commercials
Jonathan Majors' week is off to a very bad start. The Army has pulled its advertising campaign featuring the actor.
Heineken wanted to bring people with differing opinions together in an ad, and they got it right.
Nivea joined Pepsi in the terribly mishandled advertisement department just days before the soft drink giant aired an ill-advised spot featuring Kendell Jenner. The cosmetic company’s “White Is Purity” advertisement came out well before the Pepsi spot and caused a fair amount of outrage that went missing in the past week.
Childhood cereal favorite Lucky Charms is testing their hand at ditching the cardboard oats in their formula and handing out a few marshmallow-only boxes to lucky winners of their latest contest.
If you had your eyeballs locked in last night’s Emmy Awards, chances are you caught the newest Apple Music commercial starring some serious Black Girls Rock star power in Mary J. Blige, Kerry Washington & Taraji P. Henson.
Everybody neighborhood is full has beens and shoulda-coulda-woulda streetball legends. Foot Locker decided to remember the story of Bobby Butter, a Billy Hoyle-type whose love for 90s-era wisecracks are almost as painful as his choice of attire.
OG Maco has plenty to celebrate with his kinfolk when makes pit stops back in The A.
Today is Game 1 of the 2015 NBA Finals and Dr. Dre and Apple are keeping no secrets who they’re rooting for.
O.K. so, we as a Hip-Hop community, didn’t have any platinum albums this year. None the matter. Thanks to the avenues made possible from the culture’s expansion (and/or whitewashing in some cases), there is still a myriad of ways for rappers to make money outside of record sales.
Nas and Hennessy continue their beautiful business agreement with the release of a new commercial that fully realizes the vision that the legendary rhymer’s debut album, Illmatic set out to accomplish.
As far as all-time Hip-Hop classics go, Salt-N-Pepa’s “Push It” should rank on high on any list when considering all the factors. Released in 1987 as a remix, the record eventually took a life of its own, transcending through generation after generation while the female rap pioneers continued to skyrocket through the mainstream ceiling.