Archive for August 16th, 2007

A fun take on rehab chic’ – brave or sick?

Our correspondent wonders at what point ‘boundary-pushing’ fashion shoots cross into questionable taste

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First, the story of one particularly unhappy day in the life of a British fashion magazine editor who was sacked not that long ago over some supposedly controversial images. The images in question featured a nudist camp in America, the setting for an “accessories story” in which a handful of tanned yet nevertheless buck-naked nudists posed with Louis Vuitton handbags and Gucci watches.

On the day of publication, Karl Lagerfeld called the editor and congratulated her on her vision and daring. The magazine’s readers fired off enthusiastic letters – why weren’t more fashion magazines using real people in their publications? But for the publishers, the nudist camp shoot was a step too far into forbidden and dangerous territory. It was outrageous, they said, to publish pictures of naked men and women in a fashion magazine.

The editor was sacked and half the staff left with her, indignantly mindful of what was and continues to be published in every other fashion magazine without comment: photographs of perfectly formed naked women. What had really offended the publishers, perhaps even only on a subconscious level, had not so much to do with nudity. Rather, it was the flabby torsos and lumpy bottoms of the impromptu Californian models.

These are the kinds of tugs of war that go on behind the glossy veneer of Planet Fashion. On one side there are photographers and art designers who harangue their editors to “push back the boundaries” of conventionality. On the other are nervous publishers, the literal-minded main-stream press and, increasingly, politicians who in the UK have decided that the fashion industry is responsible for the psychological development and self-esteem of impressionable young women.

Not so in France and Italy. This summer Italian Vogueventured into controversial territory. A 50-page shoot by the American photographer Stephen Meisel takes “Rehab” as its theme and depicts some models writhing mock-tortuously in baths and shaving their heads in front of mirrors. It is what Italian Vogue’seditor, Franka Sozzani, calls “a fun take on rehab chic”.

In Britain it is questionable whether “supermodels go to rehab”, which dramatises the rocky drug-and alcohol-prone lives of celebrities, would ever have seen the light of day. Ten of the world’s best-known modelsrehab3_198639a.jpg do a passable imitation of what Vogue imagines might go on inside a drug rehabilitation unit. They feign cold turkey on asylum beds; they are dragged down hospital corridors by pretend, fabulously good-looking hospital staff; they suck on a soothing cigarette in what one assumes are cold baths and they do yoga naked.

It is slightly silly amateur dramatics but one doubts that British opinion-makers would be able to fathom the funny side – inevitably this would be interpreted as yet another case of the fashion industry glamorising drug addiction.

The outcry over another Italian Vogue shoot, inspired by the “war on terror”, upset the English press – though not the Italian – so much that academics such as Joanna Bourke, professor of history at Birkbeck College, London, were wheeled out to write angry analytical reproaches. “The terrorist threat [in the photographs] is an unreal woman,” Bourke wrote. “In contrast to the security personnel depicted, she is placed beyond the realm of the human. Her skin is as plastic as a mannequin’s, her body is too perfect, even when grimacing in pain.” All true, most of us would agree. But to paraphrase the private thoughts of any regular magazine reader, what did Bourke expect? It is what magazines do.

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Franka Sozzani was perplexed at the reaction and argues that the current rehab shoot is not offensive. “It’s more of an opinion,” she says, and one is forced to think back 30 years ago when magazines such as Oz and Nova published images that were far more provocative than anything in Vogue today.

Has fear of causing offence squashed creativity and debate? “Nobody in Italy complained to me about any of the shoots we’ve done. We did have a woman writing to us from France after we ran a similar fashion shoot based on cosmetic surgery but I don’t see how these photographs would be encouraging people to go into rehab. I always think it’s astonishing that you can be rich and famous and have everything and then need to destroy your life. We are not advocating anything here.”

Anyway, Sozzani detects a note of inconsistency in the British attitude. “I’ve seen English magazines and they are much more vulgar than what we publish in Italy.” Of the men’s market in the UK, she says: “There are pictures of naked people in sexual poses that we just wouldn’t run in Italy. People are really unshockable these days. These images are really demeaning and nobody says anything.” Robin Derrick, creative director of British Vogue, defends British magazines and tells the story of one sexually explicit photographic shoot, commissioned and starring a very famous model. “It was her idea but we pulled it because there was a taste issue. It’s complicated.

“We are an aspirational magazine and quite powerful, and with that power comes responsibility. On the other hand, we’re not policed by the tabloids and it’s a debate that I’m slightly tired of. We have people saying to us ‘why don’t you photograph any normal people in normal clothes that everybody can afford?’ And I say, would anybody read it? The answer is no.” There are, of course, instances in which fashion editors or photographers are led astray by lack of talent or boundary-smashing agendas. Plenty of revolting images are published every month – David Beckham smeared in baby oil for GQ, for instance – and some truly inappropriate ones.

In 2004, a Tel Aviv fashion house, Comme il Faut, shot its summer catalogue based on the theme of “women cross boundaries”. A fortnight after two Palestinians were killed in violent demonstrations, the firm’s editor was defending her decision to contrast beauty, femininity and fashion with a “concrete wall of insult, ugliness and humiliation” on the grounds that the resulting photographs would “create a dialogue around the borders”.

When a reporter subsequently questioned this statement, she replied: “You’re a man, you wouldn’t understand.”

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Paris Hilton & Nicky Hilton asking $500,000 for New Year party appearances

Paris Hilton and Nicky Hilton are reportedly offering their hosting services for New Year’s Eve celebrations in Las Vegas - but with a $500,000 price tag.Paris is said to have asked for just $100,000 for the night’s appearance last year but with her sister, and after her jail-time, her price has gone up.paris_hilton_nicky_hilton.jpg

A Las Vegas source told the New York Post: “Paris and Nicky are shopping their partying ways to Vegas at the price of around $500,000 - only they have the guts to ask for that amount - for a multiple-day New Year’s Eve bash.”

“Paris will ‘party’ at a few spots and Nicky will bless the lucky host with a fashion show of her wares and model herself.”

But the source added that it’s unlikely that anyone will take them up on the deal because the tide is turning against the heiresses: “[the Hiltons] are so desperate now, they should be paying the clubs for good PR, not the other way around.”

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10 reasons why Paris Hilton is a business genius

paris385_180313a.jpg She’s been to prison like Martha Stewart. She’s launched her own clothing lines, for both people and dogs. She’s even been mentioned by Robert Redford as a harbinger of doom for his Sundance Film Festival. (Redford said the event has become “a big fat market where you have people like Paris Hilton going to parties.”) But it turns out the true Paris Hilton is actually a business wizard of unparallelled brilliance.

1. When she met the CEO of the Guess fashion line, she wooed him by recounting an encyclopaedic knowledge of company’s history. He signed her up on the spot. (cf: Simon Ambrose in the penultimate week of The Apprentice.)

2. Parlux Fragrances have described her as “a marketers’ dream” and estimated that by signing up her to endorse a perfume range they tripled the company’s value.

3. She got paid $1million to fly to Austria, wave at a crowd and tell them she loves Austria. “But why do you love Austria?” she was asked. “Because they pay me $1million to wave at a crowd,” she smiled. You can’t argue with that.

4. She’s lucky. When footage of her having sex leaked onto the internet, propelling her into the headlines, the silver lining was it’s timing: shortly before the debut episode of her reality television show The Simple Life.

5. She’s lucky more than once. In the week she published a book ‘written’ by her famous dog Tinkerbell, the chihuahua went missing for a few days, putting the book into the media spotlight.

6. She knows which opportunities to decline: “I turn down perverted things, like a Paris Hilton blow-up doll.” One must have one’s standards.

7. She’s lauded by other businesspeople. A successful real estate magnate - OK, her father Rick – says of her successes: “She hasn’t tried to spread herself too thin.”

8. How many other ‘dumb blondes’ have seen their book spend five weeks on the New York Times best-seller list?

9. She was reportedly recently offered $1 million by The Learning Annex to teach a 60-minute class on “How to Build Your Brand.” This would make her the second-highest paid Annex speaker, behind her friend Donald Trump.

10. She admits that she encourages people to believe she is dumb and “laughs all the way to the bank” as a result.

Add comment August 16th, 2007

Heidi Klum is the new face—and figure—of Jordache jeans in a new advertising campaign shot by Brett Ratner

HEIDI KLUMS appearance in the new Jordache jeans campaign, shot by movie director Brett Ratner (the Rush Hour series) shows that the star continues to shine for the curvy model and entrepreneur.

heidi-jordache.jpgJordache’s decision to use Klum is a smart one: those fans who have followed her from her supermodelling days will recognize her, while she has an extra legion of fans who have come to know her from her two reality TV shows, Project Runway and Germany’s Next Top Model (look more closely and it’s actually Germany’s Next Top Model by Heidi Klum). Then there are the countless acting and talk show appearances, from a regular guest role in Spin City playing herself to the ever-popular (especially among women) Sex and the City.

Klum, whose net worth is estimated to be over ?3 million, is a mother of three, married to singer Seal, and has shoe, lingerie and jewellery lines named for her. Jordache simply adds to the idea of “Heidi Klum, the brand”, as elegantly as it has done for earlier models such as Elle Macpherson.

The model who claimed she was ‘too round’ for catwalk modelling and told The Independent earlier this year, ‘I stick to what I’m good at and have never been prepared to starve myself to death,’ gives off a sense of humility, having joked about naming her breasts (Hans and Franz) and her earlier days on German television. It’s hardly surprising in the industry: those in the know steer clear of the party girls and the braggarts, preferring to have their brands endorsed by someone who is unlikely to dip them into trouble.

Not that Klum has been totally trouble-free. After her divorce from famed hairdresser Ric Pipino, known to some of us at Lucire, you can find some in the anti-Heidi camp who are quite willing to group Klum as difficult to work with. Her affair with Flavio Briatore, the Formula One racing magnate, produced a child, at a time when there were more willing to add fuel to the fire by claiming infidelity from both parties.

But, celebrity culture has short memories and after her marriage to Seal, the Klum brand has returned to a high as a glamorous 30-something mother of three, someone who has had a successful modelling career while keeping her curves. In 2007, that seems to suit her earnings and those who align themselves with her.

The latest campaign was shot by Ratner in the penthouse of the Chateau Marmont and is aimed at the US market primarily. The company has announced that there will be a ‘viral component ’ to the marketing, along with outdoor and print. The website itself is ready today, with Klum inviting visitors to follow the making of her campaign, though the nitty-gritty comes on September 15, with several pages showing a fancy version of an “under construction” page.

The black-and-white images give off an idea of Hollywood glamour and claim to be inspired by the 1930s’ work of Helmut Newton. Klum‘s gear is the classic Jordache Falcon Crest skinny jeans, sold in high-end retailers and at Macy’s and Urban Outfitters.

 

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