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Chris Brown Product Placement

Chris Brown Product Placement

On August 14, Lids and New Era stores will be able to cash on the Chris Brown phenomenon.

Brown will create his own brand of caps for headwear and apparel and in a unique arrangement, he will be paid a royalty for every hat sold. 

The caps will feature six designs, including one evoking the 1980s with an image of a boom box and another featuring the initials "CBE," for Chris Brown Entertainment.

This is the summer of Chris Brown.  He just signed a deal for a dance-reality series and a 3 picture deal with Screen Gems.

 

Sting Product Placement

No money exchanged hands, but Sting's shave before his final song at Madison Square Garden has put John Allan and his 'grooming clubs' on the map.

As Sting sits in a barber chair, two women begin shaving his beard while a third manicured on his nails.  The whole setup (including the women) were from John Allan, a men's grooming club with locations in New York and Chicago.

The event was an effective way for the company to get the message across that its product worked under even the most stressful of conditions, said the founder.

According to Billboard, the Police were introduced to the John Allan service by Charlie Hernandez, the acts tour production manager.

 




 

Branded Entertainment Disney Style

San Antonio based Tomato company NatureSweet, has joined up with Disney for Spring campaign, according to Brandweek.

The deal is to promote 'sweet' tomatoes called 'Cherubs' as a healthy snack for kids.  It appears to be a combination of a media buy on Radio Disney, coupled with a cross-promotion on Cherubs packaging.

According to Brandweek, Consumers who purchase Cherubs will receive a code to download songs from the Disneymania 6 CD at www.cherubsradiodisney.com, in advance of the CD release on May 20. The code will be included on Cherubs' packaging.

This move by Disney is a sign that they are not only looking for strategic partners, but also that small players can get into the game.  Although NatureSweet
is the leading grower of tomatoes in North America, they only spent about $2 million in media - a sign to smaller brands to keep thinking big.

 

Disney and Starbucks - Music Industry Brand Report

Ever since Busta Rhymes decided to 'Pass The Courvoisier' and sales of Courvoisier jumped sharply, brands have been paying attention to the business of music.  But it's not the brands mentioned within the music that seem to matter, but the brands creating the selling opportunity that are making the difference.

None seem to have done this better than The Walt Disney Company (NYSE:DIS) and Starbucks (NASDAQ:SBUX).

Disney via their network of Radio Disney, television, theme parks and retail, are able to completely bypass traditional radio airplay or MTV and create massive profits and Starbucks via their new label and locations throughout the globe have created an alternative to the digital download monopoly.

The top-selling album of last year, with 9 tracks on the Billboard Hot 100 was 'High School Musical' - straight from Walt Disney Records.  Just shy of 4 million units and 'High School Musical 2' hitting stores on August 14th, the Walt Disney massive branding effort has turned HSM into a complete franchise which Billboard reports is expected to account for $100 million in operating revenue.

Disney is also in command with the 'Hannah Montana' Volume 2 soundtrack with 642,000 units sold since July and this is also without a mainstream hit single at radio or MTV.

Next up for Disney is the debut album of the Jonas Brothers on Hollywood Records.  Jonas Brothers were part of the 'Radio Disney Incubator', which promotes lesser known artists via the network of radio stations via airplay and interviews.  Other artists worth mentioning include B5, Emma Roberts (Nancy Drew) and DaHv

Worth mentioning - young DaHv's new song (just received today) called 'Suburbia/Disturbia' with a well-worded placement for Starbucks.

 

 

Disney and Starbucks - Music Industry Brand Report

Ever since Busta Rhymes decided to 'Pass The Courvoisier' and sales of Courvoisier jumped sharply, brands have been paying attention to the business of music.  But it's not the brands mentioned within the music that seem to matter, but the brands creating the selling opportunity that are making the difference.

None seem to have done this better than The Walt Disney Company (NYSE:DIS) and Starbucks (NASDAQ:SBUX).

Disney via their network of Radio Disney, television, theme parks and retail, are able to completely bypass traditional radio airplay or MTV and create massive profits and Starbucks via their new label and locations throughout the globe have created an alternative to the digital download monopoly.

The top-selling album of last year, with 9 tracks on the Billboard Hot 100 was 'High School Musical' - straight from Walt Disney Records.  Just shy of 4 million units and 'High School Musical 2' hitting stores on August 14th, the Walt Disney massive branding effort has turned HSM into a complete franchise which Billboard reports is expected to account for $100 million in operating revenue.

Disney is also in command with the 'Hannah Montana' Volume 2 soundtrack with 642,000 units sold since July and this is also without a mainstream hit single at radio or MTV.

Next up for Disney is the debut album of the Jonas Brothers on Hollywood Records.  Jonas Brothers were part of the 'Radio Disney Incubator', which promotes lesser known artists via the network of radio stations via airplay and interviews.  Other artists worth mentioning include B5, Emma Roberts (Nancy Drew) and DaHv

Worth mentioning - young DaHv's new song (just received today) called 'Suburbia/Disturbia' with a well-worded placement for Starbucks.

 

 

 
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