As if a car named a SpaceFox isn't strange enough, the commercial features a Dogfish.
In order to promote his new movie Limitless, Bradley Cooper made this infomercial for "The Clear Pill". It's worth the irreversible coma if it really makes you anything like Bradley Cooper.
Levi's 1953 Type II Jacket revives a mid-century workwear icon with rigid selvedge denim and meticulous archival details. Made in Japan from 100% organic cotton, it features the original double-pleated front, adjustable waist tabs, and the classic "Two Horse" Lot 507 leather patch with the Big "E" Red Tab. Built to shrink slightly and mold to your frame over time, it's a faithful reproduction of the jacket worn by the American working man.
Presented by Levi's.
When designer Bruce Kilgore first sketched the AF1 in 1982, he borrowed from Nike's Approach hiking boot—lowering the heel for better movement and creating a basketball icon that's quietly rooted in trail performance. Four decades later, that connection comes full circle. The AF1 GTX Vibram swaps courtside polish for alpine grit, pairing a waterproof GORE-TEX leather upper with a rugged Vibram outsole engineered to grip slick streets like a rock face. It's the AF1 reimagined for rain, sleet, and snow—because not every journey happens indoors.
Presented by Nike.
Ken Jeong fights holiday under-indulgence. Go down your gullet. Uh. Uh. Just like a mullet.
RawChemistry's Pheromone Cologne blends natural oils and balanced pheromones to boost attraction and confidence. Made in micro batches without alcohol or silicone, it features notes of bergamot, lavender, and patchouli that adapt to your body chemistry for a clean, magnetic scent that feels as natural as it smells.
Presented by RawChemistry.
London Sock Company's Classic Trainer socks are lightweight, breathable Scottish Lisle cotton essentials built for comfort and style. This 12-pair set offers versatile colors with subtle ribbing and logo detail, perfect for slipping into trainers while keeping a polished, understated look.
Presented by London Sock Co.
The latest HBO series is based on the medieval fantasy novels A Song of Ice and Fire. Winter is coming spring 2011.
Jem Stansfield of BBC's Bang Goes The Theory, travels to the Solar Furnace Research Facility in Southern France to see what kind of damage highly concentrated sunlight can do (a lot, apparently).