Sex and the City author Candace Bushnell creates web series
12 Aug 2009 | by Staff
NEW YORK - 'Sex and the City' author Candace Bushnell is writing a four-part web series called 'The
The City may not always appreciate it but Unilever's strategy makes sense in the long run, says...flogged off. Cescau, a finance man, was never taken seriously by the City because it thought he was just ... European company that actually believes in it all. The City marked down its shares last week because ...
NEW YORK - 'Sex and the City' author Candace Bushnell is writing a four-part web series called 'The
LONDON - Abbey is in a strong position to capitalise on other financial institutions' woes, writes Stephen Foster, and despite the credit crunch there are still more media and marketing deals in the offing.
LONDON - There could be a new, Australian, owner for Carlton Screen Advertising, but Stephen Foster thinks Sir Richard Branson has less to offer Northern Rock.
City Republic is the latest great new addition to BR. Every Monday and Wednesday, Stephen Foster...Iron Mike Ashley takes on Nike Say what you like about him (and what most people in the City say is unmentionable here), Sports Direct owner Mike Ashley certainly likes a fight. Now he s bought ... going public, Sports Direct s value has approximately halved, which is why the City doesn t like Ashley ...
Stephen Foster is looking for bears in the US market and wonders where Virgin Media will go next, as Premier Foods looks like it may become an appetising bid target.
Carolina Herrera New York's new fragrance 212 Sexy has signed up to sponsor Sex and the City on E4....and the City became cult viewing among ABC1 women when it debuted on Channel 4. Its sponsorship by Baileys ...
the big-screen version of Sex and the City. The film launches next month.
LONDON - 'Sex and the City' star Sarah Jessica Parker's skimpy outfit on posters for Lux soap has
adults suffer from acne. Many are are stressed, city-dwelling, 20-somethings. Even Keira Knightley has...So T-Zone has a big market to muscle in on if it gets its marketing right. This commercial shows spotty face-masks discarded on city streets in gruesome scenes that would not have looked out of place in the Hollywood thriller Face/Off. As a metaphor for eliminating your spots, it is the most original I have seen ...