The Entertainment Industry’s Next Act: Balancing Box-Office Releases and Streaming

After over a year of delays, the ninth installment of the Fast and Furious franchise, F9, is finally cruising onto the big screen June 25–and unlike many other films released during the pandemic, there is no option to stream it at home. The film’s anticipated theatrical-only release will unofficially kick off a busy movie season…

Why Brands Should Consider Making Connections With Budding Viral Creators

Picture this: You’re the CMO of a major brand at the center of a quickly spreading TikTok trend. Rolling notifications make it clear that this clip is a hit across multiple social platforms and gaining steam. Do you repost their content? Send free products? Is your CEO willing to approve the title of TikTok youth…

Ad Tech Is Facing the Loss of Another Important Signal: the IP Address

Ad tech’s privacy era is here. Third-party cookies are disappearing, and mobile ad IDs aren’t far behind. Now, add IP addresses to the list of vanishing signals used for targeted advertising. IP addresses are fundamental to the functionality of the internet, allowing information to be based between devices on a network. But they can also…

Can Redistributing Ad Spend Fix the Industry’s Diversity Problem?

Over the past several weeks, dozens of brands across tech, fast food, retail and CPG have released statements promising to ramp up spending with Black-owned ad agencies and media companies. A group of 20 brands including Target, L’Or?al U.S., Nestl? and DoorDash pledged through GroupM’s Media Inclusion Initiative that they’d spend at least 2% of…

Editor’s Letter: Something to Celebrate

When we began assembling this year’s class of Pride Stars, the editorial team was united in what we wanted to accomplish: a celebration. It felt important at this moment, in the summer of 2021, to celebrate a community that has persevered through obstacles both historic and ongoing to create inspiring brands, services, entertainment ventures, nonprofits…

How These Exuberant Illustrations Made Their Way Onto Popular Products—and Adweek’s Cover

When Kiehl’s Canada approached Toronto illustrator Tim Singleton to design special Pride packaging for its popular face cream, the decision was a no-brainer. He’d used the brand for years, and more importantly, Kiehl’s vowed to use part of the proceeds to help the queer community in practical, tactical ways. The partnership will create 2SLGBTQIA+ workshops…

5 Risks of Performative Pride Allyship for Brands to Keep in Mind This June

As a gay woman and a marketer, every June I brace myself for the onslaught of rainbows. They’re in social media logos, storefront window displays, colorful capsule collections, TV spots and packaging as brands signal support for the LGBTQ+ community to sell everything from cars to HR software. Earlier this month, I woke to find…

Infographic: LGBTQ+ Consumers Look for Genuine Brand Support That Outlasts Pride Month

Every Pride Month, there are conversations about how to do things the right way–avoiding mistakes and inauthentic gestures. And according to LGBTQ+ community members surveyed by retail app Shopkick, this continues to be the case, especially coming out of a chaotic year. Of the more than 2,700 people surveyed across the U.S., more than half…

25 LGBTQ+ Leaders Making a Meaningful Difference in Media, Marketing, Tech and Beyond

For the second year running, Adweek is recognizing remarkable LGBTQ+ leaders across media, marketing and tech industries with our Pride Stars honors. In a year when people didn’t get to celebrate Pride to its fullest–or at least in the usual way–our honorees remained steadfastly joyful and persistent. This class of Pride Stars includes some very…

Cara Sylvester on Embracing Her New Role as Target’s Head of Marketing

There are few retailers more beloved in the U.S. than Target, which gained some $9 billion in market share over the course of 2020. Entrusted with protecting that brand and its $90 billion business is Cara Sylvester, who was promoted to chief marketing and digital officer in February. “When I tell people I work at…

After Record Store Closures Caused by the Pandemic, Legacy Retailers Look to Open Shops

For retail, hell hath no fury like a pandemic. Nearly 15,000 stores–equal to about 52 million square feet of retail space–were permanently shuttered in the U.S. in 2020, according to real estate services provider Cushman & Wakefield. That’s a new record. Closures were led by retailers such as Ann Taylor’s parent Ascena, which filed for…

Booze-Free Spirits Are Going Mainstream as Nightlife Takes on a ‘Conscious’ Vibe

Ben Branson wanted a sophisticated and refreshing tall drink–hold the alcohol, please. But what he got instead was “a pink, fruity, childish, sickly-sweet mocktail.” That was his lightning bolt moment. “It was so terrible,” he said of the Shirley Temple-like concoction served to him at a fashionable London restaurant. “I thought maybe I could figure…

Infographic: Cooped-Up Consumers Are Chomping at the Bit to Experience Live Events Again

After the CDC’s recent announcement that vaccinated people don’t need to wear masks indoors anymore, the live events space is having its reckoning as it determines how to safely open again. According to data from experiential agency Momentum Worldwide, which polled more than 1,700 people in early April, music fans in particular cannot wait to…

How a Cat in a Shark Costume Provided the Best Marketing Roomba Could’ve Hoped For

Sometime around Halloween 2012, a Houston woman named Helen Arnold set out to buy a shark costume for her dog, a pit bull named Sharkey. When she could find only a small-sized outfit, Arnold decided to let her cat Max wear it instead. Max, as things turned out, not only tolerated being dressed as a…

Meet the Creators Who Expanded Our World When We Needed It Most

The invite came over text a couple weeks ago–“I’ll be in NYC for a few days. Happy hour?” It was the first time a marketer reached out to meet in person in 15 months, and I hardly knew how to respond. There was a lot to consider. Where would we go? How would we get…

Everyone’s an Influencer. Now What?

Everything most likely has been, or will be, democratized by the internet. The same can be said about status. Pre-internet, the concept of status was more polarized. You either had it or you didn’t. A handful of celebrities, mostly actors, TV stars, musicians, authors and the odd business personality, boasted notoriety. It was incredibly difficult…

Adweek’s 2021 Experiential Awards: See All the Winners

Was there ever any thought about chucking our third annual Experiential Awards, since the pandemic that hit last spring effectively made hallmarks of the industry like “high touch” and “IRL” nearly impossible? We’re happy to report that we’re soldiering on with this special section that honors innovative and breakthrough campaigns, finding that 2020’s lockdown did…

Apple’s App Tracking Transparency Has Advertisers Scrambling, With Concern More Is to Come

Apple customers are among some of the most desirable for marketers, given their willingness to pay more than $1,000 for a cellphone. They also collectively generate more than $500 billion a year in revenue via in-app billings, a statistic that inspires advertisers to pay top dollar for real estate on an iPhone. However, on April…

When Travel Stalled, Airbnb Rewound, Leaned Local and Remained Relevant Against All Odds

The idea of any travel brand counting 2020 as a “winning” year would strike even the most wildly confident marketing executive as absurd. And yet, for Airbnb, 2020 was successful. Proof of that can be found in the company’s December IPO, which opened at $146, more than double the price it set the day before…

Creative 100: TV and Streaming Innovators

Like a Big Bang, the streaming universe exploded out in all directions just in time for a pandemic to lock audiences at home by the millions. The experience of the past year has helped put the work of modern television’s most creative talents in front of more people than ever–at a time when comfort, empathy…