CHI reveals celebrity portraits for The Times colour launch
30 Apr 2008 | by Nikki Sandison
LONDON - Celebrities including Amy Winehouse and Wayne Rooney are featuring in a press ad campaign to back the launch of The Times' move to full colour.
LONDON - Estee Lauder has split its $400 million global media planning and buying account between Omnicom's M2M and WPP's Mindshare.
LONDON - Celebrities including Amy Winehouse and Wayne Rooney are featuring in a press ad campaign to back the launch of The Times' move to full colour.
LONDON - Amazon has struck a deal with the manufacturer of 'Grand Theft Auto IV' which will allow gamers to buy and download any of the music featured in the newly launched video game from the online retailer.
LONDON - Google has today made it easier for media owners to earn more from their mobile sites, by linking its DoubleClick Mobile platform with a range of mobile ad networks.
LONDON - Satellite TV channel FX UK has launched a Facebook application that calculates the facial beauty of the social network's members as part of a promotion for the fifth series of plastic surgery drama 'Nip/Tuck'.
LONDON - Regional publisher Northcliffe Media is to roll out online recruitment service Jobsite across all its print titles and 56 associated websites from 1 May.
LONDON - Amnesty International has released a new animated viral that sees Chinese security forces beating someone with an electro-shock baton before lighting the Olympic torch.
LONDON - BSkyB has added 56,000 customers in the first quarter of 2008 to take its total number of subscribers to 8.89m, but its profits dropped heavily year on year after another writedown on its ITV stake.
LONDON - Microsoft has reportedly re-opened talks with Yahoo!, just days after its self-imposed deadline for the internet search company passed, in an attempt to avoid a long drawn-out hostile takeover bid.
LONDON - A BBC reality TV show which brought fashion victims face-to-face with the labourers who catered for their expensive tastes has been axed, amid fears that the participants were not fully aware of what the programme involved.