Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Nike ran an ad during last night's Academy Awards that, in our book, took home the award for Best Commercial. It inspires women to "dream crazier," and that's exactly what we've been inspired to do.
A post shared by Nike (@nike) The student’s dynasty claims hold up, too. The women’s team has now won seven straight gold medals and has won 55 straight Olympic games .
The advertising agency Wieden+Kennedy began its partnership with Nike, Inc. in 1982 and, aside from a short period in the mid-1980s, has held the account ever since. [1] In the early years of the partnership, campaigns were focused almost exclusively at male demographics, leaving the market for women's sportswear to rivals such as Reebok and LA Gear. [2]
Although Nike started aggressively advertising towards women in the 1990s, they were not the first athletic company to promote their products towards women. According to Shelly Lucas's article, "Nike's Commercial Solution: Girls, Sneakers, and Salvation", "In 1981, Reebok, one of Nike's competitors in the athletic shoe industry, chose to make ...
Nike's new advertisement, which is now going viral, proves age is just a number. That's because their inspirational message features an 86-year-old woman who is in better shape than any of us will ...
"Bo Knows" was an advertising campaign for Nike cross-training shoes that ran in 1989 and 1990 and featured professional baseball and American football player Bo Jackson. It was also used as an advertising campaign for EA Sports' Madden NFL 22. Jackson was the first athlete in the modern era to play professional baseball and football in the ...
Nike has responded to growing pushback from female athletes who have condemned the company for using transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney in an advertisement featuring women’s apparel.
"Second Generation" [a] is a 2006 television advertisement introducing Nike's Air Jordan XXI brand of basketball shoes. [3] The ad depicts signature moves from Michael Jordan's NBA career, recreated in the present day by twelve young basketball players around the world.