This student blog incorporates both found-articles and original articles based on marketing within the entertainment biz- including gaming, films, TV, radio and publications.
This found-article is an about the self-esteem-style marketing and image campaigns that rival magazine publications Girlfriend and Cleo have recently adopted. This is in wake of the similar and very publicised 2004 "Real Beauty" campaign by skin care/beauty industry giant, Dove.
Girls magazine Girlfriend has launched a campaign around body image in young women.
Launched in the Pacific Magazine’s September issue, the Project You
campaign sees a number of photoshoots featuring non-models without
retouching.
The launch comes just days after Girlfriend’s ACP rival Cleo has been the subject of an anti-photoshop protest.
The campaign is to run for 12 months aims to promote its readers’
commitment to self-esteem and share their stories and pictures with the
magazine.
Sarah Tarca, editor of Girlfriend, said Project You was not in
response to the protest against Cleo, but had been in the works since
April after a reader body image survey.
Tarca said: “This was something we had to address. The idea of body
image was saturated in the market but the core is self esteem.”
Girlfriend magazine does include some photoshopped images of young
women, but indicates which are photoshopped and which aren’t with a
labeling system called ‘Reality Checks’.
“Reality
checks say whether an image has been retouched or not, or it can
demystify the glamour of the industry to include how long the shoot took
to take a particular photo, or make-up used – it’s a media literacy
tool. It makes our readers smart and aware as to what goes into a
shoot,” she said.
On the Cleo anti-photoshopping protest, Tarca said: “Each women’s
magazine stick to its own body policy and doesn’t change the body shape
of girls. But perhaps it is about removing mottled skin from goose
pimples because it’s cold outside.”
Project You features a panel of self-esteem experts to help answer
questions and give advice, as well as celebrities Ruby Rose, Miranda
Tapsell, Sarah De Bono and Johnny Ruffo showing their support.
In light of the horrific July 20th Aurora theatre
shootings during a screening of Dark Knight Rises, social media and news
outlets have been abuzz with responses from both celebrities and non-celebrities.
However, it was the responses from the organisation and workers behind the film
that the media sought after most.
Warner Bros., the studio responsible for the modern Batman
trilogy, along with the cast and crew, promptly mobilized the PR machine to
maintain consumer and media sentiment as they dealt with this crisis as an
interrelated stakeholder.
Although this is a strategic management function, it must be
remembered that the response and reactions are genuine and are no less
heartfelt. The following are PR activities and responses performed by both the
studio, and the film’s cast and crew.
From the Studio
Within the first 24 hours following the shooting, Warner
Bros (WB) issued a statement
regarding the tragedy:
“Warner Bros. is deeply saddened to learn about this
shocking incident. We extend our sincere sympathies to the families and loved
ones of the victims at this tragic time.”
Reports also
stated that Dan Fellman, head of distribution for Warner Bros., had been up
since 4 am (shooting occurred at 12:39am that night) assembling a PR responsive
campaign.
Warner Bros continued to empathises and mourn for the
victims by meekly cancelling multiple
marketing and PR activities originally organised for the release of the film,
including international premieres in Paris and Japan, interviews with the cast
and crew, and softening marketing tactics.
In addition to cancelling PR and marketing activities, WB
also delayed the release of
opening-weekend box office figures as it deemphasised the commercialisation
of the film and maintained a grieving humbleness in respect for the victim’s
and their families.
And, although unconfirmed, it has been reported
that WB will be making a ‘substantial’ donation
which will be distributed across several charities that will support victims of
the July 20 killing spree.
From the Cast and Crew
The first major response from the cast and crew was delivered
by director Chris Nolan- acting as a spokesperson for everyone involved in the production
of the Dark Knight Rises- through a news
release statement:
“Speaking on behalf of the cast and crew of The Dark Knight
Rises, I would like to express our profound sorrow at the senseless tragedy
that has befallen the entire Aurora community. I would not presume to know
anything about the victims of the shooting, but that they were there last night
to watch a movie. I believe movies are one of the great American art forms and
the shared experience of watching a story unfold on screen is an important and
joyful pastime. The movie theatre is my home, and the idea that someone would
violate that innocent and hopeful place in such an unbearably savage way is
devastating to me. Nothing any of us can say could ever adequately express our
feelings for the innocent victims of this appalling crime, but our thoughts are
with them and their families.”
Among responses from the film’s co-stars Joseph
Gordon-Levitt and Gary Oldman, the lead actors, Anne Hathoway and Christian
Bale, also released statements regarding to the tragedy. Hathoway’s statement
read:
“My heart aches and breaks for
the lives taken and altered by this unfathomably senseless act. I am at a loss
for words how to express my sorrow. My thoughts and prayers are with the
victims and their families.”
Bale opted for a more condense statement, declaring:
“Words
cannot express the horror that I feel. I cannot begin to truly understand the
pain and grief of the victims and their loved ones, but my heart goes out to
them.”
Famous
composer of the film, Hans Zimmer, wrote
and produced a requiem in memory of the victims, instead of releasing a
statement.
However,
it was Christian Bale’s surprise visit
to victims of the massacre that gained monumental media coverage and
sentiment. Bale visited the Medical Center of
Aurora several days after the disaster,
spending hours with the numerous wounded victims, posing for pictures and
talking with the patients, nurses and officers.
So, in total there
were seven major PR responses from the cast and crew of the Dark Knight
Rises in light of the Aurora theatre shootings, which included:
1.Issued statements
(by Warner Bros. studio)
2.Cancellation
of marketing/ PR activities (premieres, interviews, advertisements)
3.Delayed
release of Box Office figures
4.A philanthropic
donation
5.Issued
personal statements (by Nolan, Hathaway and Bale)
6.Composition
a ballad
7. And, a visit to the victims by Bale
And although these are strategic PR responses, it is necessary to again remember that the shootings were a tragic occurence, and that the recations from the studio, cast and crew are profoundly honest and benevolent.