Need to Know   11 : 04 : 18
Morning Recovery, US

Need to Know
11 : 04 : 18

82Labs offers hangover prevention in a bottle, Virgin Active launches a life-saving exercise class, Tommy John redefines comfortable lingerie.

1. Morning Recovery is an RTD hangover cure 2. Virgin Active Thailand offers a lifeline through exercise 3. Iceland pledges to eradicate palm oil from its products 4. Tommy John tackles uncomfortable underwear 5. Consumers are more positive towards plastic surgery 6. Thought-starter: How can brands adapt to India’s growing luxury market?

1. Morning Recovery is an RTD hangover cure

Morning Recovery, US
Morning Recovery, US
Morning Recovery, US

US – The bottled herbal drink is aimed at reducing the physical consequences of a heavy night of alcohol consumption.

Created by start-up 82Labs, the drink was inspired by founder Sisun Lee’s own experience in South Korea, where late nights of drinking would result in reaching for herbal hangover drinks that were readily available. He returned to the US to find a gap in the market and worked with researchers at the University of Southern California to create a formulation that would prevent the negative side-effects of drinking too much.

The key component is dihydromyricetin (DHM), a flavonoid that is known to improve the liver’s metabolism. Additional ingredients include Korean pear extract, which reduces the amount of sugar and rebalances the amount of vitamin B12 in the body and N-acetylcysteine (NAC), which neutralises toxins in the liver. The combination is designed to detoxify the liver and subsequently reduce any headaches.

82Labs recently introduced Morning Recovery with a more refined formula, after its initial launch last year. The drink epitomises The Optimised Self macrotrend, which examines how consumers are looking for new products and services to hack their biology to help them reach optimal performance.

2. Virgin Active Thailand offers a lifeline through exercise

Virgin Active CPROBIC, Thailand

Thailand – Fitness club Virgin Active is introducing a new exercise class in Thailand to teach its members cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) while they train.

Dubbed CPROBIC, the new exercise class has been created in response to figures that show only 6% of patients suffering cardiac arrest receive CPR before reaching the hospital, largely due to the fact that most consumers have received minimal CPR training and practice.

The 45-minute class, which integrates CPR with balance exercises on a BOSU ball, will be taught by the gym’s CPR-certified trainers. Virgin Active claims that attendees will be able to burn 400 calories, which is similar to an hour-long Kickboxing session, according to the American Council on Exercise.

In our Healthcare Market we examine the brands that are stepping in where governments are failing to help reshape the future of the sector.

3. Iceland pledges to eradicate palm oil from its products

UK – The low-cost supermarket chain, which has already removed palm oil from half of its products, has promised to remove the ingredient from all of its own-brand produce by the end of this year and vowed to absorb all of the additional costs so that consumers will not be affected by price increases.

The move follows a campaign by Greenpeace, which prompted a trip by Iceland managing director Richard Walker to Borneo to witness the deforestation occurring due to unregulated palm oil production. The production process is threatening Indonesia and Malaysia’s orangutan population, where primate numbers have more than halved between 1999 and 2015, with only 70,000–100,000 now remaining.

‘Certified sustainable palm oil does not currently limit deforestation and it does not currently limit the growth of palm oil plantations,’ Walker told the BBC. ‘So until such time as there is genuinely sustainable palm oil with zero deforestation, we are saying no to palm oil.’

In line with Educated Eating, consumers are increasingly interested in the environmental impact that food has at every stage of the production process.

Iceland, UK

4. Tommy John tackles uncomfortable underwear

Tommy John, New York
Tommy John, New York
Tommy John, New York

New York – The men’s underwear brand has launched its first women’s collection, which focuses on the comfort and fit of women’s lingerie.

The line consists of a variety of women’s briefs, boy shorts and camisoles that aim to diminish bunches, rolls and the infamous visible panty line.

Tommy John played with its known tagline, ‘no adjustments needed’, with a new ad, Little Adjustments, that pokes fun at the difficulties women face with their underwear on a daily basis. ‘We want to highlight the uncomfortable truth in a relatable way that no other women’s intimate brand has done before,’ explains Erin Fujimoto, co-founder of Tommy John. The honest yet humorous tone is part of a new tradition of lingerie marketing that is more practical and less focused on sex appeal.

Tommy John is not the only brand tackling comfort in women’s underwear. Everlane recently launched a new campaign that also exalts the simplicity of its lingerie.

5. Consumers are more positive towards plastic surgery

A new study by Zalea indicates a sizable shift in Millennial attitudes towards cosmetic procedures. Social media and celebrity culture are linked to both the increasing visibility and acceptability of these types of procedures. One-tenth (10%) of participants said they would be influenced by celebrity endorsements and social media featured in the top four reasons to try cosmetic treatment.

Driven by the rise of selfie culture, people are spending disproportionately long periods of time studying their faces. This shift is leading consumers to increasingly use injectables to become more camera-ready.

6. Thought-starter: How can brands adapt to India’s growing luxury market?

Brands that look beyond the major Indian metropolises and the millionaire elite will find a large, untapped pool of consumers willing and able to spend on luxury items at the more affordable end of the scale.

India is home to some of the world’s richest people – 47,720 individuals with more than £3.5m ($5m, €4m) in net assets. This number is expected to grow by 71% by 2022. Beyond this circle is a vast and growing group of middle-class consumers with the desire and means to spend on discretionary items. ‘The two top consumer categories – elite and affluent – will become the largest combined segment by 2025, accounting for 40% of consumption,’ Boston Consulting Group said in 2017.

The biggest potential for growth lies in online platforms. For instance, e-commerce company Paytm recently announced plans to launch a mobile luxury platform for international labels such as Gucci and Burberry. Specialist multibrand portals such as Darveys and Rock N Shop are also doing well – with the latter claiming that 30% of its sales come from outside tier 1 and tier 2 cities.

For more on why smaller cities are crucial to the Indian Luxury Market, see the full report here.

28 Kothi hotel, Jaipur
Discover More Daily Signals
Fujifilm’s Look Up campaign positions photography as an antidote to doomscrolling

Daily Signals

Fujifilm’s Look Up campaign positions photography as an antidote to doomscrolling

Fujifilm has launched Look Up, a brand campaign inviting people to put down their phones and approach photography as an act of intentional living.
Technology : Creativity : Tech-Resistance
How Paragon Studio is transforming the in-flight travel experience

Daily Signals

How Paragon Studio is transforming the in-flight travel experience

Paragon Studio has launched Altitude, an in-flight wellness concept combining guided resistance band exercises and mindfulness routines designed fo...
Travel : In-flight Entertainment : Wellness
Stat: Rising memory costs reshape China’s smartphone market

Daily Signals

Stat: Rising memory costs reshape China’s smartphone market

Smartphone sales fell by 13% during this year’s 618 shopping festival – similar to Black Friday – compared to the same period in 2025, because risi...
Statistic : Stat : Retail
KFC leads with emotion over appetite in new campaign

Daily Signals

KFC leads with emotion over appetite in new campaign

KFC has launched Surrender to Tender, a UK and Ireland campaign by Mother to introduce its Tenders & Dips range while debuting the brand’s glob...
KFC : Food : Advertising
Fragrance is the newest frontier of China’s kidult economy

Daily Signals

Fragrance is the newest frontier of China’s kidult economy

Gaming IPs are reshaping China’s fragrance market, with female-oriented romance simulation games emerging as an unlikely but lucrative new category.
Beauty : Fragrance : Gaming
Stat: Holiday demand to boost summer retail spend

Daily Signals

Stat: Holiday demand to boost summer retail spend

Holiday demand is set to support retail spending this summer, despite continued pressure on household finances and concerns about the economy.
Retail : Statistic : Travel & Hospitality
Why M+C Saatchi and Bauer Media Outdoor handed their Pride campaign to the community

Daily Signals

Why M+C Saatchi and Bauer Media Outdoor handed their Pride campaign to the community

M+C Saatchi UK's LGBTQIA+ group Proud and Bauer Media Outdoor have launched Pride is Everything, a multi-market out-of-home campaign running across...
Pride : Advertising & Branding : Brand Identity
Foresight Friday: Rodrigo Tobal Pereira, director of marketing

Daily Signals

Foresight Friday: Rodrigo Tobal Pereira, director of marketing

Every Friday, we offer an end-of-week wrap-up of the topics, issues, ideas and virals we’re all talking about. This week, director of marketing&nbs...
Advertising : Marketing : Branding
Stat: UK shoppers lose four working days a year expecting deliveries

Daily Signals

Stat: UK shoppers lose four working days a year expecting deliveries

British consumers spend an estimated 32 hours a year – the equivalent of four working days –waiting for deliveries, according to new research&...
Shopping : Retail : Post Purchase
MAD//Fest 2026: How entertainment is shaping discovery

Daily Signals

MAD//Fest 2026: How entertainment is shaping discovery

At the annual MAD//Fest marketing festival, which continued today in Shoreditch, London, entertainment emerged as a powerful tool for bui...
Marketing : Advertising And Branding : Global Events
You have 0 free Daily Signals remaining. Sign up to LS:N Global to get unlimited access to all articles.
BECOME A MEMBER
SIGN IN