CRF. Volkswagen. B2ST releases their ‘Red&Black Project’ for Shin Ramen in Japan. B2ST has released the Japanese CF for Korean food manufacturer Nongshim's Shin Ramen.
The CF was released in two different versions, Red and Black. The new track "Red & Black" has also been inserted as the official song. In the red version, fans get to see the members' fierce performance, while the black version is a more 'rock' version of the track. B2ST has been a huge hit in Japan after debuting with "Shock", climbing up to #2 on Oricon's Weekly Album chart. Seeing how quickly B2ST was broadening their Japanese fan base, Nongshim decided to appoint them as their official spokesmodels and are reportedly looking forward to seeing B2ST's marketing effects.
The CMs will begin broadcasting on April 2nd in Tokyo, Osaka, Nagoya, Fukuoka, Hiroshima, and more. Nongshim will select 200 of the fans who will win a chance to attend a B2ST fan meet. In related news, B2ST is drawing interest from all over the world after launching a world tour, covering 14 different countries from Asia to Europe. The 100 Most Creative People in Business in 2012. Jared Leto's first transformation was standard fare--from starlet-dating actor to starlet-dating prog-rock-band frontman.
But his second shift was more noteworthy: As he found new ways to expand his band's reach, he spun off new businesses to help other bands capitalize on their hard-core fans. "The future of music is really exciting," he says, "especially if you're interested in a proactive, innovative experience. " Leto has created three startups (so far). The "aha" moments and the companies they inspired: Engagement trumps numbers His band, Thirty Seconds to Mars, once invited fans to submit photos of themselves, for a chance to be on the band's next album cover; it yielded 2,000 different fan covers.
So, he launched: The Hive, which runs social-media management and digital marketing for his band and others such as Jessie J and Semi Precious Weapons. Cater to your biggest fans Court a premium audience "Everyone who knows streaming said to keep the price low, to go for numbers," he says. The 100 Most Creative People in Business in 2012. Album, concerts, repeat.
That's the music industry's formula, and after more than 19 years of mostly following it, the Icelandic singer decided it was time to do something different--and for an eccentric woman like Björk, that means really different. With her latest, Biophilia, Björk has produced a genre-bending album notable for both its inspiration and its production. On the inspiration front, she found musical ideas in scientific theories and laws, from wormholes to dark matter. "I think at one point, after a few glasses of wine, I managed to explain string theory," she says. She recorded the album with the help of an all-female Icelandic choir, a metal percussion instrument called a hang, a giant crackling Tesla coil, and iPads whose touch screens triggered digital beats and groans from a homemade pipe organ. But Biophilia is more than just ambitious art: By simply breaking the music down into component parts, it becomes teaching tools--with additional components to sell.
Got Milk?