Connect with us

Entertainment

Coco Gauff is gearing up to release her second signature shoe with New Balance, the Andscape

Published

on

Behind the scenes of certainly one of the busiest periods of her young profession, 20-year-old tennis star Coco Gauff patiently prepared for the launch of her second signature shoe with longtime sponsor New Balance.

On Aug. 21, the Boston-based apparel company unveiled Gauff’s New Balance CG2 ahead of her return to the U.S. Open as the defending women’s singles champion. At last yr’s Open, Gauff wore her debut signature shoe, the CG1, en route to winning her first profession Grand Slam since turning pro and signing with New Balance at age 14.

“I won my first major in the CG1, so that shoe will always be special to me,” Gauff told Andscape via email. “Having a signature shoe in tennis is a dream come true, and being able to build on the first CG2 is another milestone I’m proud of.”

New Balance will officially release the CG2 for $170 a pair, a yr after celebrating Gauff’s Grand Slam victory with an ad campaign.

“As a brand, we were prepared for Coco’s first Grand Slam win with a campaign that we were excited to launch as soon as she reached that big milestone,” Evan Zeder, New Balance’s tennis marketing manager, told Andscape via Zoom. “But ultimately, every little thing that got here out of her first Grand Slam win was more necessary to us. Coco is someone who all eyes are on now as she continues to transcend tennis.

“She’s one of the best players in the world, with one of the most coveted trophies,” Zeder said. “So how do we continue to grow, not just from a marketing perspective, but from a product perspective? That’s where CG2 comes in.”

Even though the shoe was released in late August, number 2 tennis player in the world is not expected, nor is she contractually obligated, to debut her CG2 on court at the last major tournament of the yr.

“There’s no pressure for Coco to wear the CG2 at the U.S. Open,” Zeder said. “For us, the approach will always be about how Coco can feel her best and most confident on the court. We know she loves her new shoes. But in this current window, she’s focused on winning while we continue to shape her personality by delivering authentic stories.”

Gauff’s upcoming US Open appearance will probably be her sixteenth tournament in 2024. a busy eight-month scheduleShe has played tennis in 11 countries, including at the 2024 Paris Olympics, where she served as the U.S. flag bearer during the opening ceremony.

“This year hasn’t given Coco a chance to stop,” Zeder told Andscape. “Her schedule has been so crazy that we’ve tried our greatest not to interrupt her, not to distract her, not to overdo it. We’ve tried to plan for 2024, knowing how busy she’s going to be and that she’s going to be covering and doing other supporting things after she wins her first Grand Slam.

“There’s a lot of internal dialogue and conversations going on with her team about making sure that Coco doesn’t do anything that gets in the way of her main goal of winning tennis matches,” he said. “That’s not to say we didn’t say, ‘We’re launching a new shoe and we need feedback.’ But we hope that Coco doesn’t feel any stress or anxiety about working with New Balance.”

Taking under consideration industry standard timeline of 18 to 24 months to design and launch a signature modelInitial discussions about the New Balance CG2 began in November 2022, about 4 months after Gauff’s first shoe went on sale in July 2022. That means the design process for Gauff’s second signature model began almost a yr before she won her first Grand Slam title at the 2023 US Open.

“We had literally just released her first shoe, and then almost immediately started talking to Coco about the next iteration,” Zeder recalls. “So I think Coco was initially a little surprised by the long-term life cycles that we have with branded products.”

In the fall of 2022, when New Balance hosted Gauff and her family in Boston for the first official meetings to discuss the design of her second shoe, she had only played a handful of tournaments in her debut CG1. So New Balance had rather a lot to work with Gauff, who signed a multi-year contract extension with the brand to proceed her signature footwear and apparel line in 2022.

“When we started talking about CG1, Coco was 16. When we started creating CG2, she was 18,” Josh Wilder, senior footwear manager for tennis at New Balance, told Andscape. “Players go through a lot of changes from 16 to 18, so we had to give her a variety of options that ranged from what we would consider mild to extreme. We sat down with Coco and her whole family with about three different shoe samples. Then we all just broke them down and expressed what we liked and didn’t like about each one.”

Tennis player Coco Gauff wears the New Balance Coco CG2 shoes in a premiere colorway.

New balance

A big a part of New Balance’s strategy for Gauff is focused on maintaining the continuity of the brand’s team of directors and designers who work on its signature footwear, apparel and marketing.

“Seeing how we build products with her and for her, Coco has been around a lot of our team,” Zeder told Andscape. “Early on, she agreed with us on a lot of things, which I think was just because she was a very well-mannered and polite person. Before, we had to dig into her a lot more. Now, we dig into her less because she understands that when we tell her, ‘We love it when you don’t like something,’ the fact that she doesn’t like something helps us just as much as the fact that she likes something. So honestly, we’re able to go through that process more smoothly because she’s more confident in her style and her ability to give feedback. And she’s also started to understand that our work will evolve and bear fruit over time.”

Gauff has openly expressed his appreciation for working with the established creative team at New Balance. After working together on CG1, Cordell Jordan, a black designer, and Jodi Klann, a female design manager, returned to lead the creation of CG2.

“I’ve been with the brand since I was 14, so they’ve been there for me every step of the way and they really care about me as a person—not just an athlete,” Gauff told Andscape. “The entire New Balance team is amazing to work with, so going through this process a second time was great.”

Early on, while planning her sophomore shoe, Gauff uttered a phrase that has guided New Balance for the past two years.

“Coco specifically told us that she wanted the CG2 to be ‘an evolution, not a revolution,’” Wilder said. “The reason is — and she’s mentioned this a few times over the last few years — not everyone who follows her on Instagram plays tennis. So she wanted her shoe to be very versatile and not just be worn on the court, like a lot of tennis shoes that other brands make.”

The CG2 draws direct inspiration from the New Balance 550, certainly one of the brand’s popular lifestyle models and Gauff’s favorite off-pitch silhouette. Gauff’s New Balance team had to get official approval to incorporate certain elements of the 550 into the CG2’s design, most notably on the shoe’s tongue label.

“It was pretty cool that we went to the lifestyle team and said, ‘Hey, we know the 550 is an iconic shoe and brand, but can we make it tennis and make it Coco?’ And the answer was basically, ‘For Coco? Absolutely,’” Wilder recalls. “When we design with Coco, it’s all about her. We don’t do anything to her shoe or her product unless she says so. Our relationship with her isn’t based on our subjective thoughts, but on her specific opinions and what she wants as she evolves as a person and as a tennis player.”

Gauff had one other notable request for the CG2—she saw samples in private sessions ultimately yr’s US Open before testing the shoe for the first time in early December 2023.

“I wanted people to be able to tell the difference between the CG2 and the CG1,” Gauff said. “The first shoe was supposed to tell my story and let people know who I am. The second shoe still has those little details that are relevant to where I am in my life. My family has always been my biggest supporters and taught me how to lift others up. I hope that fans, especially young girls, feel like I support them when they put this shoe on.”

Tennis player Coco Gauff practices during the second day of the Cincinnati Open at the Lindner Family Tennis Center on August 12 in Mason, Ohio.

Dylan Buell/Getty Images

Soon, the New Balance CG2 will complete its successful development, be launched on the market and at last be the moment when Gauff presents his first shoe.

“I’m very proud and appreciative of the CG1 because it felt like more than just a shoe,” Zeder said. “It was a mid-cut in a tennis category that doesn’t produce many mid-cuts. It represented a woman getting a signature shoe, which we haven’t seen much of historically, especially outside of basketball. And tennis in general hasn’t traditionally produced signature products—a topic we’ve gotten a lot of questions and pushback about. There were people who said, ‘She’s 18 and she’s getting her own shoe, but what else has she won?’ Even though you can look through the NBA and find a ton of signature products made for players who don’t have championship rings. But I think any criticism of creating a signature line for Coco was thrown out the window when she lifted the U.S. Open trophy last year.”

Since first signing Gauff in 2018, New Balance has taken a partnership approach with Coco, which has helped the brand thrive by increasing the variety of athlete signings it has made, including Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Shohei Ohtani, Arizona Cardinals rookie Marvin Harrison Jr. and Brazilian soccer forward Endrick.

“It’s a special time to be at New Balance, and Coco has been with us since we first started authenticating our brand across all sports,” Zeder said. “We can now say with confidence that we have the best athletes in the world wearing New Balance, which is something we’ve never been able to say. For us, Coco has long been a huge part of New Balance’s plan to grow the brand with fewer, bigger, better athletes. And it’s been so much fun to work on creating a product that’s not only unique to the industry and the tennis category, but also unique to Coco.”

“We’re thrilled to have landed our second signature model with Coco,” Zeder said, “and we’re even more thrilled because regardless of her on-court performance, we’re still growing with her.”

Aaron Dodson is a sports and culture author at Andscape. He primarily covers sneakers/apparel and hosts the platform’s Sneaker Box video series. During Michael Jordan’s two seasons with the Washington Wizards in the early 2000s, the Air Jordan 9 “Flint” kicked off his passion for footwear.

This article was originally published on : andscape.com
Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Entertainment

How Much Did Raven-Symoné and Kenan Thompson’s Childhood Fame Cost?

Published

on

By

Raven-Symoné, Kenan Thompson, Child Star, Quiet on the Set, Black child stars, Black Hollywood, theGrio.com

Raven-Symoné and Kenan Thompson discuss the value of childhood fame.

The pair join other child stars including Christina Ricci, Drew Berrymore and Alyson Stoner, who rose to fame dancing alongside Missy Elliott within the 2000s, in a brand new Hulu documentary “Child Star”” co-directed by Demi Lovato.

Symoné, who began her profession at age 3 on “The Cosby Show,” recalls the pressure she felt about her sexuality.

“There was a point in my life when I was asked if I wanted to stop being straight. But it was like the second season of That’s So Raven. It was like the third album,” the 38-year-old recalls.

“I thought to myself, ‘Why are you asking me this question now? Just to make me feel bad if I say yes, when you know I don’t really want to be here right now?'”

Symoné eventually got here out in 2013 and married Miranda Maday in 2020. In the documentary, she also noted how being a baby actor can affect family dynamics.

“But sometimes the dreams of the parents can infiltrate the dreams of the child,” she said. “And you get so caught up in that. Parents forget that children, little children, are performing for their parents. They are performing for the love and affection of their parents.”

Thompson shares this view, adding that children and their families ought to be fully prepared for the consequences of fame.

“It’s not normal for someone in your family to be famous,” Thompson said.

Featured Stories

Thompson, who rose to fame for his appearances in Nickelodeon shows and movies like “Kenan & Kel,” “All That” and “Good Burger,” fell victim to a shady financial advisor who stole all of his earnings. He realized what had happened when he tried to shut on his first home.

“It’s crazy to go from rags to riches and back again,” Thompson said.

Lovato’s documentary is the newest to delve into the real-life experiences of among the industry’s biggest child stars since HBO Max’s “Quiet on the Set: The Darkside of Kids TV” exposed the abuse and exploitation suffered by many Nickelodeon stars. The docuseries was groundbreaking, revealing how producer Dan Schneider created a toxic work environment for performers, writers and others. The film also details instances of significant physical, sexual and emotional abuse experienced by actors, staff and crew members.

Following the discharge of “Silence on the Set,” there have been widespread calls for greater protection of kids within the entertainment industry, which was also reflected in Lovato’s film.

“If I were to talk to my future kids, I would say, ‘Practice, practice, practice,'” Lovato said. And! News on the “Child Star” screening, adding, “Then when you’re old enough, you can follow your dreams and realize them. But it’s important to remember to have a childhood whenever you can.”

This article was originally published on : thegrio.com
Continue Reading

Entertainment

Sasha Obama’s ‘homeless’ look slammed by critics, fans race to defend former first daughter

Published

on

By

sasha obama smoking

Sasha Obama has made probably the most of her time in Los Angeles after transferring from the University of Michigan to the University of Southern California in 2022. After graduating with a level in sociology in 2023, the 23-year-old has develop into a magnet for public attention.

From her workouts to her adult habits, the whole lot the White House’s second black daughter does makes headlines. Sasha never asked for the highlight—her parents did.

sasha obama smoking
Sasha Obama caused a stir on the web after recent photos of her went viral. (Photo: Karwai Tang/WireImage via Getty Images)

Her personal style has come under fire recently, with some fashion critics criticizing Sasha’s casual, “homeless” look. Spotted multiple times around Los Angeles, the second daughter of Barack and Michelle Obama has been showing off her unique style while hanging out with friends, older sister Malia Obama, or just living within the City of Angels.

Recently, HOLA! published photos of the former first daughter running out to do some shopping and having fun with the last days of summer. Dressed in a brown button-down shirt tucked into light blue high-waisted shorts, green slip-ons and her favorite necklace, Sasha looked relaxed and assured.

Despite this, critics have criticized her fashion decisions.

Another outlet, SheKnows covered Sasha’s outfit that called her the “Queen of Street Style.” “Style is not a word that comes to mind,” one commenter wrote when SheKnows covered her outfit, earning her the nickname “Queen of Street Style.”

Another person added: “I mean… Street style queen? In the eyes of the beholder, that’s what I think.”

The insults became increasingly harsh.

Supporters of Obama’s daughter say it’s unfair for the general public to criticize Obama’s daughters for the way they dress and smoke. (Photos: Page Six via Bakgrid and Splashnews.com)

“She looks almost homeless. I don’t know how anyone can see anything ‘chic’ or ‘trendy’ in this,” one critic commented. Another wrote: “She looks awful. You’d think she could afford a fashion coach.”

The criticism wasn’t limited to her attire – there have been also intolerant insults, directed not only at Obama’s younger daughter, but in addition her sister.

“Now you know if they were the daughters of a Republican president, the press would tell us what they really thought. So much flattery, I thought I was watching a Bambi movie.”

But Sasha just isn’t without defenders. Many fans have taken to social media, criticizing the media for its scrutiny of her appearance and demanding her privacy.

“These ladies live their lives, there are no reports of drug or alcohol abuse or legal issues,” one person commented, before mentioning, “Their style is comparable or even better than what I see on others their age these days. They don’t walk around in pajamas and slippers. All the comments below are from people who know they will never be able to keep up with these ladies.”

The resistance didn’t end there.

“Both Sasha and Malia Obama are beautiful young women. They are college students and finding their place in the world. Adults of my generation didn’t like what we considered fashion back then, just as we might not like what Sasha and Malia wear today. Leave them alone,” one defender wrote.

Another user summed up what many were pondering: “I wish the press would leave them alone. They were not elected to public office and deserve privacy.”

Adding: “I also think they should leave Barron Trump alone. They’re not their parents.”

This isn’t the first time people have rallied behind Sasha Obama. Earlier this week, she was spotted smoking, which sparked further criticism. However, supporters once more asked the general public to leave her alone, emphasizing that each Sasha and Malia are adults and may legally do whatever they need.

The Obama girls aren’t the one presidential children to face such intense media scrutiny. Chelsea Clinton faced similar harassment during her father’s presidency, enduring cruel comments about her appearance, especially growing up. The Bush twins, Jenna and Barbara, were often criticized for partying and underage drinking while their father, George W. Bush, was in office.

Even Barron Trump faced public criticism for his behavior and appearance despite being a minor.

Things are different now, as social media has develop into a tool for balancing response with public support. While Sasha and the president’s other children should face harsh judgment, their defenders are louder and more visible than ever, offering a counternarrative to the negative attention.

As one person wrote in Sasha’s defense, “Let them just be themselves!”


This article was originally published on : atlantablackstar.com
Continue Reading

Entertainment

Natasha Rothwell Talks About Her Connection With Reesy Teesy’s Story ‘Who Did I Marry?’

Published

on

By

Natasha Rothwell Reesa Teesa, Natasha Rothwell Who TF did I Marry, Who TF Did I Marry on the TikTok show, Who TF did I marry Reesa Teesa theGrio.com

Natasha Rothwell is ready to tackle latest role as ‘Reesy Teesy’.

As theGrio previously reported, the actress is ready to star in a TV adaptation of the viral TikTok saga “Who TF did I Marry.” While fans reportedly envisioned her starring in a Hollywood adaptation of the viral 52-part series, Rothwell says producing the show was the final thing on her mind.

“I devoured it on the spot,” she said. People Magazine, recalling the primary time she watched videos on social media. “(I didn’t think) ‘Oh, how can I do this?’ I did, (but rather) ‘I want to do everything I can to help this woman get flowers,’ because it was the most vulnerable act of honesty (and) radical vulnerability I’ve ever seen.”

Earlier this yr, social media couldn’t stop talking about Tareasa “Reese Tees” Johnson and her compelling story about her marriage and divorce from the person she calls “Legion.” Sharing candidly the small print of her complicated marriage to “Legion,” who she says is a pathological liar, Johnson’s videos have racked up greater than six million views on social media. So Rothwell wasn’t surprised to see “very competitive” negotiations in Hollywood for Johnson’s story.

Featured Stories

But unlike other producers and executive directors, Rothwell had a singular vision for adapting Who Did I Marry?

“It wasn’t her trauma that interested me and[made me]want to throw my hat in the ring,” she explained. “It was her — who she is as a person, how she survived all of this — and the viral fame, how she survived that. I was like, ‘Oh, this is where I lean in.’”

Having spent nearly eight years developing her recently released Hulu show How to Die Alone , the actress and producer says she took the same approach in negotiations with Johnson. Ultimately, her “if it’s meant to be, it will be” attitude paid off when she was notified that the viral TikTok storyteller desired to work along with her.

“My team called me (and said), ‘She wants to work with you specifically. You saw her in the meeting. She felt seen. It wasn’t opportunistic,'” she added.

But just as Johnson felt seen, the How to Die Alone actress felt seen when the duo met for dinner earlier this month. Feeling like she had met her “twin,” Rothwell compared their interaction to being in a “mutual bubble of love where we just enjoy each other and understand each other and learn about each other.”

“I’m definitely looking forward to approaching her story in a 360-degree way, and not just… telling the story that we’ve all been consuming. I think it’s a lot more interesting than what happened to her,” she said, revealing that the series is “in its very early stages.”

This article was originally published on : thegrio.com
Continue Reading
Advertisement

OUR NEWSLETTER

Subscribe Us To Receive Our Latest News Directly In Your Inbox!

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

Trending