Popeyes Goes All in On Wings for Its First Super Bowl Ad

Popeyes never backs down from a challenge, as is represented by its starting of the chicken sandwich wars a few years ago and more recently as a worthy competitor in the chicken nugget and chicken wings arena. Now, the chicken chain is jumping into the biggest ring as it enters its first Super Bowl with…

How the NBA Paris Game Will Serve Europe’s Basketball Fans and Brands

More than half a billion (585 million) people globally play basketball annually, the National Basketball Association (NBA) discovered through a YouGov-run fan survey two years ago. It is an international sport with a great deal of potential for further growth outside of its core U.S. and Canadian bases. And as it aims to tap that…

Vodafone’s Action-Packed Ad Dramatizes the Everyday Fight for the Remote

Telecommunications company Vodafone Ireland is showcasing the breadth of entertainment available through its new TV Play smart hub with an epic genre-hopping ad from agency Grey London. “Remote” begins with a mob family scrambling to grab an envelope of cash. The action then shifts to a medieval battlefield, where the same characters fight for control…

Cherry-Powered Lip Balms – Fenty Skin Lux Balm Transforms Dry Lips with a Swipe

(TrendHunter.com) The all-new Fenty Skin Lux Balm is touted as a leveled-up lip balm that instantly transforms dry, chapped and otherwise uncomfortable lips with the power of super-hydrating ingredients like shea…

A Gen Z Marketer’s Playbook for Engaging Advertising

Gen Z consumers are notoriously ad-averse, with 99% hitting “skip” on ads and 63% using ad blockers to avoid advertising. So how can brands grab their attention in 2024? As a Gen Zer who works in advertising, I want to share insights into how we view ads. It’s not as simple as Gen Z being…

In-Store Retail Media in 2024: Hype or Happening?

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Tyrone Rhabb Brings Editing Passion To Cut+Run

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Award-winning editor Tyrone Rhabb joins Cut+Run.

Jewish Group Assails Film Academy’s Diversity Efforts

An open letter signed by notable actors and producers criticized the organization for not including Jews as an underrepresented group as part of a new initiative.

Omnicom Media Group Names Former Forrester Analyst Joanna O’Connell N.A. Chief Intelligence Officer

Former Forrester analyst Joanna O’Connell is joining Omnicom Media Group (OMG) as its first chief intelligence officer in North America. At the helm of the group’s marketplace intelligence team, O’Connell will continue her work as a media analyst to provide the group’s clients insight into market trends and changes. O’Connell began her career in 2000…

Fox News and Trump Go Live Wednesday for First Time in 2 Years

A town hall in Iowa on Wednesday is the network’s first live interview with the former president in nearly two years, the latest twist in a long-running drama.

Brave Commerce Podcast: Riding the Waves of Change in Beauty Marketing

On this episode of Brave Commerce, Julien Bouzitat, the U.S. general of Laneige and Innisfree, part of the Amorepacific Group, joins hosts Rachel Tipograph and Sarah Hofstetter to share valuable insights into the evolving landscape of beauty, the significance of strategic partnerships, and the nuanced art of adapting global brands for regional success. Bouzitat’s journey…

Editor of Los Angeles Times Steps Down

Kevin Merida, who took over the job in 2021, said in an internal note that his last day would be on Friday.

London Sphere Proposal Withdrawn by Madison Square Garden Entertainment

A potential advertising innovation proposed for London in the style of the Las Vegas Sphere will not move forward after Madison Square Garden Entertainment (MSG) withdrew its proposal. MSG had hoped to build a 21,000-capacity venue in the Stratford area of the city, but that was rejected by Mayor Sadiq Khan late last year. Despite…

Apple Echoes a Classic iPhone Ad to Tease Its First Spatial Computer

Apple is setting high expectations for its Vision Pro spatial computer by previewing the device’s Feb. 2 launch with an ad modeled after “Hello,” the film that introduced the iPhone in 2007. While “Hello” showed a myriad of TV and film characters answering the phone, “Get Ready” kicks off with Gene Wilder in Young Frankenstein…

Apple lança primeiro comercial do Vision Pro inspirado no anúncio original do iPhone

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A Apple acaba de lançar o primeiro comercial do seu headset Vision Pro – que tem lançamento programado para 2 de fevereiro – trazendo ecos nostálgicos do comercial original do iPhone. Com a campanha, a marca promete a chegada da era da computação espacial. Porque isso importa: O comercial intitulado “Get Ready” apresenta uma montagem …

Leia Apple lança primeiro comercial do Vision Pro inspirado no anúncio original do iPhone na íntegra no B9.

Barbara Lippert is back! Madblogging again.

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Happy New Year!

Elections and Disinformation Are Colliding Like Never Before in 2024

A wave of elections coincides with state influence operations, a surge of extremism, A.I. advances and a pullback in social media protections.

Art and Creativity in an Era of Ecocide

A review of Art and Creativity in an Era of Ecocide. Embodiment, Performance and Practice, edited by lecturer in Human Geography Anna Pigott, Professor of Environmental Humanities Owain Jones and Reader in Art, Environment and Social Practice Ben Parry. Published by Bloomsbury.

The book uses the term ecocide in its ecological and in its broader cultural senses. It not only covers the decimation of biological complexity but also alludes to Félix Guattari’s 3 ecologies which include not only the eradication of biodiversity but also the eradication of difference, alterity and creativity at the collective and individual levels.

As the editors acknowledge, the book collects essays from people enjoying relatively privileged positions and living in fairly rich parts of the world. But even though their texts do not reflect the full spectrum of human and non-human experiences, they cast a very critical glance at western modernity and its legacy of colonial-capitalism.

Art and Creativity in an Era of Ecocide looks at the emergence of diverse forms of artistic practice and subjectivities that respond to environmental destruction and guide us towards a more considerate, multi-species world view. The contributors ask questions such as:

How are artists and creative practitioners rethinking art and creativity when life on Earth is being slowly suffocated? How do they reinvent methods, materials and practices to illuminate hidden power structures, imagine alternative modes of action, suggest new forms of collective intelligence and even become agents of change? What are the skills and responsibilities that artists can develop in the present socio-ecological context?


Lydia Halcrow, Ghost Nets (Strandline), 2021. Photo: Owain Jones

Artworks that raise awareness are crucial (the editors give the example of Angela Palmer’s Ghost Forest) but, often, all they generate is despair and defeatism. Hence, the book spotlight on creative initiatives that help us manage or transform our individual and collective grief by channelling our capacity for creation, empathy and repair.

I liked the publication for its interesting perspectives and uplifting mindset. Part of its content is great. Part feels like a paraphrase of ideas that deserve to be spread widely but that have been explored again and again over the past 10 to 15 years. Still, some of the essays are worth a read:


431art, botanoadopt.org, 2009-ongoing


431art, botanoadopt.org, 2009-ongoing


Carsten Höller and Stefano Mancuso, The Florence Experiment, 2018. Photo: Martino Margheri

Carsten Höller and Stefano Mancuso, The Florence Experiment, 2018. Photo: Martino Margheri

Philosopher and curator Sue Spaid delineates the history of scientific research and artistic experiments that illuminate the intelligence and otherwise difficult to perceive life of plants. I learnt so many fascinating facts and ideas from her essay. Such as the backlash to Carl Linnaeus’ revelation that flowers have sexual organs. It was 1753 and his classification of about 7000 plants in terms of their sexual reproduction sparkled horrified comments from his critics (who were referred to as “anti-sexualists”.) Some even described his systems as “loathsome harlotry.”

It took decades before philosophers stopped mischaracterising plants as being sexually indifferent. Even nowadays, with Plant Neurobiologists and other researchers helping us better comprehend the otherwise imperceptible events that define plant life, most people (outside indigenous traditions, as the author notes) find it difficult to acknowledge plant agency.

Spaid also surveys art projects that attempt to reveal what our flawed human senses fail to notice. From Rob Carter’s co-creations with GM soybeans to 431art’s adoption programme for abandoned plants, the artists manage to draw us closer to the vegetal universe. These artistic practices add affective and intuitive layers to scientific findings, making us mindful of plants, reminding us that even life that we assumed to be “immobile” is worthy of care and protection. Which perhaps constitutes the first barrier against ecocides.


Silent Trail on the Cuifeng Lake in Paiping Mountain, Taiwan

Some of the texts in the book focused on the use, by artists, of an embodied, multisensory engagement with the surrounding in order to help us re-wild all our senses and better perceive and acknowledge the more-than-human worlds.

Field recordist Laila Chin-Hui Fan, for example, convinced a government agency in Taiwan to set up a special trail dedicated to listening. Located along the shores of Cuifeng Lake in Paiping Mountain, the Silent Trail opened in 2018. Since then, it has been guiding the public towards recreational behaviour that take into account all their senses and make them more likely to be mindful of the fauna and flora that surround them.

In her essay, Patricia Brien explains how she used her curator role to be a cultural agent of social change in her community. In 2029, she invited artists to respond to the opening of a waste incinerator in a green rural area near Stroud, UK. Called Incendiary, the exhibition not only highlighted the social inequalities engendered by ecocide (and in particular by the release of small invisible particle matter), it also highlighted the importance of collaborations between artists, scientists and environmental activists to exchange situated knowledge and draw strength from it.

Artist and environmental activist Alison Harper and researcher Sarah Chave from the University of Exeter write about deep materialism as a strategy to resist toxic over-consumption and reappraise the value of all matter, even matter we would normally consider to be waste. The concept of deep materialism is illustrated by Harper’s use of industrially processed material in her practice. She unmakes, largely by hand, objects and matters that have lost their value and transforms them into new artefacts. By doing so and by carefully assessing the carbon footprint of the artistic process, she deepens her connections with the material world and thus repairs her relationship with it.

Image on the homepage: The Florence Experiment, 2018. At Palazzo Strozzi, Florence. Photo: Attilio Maranzano.

Related books and stories: The Funambulist: Forest Struggles, Oliver Ressler. Barricading the Ice Sheets, Vegetal Entwinements in Philosophy and Art, Green Revisited: Encountering Emerging Naturecultures, “Have we met?” A multispecies approach to the planet, PlateauResidue: the artists whose daily life reflects their fight for the climate, etc.

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Top 100 Furniture Trends in 2023 – From Modular Fold-Out Desks to Stool-Integrated Tables (TOPLIST)

(TrendHunter.com) If there was one word to define the 2023 furniture trends, that word would definitely be “flexible.”

With consumers increasingly working hybrid roles that require their homes to…

Slack Breaks Into Song and Dance in This Whimsical Musical About Meetings

Meetings that “could have been an email” are the bane of many workers’ existences, but what about a meeting that could have been a quick, informative musical? With the instant collaboration available today, it might be more likely than you think, according to a new ad from business messaging platform Slack. To highlight some of…