‘We Just Got Banksy-ed’: ‘Girl With Balloon’ Sells For $1.4M Before Self-Destructing
Consumerism
Burberry, H&M, and Nike destroy unsold merch. An expert explains why.
"The British luxury brand Burberry brought in $3.6 billion in revenue last year β and destroyed $36.8 million worth of its own merchandise."
"In July 2018, the brand admitted in its annual report that demolishing goods was just part of its strategy to preserve its reputation of exclusivity."
"Shoppers did not react well to this news. People vowed to boycott Burberry over its wastefulness, while members of Parliament demanded the British government crack down on the practice. The outrage worked: Burberry announced two weeks ago it would no longer destroy its excess product, effective immediately."
"Yet Burberry is hardly the only company to use this practice; it runs high to low, from Louis Vuitton to Nike. Brands destroy product as a way to maintain exclusivity through scarcity, but the precise details of who is doing it and why are not commonly publicized. Every now and then, though, bits of information will trickle out. Last year, for example, a Danish TV station revealed that the fast-fashion retailer H&M had burned 60 tons of new and unsold clothes since 2013."
We wonβt save the Earth with a better kind of disposable coffee cup
"The problem is not just plastic: it is mass disposability. Or, to put it another way, the problem is pursuing, on the one planet known to harbour life, a four-planet lifestyle. Regardless of what we consume, the sheer volume of consumption is overwhelming the Earthβs living systems."
Earth Overshoot Day Shows We’re Devouring The Planet’s Resources Much Too Fast | HuffPost
"We need 1.7 planets to fulfill our appetite for stuff. And it's getting worse."
Buy-ology, the truth and lies about what we buy
I just finished reading “Buy-ology, the truth and lies about what we buy” by Martin Lindstrom. πOne of the most notable conclusions of the book is summed up in this sentence:
“In other words, overt, direct, visual explicit anti-smoking messages πdid more to encourage smoking than any deliberate campaign that Marlboro π¬or Camel π«could come up with.”
Buying The Package (previously unreleased) – YouTube
"You're buying the package,
You're buying the dream,
You pay for the ads
On the television screen,
They sell you a story,
They sell you a mood,
But what they don't deliver is food."