Posts Tagged ‘Lifestyle PR’

PR Superstar Wins Health PR Campaign

PR Superstar has been appointed by Nutrologie to drive media and public interest in ‘6 Week Bikini Body.’

Nutrologie have created the world’s first all-in-one slimming solution – bringing together diet, fitness, food supplements, and fat-burners for the first time ever - to help ladies lose up to two stone in just six weeks. It goes on sale in Holland and Barrett on June 1st.

Twitter Endorsement by Men’s Health

Alex Harris, Fitness Editor for Men’s Health, is training four times a week with London fitness company Evolution of Man, thanks to public relations agency PR Superstar.

Alex will document his workout regime on social media including Twitter where he has described Evolution of Man Founder  Tim Walker as “the amazing trainer who has been kicking my sorry arse lately,” on menshealth.co.uk and in the magazine, which is the best-selling men’s magazine in the UK.

Men’s Fashion PR in ShortList Magazine

Cool men’s magazine ShortList this week features trendy specs by online eyewear company Swag & Stare in their ‘Chosen Few’ section.

Shortlist has the biggest circulation of any men’s lifestyle magazine in Britain, with more than half a million copies every week.

Luxury Furniture Label Appoints PR Superstar

The Longest Stay has appointed PR Superstar to handle PR around its launch.

The London-based business is an online store that sells home furnishings found in luxury hotels, celebrity homes and designer rooms.

Customers can choose from luxury European furniture brands, shop for exclusive products, and even purchase an entire room setting styled by a top interior designer.

Luxury Lifestyle PR in Upmarket Esquire

Stylish men’s magazine Esquire reviews new online spectacle boutique Swag & Stare which fuses premium quality eyewear with honest pricing.

It says: ”Newcomers Swag & Stare are definitely worth a look. The online eyewear-merchants boast a range of classic designs, in a pleasing selection of colours.  It does for glasses-buying what ASOS did to clothes-purchasing, and caters to the time-poor.”