a black blouse edged in lace.

In another shot, she sports a sexy-chic long V-necked grey sweater accented by faux fur. Moore hadn't worked with Demarchelier since he photographed her as the cover of an issue of Harper's Bazaar in the '90s, one of her favorite shoots, she said.

The collection also includes animal-print jackets, tailored tweed, wide-legged pants and bling-y statement jewelry. Moore added her own creative slant to the ads, suggesting the pairing of a leopard-print shirt with khaki pants, and the faux fur-trimmed sweater.

"That was actually one of my favorite pieces, when I first looked through the collection," said Moore.

The Brand "Kardashian" is on a high


Love ‘em or hate ‘em, the Kardashian clan is everywhere. Whether it’s news of Kim’s upcoming wedding or the sisters’ seemingly endless stream of product lines, there’s no escaping the Kardashian dynasty.

Last year, the family racked in $65 million in TV shows and endorsement deals. Not shabby!

The brains behind the empire is, self-described momager, Kris Jenner, who takes 10 percent off the top of all deals. She reveals the secrets to her success in the July/August issue of More magazine, saying “I use my intuition. When something to starts to feel really forced or not natural or doesn’t resonate with my family, I know it’s time to walk away.”

As for critics who slam her for exploiting her children, the fierce momager fires back to More, “[I respond] by working hard. My job is take my family’s 15 minutes of fame and turn it into 30.” I’d say Kris has been more than successful – spinning 15 minutes of fame into a lifetime of notoriety.



Kris learned her tough-as-nails business savvy from the ‘toughest job in the world’ – being a mom! “I was the Brownie leader and the soccer coach and room mother and car pool driver. Being a mom gave me great knowledge of how to be a professional multitasker. I see a problem, and I fix it.”

Her advice to other aspiring momagers (and the rest of us working folks), “If someone says no, you’re asking the wrong person. Don’t get discouraged, and don’t be afraid to try new things. Get organized.”

English politician against Julia Roberts


Member of English parliament are increasing pressure on the advertising watchdog to ban campaigns featuring airbrushed images if they are found to be ’socially irresponsible’, after two L’Oreal ads were withdrawn for using ’misleading’ images of model Christy Turlington and actress Julia Roberts.

The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) ruled the ads for the L’Oreal owned Maybelline and Lancome make-up brands should not run in future after receiving complaints from Jo Swinson MP.

Swinson was acting on behalf of the anti-airbrushing ’Campaign for Body Confidence’, which she co-founded last year with fellow Lib Dem MP Lynne Featherstone, who has since become equalities minister.

The ASA agreed with Swinson that both ads misled consumers on the effects of the foundation make-up products they were promoting because the images of Turlington, for Maybelline, and Roberts, for Lancome, had been ’digitally manipulated’.

“This ruling demonstrates that the advertising regulator is acknowledging the dishonest and misleading nature of excessive retouching,” says Swinson.


“Excessive airbrushing and digital manipulation techniques have become the norm, but both Christy Turlington and Julia Roberts are naturally beautiful women who don’t need retouching to look great. This ban sends a powerful message to advertisers - let’s get back to reality,” she adds.

In its defence, L’Oreal admitted that the Maybelline ad did use “post production techniques” but the image “accurately illustrated the results the product could achieve”.

The campaign, which has broad support from experts and organsiations including feminist academic and writer Dr Susie Orbach and online community Mumsnet, has given a dossier of evidence to the ASA which it claims prove links between airbrushed ideal images of men and women and mental health disorders such as depression and anorexia, particularly among young people.

However, a spokesman for advertising rules CAP and BCAP says the evidence of a causal link has not yet been proven.

The ASA issued guidance to brands on the use of airbrushing in April. L’Oreal has had previous ads banned for airbrushing including a 2007 campaign starring Penelope Cruz.


YouGov Insight:
Health and Beauty Retailers

  • Boots has the highest purchase penetration in healthcare (48%), toiletries (43%) and cosmetics, fragrance and skincare (29%), confirming its dominant presence in these categories.
  • Superdrug achieves its highest purchase penetration in toiletries (28%) and is relatively strong in cosmetics, fragrance and skincare (12%)
  • Multiple and independent chemists are relatively strong in healthcare as both achieve 20% purchase penetration, but both are weak in toiletries and cosmetics, fragrance and skincare
  • 10% of adults buy cosmetics, fragrances and skincare from beauty specialists.


Rachel Weisz : new ambassador of Bulgari

British movie star and fashion model Rachel Weisz is now the new face of Italian luxury brand Bulgari known for watches, jewelry, accessories and fragrances.

More than Weisz’s Italian blood from her mother’s side, it was probably her sultry looks that match the brand image of Bulgari’s new perfume Jasmin Noir that bagged the deal.

The campaign, photographed by Mert Alas and Marcus Piggot, with the Bulgari lion is being described as having “a seductive and sophisticated boudoir-style aura”.

The Mummy star, stunning at 40, is shot in an elegant boudoir, broodingly caressing the Jasmin Noir bottle, draped in breath-taking Bulgari jewels.

Weisz, wife of James Bond star Daniel Craig, now joins Julianne Moore and Kirsten Dunst, Hollywood celebrities who have posed for Bulgari.


The commercials are expected to surface next month.

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