Jul 10th, 2009 11:35 AM EST By Sena Atoklo Sena Atoklo is a broadcast journalist and resident of Ghana who has worked with the BBC…
Posts Tagged ‘week’
Jackson Kids Update: Guardianship Case Delayed One Week
LOS ANGELES — Michael Jackson’s mother and ex-wife time will have time to reach an agreement over who will take care of the singer’s three children.
For the second time, Katherine Jackson and Deborah Rowe joined to seek a delay in a hea…
Chris Weigant: Friday Talking Points [85] — Roll Up! See The Show!
“Welcome back, my friends, to the show that never ends…” All week long, this line has been running through my head. It’s from an Emerson,…
Friday Playlist
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A distinctly summery feel permeates this week’s mini-mix. The music on our stereos and in our tiny, white ear-buds shifts as temperatures rise, the humidity and sunshine steering us towards tunes fit for flip-flops, ocean shorelines and bare legged comfort. Here’s a few sweet strains to help move y’all in that direction, beginning with a new one from Regina Spektor‘s swell new Far album. From their things bloom buoyantly with Marcy Playground and a salute to nude sunbathing (and the lucky ones who get to enjoy the golden baked benefitsÂ…) from Pavement. The second half of our assortment rolls into Camper Van Beethoven‘s sing-along romp about long haired lovelies and surfing followed by a wonderfully groovy number about our modern penchant for self-medication from San Jose, CA’s fab The Mumlers and a swell, vibrating epilogue from excellent up-and-comers BLK JKS.
And check out last week’s Playlist with Latyrx, The Hold Steady, Cheap Trick and more!
At the high temple of fashion
Suspend your disbelief, take a deep breath, and dive into the extraordinary world of Paris haute couture fashion week … Because there’s nothing else quite like it. By Jess Cartner-Morley
In pictures: Haute couture, the greatest show on earth
On Tuesday afternoon I waited for the best part of an hour for a 10-minute catwalk show comprising of 24 dresses, none of which in all probability will ever be available for sale. This was the Christian Lacroix show, and neither I nor the other 279 people in the audience would have dreamed of missing it. This, the new collection from a designer whose 22-year-old company has never made a profit and is now on the verge of bankruptcy, was the hot ticket of the week, despite the fact that if no buyer appears to rescue the company, the atelier where these clothes are produced will be shuttered and locked before these dresses get a chance to go into production.
What Paris haute couture week lacks in logic, however, it makes up for in poetry. The dresses at Lacroix were dark and elegant and grand, in the kind of fabrics you seldom come across in the real world: guipure lace, swiss muslin, silk taffeta. Midway through the show, the gathering clouds let rip and the slender glass windows of the Museum of Decorative Arts rattled in the driving rain: appropriately theatrical, battlefield weather for Lacroix’s last stance.
One of the details that distinguishes haute couture from other clothes is that these are clothes designed and perfected from every angle. The front view is only one element of the look: the side profile will have been tweaked to dramatic perfection, and the back view is often a work of art in its own right. At Lacroix, a midnight blue crepe dress was caught with a creamy silk bow at the base of the spine, while an evening gown was suspended by a single fragment of the lightest black lace stretched from one clavicle and over the shoulder bone. It was as if Lacroix was as focused on exits as entrances: which, seeing as how this could be his label’s last show, would be understandable.
The trouble with haute couture is that pictures don’t really tell the story at all. Trying to convey the full experience of haute couture via a photograph in a newspaper is like trying to capture the taste sensations of a meal by Heston Blumenthal or Ferran Adrià in a flavour of potato crisps. Watching it live is a full-on sensory experience: the angles, the ideas, the references, the colours, the texture of each outfit, not to mention the choreographed body language and painstaking hair and makeup of the models, or the ambience of the setting, every detail of which will have been meticulously planned, from the celebrities who have been invited to ornament the front row to the colour of the napkins handed out with the after-show canapes.
Now more than ever, attending haute couture requires a certain suspension of disbelief. To appreciate couture you have to leave your head-screwed-on, oh-for-goodness-sake-surely-no-one-buys-this-stuff attitude at the door and dive right in. Some people like to take deep lungfuls of air when they are by the sea, or in the mountains, in order to draw deeply on the good stuff: I do the same in Paris couture ateliers. I calculate that every lungful contains at least a tenner’s worth of Diptyque room fragrance, so I try to make the most of it, in the hope I will still have figuier or tuberose in my nostrils when I get off the Eurostar and back on the tube.
There are still people who have pots of money and the desire to spend it in ridiculous ways. If you doubt me, ask Nicolas Ouchenir, a calligrapher who is employed by designers including Miuccia Prada and Karl Lagerfeld to write the work-of-art, handwritten invitations that are a calling card of couture. He told Womenswear Daily this week that as well as fashion designers, his clients include wealthy Russians who pay him to transcribe love letters to their sweethearts, sometimes in ink laced with real gold.
But haute couture is in very real trouble, caught in a tug-of-war, between Paris and the rest of the world. There is a very real need to build a relationship with clients in emerging markets. The Russian and Middle Eastern clients who were a front-row novelty just a few years ago are now the old-timers; China, Brazil, Turkey, even Ukraine and Kazakhstan are where orders are coming from now. To seduce these customers, they need to be made to feel comfortable with what they are watching. Yet the value of couture is in its very Frenchness: every other city in the world has a fashion week, but only Paris has a week devoted to haute couture. That hoity-toity Parisian attitude is precisely what gives added value to the labels on the couture roster, and they tinker with it at their peril.
The dilemma can be seen in the contrast between the Chanel and Dior shows this week. At Chanel, Lagerfeld’s new look centred around long, column-shaped skirts and dresses slit at either side. It was reminiscent of the Chinese cheongsam shape – and, as such, may well succeed in grabbing the attention of the Chinese clients whom Chanel and Dior are currently battling to seduce. But on the Paris catwalk, the clothes looked a little tricksy, although the evening was staged with aplomb – an evening show in the Grand Palais, which merged seamlessly into a glamorous after-show soiree.
Dior took the polar opposite route, moving its show from the hangar-like, out-of-town venues it has favoured in recent seasons back into the iconic dove-grey rooms of Dior’s Avenue Montaigne headquarters. The setting, the clothes and the styling conspired to turn back the clock half a century to when Dior clients gathered in these very rooms to view classics such as the Bar peplum jacket and wasp-waisted suits, pieces that were revived this week. The makeup at a Dior show is always a work of art in its own right, and this season it conjured up memories of 1950s beauties. Dotted black net veils over the face recalled Irving Penn’s famous 1951 Vogue cover, in which the model’s face is closely wrapped in a black fishnet veil; the strong eyebrows and pale complexions artfully powdered and sculpted suggested Richard Avedon and the regal, arch allure of his 1955 portrait Dovima with Elephants.
The giant perfume bottles that dominated the Chanel catwalk made another important point about haute couture, which is that despite the tiny scale on which the actual dresses are produced, the economics only make sense on a giant scale. Couture is “a powerful tool to educate the customer about our brand”, as Chanel’s president of fashion, Bruno Pavlovsky, put it recently. The concept of a brand having a “DNA” has taken over from a colour being “the new black” as the fashion cliche of our time, and there is a very real danger of the creativity of couture being strangled by the obsession with bludgeoning home brand values. Death by brand-building: what a very 21st century way for couture to go.
The spirit of couture lives on, if nowhere else, in the studio of designer Bruno Frisoni, who twice a year creates a range of couture bags and shoes for the venerable Roger Vivier label and presents them in his gorgeous, pink-walled studio above the Rue Faubourg Saint-Honoré. Here, this week, he showed me his treasures for autumn: a clutch bag with one side in gold vermeil, modelled on a turtle shell, and the other in gold-painted crocodile, soft as the underside of a turtle; and a chainmail bag encrusted with jet dragonflies and the softest feathers, which he likened to “the magical remains of a mermaid”. Moments after I had laid my coffee cup on Frisoni’s table, Inès de la Fressange, his full-time muse – I told you, this place is very, very couture – discreetly picked up a stray teaspoon and replaced it on the saucer, apparently bothered by the asymmetry. Moments later, I spotted Frisoni absentmindedly rubbing at an entirely invisible mark on a white leather chair. After all, as Pavlovsky of Chanel said recently, “in couture, the objective is to be perfect”.
On my way home, as I got off the train at St Pancras, I fell into step behind a petite lady in harem pants and gladiator sandals. I wouldn’t have looked twice, except it was nearly dark and she was wearing sunglasses. It was Kylie, who had changed out of the curvy black lace skirt she had been wearing at Jean Paul Gaultier earlier that day. Families and businessmen jostled past her on the platform, and in the evening rush, no one noticed a pop princess. Haute couture was over, and it was back to reality, even for Kylie.
The Week in brief
5 Ways to Make Sure You’re Asking Well

I wrote a post here last week called “Can’t-Miss Marketing: Just Ask” that got a lot of interesting responses. Sure, people said, asking is all well and good, but what does “asking well” actually mean?
It’s an interesting, and important, question to consider. If, as I’ve seen time and time again, good things really come to those who ask, what do they do right? What traits do they have in common that make those people more likely to be successful? And what differentiates the no’s from the yes’s?
In my experience, it really boils down to five things. These are five tips on how to ask well, and how to set yourself up for a lot more positive responses to your questions.
Don’t Overwhelm
This is one of the trickiest parts of this whole prospect, and arguably the hardest part of any kind of sales as well: reminding and prodding people a bit, without putting them off by being too forward.
There’s no cut-and-dry solution to this, unfortunately, but my rule has always been this: I initiate contact. Once. I wait a week – if I don’t hear back, I ping them again. If I don’t hear back after that one, it’s over. This keeps future options open because I haven’t harassed them until they can’t stand me anymore, but makes sure they didn’t just miss me the first time.
Show Mutual Benefit
Often, we tend to focus constantly on what we bring the table: our skills, background, education, etc. What many people ignore, however, is that many people just flat out like helping people. We all love being the one who “gave them a chance when no one would,” especially when it turns into a success story. Don’t be afraid to talk about how what you’re asking for would benefit you, too.
That’s not to say ignore the benefit to the other party – that’s definitely the most important part of all this. But don’t overlook people’s desire to help someone out, and play into their feelings of being good people by helping you out.
Be Direct
If you’re looking for a given job or opportunity, odds are you’re not the only one. And odds are, the person you’re contacting doesn’t have tons of time to spare. So don’t waste it – get to the point. There are right ways and wrong ways to do this, obviously, but don’t dance around an issue. A 13-paragraph email isn’t going to get read nearly as often as a two-paragraph email that says essentially the same thing. They’ll appreciate your effort and consideration of their time.
Be You
In talking to various employers, they’ve all said the same thing: the unique people get noticed. Most people, frankly, do exactly the same thing, in the same format, without any personality or interest; somehow, we’ve come to think of that as “professional.”
That’s terrible. And it doesn’t work. Funny, interesting stuff gets much more attention than the “professional” stuff. So be you, and let your personality affect what you say and do. Everyone can fill out and send a form letter – don’t even try. Know what makes you unique, both your skills and your personality, and run with that.
Ask Not What They Can Do For You
This is a tip I was given when I was first starting to apply for “real world” jobs: when you contact someone, don’t ask anything from them. Don’t say “please get in touch,” or “call me back,” or anything like that. Instead, ask them what you can do – who can you get in touch with? What can you do to get the ball rolling?
Put the onus for action on yourself – the less the other person has to do, the more likely they are to do it. And odds are, they’ll do something to help you out anyway.
From either end of the equation – asker and askee, for lack of a better phrase – what can we do to be better at asking for what we want?
Photo: saikofish
David Pierce is a college student, freelance writer, and lover of all things Web-based. He blogs about the digital world at The 2.0 Life, and can frequently be found on Twitter .
Aussies to feel the heat?
The week in brief
Aussie rules at SW19
The week in brief
Finally Catching Up
Things have been crazy the past two weeks, the biggest spanner in the works being the flu that knocked me down completely back on Tuesday and I was still sleeping it off on Wednesday. Losing two days from the work week creates a total loss for blogging and podcasting and I’m just now catching up [...]
One Week Left To Enter The “I Am The Future Of Journalism†Contest
There’s one week left to submit an entry to the “I Am The Future Of Journalism” Contest. The deadline is December 30.
We’ve gotten some great entries by journalists who are thinking creatively, passionately, and positively about the future. You can show your support for them by helping to rate the entries (some examples embedded below):




