Question:
Oooh la la sassons! :crackup:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BT_IZMyB9vM&NR=1
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=duvWNZ68p1g
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wpVLE...related&search
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ooooooooooooh the jeans with the shape
:bounce2:
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I had a pair.:laugh:
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the jeenz dun look bad
but jeezuz dat 2nd 1...FRUTE SWAG on sum VELVET shit namsa yn??
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I love how every decade thinks their fashion is exempt from becoming dated and laughable like everything else has been from the 60s, 70s, 80s and 90s.
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Did you size down 2?
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At the very least, these commercials are dated and laughable.
My favorite is the Jordache commercial from the 80s that very well may have started the commercial trope so prevalant today wherein a person is so hot wearing such-and-such clothes that they actually leave a small trail of devastation in their wake. The commercial alternates between Jordache woman and Jordache man, both walking down city streets, both leaving their respective paths of destruction, until the end where they cross paths and then spin around like, "Wa-HEY!"
If this is the golden age of designer denim, why do they no longer make TV commercials for jeans?
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Yes yes the commercials are funny and so are things like "Where's the beef??"; but, the there is certainly a comic value in the clothes themselves.
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NOT RLY 2bh imo. loox fine 2 me.
commercial b mad frutey lol
nuthin rong...just old :teach:
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This is an english only forum. Your posts are a pain in the ass to read.
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See what I mean!! The government is watching!!! I am not even that good at txting. It's racism! :censored:
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That commercial (or another Jordache one) is linked to on the pages on one or two of the movies above. The fit on guy's jeans in it actually looks pretty decent :tounge:
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There are no T.V. commercials for designer and premium denim because companies discovered that "stealth marketing" techniques - being placed in the right stores, alongside the right product, being seen on the right celebrities, being in the right magazines - was much more useful in attracting their customer, who craves exclusivity above all else. If you believe that the customer is interested more in "quality", think again. Just look at how many posts there are in Supertalk decrying people "blowing up spots" and designers for selling out by selling to Urban Outfitters.
Interestingly, Seven, one of the first companies to spearhead the premium denim industry, has only recently began to buy print ads. At the beginning, they were all about getting the right placement (Traffic carried them alongside Helmut Lang and Vivienne Westwood, back in 2002) and editorial. Going to print ads certainly signals a shift in the target demographic.
BTW, the Seven print ads are horrible. The jeans look really terrible and the male models look like slightly overweight Corey Feldmans.
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Blowing up spots is actually a sneaker thing. A lot of people on superfuture migrated from ISS, Hypebeast, and NikeTalk. Volume is the way to make money, not exclusivity/higher pricing (the two are obviously related), therefore Seven's had to switch up their game plan. :teach:
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They were true to size, sitting just below the ribcage.:laugh: Same fit as my jordache and calvins. My sisters wore Gloria Vanderbilt with the swan and Anne Klein with the lion emroidery on the backpacket. Gems.
