| EVENT REPORT 09.23.09 3:51 PM |
|
VH1 Brings Back Divas Franchise at Brooklyn Concert and After-Party
|
 | Pink illuminations at the Divas Live after-party Photo: Alice and Chris for BizBash |
|
Launched in 1998 to a great deal of fanfare, VH1's celebration of women in music, Divas Live, was a highlight of the network's event calendar for seven years—before unceremoniously ending with the 2004 show. But this past Thursday, VH1 brought the series back for a concert at the Brooklyn Academy of Music and an after-party at the recently opened Skylight One Hanson.
Featuring performances by Kelly Clarkson, Jennifer Hudson, and Leona Lewis, the Paula Abdul-hosted event was broadcast live from BAM's Howard Gilman Opera House. When the concert concluded promptly at 10 p.m., guests made their way down the street to neighboring Skylight One Hanson, in the newly renovated ground floor of the Williamsburg Bank Building.
MORE >>
RELATED TOPICS
VH1, VH1 Save the Music, VH1 Divas Live |
 |
| EVENT REPORT 07.08.09 2:05 PM |
|
Students Debate Dance Crazes and Reality TV to Promote VH1's New Show
|
 | VH1's rowdy The Great Debate publicity stunt Photo: John Minchillo for BizBash |
|
On Monday, shoppers coming out of Macy's probably didn't expect to hear folks debate whether real boobs are better than fake ones, but that was the kind of pedestrian-stopping, rowdy distraction VH1 used to promote its new show The Great Debate. Assembled in the Broadway pedestrian area between Macy's and Herald Square Park, some 2,500 spectators paused to watch students from Yale, Harvard, Columbia, and the University of Pennsylvania energetically argue over pop culture issues on a boxing ring-style stage. Hosting the contest were VH1's Best Week Ever contributor Chuck Nice and comedians Pete Holmes and Amy Schumer.
MORE >>
RELATED TOPICS
VH1 |
 |
| EVENT REPORT 02.23.09 11:23 AM |
|
Elton John's Recession-Appropriate Gala Still Glitters—and Offers Guests a Chance to Hit Vanity Fair, Too
|
 | Elton John's black-and-white Oscar party Photo: Dimitrios Kambouris/WireImage |
|
FROM LOS ANGELES
With Vanity Fair’s party canceled last year on account of the writers' strike, Elton John’s bash rose to the top of the Oscar-night clutter. But the reemergence of the magazine’s party this go-round did little to quash the glitter of last night's 17th annual Elton John AIDS Foundation benefit at the Pacific Design Center—and neither did the woeful economy, which necessitated careful budget review, but no cuts that looked jarring to guests.
John and husband David Furnish hosted the viewing dinner and party, and Chopard, Jo and Raffy Manoukian, and VH1 were the evening’s cosponsors. Foundation executive director Scott Campbell oversaw the event, tapping Virginia Fout again this year to produce it.
MORE >>
RELATED TOPICS
Award Season, Oscars, Elton John AIDS Foundation, Raphael Saadiq, Chopard, VH1, Ciroc, Sterling Vineyards, Budgets, Vanity Fair |
 |
|
|
 |
| NEWS 02.18.09 11:17 AM |
|
Oscar Week: Vanity Fair's Back, Mercedes Moves to Montage, Governors Ball Tones Down, Suites Abound
|
 | The 2008 Governors Ball Photo: Nadine Froger Photography |
|
FROM LOS ANGELES
The catastrophic state of the economy hardly bears repeating here—except to say that it hasn't done much to diminish the sheer number of Academy Awards-related event offerings on this week's calendar, even if it has affected those events' budgets. From an array of suites to Vanity Fair's apparently triumphant return, many guests' dance cards—even in this recession—are completely full.
The plethora of gift and hospitality suites around town include GBK’s “Circus of the Senses” at the SLS Hotel on Friday and Saturday. The event will give 20 percent of its proceeds to four charitable organizations. Melanie Segal’s “Be the Change” Oscar lounge, presented by Sensé Beautiful Science, will take to the Pali House on Thursday and Friday. Silver Spoon’s suite today and tomorrow benefiting the Chrysalis organization offers spa treatments, caviar tasting, and gifts. Stuart Weitzman's Oscar styling suite kicked off yesterday at the London West Hollywood hotel, and runs through Saturday with beauty treatments and a chance to peek at the shoe designer's 2009 red-carpet collection.
MORE >>
RELATED TOPICS
Oscars, Award Season, Vanity Fair, Elton John AIDS Foundation, Gift Suites, Chrysalis, 95.3 the Beat, Brandaid, Sense Beautiful Science, Tag the World, Essence Magazine, Stuart Weitzman, Governors Ball, W.W.E., Global Green, Lexus, Mercedes-Benz, U.S.-Ireland Alliance, Montblanc, Unicef, The Hollywood Reporter, Billboard, Children Uniting Nations, Dior, BMW, Chopard, VH1, AIDS Project Los Angeles |
 |
| ASK BIZBASH 09.08.08 9:00 AM |
|
Who Can Produce a Cool Tribute Video?
|
 | Stills from a variety of tribute videos. Photo: Courtesy of Lifefilm (top), Courtesy of Madprops (middle), Courtesy of Raw Films (bottom) |
|
Honoring a retiring exec or an award winner with a video about their life’s work is a great idea, but only if the piece doesn’t move guests to check their BlackBerries or sneak off to the restroom. Here are three companies that specialize in these types of films and, if asked, will travel to make it happen.
With more than 20 years of combined film and television industry experience, Lifefilm Productions co-founders Peilin Chou and John Brancaccio use the same production professionals they worked with at companies such as Walt Disney Studios, MTV Networks, ESPN, and Bravo to craft their celebratory docs. The firm prides itself on delivering broadcast-quality, story-driven films that are truly entertaining. Past clients include C-level execs from Hasbro and real estate developer S.R. Weiner. Rates start at $5,000, with longer and more intensive projects ranging from $10,000 to $20,000.
MORE >>
RELATED TOPICS
Walt Disney Company, MTV, ESPN, Bravo, Academy Awards, Saturday Night Live, VH1, A&E, E! Entertainment, NBC, Clinton Global Initiative, Miramax, Hasbro |
 |
|
|
 |
| EVENT REPORT 03.17.08 6:55 PM |
|
Eastsport Offers Media and Musicians a South by Southwest Sanctuary (and Backpacks)
|
 | Members of the media crowded the Eastsport Café. Photo: Hal Harowitz for Elevation Photos |
|
FROM AUSTIN, TEXAS The novelty of standing in line for more than an hour, inching closer to stages through sweaty crowds, and subsisting on whatever domestic beer is being given away can only last for so long—certainly not for an entire week.
People need to be able to escape from the din long enough to rest their feet, collect their thoughts, and, in the case of the throngs of media and musicians who descend on the South by Southwest festival every year, get some work done. This year, backpack brand Eastsport teamed with the BMF Media Group to create an environment where they could do it all, safe from the distraction of live music.
Looking for an opportunity to tap into the SXSW crowd with some sort of café, Eastsport senior vice president of advertising and marketing Joseph Janus turned to BMF, having seen the production company’s work on hospitality lounges at similar events like Lollapalooza and Austin City Limits. The result: the Eastsport Café at Austin’s iconic Moonshine Bar & Grill, which ran Thursday through Saturday during last week’s festival.
MORE >>
RELATED TOPICS
South by Southwest, Austin, Lollapalooza, Eastsport, Adriano Goldschmied Jeans, Cafe Bustelo, Altoids, Don Julio, Izze, Warner Bros. Records, VH1 |
 |
| EVENT REPORT 02.25.08 3:05 PM |
|
Brightly Hued Elton John Party Assumes Oscar Night's Top Slot
|
 | Elton John's brightly colored Oscar bash Photo: Stefanie Keenan/WireImage |
|
FROM LOS ANGELES
With Vanity Fair's exclusive bash off the slate this year, a new entity claimed the title of biggest Oscar party last night (apart from the academy's own ball): the Elton John AIDS Foundation fund-raiser. Sir Elton John and David Furnish hosted the foundation's 16th annual party at the Pacific Design Center, with Chopard and VH1 cosponsoring. The event raised $5.1 million—up considerably over last year's $4.2 million and by far a record.
The gala event began with a cocktail reception, followed by a formal dinner and viewing for 680 (more guests than last year by a small margin, but considerably fewer than in previous years after a decision to cut superfluous guests who weren't contributing to the benefit's bottom line). Following dinner offered by Mark’s Restaurant owner and chef Wayne Elias and co-owner Chris Diamond with their Crumble Catering team, guests bid on live auction items including Sharon Stone's 1974 Corvette and a world travel package patterned after Oscar-winning film Around the World in 80 Days. To cap off the night, Elton John and his band performed for more than an hour, along with guests Mary J. Blige and Jake Shears of the Scissor Sisters. About 200 more guests joined the dinner group for the auction and performances.
MORE >>
RELATED TOPICS
Elton John AIDS Foundation, Oscars, Award Season, Writers' Strike, Chopard, Vanity Fair, VH1 |
 |
| GUEST QUESTIONS 12.07.07 3:22 PM |
|
MTV Staffers on Snow Globes, '80s Tunes
|
It's corporate holiday party time, so we're heading out into the cold to ask employees what they think about their companies' bashes. (That's the point, right?) Here's our second report of the season.
Last night was one of the biggies: MTV Networks' annual holiday party at the Hammerstein Ballroom, which arrived with the possibility of some Gawker-fueled demonstrations from freelancers over their health-insurance beef with Viacom.
As we shivered outside, the weary staffers (some slightly inebriated) from Nickelodeon, VH1, Comedy Central, and Logo voiced their thoughts whilst smoking or waiting for their rides home. Wary of corporate repercussions, nobody wanted to give a name and many were reluctant to tell us their titles, but plenty had something to say about the event. There was the usual complaining about overcrowding, but the people we talked to also offered up some opinions on the decorations, the food, and—naturally—the music:
"I liked the decor. The colors were lighter than last year, and there was sort of a theme: snow globes. There was a big snow-globe centerpiece with men and women models playing Twister inside."
—MTV employee, 30
"No matter where you go, all roads lead to MTV. This is my second party, third year working here, and everyone always talks about nothing but this party. The music is weird this year. What they should do is put a band on—that's the one thing missing this year. And the interrogating was not good; when I and someone else came outside for a cigarette, the guards accost you: 'Who are you? Where'd you come from?' Also, I think when I'm leaving later, I'm going to have the worst experience lining up waiting for all the cars to come. At least they're prepaid for us."
—Sales coordinator, MTV, 33
MORE >>
RELATED TOPICS
MTV, Viacom, Nickelodeon, VH1, Comedy Central, Corporate Holiday Parties |
 |
|