Showing posts with label Kim Kardashian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kim Kardashian. Show all posts

Saturday, 7 August 2021

Kanye West has claimed Kim Kardashian is ‘still in love with’ him in new Donda track



Kanye West has claimed that Kim Kardashian still has feelings for him in a new track premiered at a Donda event.

On Thursday (5 August), the rapper held his second Donda listening party at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, revealing a new song on his 10th studio album – thought to be titled “Lord I Need You”.

The song references the couple’s ongoing divorce. “Time and space is a luxury / But you came here to show that you’re still in love with me,” West raps, appearing to reference how Kardashian attended both of his listening events for the album with their children.

He also debuted updated lyrics to the song “Love Unconditionally”, changing the original words of “I’m losing my family” to “I’m losing all my family / Darling, come back to me”.

Other lyrics in the song include: “She’s screaming at me / Honey, why could you leave? / Darling, how could you leave? / Come back tonight, baby / Come back tonight, darling, please / Darling, how could you leave?”

Donda, which is named after West’s late mother, has suffered multiple delays and was most recently scheduled for release on 23 July, but the album never manifested.

It was then supposed to come out Friday 6 August, but at the time of writing it has still not materialised.

Donda is West’s first album since the release of his 2019 gospel album Jesus Is King and since Kardashian filed for divorce in February after six years of marriage.

Saturday, 17 September 2016

Kim Kardashian shows massive boobs as she attends Kanye West concert in Miami


Kim Kardashian showed massive boobs as she attended her husband's concert in Miami, Florida on Friday night. She stepped out in a see through silver dress, brown boots and a black purse.



Tuesday, 30 August 2016

Kim Kardashian is paid $75,000 to Love a Brand on Instagram


The millions of people who follow Kim Kardashian West and her sisters on social media have become accustomed to seeing them praise everything from fat-burning tea to gummy vitamins for healthier hair.
“Ever since I started taking two @sugarbearhair a day, my hair has been fuller and stronger than ever!! Even with all the heat and bleaching I do to it!” Khloé Kardashian posted on Instagram this month.
But in the last week, close watchers of the sisters’ accounts may have noticed a small addition to those laudatory messages about the latest miracle product: “#ad.”
For marketers contending with consumers who use ad blockers online and have cut the cord to their TVs in favor of streaming services, social media has become a way to reach an elusive audience. Brands such as Jack in the Box and Red Bull have proved willing to pay thousands of dollars per social media mention to people like the Kardashians and other so-called influencers who command big, loyal followings on services like Instagram, Snapchat and YouTube.
These mentions, however, are often presented as testimonials rather than advertisements, a practice that at least one consumer advocacy group has claimed is deceptive. And the Federal Trade Commission has found itself struggling to articulate exactly how these sorts of paid brand endorsements should be handled to ensure that they are identified as ads.
In the case of Ms. West and her sisters, Khloé and Kourtney Kardashian and Kylie and Kendall Jenner, TruthinAdvertising.org, a nonprofit that fights deceptive advertising, asserted that dozens of Instagram posts from the sisters violated guidelines from the F.T.C. that say it should be “clear and conspicuous” to consumers if a person endorsing a product “has been paid or given something of value.” However, while the agency suggests putting “#ad” or “#sponsored” at the start of those kinds of social media posts, or providing verbal disclosures in videos, there are no hard and fast rules.
“We’re not prescriptive about that,” said Mary K. Engle, the F.T.C.’s associate director for advertising practices. “But it has to be unambiguous.”
For example, simply saying “thank you” to a brand or adding “#sp” or “#spon” probably isn’t clear enough, while saying a brand is a “partner” probably is, she said.
The gray area was on display last week when Kylie Jenner changed a caption on an Instagram picture of a lavish mansion in Turks and Caicos from “Thanks for the birthday home, @airbnb” to “Thanks for the gift of a lovely birthday home, @airbnb.” After a lawyer for the sisters received an Aug. 17 letter from TruthinAdvertising.org, they also edited the captions on at least a dozen other Instagram photos and deleted others.
Michael Kump, a lawyer for the sisters, confirmed on Wednesday that he was talking with TruthinAdvertising.org.
Audiences “have a very visceral reaction to ‘#ad’ or ‘#spon’ or whatever it is, where they don’t want to know people are getting paid for stuff even if they are,” said Jaclyn Johnson, president of creative services at Small Girls PR, where she connects brands like L’Oréal Paris and Urban Decay cosmetics to influencers who have large social media followings. “A few bloggers we work with say, ‘I want you to know, my engagement on posts that are tagged “#ad” or “#spon” get lower engagement than if that wasn’t there.’”
Brands are “toeing this line of how to make it come across as authentic but also in line with the legalese of social media endorsements,” Ms. Johnson added.
Disclosure, which the F.T.C. has been wrestling with for years, has become more important as the money offered to influencers has jumped and the number of sponsored posts on services like Instagram and YouTube has surged.
Captiv8, a company that connects brands to influencers, says someone with three million to seven million followers can charge, on average, $187,500 for a post on YouTube, $75,000 for a post on Instagram or Snapchat and $30,000 for a post on Twitter. For influencers with 50,000 to 500,000 followers, the average is $2,500 for YouTube, $1,000 for Instagram or Snapchat and $400 for Twitter.
The company has counted more than 200,000 Instagram posts a month since January tagged with “#ad,” “#sp” or “#sponsored” — and that does not include those that were not properly marked. Any one brand could be working with thousands of influencers, said Ms. Engle of the F.T.C., and most are not reality television stars.
“Most of them are just more or less regular people,” she said.
Shaun McBride, a 29-year-old who is known as Shonduras on social media, has worked with companies like Google and Red Bull on campaigns on Snapchat, where he said he had about 700,000 followers. His posts feature him doing activities like skateboarding and launching homemade rockets, as well as photos of his infant daughter and cereal.
For top Snapchat users, brands will start rates “at around $10,000” for a story, he said, referring to a collection of images and videos that disappear after 24 hours. He said he did at least five of those a month.
“All brands have always been worried about the F.T.C. guidelines, but I definitely think they’re focusing on it more,” Mr. McBride said. “Recently, it’s like, ‘Can you have ‘#sponsored’ on the first snap and the last snap?’ Or ‘Can you put ‘#ad’ on every single snap in the corner?’”
That makes Mr. McBride even more inclined to make paid posts “very, very obvious.” That could, for instance, mean thanking Red Bull for a free trip to Hawaii. Otherwise, posts with “#ad” or “#sponsored” can give his followers an “uncomfortable feeling,” he said.
Disclosures can also be complicated as brands increasingly give creative leeway to social media stars. Jack in the Box, for example, told investors and analysts in May about its work with the YouTube star Miranda Sings, who created a passionate serenade for one of its hamburgers called “Sexy Buttery Love Song.” It surpassed a million views, and she later performed it in concert, executives told the investors and analysts.
Her YouTube post description includes a line that says, “This video is sponsored by Jack in the Box,” and that same line appears in the corner of her video after the two-minute mark.
In July, Warner Bros. settled charges with the F.T.C. over a marketing campaign it ran with YouTube video game influencers. Part of the problem was that most of the disclosures were visible only if users clicked the “Show More” button under the videos.
“It would definitely be awesome to see specific examples on every single platform so you don’t have issues like the Warner Bros. one,” said Krishna Subramanian, a founder of Captiv8. “If there were very clear definitions of what’s right and what’s wrong, then we as an industry could embrace it and help move things forward.”


Tuesday, 23 August 2016

According to Forbes, Taylor Swift is the world's highest-paid celebrity


Taylor Swift has topped Forbes' annual list of the 100 highest-paid celebrities.

With a $170m (£130m) fortune, the singer-songwriter is ahead of Adele, who's at number nine with $80.5m (£61.9m), Madonna is in 12th spot with $76.5m (£58.8m) and Rihanna at number 13 with $75m (£57.7m).
Taylor's 1989 World Tour earned more than $200m (£154m) last year.
The star's ex-boyfriend Calvin Harris is in 21st spot with $63m (£48.4m).
Other top 10 earners include boy band One Direction at number two with $110m (£84.6m), actor-comedian Kevin Hart at number six with $87.5m (£67.3m) and US radio DJ Howard Stern at number seven with $85m (£65.4m).

Kim Kardashian is featured on the magazine's cover.
She's number 42 on the list with $51m (£39.2m).
Forbes says 40% of her pay this year came from her mobile game Kim Kardashian: Hollywood.
The game's maker, Glu Mobile, is scheduled to release an app starring Taylor Swift next year. 

Katy Perry is at number 63 with $41m (£31.5m).
"The world's 100 highest-paid celebrities pulled in $5.1bn (£3.9bn) pre-tax over the past 12 months, more than the GDP of Belize, Gambia and Bhutan combined," Forbes said.
Magazine editor Zack O'Malley Greenberg said live entertainment continues to be a major cash draw.
"From soccer games in Spain to concerts in China, fans are willing to shell out to see big names - and this is driving the celebrity economy to ever greater heights," he said in a statement.
On the Hollywood front, Jennifer Lawrence was the industry's highest-paid actress for the second consecutive year, earning $46m (£35.1m), a slight drop from the $52m (£39.7m) The Hunger Games star banked the year before. 
Jennifer Lawrence
Actor Dwayne Johnson wrestled the highest-paid actor spot from Iron Man's Robert Downey Jr, earning $64.5m (£49.3m), largely thanks to the billion-dollar Fast and Furious franchise and the surprising success of 2015's San Andreas movie.
Many athletes also made the list, including Portuguese footballer Cristiano Ronaldo ($88m - £67.2m), tennis player Roger Federer ($68m - £51.9m), and British F1 driver Lewis Hamilton ($46m - £34.9m).
There are other Brits at 18 (Rolling Stones), 25 (Paul McCartney), 34 (Gordon Ramsay), 44 (Muse), 60 (Rory McIlroy), 61 (Elton John), 67 (Mumford & Sons), 77 (Gareth Bale) and 82 (Ed Sheeran).

Top 10 highest-paid celebrities

1. Taylor Swift - $170m (£130m)
2. One Direction - $110m (£84.6m)
3. James Patterson (Author) - $95m (£72.3m)
4. Dr Phil McGraw (US TV personality) and Cristiano Ronaldo - $88m (£67m)
6. Kevin Hart - $87.5m (£66.6m)
7. Howard Stern - $85m (£65.4m)
8. Lionel Messi - $81.5m (£62.1m)
9. Adele - $80.5m (£61.9m)
10. Rush Limbaugh (US entertainer) - $79m (£60.1m)



Wednesday, 10 August 2016

Kim Kardashian West Worried About Catching Zika During Her Family Trip to Cuba




Kim Kardashian West Worried About Catching Zika During Her Family Trip to Cuba
Kim Kardashian West worried about the possibility of catching the Zika virus during her family trip to Cuba in May.

While driving through the streets of Havana with older sister Kourtney Kardashian and her assistant Stephanie, the 35-year-old mother of two asks in the E! clip, "I wonder if there's like a test we can get for Zika like when we get back home to clear everyone's heads?"

The duo traveled to Cuba in the spring with their children, younger sister Khloé Kardashian and Kanye West.