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Memo Pad

Memo Pad: Dior's Triumvirate... Just Give Us the Ads... Web Focused

Memo Pad: Dior's Triumvirate... Just Give Us the Ads... Web Focused

by WWD Staff

Posted Monday October 22, 2007

From WWD Issue 10/22/2007

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DIOR'S TRIUMVIRATE: Jessica Stam is to appear in the Christian Dior campaign once again, according to an industry source. But this time, she'll be joined by fellow Canadian model Coco Rocha, plus the up-and-coming Polish model Kasia Struss. The trio was said to be shooting the spring campaign with Craig McDean in Paris on Friday. A Dior spokesman declined comment.
— Katya Foreman

JUST GIVE US THE ADS: Traditional media still hems and haws about the separation between advertising and editorial, but advertisers continue to experiment with cutting out the middleman online by creating their own branded digital video. Enter Honeyshed, which is expected to go into beta Tuesday. It's a branded entertainment site operating under the assumption that people don't mind being sold to as long as it's transparent, and that multibrand channels by categories like beauty and sneakers will draw more eyes than a single brand platform like the site BudTV.

Those behind Honeyshed are advertising giant Publicis Groupe, video production company Smuggler and Droga5 — the agency last known to old media types from its collaborations with Esquire and the fact that its chief executive, Andrew Essex, edited Absolute and was executive editor at Details. Condé Nast's ShopVogue.tv is attempting a similar marriage of video content and commerce, but Essex emphasized the social networking aspect of his site (still in relative infancy — right now it's only a live chat room), its more interactive interface and the development of recurrent host personalities.

Drawn from the ranks of the model-actress hopefuls of Los Angeles, the young and nubile male and female hosts seem to spend most of their time giggling, kissing and wriggling in and out of clothes — at least in the demo material. No surprise, then, that Honeyshed has its eye on the 18- to 30-year-old demographic, with 22-year-olds being the key target. Besides, Essex said, QVC is full of giggling in the service of product pushing. "I've seen the term 'QVC on acid,'" he said of the demos, "and I'm oddly comfortable with that."

For its first phase, Honeyshed is featuring nonsponsored content, meaning all products were called in editorially, with the hope of generating an audience that will entice advertisers to buy space as a pure media play. As products appear just outside the video box, viewers can click to be redirected to a company site to purchase. Fashion and beauty brands featured in the beta programming include Adidas, Reebok, Maybelline and Shu Uemura. Once brands sign on, they'll also be able to repurpose all the content for their own sites.
— Irin Carmon
WEB FOCUSED: Michael Caruso, whose contributing editor-at-large contract at Portfolio ended last week, is now devoting himself to being chief executive of the Daily Tube, the Web video aggregator he launched two months ago out of pocket. The site now has more than 10,000 subscribers, Caruso said, who have signed up for free e-mail newsletters cluing them into the video zeitgeist. So how is Daily Tube different from YouTube? Caruso has about 25 editors — mostly junior staffers at publications he declined to name lest their bosses balk — curating the videos and sorting them into channels like humor, sports and music. And they're drawing on video content beyond YouTube, including efforts by major media conglomerates on their own Web sites. "YouTube's great if you've got tons of time to wade through the crap and get to the good stuff," Caruso said. "This is for if you've got a job or a family or any kind of life and you still want to be in the swim." The Daily Tube will start selling ads through a third-party online ad sales vendor within the next month.
— I.C.
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