Author: Alpha Maidawa

  • Designers fashion a go-slow future for catwalks and collections

    Designers fashion a go-slow future for catwalks and collections

    From Armani to Gucci, top fashion houses are re-designing their calendars to slow down the frantic pace of catwalk shows and new collections as the coronavirus pandemic forces a rethink of the way the industry works.

    Luxury labels are scaling back the number of collections they show at fashion weeks across the year in London, Paris, Milan and New York or at other events in exotic locations.

    After more than two months of lockdown, with shops shut across the globe and manufacturing sites idled, the $310 billion luxury goods sector is on course for a 2020 sales drop of up to 35%, consultancy Bain estimated.

    Brands are grappling with piles of unsold stock and the prospect of widespread discounts that risk denting their aura of exclusivity as well as profits.

    U.S. designer Michael Kors was the latest to call for a post-virus slowdown in the fashion calendar on Monday as he pulled out of New York’s shows in September.

    He said he would only make two collections a year – one for spring/summer and one for fall/winter, skipping so-called resort and pre-fall collections that many high-end labels have recently begun producing to refresh stores in the winter and over summer.

    These collections showcase holiday wear for foreign travel that jetsetters may have to forgo this year.

    These have added to the number of designers’ creations, capsules and collaborations that critics say are out of sync with consumers’ needs, particularly in a global recession. A cruise or resort collection is typically shown in May and delivered to stores in November.

    Robert Burke, founder of luxury retail consultancy Robert Burke Associates, said the move towards fewer collections fits with a consumer shift away from disposable fashion.

    “Buying things that you know you’ll only have for a short time period or go out of fashion immediately doesn’t seem attractive right now.”

    The debate about fashion industry excesses pre-dates the crisis, but has been given a sense of urgency by the pandemic, which is pressuring brands to cut costs and shed inventory without losing too much money.

    Kors said deliveries of its products would from now on be scheduled to arrive in store incrementally over the spring/summer and fall/winter seasons, more closely reflecting “how customers actually live and shop.

    “It is imperative that we give the consumer time to absorb the fall deliveries, which will just be arriving in September, and not confuse them with an overabundance of additional ideas, new seasons, products, and images.”

    Armani, in an open letter to fashion trade publication WWD, said luxury labels should stop mimicking hectic fast fashion delivery schedules.

    “It makes no sense for one of my jackets or suits to live in the shop for three weeks before becoming obsolete, replaced by new goods that are not too different,” he wrote.

    Alessandro Michele, who turned Gucci into a cash cow for French owner Kering, has also said he would cut the label’s yearly shows to two from five.

    And in its end-May earnings presentation, Ralph Lauren said it had rebalanced its assortments towards “core”, less seasonal products, which have faster lead times and less mark down risk.

    CFO Jane Nielsen said the summer collection would stay in stores through August “to maximize full-price selling.”

    The brand will also set aside some finished products for upcoming seasonal collections, even if that means keeping clothes in inventory longer than usual.

    Brands like Gucci and LVMH’s Dior have used more frequent collections and expensive events in exotic places to lure a rich, but also voracious, clientele, particularly in China.

    With luxury spend hit by the crisis, some industry insiders say it no longer makes sense to have such huge marketing expenses — a fashion show can cost well over $1 million.

    The move towards showing and producing less also reflects a power shift between brands and big U.S. department stores, which long dictated the timing of product releases to keep their stands looking fresh.

    Multiple deliveries allowed the stores’ sales associates to call their clientele regularly, saying “Come in, we’ve got some new products,” Ron Frasch, former president of Saks Fifth Avenue, told Reuters.

    That puts winter coats in shops in the middle of the summer and gives department stores leeway to discount as they see fit — something that Frasch said was a “bloodbath” for most brands.

    With the pandemic accelerating the demise of Neiman Marcus and other top U.S. retailers, that model is now increasingly being called into question, he said.

    Yet some brands are resisting the call for a leaner fashion schedule. Chanel, which in a show of strength increased prices in May, said it would stick to six collections a year. (Reuters/NAN)

  • NCDC records 587 new COVID-19 cases, total Infections rise to 17, 735

    NCDC records 587 new COVID-19 cases, total Infections rise to 17, 735

    The Nigeria Centre For Disease Control (NCDC), has recorded 587 new cases of coronavirus (COVID-19), bringing the total number of infections in the country to 17, 735.

    The NCDC announced this on Wednesday through its official Twitter handle.

    It said that as at June 17, the 587 new confirmed cases were from 18 states and 14 deaths recorded.

    There was a drop in the number of deaths reported on Wednesday, compared to the 31 deaths reported on Tuesday

    The Nigeria Publicity Health Institute said that no new state had reported a case in the last 24 hours.

    The NCDC said that Lagos reported the highest number of cases with 155 new cases, while Edo was second with 75 new infections.

    Others were FCT–67, Rivers–65, Oyo–56, Delta–50, Bayelsa–25, Plateau–18, Kaduna–18, Enugu-17, Borno–12, Ogun–12, Ondo–7, Kwara–4, Kano–2, Gombe–2, Sokoto–1 and Kebbi-1.

    The NCDC said that till date, 17, 735 cases had been confirmed, 11,229 active cases, 5,967 cases had been treated and discharged, 103,799 samples had been collected, and 469 deaths had been recorded in 35 states and the Federal Capital Territory.

    NCDC had announced the inclusion of four new laboratories in the COVID-19 Molecular Lab Network.

    The NCDC stated that there were currently 38 laboratories in Nigeria with the capacity to test for COVID-19.

    It, however, disclosed that in progress: were Gombe and Ondo states.

    The agency said it has the capacity to test daily for 10,000 persons across the country.

    The Nigeria Public Health institute tests about 2, 000 people daily as the laboratories are working at about 20 per cent capacity at the moment.

    The agency, however, called on state governments to bring samples for testing .

    It said it had continued with the stockpiling of medical and testing supplies to states and tertiary health facilities across the country.

    “The commodities will be used to strengthen testing capacity and the management of COVID-19 cases in laboratories and isolation centres across the country,” It said. (NAN)

  • Rape: Make decent dressing lIfestyle: Clerics urge Nigerians

    Rape: Make decent dressing lIfestyle: Clerics urge Nigerians

    A Catholic cleric, Rev. Fr. Anthony Afariogun, has called for decent dressing by both genders as a strategy to reduce rape and defilement in Nigeria.

    Afariogun, Chaplain, Our Lady Queen of Peace, Adeyemi College of Education, Ondo, spoke with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Wednesday following incessant rape and defilement case.

    He said that it was necessary for mothers to ensure that their children would make decent dressing a lifestyle.

    According to the cleric, home is the first place where a child receives moral training.

    “Mothers are the first teachers and must train, discipline and bring up children very well, encouraging them to dress decently to avoid exposing themselves to danger – rape.

    “Sexual molestation is getting too much and happening to both girls and boys.

    “Sometimes, revealing dressing that exposes sensitive parts gives them away to the perpetrators.

    “The Bible advises us in the book of Proverbs to train a child in the way he should go so that when he is old, he will not depart from it,” he said.

    According to him, some people commit rape in order to feel big or get promotion in a cult, and they can go the extra mile to kill their victims to cover up the track.

    The cleric added that some men would lack self control after seeing any sensitive part of a woman or even girl.

    ‘”I give awards every month to girls who dress well in my parish to encourage them to be modest.“

    He called on religious organisations to emphasise decent dressing and condemn rape through preachings, youth programmes and seminars.

    “Schools should play major roles in fighting rape. Sex education and penalty for rapists should be in school curriculum,” he told NAN.

    Rev. Fr Pascal Ekechiegwu of the Saint Luke’s Catholic church, Awgu, Enugu, advised parents to promote effective communication with their children to enable the children to relate experiences to them.

    “Parents should create a friendly relationship so that their children can let them know their challenges including threats from rapists.

    On the penalty for rapists, Ekechiegwu said that imprisonments rather than death sentence should be encouraged to give offenders an opportunity repent.

    NAN reports that rape is punished in Nigeria with up to life imprisonment.
    (NAN)

  • Spotify reaches podcast deal with Kim Kardashian West: WSJ

    Spotify reaches podcast deal with Kim Kardashian West: WSJ

    Reality TV star Kim Kardashian West reached a deal with Spotify Technology SA for a podcast about her work with the Innocence Project, the Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday, citing people familiar with the matter.

    Kardashian West and television producer Lori Rothschild Ansaldi are to co-produce and co-host the show, the report added citing one of the people.

    Spotify, which has over 700,000 podcasts on its platform and reaches nearly 300 million monthly users, has been investing heavily in an ongoing quest to transform itself into the Netflix of audio.

    The show, to be available exclusively on Spotify, will highlight the work of the nonprofit legal organisation that seeks to exonerate people who have been wrongly convicted, the report said.

    Spotify did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment. (Reuter/NAN)

  • U.S. actor Danny Masterson charged with raping three women

    U.S. actor Danny Masterson charged with raping three women

    That 70s Show” actor Danny Masterson has been charged with raping three women in separate incidents in 2001 and 2003, the Los Angeles District Attorney’s office said on Wednesday night.

    The District Attorney’s Office said in a statement that it had declined to file sexual assault charges against Masterson in two other cases because of insufficient evidence and because of the statute of limitations.

    Masterson, 44, got his break-out role in the 1998-2006 television comedy series “That 70s Show,” in which he played a rebel adolescent.

    He could not immediately be reached for comment on the charges.

    In a statement issued to Variety, Tom Mesereau, Masterson’s attorney, vowed to fight the charges.

    “Mr Masterson is innocent, and we’re confident that he will be exonerated when all the evidence finally comes to light and witnesses have the opportunity to testify,” Mesereau said in the statement.

    “The people who know Mr Masterson know his character and know the allegations to be false.”

    The three rape charges together carry a maximum prison sentence of 45 years to life in prison if Masterson is convicted, the District Attorney’s office said.

    All of the alleged rapes took place at Masterson’s Hollywood Hills home, the statement said.

    They involve the alleged rape of a 23-year-old woman between January and December 2001, a 28-year-old woman in April 2003, and a 23-year old woman between October and December 2003. The charges did not name the women.

    Masterson, who has been married to actress Bijou Phillips since 2011, was written out of the Netflix comedy series “The Ranch” in December 2017 when a police investigation on the allegations against him first came to light.

    Dozens of actors, politicians, businessmen and musicians have lost their jobs since 2017 when sexual assault allegations against Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein fueled the #MeToo movement.

    Weinstein was convicted of rape and sexual assault in February and sentenced to 23 years behind bars. (Reuters/NAN)

  • Davido unfollows Chioma and fans on Instagram as Kemi Olunloyo prays for his relationship

    Davido unfollows Chioma and fans on Instagram as Kemi Olunloyo prays for his relationship

    Popular Nigerian singer, David Adeleke, also known as Davido has unfollowed the over 5 thousand people he was following on Instagram, including his finance, Chioma.

    This is coming amidst speculations and rumors that his relationship with her (Chioma) has hit the rocks after he reportedly welcomed a fourth child with a London based makeup artist, Larissa.

    With over 17 million followers, Davido has decided to pull a “Beyonce” as he unfollowed all those he’s following.

    See a screenshot below…

    However, controversial self acclaimed investigative journalist, Kemi Olunloyo appears to have taken a u-turn on her constant social media trolling of the celebrity couple.

    The self crowned queen of online trolls who is known for calling out and cussing the singer, ate her own words as she said a prayer for him on her social media page.

    She shared a photo of herself and wrote:

    “God Bless Davido and Chioma. May your relationship be SEALED with a wedding soon. May your Marriage be blessed…so help you God! Chioma my lover will change to Chioma my wifey”

  • Veteran actor, Ramsey Nouah, finally compensates lady who called him out for using her graphics work without pay on Living in Bondage

    Veteran actor, Ramsey Nouah, finally compensates lady who called him out for using her graphics work without pay on Living in Bondage

    The lady who took to micro blogging platform, Twitter to call out veteran actor, Ramsey Nouah for using her graphics work without pay on his Blockbuster movie, “Living in Bondage” has finally been compensated.

    The said lady took to the social media platform to claim that most of the graphics used were hers and she wasn’t paid as the former media manager of the set who hired her was fired.

    According to her, the guy who hired her claimed he wasn’t paid either.

    However, she has taken to same platform to give an update.

    She revealed that the said former media manager who hired her was passing her works as his to the team, and they knew nothing about her. She also added that she has been compensated accordingly.

    She wrote:

    “UPDATE Twitter, I made that thread not to indict anybody but to sensitize about the issue and I am grateful that everyone was supportive to me. I didn’t have a direct contact to Ramsey or the crew that is why I used social media. You can see I even tagged the wrong handle.”

    “Thank you so much to everyone who have helped me with this. Thank you @HenshawKate I really don’t know everyone’s handles but I am utterly grateful.”

    “For those who do not know that I made an update on a new tweet. I have been contacted and compensated. I really wanna thank everyone of you for your Retweets and support. Thanks a lot.”

  • Tonto Dikeh opens up on the hatred she had for her late mother for years

    Tonto Dikeh opens up on the hatred she had for her late mother for years

    Popular Nollywood actress, Tonto Charity Dikeh, popularly known as king Tonto has opened up the the hatred she had for her late mother.

    According to the mother of one, she only forgave her mother 8 years ago and let go of everything.

    Tonto who lost her mother at a very tender age said the hatred for her late mum started after her death.

    The Rivers born YouTuber made this shocking revelation in a new episode of her YouTube series, “Grub and Rub with king Tonto”.

    According to her, she hated her mum for dying and leaving her at that tender age.

    Tonto also revealed that she grew up with that resentment and hatred for her until she turned 28.

    She added that she was often scared that she was going to leave her own son behind just like her mother left her.

    Tonto then revealed that she got professional help when she turned 28, and was able to let go of everything.

  • BBNaija ex-housemate, Leo DaSilva, gives advice against having stupid partner

    BBNaija ex-housemate, Leo DaSilva, gives advice against having stupid partner

    Former BBNaija reality TV star, Leo Dasilva has advised against marrying someone who is stupid because the marriage will be affected.

    According to him, people who get influenced by outside factors can really become problematic in marriage.

    He wrote: “Whatever you people do, don’t date stupid people talk less of marrying stupid people. You shouldn’t be spending your life with someone that can easily be manipulated or easily swayed by opinions from outsiders. It will cause a problem for your life.

    “Imagine someone that watches a TV show that makes them think men love to be stressed, that’s how you should express love to us. She kan start to dey show you pepper. Tv dey influence the love of your life. Lol. You’re in love with an idiot.

  • Life is such a temporary space – Toyin Abraham philosophizes

    Life is such a temporary space – Toyin Abraham philosophizes

    Nollywood actress, Toyin Abraham has taken time to reflect on the meaning of life which has made her realize that it is a temporary space.

    In an Instagram post, Toyin Abraham wondered how people plan for days and month ahead as if they don’t know that all lies in Gd’s eyes.

    She wrote: “The past few days have got me rethinking and reflecting on life in a totally new dimension. I looked at myself, looked at life and everything and it hits me so hard that life is so vain.

    “No wonder it is so easy for us to exist in another day as if yesterday didn’t happen. Lóòótọ́, everybody knows that ayé ó lọ bí ọ̀pá ìbọn, ìgbà ó lọ bí òréré, bíntí láyé, but how often do we remember these words and act accordingly every waking day?

    “My understanding of life has hit differently during this short period. Ah! Ó má da kí ènìyàn l’àròjinlẹ̀ o. If one is thoughtful, one will see the irony of life so glaringly. Life is a such a temporary space, but we keep chasing after things that are here today, but gone tomorrow hoping we can make them permanent. Who are we? ènìyàn lásán who cannot even predict what will happen today talk more of tomorrow?

    “We plan six months as if tomorrow is promised. My dears, ayé ni àdììtú tí Olódùmarè fi ju ẹ̀dá lọ. We make plans but only God can bring it to pass. So, I asked myself, Oluwatoyin, why are you chasing shadows when God is the one that holds your life?

    “This is one thing I’ve come to realise, not everything that glitters is gold and there is no forever in affluence because the truth is, kò sì ẹni tó lè ra ayé gbé. I have found my peace in knowing that whatever God has destined to be mine will be mine ‘cos at the end of the day, only God truly has the control.

    “Dear #ToyinTitans, life is so ordinary, it is how we live that makes it extraordinary. Live purposefully”.