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Inside Hollister’s first music video, made for graduation season.

Today is Thursday. Bic’s latest ad campaign promotes its lighters with a revived 1970s tagline, “Flick your Bic.” Except times have changed, so this one’s about lighting candles, not smoking inside an airplane cabin.

In today’s edition:

—Katie Hicks, Alyssa Meyers, Jeena Sharma

SOCIAL & INFLUENCERS

Collage of stills from the music video featuring Gigi Perez

Hollister, Outtahere, LLC

Anyone who shopped at Hollister in the 2000s remembers that the ambience—from the live projections of Huntington Beach to the dim lighting to the pop-punk playlists—was a key part of the shopping experience.

Hollister 20-plus years later offers a different, more brightly lit retail experience, but the brand remains committed to making music a key part of its brand identity—even if it’s not the emo music millennials may remember. In 2024, the brand hosted its first Feel Good Fest music festival, which was headlined by Benson Boone. More recently, Hollister produced and released its first-ever music video, with singer Gigi Perez singing a jangly cover of Green Day’s “Good Riddance (Time of Your Life).” The video, which features scenes from a high school, is aimed at the brand’s Gen Z audience and specifically those about to graduate.

“We really wanted to create a campaign that crystallized around that time of their life and laddered down into all the products that we have to support them,” Joanna Ewing, SVP of creative marketing at Abercrombie & Fitch Co., told us.

Experimenting with a music video offered Hollister a way to test out longer-form content and “double down” on the emotional resonance and engagement from Feel Good Fest, Ewing said. The music video has racked up more than 340,000 views in its first week.

We spoke with Ewing about the campaign and how Hollister is evolving its music-driven marketing.

Continue reading here.—KH

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SPORTS MARKETING

WNBA Finals Game 4 2025

Christian Petersen/Getty Images

Three decades ago, you might have been kicking back with a bottle of Orbitz soda, playing games on your N64, and getting ready to watch the inaugural season of the WNBA. Fast-forward to today, and only one of those things is still around.

This year, the WNBA is celebrating its 30th season—and naturally, the league’s marketing team set out to commemorate the occasion in a big way.

“There’s an opportunity to celebrate,” WNBA CMO Phil Cook told Marketing Brew. “We knew we had to step outside and do something distinctive and unique…As a marketer, you’re looking for, ‘What is going to give us an opportunity to ground the brand and align everyone around what we stand for, and where we’ve been, and where we’re going?’”

The milestone marks a major one for any league, nevermind a women’s professional league. Founded in 1996, the W is one of the oldest pro women’s sports orgs in the country, alongside the WTA, the LPGA, and the Women’s Professional Rodeo Association.

And as anyone who has planned a 30th birthday party knows, it’s a big task, so the league is rolling out a multi-part campaign spanning tentpole moments from the draft to the postseason. The ultimate goal is to highlight its legacy while simultaneously cementing new fans and icons of the game, Cook said.

Read more here.—AM

BRAND STRATEGY

Bucherer x Christopher Florentino 'Timing is Everything' exhibition

Bucherer

In recent years, luxury has begun to lean into the idea of creating holistic spaces versus simply polished showrooms to sell products.

For many retailers, such as Tiffany’s and Louis Vuitton, that has meant opening up cafes or restaurants, while others have added more immersive elements to the shopping experience.

In the case of Rolex-owned Bucherer (formerly Tourneau-Bucherer)—the Swiss watch and jewelry brand founded in 1888—that has meant collaborating with artists.

In March, the brand partnered with American contemporary artist Christopher Florentino, who creates under the name Flore, for an exhibition at its New York flagship, part of what Bucherer USA CMO Carina Ertl calls its broader “art program.”

“The store is literally designed like a gallery space, and we have a professional art hanging system,” she told Retail Brew, adding that the brand has had shows featuring everyone from Andy Warhol and Pablo Picasso to solo shows of Terry O’Neill.

“Even though we’re a multibrand retailer, we are also a brand in its own right, so we really try to showcase more than just the creation of fine watches and luxury jewelry pieces,” she said.

Beyond art, Bucherer’s New York flagship, called “TimeMachine,” features multiple bars serving drinks, part of a broader push to create a full-scale experience with the ultimate goal of engaging everyone from ultra-high-net-worth clients to younger, aspirational consumers who increasingly value experience alongside product.

In chatting with Retail Brew, Ertl opened up about why art matters for the brand, the evolution of its identity, and reimagining itself as a hospitality space.

Read more on Retail Brew.—JS

Together With Vanderbilt

EVENTS

Julia Piccone, senior director of marketing, Nuuly, appears in a promotional image for a Morning Brew virtual event

Morning Brew Inc.

Primetime isn’t what it used to be, which is great for consumers and slightly chaotic for marketers. On April 23, join Marketing Brew and tvScientific to learn how to connect CTV, social, and search into one strategy that turns scattered attention into measurable growth.

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Amelia Kinsinger

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FRENCH PRESS

French Press

Morning Brew

There are a lot of bad marketing tips out there. These aren’t those.

Staying responsive: Why commenting on Facebook could be good for engagement.

Push it: Thoughts on shifting content strategies in the age of AI from one marketing expert.

Mixing it up: Insights about how content diversification on Pinterest may be key for higher engagement.

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JOBS

Real jobs shared through real communities. CollabWORK brings opportunities directly to Marketing Brew readers—no mass postings, no clutter, just roles worth seeing. Click here to view the full job board.

WISH WE WROTE THIS

a pillar with a few pieces of paper and a green pencil on top of it

Morning Brew

Stories we’re jealous of.

  • New York Magazine wrote about why celebrity brand names, from Sydney Sweeney’s Syrn to Justin Bieber’s Skylrk, are getting weirder—and harder to spell.
  • The Wall Street Journal wrote about the increasing use of “no-AI” disclaimers from brands.
  • The New York Times wrote about early impressions of Alix Earle’s new skin care line, considering Earle has been outspoken about using prescription medication to treat her acne.

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