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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=91TT2097>
<title>
Sep. 23, 1991: What's It All About, Calvin?
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
Sep. 23, 1991 Lost Tribes, Lost Knowledge
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BUSINESS, Page 44
ADVERTISING
What's It All About, Calvin?
</hdr><body>
<p>Jeans genius Klein pumps lots of cash and controversy--but not
many jeans--into a magazine supplement
</p>
<p> "Jeans," intones Calvin Klein, "are about sssexx."
</p>
<p> He first discovered that truth in 1980, when 15-year-old
Brooke Shields cooed that nothing came between her and her
Calvins, "nothing." That ad campaign ruffled a lot of feathers,
sold a lot of jeans and spawned a hypothalamus-numbing host of
imitators.
</p>
<p> Though Klein has since been distracted by selling perfumes
with names like Obsession and Escape, he's once again focusing
on the jeans war, and his opening salvo is a 116-page ad
supplement that accompanies the October issue of Vanity Fair.
It is touted as the largest ad supplement for a consumer
magazine in U.S. history, and industry sources say Klein spent
more than $1 million to produce and place it.
</p>
<p> Totally textless, utterly black-and-white, the thick,
glossy portfolio photographed by Bruce Weber is a jumbled
pastiche of naked bodies, black leather jackets, Harleys and
tattoos, with cameo roles by a crying baby and a urinal. Biker
chicks straddle their "hogs" and rough up their men. Rippling
hunks wield electric guitars like chain saws, grab one another,
sometimes themselves. Oh, yes, there are even a few incidental
photographs of jeans, most of which are being wrestled off taut
bodies or used as wet loincloths.
</p>
<p> "The book," says Klein, "is a fantasy about a rock
concert. You see the band onstage, backstage, after the show.
The wild and crazy groupies. The people living in the motorcycle
world. It's about excitement. Hot and sweaty rock 'n' rollers
who wear nothing but jeans and skin. It's about denim. People
love it."
</p>
<p> It's also about money. And troubled retailers and
advertising executives love that. Women's Wear Daily reported
that Klein plans to spend about $10 million on jeans advertising
this year alone. Last week he staged his first all-jeans fashion
show--based on the supplement and featuring a fabric dubbed
"dirty denim"--in New York City. Magazine publishers, buffeted
by an industry-wide decline of 10.4% in ad pages, are also
heartened. Images from the supplement will be appearing as ads
in various magazines for months to come.
</p>
<p> The idea of attaching advertising supplements to a
magazine with plastic wrap caught on in the mid-1980s, though
the number has waned because of expensive postal regulations.
Even Klein's booklet will be wrapped with only 250,000 or so
copies of Vanity Fair (out of a total circulation of about
850,000), and will not be available at newsstands except in
Southern California and metropolitan New York.
</p>
<p> Is Klein's splash going to grow into a full-blown trend?
"I'm sure there will be imitators," says Ronald Galotti,
publisher of Vanity Fair. "But we probably won't do it again."
Fashion magazines, however, have been hard hit by the recession,
and are likely to be inspired. Elle slapped a videotape, a
scented card and an order form for Estee Lauder's SpellBound
perfume onto 14,000 copies of its September issue in 10 cities.
"It's terrific. The excitement factor works," says Elle's
publisher, Lawrence Burstein, who says he's working on similar
ideas for the future.
</p>
<p> Not everyone is enthralled. Some find the material
offensive, the message obscure, the numbers questionable. "Are
sales going to offset the cost of Calvin's 116 pages? I suspect
not," says a magazine-publishing executive. "His supplement is
more of an ego piece." But Klein has no doubts. "People get the
message," he says enthusiastically. "It's big, it's sexy and
it's so right."
</p>
<p> By Alex Prud'homme
</p>
</body></article>
</text>