CLIENT: DEMAND.FILM
OUTLET: ABC TV NEWS BREAKFAST
An Australian film director travelled to China to explore the country's wedding industry, which is now worth more than $80 billion annually.
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CLIENT: DEMAND.FILM
OUTLET: ABC TV NEWS BREAKFAST
An Australian film director travelled to China to explore the country's wedding industry, which is now worth more than $80 billion annually.
CLIENT: DEMAND.FILM
OUTLET: THE MORNING SHOW
Move over Crazy Rich Asians, there's a new film in town exploring the real billionaires of the east. China Love explores the country's $80 billion wedding industry, and zooms in on the new trend of the pre-ceremony photo shoot which can set couples back half a million dollars. Find out where you can see China Love here.
CLIENT: DEMAND.FILM
OUTLET: NEWS.COM.AU
THEY’RE the real-life Crazy Rich Asians splashing out up to half a million dollars on outrageously lavish “pre-wedding” photo shoots.
Whether underwater, suspended in mid-air from wires like a scene from The Matrix, or on the Antarctic ice under the southern lights, Allen Shi is the man who makes it happen.
Dubbed the “Godfather of the pre-wedding photo industry” in China, the 38-year-old has risen from absolute poverty to turning over $2 billion through his company The Jiahao Group in less than eight years.
DL COMMS was honoured to have worked alongside the Chapel Street Precinct team to bring this year's PROVOCARÉ Festival of the Arts to life - one of the biggest PR projects we've ever worked on. Just in case you weren't able to attend, check out this video to get a taste of what you missed out on! 10 days in 50 seconds.
CLIENT: DEMAND.FILM
OUTLET: THE GUARDIAN INTERNATIONAL
It was October 1984 and Peter Garrett, the frontman for Midnight Oil, should have been riding high. The band’s fifth album, Red Sails in the Sunset, had just topped the Australian charts – the band’s first number one.
Instead, he was restless and preoccupied. In his memoir, Big Blue Sky, he admitted he hadn’t contributed much by way of music to the album, recorded in Tokyo.
When it was complete, he and his partner Doris visited Hiroshima.
CLIENT: DEMAND.FILM
OUTLET: POLKA DOT BRIDE
If you’ve ever travelled to the world’s most famous locations and seen Chinese bridal couples posing for over-the-top photo shoots, there’s no need to congratulate them yet for their Big Day. Why? Because often the actual wedding could still be another six months away!
What you’re witnessing is the cornerstone of China’s massive $80 billion wedding industry: the pre-wedding photo shoot. This trend is so huge, couples try to outdo each other with exotic locations and price tags to match. While many couples are happy to pay a few thousand dollars for a set of wedding images, China’s jet set have been known to pay up to $500,000 for a series of international, on-location shoots (think an Antarctic backdrop for that kind of price)!
CLIENT: DEMAND.FILM
OUTLET: SUNDAY TELEGRAPH
CLIENT: DEMAND.FILM
OUTLET: THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER
The Australian distributor, which is about to launch in Germany, will use Screencreds to pay fans for watching and sharing trailers and promoting new releases.
Demand Film, an Australia-based cinema-on-demand distributor, has launched a new cryptocurrency, called Screencreds, to reward users who watch and promote trailers for their upcoming releases.
Demand Film is rolling out the new currency ahead of its launch in Germany on Tuesday. Founded in 2016, Demand Film already operates across the English-speaking world, organizing single-event theatrical screenings for feature films and documentaries based on online user demand. The German launch marks the company's first foray into a non-English language territory.
CLIENT: DEMAND.FILM
OUTLET: DAILY TELEGRAPH
THIS is the photo that showcased the toughness of the Hawaiian Ironman and put the sport of triathlon on the international map.
It’s also the moment that planted a flag for all female athletes and one that I’ll acknowledge at the start line of the 2018 Patagonian Marathon in four weeks time.
To be a female athlete in these times, professional or amateur, is to be part of a seismic shift in the narrative of what it means to be a woman.
CLIENT: DEMAND.FILM
OUTLET: NINE'S WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS
The image of Julie Moss crawling across the finish line for second place at the 1982 Ironman in Hawaii became an iconic moment in the sport of long distance triathlon.
Now almost 40 years later, Moss recounts that awe-inspiring photo.
"I was literally a few yards from the finish line and had to crawl over and watch others finish," Moss told Wide World of Sports.