News 20.09.2018

Need to Know

Ikea considers multi-functional cars, gaming meets adult entertainment and the working habits of today’s teens.

Kenzo launches a 30-minute cinematic campaign

The EVERYTHING, Fall/Winter 2018 campaign by KENZO

New York – The luxury house’s latest campaign, The Everything, is a 30-minute teenage sci-fi film.

The film is the directorial debut of the brand’s co-creative director Humberto Leon, and stars well-known names in cinema such as Milla Jovovich and Spike Jonze. While doubling as an ad for the brand’s latest collection, The Everything takes the concept of a fashion film to the next level, offering a full narrative that follows a clutch of teenage siblings with supernatural powers.

Kenzo’s campaigns are known for their often surrealist themes. Last year, the brand hired actor Natasha Lyonne to write and direct a Vaudevillian-inspired13-minute film. As its campaigns get longer and increasingly cross into the territory of cinema, Kenzo continues to go beyond traditional product placement.

Ikea imagines the future of Spaces on Wheels

Space 10 x Foam Space 10 x Foam
Space 10 x Foam Space 10 x Foam

Sweden – The retailer’s innovation lab Space10 has designed a series of seven speculative car interiors for tomorrow’s autonomous vehicles.

The project, created in collaboration with design studio Foam, imagines a future where self-driving vehicles offer various functions beyond human transportation. The concepts include a retail interior featuring Ikea products, a convenience store car and even a moving hotel. Currently, Spaces on Wheels only exists in augmented reality, but can be ‘ordered’ to a customer’s house using an iPhone. Through the phone, users can then explore how their chosen concept car will look parked on their doorstop.

‘When spaces are able to move themselves, they would no longer just be means of transportation, but could be tailored to the very activities we spend most time on – while moving you from A to B,’ says Kaave Pour, co-founder of Space10.

As explored in our macrotrend Subconscious Commerce, brands such as Toyota and Pizza Hut are also exploring future retail concepts housed within autonomous vehicles.

Steam launches an Adults Only game category

Global – The first 100% uncensored game for adults is now available to play via games platform Steam.

While video games that include sexual interactions and nudity have previously been blocked by Steam, an erotic ‘visual novel’ titled Negligee: Love Stories has been approved as part of its new filtering system, Adults Only.

Steam currently restricts sexually-explicit gaming content amid concerns that younger users could be exposed to it, however the Adults Only filter demonstrates wider recognition of games that blur the boundaries between entertainment and pornography.

The filter, which users must manually turn on via their settings, features several stages of verification and trigger warnings before giving access to such games. Despite this, a number of countries including Germany, Australia, South Korea and Japan have already exercised local laws to prevent Love Stories' availability.

To read how pornography could infiltrate the mass media, read our Opinion piece.

Negligee: Love Stories game on Steam

LDF 2018: Can data be used for better urban design?

The Data and Life of Great Future Cities, Roca Gallery, London The Data and Life of Great Future Cities, Roca Gallery, London
The Data and Life of Great Future Cities, Roca Gallery, London The Data and Life of Great Future Cities, Roca Gallery, London

London – In light of GDPR and the Cambridge Analytica scandal, Roca London Gallery has launched a new exhibition that focuses on how data can positively shape urban design.

Part of this year’s London Design Festival, The Data and Life of Great Future Cities exhibition explores how, when used responsibly, data can improve human’s experience of cities. Treepedia, for example, uses Google Street View to compare tree canopies in cities around the world, while the Friendly Cities project analyses phone usage in Singapore to understand how people ‘bond’ through deliberate connectivity with friends or ‘bridge’ via chance encounters with strangers. In turn, such data is being used to understand which places and spaces bring city-dwellers together.

Speaking at the exhibition, Fábio Duarte, a research scientist of the MIT Senseable City Lab, explained: ‘Our research shows that using aggregated, anonymised data opens up new possibilities of designing cities that are better adapted to human needs.’

To explore how data from devices and digital public feedback could influence our future cities, explore our Branded Cities report.

Stat: More 18-year-olds are unemployed than working

The Office for National Statistics has released a new study entitled Being 18 in 2018, which reviews the lifestyles of UK residents born in the year 2000. It found that the number of 18-year-olds currently unemployed or not looking for work outnumbered those who are working. Furthermore, the findings show that the number of 18 year’s old working – at 43% – is a significant decrease from the start of the millennium, when 60% of the age group were employed.

As Generation Z continue to find new ways to make money through methods such as fashion resale or sponsored social media content, working attitudes are shifting. For more on this topic, look out for our upcoming Youth macrotrend, launching in October.

Thought-starter: Are young people still reading books?

Despite the time they spend online young people still want traditional book formats. Foresight writer Rhiannon McGregor navigates the brands and influencers using digital channels to inspire offline reading habits.

While a host of brands are developing literary formats to better suit teenagers’ diminishing attention spans, traditional books remain popular among young readers as they seek escapism from our fast-paced, technology-driven world.

With a net revenue of £2.19bn ($2.87bn, €2.46bn), young adult (YA) fiction is one genre that is doing particularly well. BookTubers Lucy Powrie, 18, and Christine Riccio – who at 27 is not a member of Generation Z but whose content largely appeals to a teenage audience – have amassed 23,000 and almost 400,000 subscribers respectively, as they discuss their favourite novels through playful formats like Guess the Plot.

One library that is thinking more creatively about how to offer this new generation of readers a 21st-century experience is the New York Public Library. It recently launched its Insta Novels initiative, in which it merges the visually-driven online world of Instagram with the offline world of books.

Read the full microtrend, Young Biblophiles, as part of our Youth sector focus.

Insta Novels by Mother New York for The New York Public Library
Previous News Articles
Sonic Heirloom explores preservation of memories through sound

News

Sonic Heirloom explores preservation of memories through sound

Design studios Map Project Office and Father have unveiled Sonic Heirloom, a speculative project exploring the intersection of sound and memory.
Design : Health & Wellness : Technology
Merit and Completedworks unite for sculptural jewellery line

News

Merit and Completedworks unite for sculptural jewellery line

Merit and Completedworks have unveiled their limited-edition jewellery collection to complement Merit’s debut fragrance, Retrospect.
Fashion : Luxury : Beauty
Pinterest predicts sea witchery will redefine style in 2025

News

Pinterest predicts sea witchery will redefine style in 2025

Pinterest’s annual trend report, Pinterest Predicts, anticipates a shift towards maximalism and individual expression in 2025.
Fashion : Pop-culture & Media : Society
Stat: Family-friendly films revive US box office sales

News

Stat: Family-friendly films revive US box office sales

Family-friendly films dominated the US box office in 2024, with PG-rated titles accounting for a third of ticket sales – the highest share since 1995.
Society : Pop-culture & Media : Youth
Netflix South Korea tackles rugby with new reality show Rugged Rugby: Conquer or Die

News

Netflix South Korea tackles rugby with new reality show Rugged Rugby: Conquer or Die

Netflix is set to premiere Rugged Rugby: Conquer or Die on 10 December, aiming to introduce Korean audiences to the intense world of rugby.
Sports & Leisure : Society : Pop-culture & Media
The Rolling Stones debuts a fragrance that captures the spirit of a cultural revolution

News

The Rolling Stones debuts a fragrance that captures the spirit of a cultural revolution

In an unexpected yet fitting evolution of their iconic brand, The Rolling Stones has launched its first fine fragrance.
Beauty : Pop-culture & Media : Luxury
Tesla builds teleoperations team for upcoming robotaxi service

News

Tesla builds teleoperations team for upcoming robotaxi service

Tesla is currently assembling a teleoperations team as it prepares to launch its robotaxi service.
Mobility : Technology : Society
Stat: TikTok drives holiday shopping trends among users with gift inspiration 

News

Stat: TikTok drives holiday shopping trends among users with gift inspiration 

TikTok is shaping the way its users discover and purchase holiday gifts, with 55% of shoppers finding inspiration on the platform, according to a s...
Retail : Pop-culture & Media : Society
Wyld launches UK’s first floating public sauna in Liverpool

News

Wyld launches UK’s first floating public sauna in Liverpool

The UK’s first floating public sauna, Wyld Sauna, has opened at Princes Dock, Liverpool.
Design : Health & Wellness : Architecture
Timbaland and Myndstream redefine wellness through sound

News

Timbaland and Myndstream redefine wellness through sound

American record producer and rapper Timbaland has collaborated with spa soundscape production company Myndstream to launch Yellow, an album merging...
Pop-culture & Media : Technology : Health & Wellness
You have 2 free News articles remaining. Sign up to LS:N Global to get unlimited access to all articles.
BECOME A MEMBER
SIGN IN