Jordache Wants Liz Hurley to Get Its Fetch Back

elizabeth_hurley_jordache.jpg

Adland points out Liz Hurley will be the new celebu-face of Jordache jeans, a company that had its fashion fame back in the 70’s. Hurley, who isn’t exactly a celeb with all that much “hip/cool/spend way too much on these jeans because I’m wearing them” factor, will appear in September issues along with the Jordache horse. The ads, shot by Michael Thompson, will promote the company’s Legacy line which will be available only at Macy’s. Hmm, I guess there isn’t all that much hip factor needed if that’s the only shopping audience on which the company is focusing.

Picture of Steve Hall

Steve Hall

RECENT ARTICLES

TRENDING AROUND THE WEB

Psychology says people who educated themselves through curiosity instead of classrooms solve problems in a fundamentally different way that formal education can’t replicate

Psychology says people who educated themselves through curiosity instead of classrooms solve problems in a fundamentally different way that formal education can’t replicate

Global English Editing

Psychology says the boomer men now entering their late 60s and 70s are carrying a specific kind of unhappiness that has almost no cultural language — they were raised to provide, protect and endure, and most of them did all three brilliantly, and the cruelest reward for a lifetime of quiet service is discovering that the role was the entire identity and without it there’s a man underneath who was never introduced to anyone including himself

Psychology says the boomer men now entering their late 60s and 70s are carrying a specific kind of unhappiness that has almost no cultural language — they were raised to provide, protect and endure, and most of them did all three brilliantly, and the cruelest reward for a lifetime of quiet service is discovering that the role was the entire identity and without it there’s a man underneath who was never introduced to anyone including himself

Global English Editing

A psychologist explains why people who’ve found inner peace often seem disengaged or distant to their families — they’re not checked out, they’ve stopped absorbing everyone else’s emotional dysregulation as a personal responsibility to fix

A psychologist explains why people who’ve found inner peace often seem disengaged or distant to their families — they’re not checked out, they’ve stopped absorbing everyone else’s emotional dysregulation as a personal responsibility to fix

Global English Editing

Psychology says people over 60 who still play CDs aren’t resisting technology — they’re protecting a ritual that required intention and commitment and the act of holding an album and choosing it is a ceremony that streaming destroyed by making every song equally weightless and their refusal to let go is a refusal to let music become background noise in a life where too much is already disappearing

Psychology says people over 60 who still play CDs aren’t resisting technology — they’re protecting a ritual that required intention and commitment and the act of holding an album and choosing it is a ceremony that streaming destroyed by making every song equally weightless and their refusal to let go is a refusal to let music become background noise in a life where too much is already disappearing

Global English Editing

I’m 37 and I’ve noticed that whenever there’s a crisis everyone turns to me like I have answers – and the hardest part isn’t solving the problem, it’s that nobody ever asks if I’m okay because they need me to be the steady one and I’ve forgotten how to be anything else

I’m 37 and I’ve noticed that whenever there’s a crisis everyone turns to me like I have answers – and the hardest part isn’t solving the problem, it’s that nobody ever asks if I’m okay because they need me to be the steady one and I’ve forgotten how to be anything else

Global English Editing

I’m 73 and I keep the television on from six in the morning until I fall asleep — not because I’m watching it, but because the sound of other people talking fills the exact shape of the silence my family left when they stopped needing this house, and some mornings a commercial says “good morning” before anyone real does

I’m 73 and I keep the television on from six in the morning until I fall asleep — not because I’m watching it, but because the sound of other people talking fills the exact shape of the silence my family left when they stopped needing this house, and some mornings a commercial says “good morning” before anyone real does

Global English Editing