In the Press

Can a Live-Action Movie Save Barbie and Mattel?

Ken and Barbie
Think Barbie isn’t enough of a “real woman?” Well, she’s about to become one.

For years, Mattel has been battling the notion that their hallmark brand, once a symbol of female empowerment, enforces impossible body-image standards. But the recently-announced live action Barbie film could change that … assuming they don’t cast this woman.

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Living A Healthy Lifestyle From An Athlete’s Perspective

Here’s Gabrielle Reece talking about her recent deal with KOWA’s NutriDiet® dietary supplement.

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Can Daniel Dienst Turn the Martha Stewart Empire Around?

Martha Stewart
Bloomberg Business WeekOn Monday, Oct. 28, hundreds of employees at MSLO’s headquarters in Manhattan gathered for a town hall-style meeting inside its “clerestory”—a vast loftlike space where the company throws galas, design exhibitions, and its annual holiday party. Dienst, who is tall and lean and walks with his broad shoulders thrown confidently back, strode in. He was wearing jeans, a starched, white button-down shirt, suede cowboy boots, and a big metal belt buckle. The Manhattan-meets-Montana, SoHo-bolo style is his uniform: He wears the same thing to work every day.

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The Quarterly Report

Hector Elizondo

Electronic Retailer: InterMedia Entertainment (IME) designed the DR Star Index® to capture and track rapidly shifting consumer sentiment concerning celebrities in a media-saturated and celebrity-obsessed society. IME conducts this primary consumer research on a quarterly basis to ensure that the index is reflective of current media trends and consumer attitudes. In the latest update of the DR Star Index, we dissect the factors that determine the winners, the losers, and those in-between.

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Star Quality: InterMedia Debuts New Celebrity DR Index

Brooke Shields

Bloomberg Business WeekHiring the wrong celebrity to represent your brand can be a costly mistake. Witness, for instance, all the recent acrimony surrounding Paula Deen and the brands that licensed her visage.

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The State of Chuck Norris Is Strong, and Other Findings From a Celebrity Ad Index

Chuck Norris

Bloomberg Business WeekHiring the wrong celebrity to represent your brand can be a costly mistake. Witness, for instance, all the recent acrimony surrounding Paula Deen and the brands that licensed her visage.

Over the past half-century, as the age of the celebrity has taken over American public life, a cottage industry has emerged to assist advertisers in their all-important search for the perfect face to slap on, say, the side of their honey-baked ham. Helping brands measure a celebrity’s value is a competitive field and one that continues to get increasingly specialized.

Earlier this year, InterMedia Entertainment unveiled a new celebrity ranking index designed to cater to a specific subset of advertisers: direct-response marketers.

“Several tools were already available to advertisers to measure celebrity appeal, including the Q Score, the Davie Brown Index, and E-Score Celebrity,” InterMedia recently explained on its website. “However, none of these are designed specifically to measure the unique attributes that determine the efficacy of a celebrity spokesperson within the context of a DR marketing program.”

InterMedia has released the latest results of its quarterly DR Star Index. A couple of insights culled from the rankings:

1. Love the Chuck. Despite Chuck Norris’s failure to sell America on the idea of Newt Gingrich for president, direct-response marketers shouldn’t shy away from the martial arts legend. In the latest rankings, Norris was the only celebrity who ranked in the top 10 in recognition while also turning up in the top 50 for overall value.

2. Jeopardy Rules. Answer: According to InterMedia, he is currently the third most valuable direct-response celebrity endorser in the world. Question: Who is Alex Trebek?

3. Beware of Bieber. While the baby-faced Canadian pop star measured well in overall recognition, Justin Bieber scored poorly in overall value, failing to crack the top 70. Presumably, incidents like these aren’t helping the young gentleman’s likability with some consumers.

4. Good Sex Appeal + Bad Science = Dan Marino. Jenny McCarthy, the former Playboy Playmate, newish member of ABC’s talk show The View, and longtime proponent of discredited anti-vaccine ideas, still resonates with certain consumers. She comes in at No. 68 on DR Star Index, just behind Raquel Welch and just ahead of Dan Marino.

SOURCE

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IME Star Index: Dynamics of Celebrity Ranking Explained

The DR Star Index

Electronic RetailerThe InterMedia Entertainment (IME) DR Star Index® debuted in the July 2013 issue of Electronic Retailer to address a pressing need in the direct response industry: for an accurate measurement tool to identify, evaluate, and rank the best celebrities for DR marketing programs. Several tools were already available to advertisers to measure celebrity appeal, including the Q Score, the Davie Brown Index, and E-Score Celebrity. However, none of these are designed specifically to measure the unique attributes that determine the efficacy of a celebrity spokesperson within the context of a DR marketing program.

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