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Hilda Clark remained the advertising "face" of Coca-Cola until February 1903 when she married Frederick Stanton Flower in New York, taking the name Hilda Clark Flower. [citation needed] Flower was a nephew of New York Governor Roswell P. Flower. Clark had been an active socialite in Boston but retired from the stage when she married. Frederick ...
Charles started her career in British television commercials, having been chosen as the face to launch Coca-Cola's new flagship brand Sprite. She continued in commercials and modelling work. [1] After moving to Australia in the mid-1990s with then boyfriend Scott Michaelson, she landed her first acting role.
She advertised Dasani bottled water from The Coca-Cola Company. As of 2010, she can be seen modeling for Forever 21's maternity line. Richardson appeared in a 2004 advertising campaign for burger chain Carl's Jr./Hardee's in which she ate a Western style burger while riding a mechanical bull to the tune of "Slow Ride" by Foghat. [3] [4]
The beauty of this Coca-Cola ad is that it showed a different side of 'Mean' Joe Greene, a defensive tackle on the Pittsburgh Steelers from 1969 to 1981 who earned his name by being a tough player ...
Prolific commercial and music video director Joe Pytka, who directed the original Pepsi spot, tells Yahoo Entertainment that many people have reached out to him about the reimagining. "Some people ...
Kenya Barris is telling an American story, one can of soda after another. In a new six-minute short film, the writer, director and showrunner, known for his work behind the ABC series “Black-ish ...
After Dispenser, Diet Coke Break commercials went into hiatus for ten years. [9] Following the UK release of Coke Zero in 2006—which was deliberately being marketed at men—the campaign returned with a new advert, Lift, to repromote Diet Coke towards the brand's female consumers. [12] An international search to find a new "hunk" began in 2006.
Coca-Cola launched its holiday commercial, “The Holiday Magic is coming.” on Monday. The 30-second video is a tribute to the company’s 1995 holiday commercial, “Holidays Are Coming.”