Need to know   06 : 09 :17
Les Girls Les Boys campaign, UK

Need to know
06 : 09 :17

In today’s daily digest: Converse connects with Generation Z, Wendy’s shines a spotlight on multi-generational families, the automated future of manufacturing and other top stories.

1. New gender-fluid lingerie brand offers neutral intimates 2. Converse launches Twitter-based youth series 3. Sewbot set to transform clothes manufacturing 4. Wendy’s speaks to young entrepreneurial Hispanic consumers 5. Coffee consumption in the UK to overtake tea by 2021 6. Thought-starter: Will optimisation enhance or destroy our humanity?

1. New gender-fluid lingerie brand offers neutral intimates

Les Girls Les Boys campaign, UK Les Girls Les Boys campaign, UK
Les Girls Les Boys campaign, UK Les Girls Les Boys campaign, UK
Les Girls Les Boys campaign, UK Les Girls Les Boys campaign, UK
Les Girls Les Boys campaign, UK Les Girls Les Boys campaign, UK
Les Girls Les Boys campaign, UK Les Girls Les Boys campaign, UK

UK – Agent Provocateur co-founder Serena Rees has launched Les Girls Les Boys, a new lingerie brand that taps into the rise of Neutral Culture with a collection of underwear that can be worn by anyone.

The collection marks a departure from the overly sexualised aesthetic traditionally associated with underwear lines and features items such as simple triangle bras, cotton boxers and hoodies.

‘The kids of this generation have such a different view to previous generations on how to dress, how to behave, how to hang out with friends and lovers, and in their attitude towards sex and sexuality,’ says Rees. ‘I looked at what the market was currently offering them and it felt like there was a big disconnect.’

2. Converse launches Twitter-based youth series

Public Access by Converse

Global – The US shoe company has created a web series that taps into celebrity youth culture through collaborations with Generation Z influencers such as Miley Cyrus and Maisie Williams. Billed as a space ‘for big ideas and diverse voices’, Public Access’ celebrity hosts are given free rein to discuss topics they are passionate about.

Pop star Cyrus takes a Flat Age approach, showcasing, 81-year-old circus stunt performer Carla Wallenda and 66-year-old pole-dancing champion Greta Pontarelli. The series will debut on Twitter Live, enabling viewers to comment in real time. For more on the activist mentality emerging among younger consumers, see our Gen Viz macrotrend.

3. Sewbot set to transform clothes manufacturing

Arkansas – A new factory operated by China’s Tianyuan Garments Company, which is scheduled for completion in 2018, will feature a workforce of fully autonomous Sewbots overseen by human supervisors and spread across 21 production lines. Developed by technology company SoftWear Automation, the robots will be capable of making 2.1m t-shirts each year and the factory will be able to compete in terms of cost with companies in countries across the globe that offer factory workers the lowest minimum wage.

While the Sewbot may remove the need for low-skilled garment workers, SoftWear Automation CEO Palaniswamy Rajan believes that it will encourage people to learn artisanal skills that are harder to automate, such as wedding dress design. For more on the rise of automation in the apparel industry, see our Fast Fabrication microtrend.

Sewbot by SoftWear Automation, US Sewbot by SoftWear Automation, US

4. Wendy’s speaks to young entrepreneurial Hispanic consumers

Giant Junior by Wendy’s, US

US – Fast food restaurant chain Wendy’s has launched a series of tv ads that pokes fun at the stereotype that Hispanic consumers tend to live in the family home for longer than other consumers. Far from being disparaging, the campaign depicts these young adults as entrepreneurial ‘Giant Juniors’ looking to get ahead in the world of work while living at home.

Hispanic Millennials are more likely to live in large, multi-generational homes than any other group in the US, according to Univision, and brands such as Wendy’s are increasingly creating campaigns that acknowledge the diversity of the modern family unit.

‘I’m the youngest of three and I was a Giant Junior living in my parents’ house. I was fully functional, with a job,’ says Juan Mantilla, vice-president of strategic planning at Young & Rubicam, the company behind the campaign.

5. Coffee consumption in the UK to overtake tea by 2021

As LS:N Global explored in our Food and Drink Futures Report 2016, coffee culture is growing in popularity globally as more consumers develop a taste for the caffeinated beverage.

In the UK, coffee consumption is predicted to reach more than 91 tonnes in volume sales by 2021, according to Euromonitor, which claims that tea is falling out of favour because tea brands are unable or unwilling to modernise their offer. ‘Younger people do start drinking more coffee because it is perceived as more modern,’ Matthew Barry, beverage analyst at Euromonitor, told Beverage Daily.

6. Thought-starter: Will optimisation enhance or destroy our humanity?

If the innovators of Silicon Valley get their way, future humans will live forever in enhanced bodies with optimised minds. Senior journalist Rebecca Coleman explores how, in becoming more machine than man, we risk losing our humanity.

One of the most startling examples of how we might be altered by Silicon Valley innovation comes from Neuralink, a new company from serial entrepreneur and Tesla founder Elon Musk. Its mission is to create implants that will grow and mesh with the human brain, enabling machine-like information-processing capabilities, as well as direct communication with artificial intelligence (AI). But will people with a Neuralink implant be humanly enhanced or diminished by their assimilation of technology?

While Musk and his Silicon Valley peers are all for this kind of technological innovation, members of the public remain wary, according to research by Pew Research Center. Some 66% and 63% of US adults say they would not want enhancements to their brain or blood, respectively, while 73% believe that brain chips like those proposed by Musk will increase inequality because they will initially only be obtainable by the wealthy.

Read the full Opinion piece to find out more about the ethics of scientific and technological optimisation here.

The Quest for Eternal Life: Right or Wrong? by The Future Laboratory and Unlimited by UBS The Quest for Eternal Life: Right or Wrong? by The Future Laboratory and Unlimited by UBS
Discover More News
Ocado’s Shopping List Stories campaign finds emotional value in the weekly shop

News

Ocado’s Shopping List Stories campaign finds emotional value in the weekly shop

Ocado is reframing grocery shopping as an emotional experience with Shopping List Stories, a new campaign by Uncommon Creative Studio.
Food And Drink : Supermarket : Branding And Advertising
Foresight Friday: Alice Crossley, senior foresight analyst

News

Foresight Friday: Alice Crossley, senior foresight analyst

Every Friday, The Future Laboratory team offers an end-of-week wrap-up of the topics, issues, ideas and virals we’re all talking about. This week, ...
Foresight Friday : Ff : Lionesses
Stat: Netflix confirms anime watching is no longer niche

News

Stat: Netflix confirms anime watching is no longer niche

More than half of Netflix’s 300m global subscribers now watch anime, according to proprietary figures shared by the streamer.
Pop Culture & Media : Youth : Technology
The Faroe Islands bring back the joy of getting lost

News

The Faroe Islands bring back the joy of getting lost

As algorithm-driven travel fuels overtourism, a new initiative is challenging travellers to let go of planning and control.
Travel : Tourism : The Faroe Islands
Thai perfume brand Journal turns fragrance samples into NFC collectables

News

Thai perfume brand Journal turns fragrance samples into NFC collectables

Fragrance brand Journal is rewriting the rules of scent sampling with a wearable fragrance tester that doubles as a social connector.
Beauty : Fragrance : Technology
Stat: Survey finds hardening stances on office attendance are impacting UK staff wellbeing

News

Stat: Survey finds hardening stances on office attendance are impacting UK staff wellbeing

Hardening return-to-office mandates are fuelling anxiety among UK workers, with 38% reporting that media coverage of stricter attendance policies i...
Office : Workplace : Stat
Innovation Debrief 2025–2026 report goes live

News

Innovation Debrief 2025–2026 report goes live

Discover the top 50 innovations acknowledging, driving and anticipating change in our new Innovation Debrief 2025–2026 report. 
Innovation Debrief 2024-2025 : Future Trends 2026 : Cultural Foresight
Joe Wicks’ Activate turns movement into play for kids

News

Joe Wicks’ Activate turns movement into play for kids

Fitness trainer Joe Wicks is swapping live-action workouts for animation with Activate – a lively new series of five-minute fitness bursts designed...
Fitness : Health And Wellbeing : Gen Alpha
IKEA creates open-air library along the Seine in Paris

News

IKEA creates open-air library along the Seine in Paris

IKEA has unveiled the Billyothèque, a pop-up outdoor library transforming a stretch of Paris’s Seine riverbank into a space for slow, serendipitous...
Ikea : Reading Room : Reading Experience
Stat: US teens turn to AI companions for life advice

News

Stat: US teens turn to AI companions for life advice

A new study by Common Sense Media reveals that 72% of US teens aged 13–17 have tried AI companions, with over half now using them regularly.
Technology : AI : Stat
You have 0 free News articles remaining. Sign up to LS:N Global to get unlimited access to all articles.
BECOME A MEMBER
SIGN IN