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  • Cosmopolitan UK partners with Universal Pictures for The Super Mario Galaxy Movie with return of CosmoGIRL

    Cosmopolitan UK partners with Universal Pictures for The Super Mario Galaxy Movie with return of CosmoGIRL

    CosmoGIRL returns for the first time in almost 20 years and is fronted by fan-favourite character Rosalina.

    The limited-edition issue was distributed across major UK retail and city locations, including Westfield Stratford, Trafford Centre, Metrocentre, and high streets in Birmingham, Leeds and Manchester.

    The collector’s edition features an exclusive interview with Oscar-winning actor Brie Larson, who voices Rosalina, alongside editorial content inspired by the film, including a dedicated guide, horoscopes and nostalgic Cosmo features.

    The campaign also included a premium experiential moment, with Cosmopolitan hosting an exclusive screening for Club Cosmo members at The Cinema at Selfridges.

    Social-first content extended the campaign further, with creators Rosie Okotcha, Meg Hughes and Rosie Caddick producing content designed to capture fan engagement and community, including a Rosalina-inspired “get ready with me”, a “come with me” screening experience, and interactive Super Mario content.

    Natasha Banjo, Portfolio Director of Cosmopolitan UK, said: “Partnering with Universal Pictures International UK & Eire Limited on The Super Mario Galaxy Movie brings together a global entertainment franchise with Cosmopolitan’s ability to engage young women at scale. By combining the return of CosmoGIRL with live experiences and social-first storytelling, we’ve created a campaign that connects nostalgia with a new generation of audiences.”

  • Air Business appoints new Operations Director

    Air Business appoints new Operations Director

    Air Business, the global distribution, subscriptions and e-commerce management company, has appointed James Curness-Blane as Operations Director.

    Curness-Blane previously held senior positions at Aldi UK, Aldi SUD and most recently at Evri, where he was Head of Courier Operations.

    Curness-Blane replaces outgoing Operations Director Laitan Etti, who retired earlier this year after more than 35 years of service with Air Business. Curness-Blane takes on responsibility for the operational strategy of the company’s distribution arm, with a key focus on ensuring exceptional service standards, as well as all elements of the distribution process including warehousing, fulfilment and e-commerce. 

    Adam Sherman, Chief Executive Officer of Air Business, said “We are delighted to welcome James to our senior management team as we continue to strive for the highest possible standards. James has a sustained record of success within fast-paced environments across a range of industries, from grocery retail and innovation, to parcel logistics and courier operations.”

    Curness-Blane added, “I am thrilled to have joined Air Business during an exciting period of transformation. I am passionate about creating an outstanding and memorable experience for our customers, whilst also delivering on our business objectives.”

    Curness-Blane reports to Chief Operating Officer Phil Ions and is based at Air Business’ headquarters and distribution centre in Hatfield, Hertfordshire.

  • Anthem launches Mindful Mandalas – its first new monthly magazine in five years

    Anthem launches Mindful Mandalas – its first new monthly magazine in five years

    Each monthly issue of Mindful Mandalas contains 24 new and exclusive mandala colouring pages, full of beautiful patterns and simple motifs for calm, mindful colouring.

    Talking about the exciting new launch, CEO Jon Bickley says, “We’re really excited about the Mindful Mandalas launch – Anthem’s first new monthly magazine for five years.

    “And, as the UK’s biggest publisher of colouring magazines, we’re pleased to be bringing out a title that gives people access to high quality, original mandala content at a much more affordable price than the other titles in the sector.”

    Issue 1 went on sale 11th January 2023, featuring winter wonder mandala colouring designs, by artist Cari Buziak.

    The new title can be picked up in stores for just £3.99, or ordered directly from Anthem’s website.

    It’s also available to buy as a digital edition, for colourists to download and print at home, or colour digitally on devices like iPads and tablets.

  • The PPA 30 Under 30 Podcast is back for a second season!

    The PPA 30 Under 30 Podcast is back for a second season!

    The PPA 30 Under 30 Podcast is back! In our first episode, 'Making Waves: Editorial Changemakers' our staff writer Sorcha Mondon speaks to Who What Wear's Shopping Editor Joy Montgomery about how sustainable fashion can be financially viable for publishers, fashion journalism in the face of the climate crisis and much more.

    You can listen to the podcast here on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/4Y881rJ4Lg2UWt1yvDUfwz?si=RE-RLs6AQF-gF3uj98NbLQ

    Be sure to tune in next week to hear about all things B2B.

  • Chemical Watch launches powerful new product compliance regulatory data solution

    Chemical Watch launches powerful new product compliance regulatory data solution

    Chemical Watch, the provider of independent intelligence and insights for product
    safety professionals managing chemicals, is joining forces with Enhesa, the leading global provider of
    environmental, health and safety compliance intelligence to multinational companies, to launch the
    Regulatory Database – a powerful new product compliance solution for businesses worldwide.

    The Regulatory Database is a global database of baseline regulatory requirements for product safety product
    professionals, alongside the complete view of emerging and forecasted regulation. Information is presented
    in a consistent, standardised structure, drawing on Chemical Watch and Enhesa’s combined experience in
    making complex compliance requirements easy to understand and actionable for product safety teams.

    The Regulatory Database covers 279 jurisdictions in one place, monitored by a team of 85 legal experts and
    regulatory analysts working across Chemical Watch and Enhesa. The comprehensive structured product
    compliance data solution is the first collaboration between the businesses since Enhesa acquired Chemical
    Watch in December 2020.

    Stuart Foxton, Chief Operating Officer at Chemical watch said: "Regulatory Database goes beyond anything Chemical Watch has offered before, introducing an extensive global database of compliance content – some 55,000 items detailing regulatory requirements and business impacts – integrated into Chemical Watch's class-leading platform, alongside our other products and services to provide our members with a comprehensive product compliance solution,"

  • Reach PLC joins 30% club

    Reach PLC joins 30% club

    Reach PLC, the publisher of consumer magazine OK!, has joined the 30% club.

    This means the publisher has made an explicit commitment to making sure 30% of their board and senior management team are women by 2023. Reach has also committed to greater representation for people of colour.

    The pledge has been signed by chairman Nicholas Prettejohn who said: “Media organisations have a responsibility to represent the diversity of their audiences and joining the 30% Club is an important step to achieving this. Greater leadership diversity will strengthen the business at every level and put it in great stead to face the future."

    30% Club Global Chair and Executive Vice Chair at Mastercard Ann Cairns commented on the importance of initiatives like this: "While there has been good progress on gender diversity on boards in recent years, there is so much more to be done.

    Diversity in governance is a business imperative for any company, and I sincerely hope other major publishers will commit to at least 30% gender diversity on their boards and senior management teams in the not too distant future."

  • PPA takes delegation of publishers to discuss future trade agreements with the Department of International Trade

    The publisher-focused session was facilitated by the Alliance for IP, of which the PPA is a member, to raise industry specific concerns and priorities for the handling of IP and copyright, in the context of future UK trade policy.

    Strong IP provisions ensure that publishers can protect their content and receive reasonable remuneration from the licensing and selling of trademarks and brand rights internationally.

    During the meeting the PPA and the Publishers Association (PA) were able to highlight how IP underpins publisher business models, and why the gold standard copyright protections in the UK should be celebrated, not suspended in future trade agreements.

    Feedback was also given to government officials on the logistical concerns regarding trade deals, the potential impact on the custom and supply chain aspect of publishing businesses as a result of new trading agreements.

    For further details, please contact Amy Owens at amy.owens@ppa.co.uk.

  • British Journal of Photography launches first-ever Portrait of Britain book

    Following an open call by the British Journal of Photography for its Portrait of Britain exhibition, over 13,000 portraits were submitted. Judges whittled that number down to 200 shortlisted images, crowning 100 of them winners. For the first time, the photographs were compiled into the Portrait of Britain book, published by Hoxton Mini Press. The nationwide exhibition, now in its third year, launched on September 1 across JCDecaux’s channel of digital screens. The winning entries can be viewed at rail stations, shopping malls, high streets and at Heathrow Airport.

    *WINNERS *

    “The Tea Drinker” by Crispin Lingford

    This is Hasan and he was the kebab shop owner. As you can see from the décor and the ambience, he’d been working there for quite a long time – decades. Even the furniture is slightly dilapidated. It’s really preserved in time. I wanted to document the shop before it went.  He was starting to close down. He was not working certain days, but he would always be there no matter what. Even if he wasn’t open, he was at the back of the shop. He couldn’t leave it. This was the business that he’d built up.

    On the day of the shoot, he said it was his last weekend in the shop and he needed to have an operation on his leg, so he was going away. We don’t know where he is unfortunately, which is quite sad. The shop has already been turned into another takeaway shop. The Daily Mail headline is there, An abuse of capitalism, just to further make a point. The title is “The Tea Drinker.” He kept offering me tea every half an hour.

    A kebab shop is a feature of every high street up and down the land, especially after a night out on the town. If people saw a gentleman like this walking around, they’d know he’s part of the community.

    “The General” by Nick Simpson

    I was driving along Holloway Road and I spotted a very eccentric-looking gentleman and I screeched to a halt, leapt out, grabbed my camera from the car, asked him if I could take his photograph and he agreed. He was dressed in an extraordinary way with a homemade military uniform and I said, “Are you going somewhere special?” And he said, “No, just out for a stroll.” I’ve kept in touch with him – he’s a lovely chap.

    “Tika” by Nirish Shakya

    A lot of family and relatives got together for a special occasion and I wanted to take a quick picture. I wanted to show the diversity of a typical English family and challenge the notion of what that family could look like.

    “Helen Mary Stronge” by Jennifer Pattison

    Jennifer Pattison: Helen’s daughter Laura is my best friend and we’ve known each other for 30 years. She lives in the States and she is a super talented Stylist and Costume Designer and whenever we get together, we creatively bounce off each other. She had a short period of time when she was here in between jobs and she had been watching Top of the Lake. One of the actresses, Holly Hunter, had long grey hair and that was one of the inspirations – also Georgia O'Keeffe. We both really like her style and her paintings. She was photographed a lot by Edward Weston, so Laura was quite inspired by that. I said, “Okay, let’s do a shoot.” Helen’s like a second mum to me, so I said, “Let’s do it with your mum.” Laura did the styling and it was all pulled together really last minute. We went up to the chalk pits behind Helen’s house in Sussex. We just had a brilliant, fun shoot.

    Helen Stronge: I’m hugely flattered to be featured in the Portrait of Britain book. It’s particularly wonderful because it’s Jen that’s taken the photograph and Laura styled it. I love that whole feeling of going off out somewhere and whatever comes, comes, and there it is. There’s the image. There’s the result.

    JP: It’s always made 100 times easier when you have this complete trust and it’s like the camera is invisible. It’s very rare to get a really honest image where you truly capture a sense of someone and they’re not posturing or self-conscious and often you get that with people you know.

    ** “Son 2” by Tom Oldham**

    My entry is a very low-key, quiet image of my son after a beautiful day out last Christmas at Studland Beach in Dorset. It’s in this lovely, wintry end of day sunlight and it’s a different sort of thing from what I normally do. I tend to photograph quite high-profile sports or music people, but this was a pure one-off, so to have it selected is unusual, but a tremendous compliment to me and my little boy.

    The book element this year was a massive incentive. I applied before unsuccessfully. It means a huge amount to be a member of this beautiful club among some huge names and some refreshingly new and exciting names that are producing astonishingly high-quality work. To be among them, I feel like I’ve hijacked it with a snap of my kid, I have to be honest. He’ll be proud to be in the book for sure, as am I to have him in there.

    “Ian Borthwick, Emblem Bearer of the Barley Banna” by Jeremy Sutton-Hibbert

    I was amazed when I found out there were 13,000 entries and one of my pictures got into the last 100, which is obviously a great honour. It’s exciting for me being a Scottish photographer. Sometimes Scottish photography doesn’t get championed as much as photography from other regions, so I feel that, with a couple of other photographers from Scotland who were also selected, I am flying the flag for Scotland. It’s great to represent. I came down from Glasgow for the party to see the book and to meet all the other photographers.

    In 2012 through to 2014, when we were coming up to the Scottish independence referendum, I photographed in the Borders region of Scotland. I looked at all of these ancient festivals, which are called Common Ridings, that date back 200 years. One even goes back about 500 years. My portrait is a gentleman holding a barley bannock with a pickled herring nailed to it. People immediately say, “What’s that all about?” Even if you were to ask that gentleman, he would actually struggle to give you an answer, because the traditions are really lost in the mists of time, to use a cliché.

    “Old Age Doesn’t Come By Itself” by Rhiannon Adam

    My grandmother, who was her in 90s, died recently. I realised I had pictures of her when she was younger and she was more active, but I didn’t have any pictures showing what she really looked like. It’s the hardest thing to photograph the people you love. I never took many pictures of my grandmother facing the camera, because she’d wriggle, she’d laugh, she’d pull out her false teeth – she’d do anything to disrupt it so I wouldn’t post it anywhere. I find it much easier to stop someone on the street and ask them to pose for a picture and I somehow get the most honest images that way.

    There were two rooms in her sheltered accommodation. I was in the other room and she’d gone for a rest. She always used to make lunch and tea in this housecoat and she’d been doing that since I was a kid. She was always really well put together – she ironed her clothes every single day even in her 90s. She was lying in the bed and she looked like the grandmother I always knew, but then she was aging and losing her independence. I wanted it to be a tender moment, to be able to remember those little things, the in-between moments that you lose when someone passes.

    It’s been really nice since she’s no longer with us to be able to see her popping up on screens everywhere, because suddenly it’s almost like she’s taken on a life of her own. I get to see her on my daily commute. My grandmother came from a very small town in South Wales in Maesteg – it’s hardly a blip on the map. No one knows it, it’s not famous for anything and yet here it is appearing in London.

    SHORTLISTED

    “Isaac” by Matt Grayson

    Matt Grayson: Barnardo's commissioned me to take some photographs for their 150th anniversary book and Isaac was selected from the case studies. We met a couple of years ago. It’s important to get the charity’s name out there and show the fantastic work that it’s done. It’s also important to get Isaac’s story out there, because he’s an incredibly inspiring, powerful young man. He makes videos and he does incredible stuff, including sky diving, skiing and he was selected to hold the Olympic Torch.

    Isaac: Being in the Portrait of Britain book and having a disability is quite a big deal. It is a huge honour and a great experience to have my story shown to more people and to represent people with a disability.

  • Press Card – Sponsoring PPA Member Confirmation

    The form below is to certify that the PPA Press Card applicant is a responsible member of this organisation, or is a freelance or supplier who works for your organisation and who meets the agreed criteria for holding the press card.  Please check that the attached photograph is a good likeness of the applicant.

    If you have any quesitons, please email or call 020 7404 7526 for more details.