I love reality TV shows about retail. My latest fave is “Mary Queen of Shops,” a British import that is being shown here on BBC America.
The star of the show is Mary Portas, the former creative director of the fashionably trendy Harvey Nichols store in London. Like so many other retail consultants, she is inclined to blanket statements and arching pronouncements: In the opening show, she opted that the Primark chain is “ruining” England.
The premise of the show has Portas traveling all over Britain, helping shopkeepers attain greatness (think of it as a “Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares” for the retail trade).
Portas has a big mouth. She has an air of self-importance and is arrogant as all get out, which is ultimately what makes the show so entertaining. As she put it in the first episode: “What I don’t know about shops isn’t worth knowing.” See if you agree -- the show can be seen on Wednesday nights at 9 p.m. on BBC America. As it happens, my other fave TV reality show, “Man Shops Globe,” featuring the suave and dapper Keith Johnson from Anthropologie, is on Wednesday night also, at 10 p.m. on the Sundance channel. It’s a solid night of retail nirvana -- who could ask for anything more?
Wednesday, 21 October 2009
Friday, 2 October 2009
My new must-see TV: Shopping around the world -- for Anthropologie
Ever wonder where Anthropologie finds some of the goods that make its stores so interesting? Well, wonder no longer. A new series on the Sundance Channel, called “Man Shops Globe,” will take viewers around the world with Keith Johnson, buyer-at-large for Anthropologie, as he scours flea markets, out-of-the-way antique shops, obscure art studios, private dealerships, craft stalls and even a student design show in search of decorative antiques and found objects. Some of his finds will be sold in Anthropologie stores. Others will serve as inspiration for the company’s in-house design team. Johnson also seeks out gifted artisans to create original works.
Johnson, who spends a good deal of the year abroad, will visit a different country in each of the show’s eight episodes. In the first, which airs on Oct. 7, he haunts flea markets in Paris and sprints through an Avignon antiques show. Other episodes will follow his shopping exploits in Holland, South Africa, Belgium and other global destinations.
Promotional material describes Johnson as having “the greatest job in the world.” It’s a job he was seemingly born to. The son of a global-trotting art dealer, Johnson often accompanied his father on excursions around the world. His association with Anthropologie dates back to 1994, when his partner and company president Glen Senk (now CEO of Anthropologie's parent company Urban Outfiitters) asked Johnson to find decorative antiques and found objects for the company’s first store. As the brand grew so did Johnson's responsibilities. He now buys for Anthropologie’s 123 U.S. stores and two in Canada, and also curates the brand’s art gallery in its Rockefeller Center location.
To see a preview of “Man Shops Globe,” click here.
Johnson, who spends a good deal of the year abroad, will visit a different country in each of the show’s eight episodes. In the first, which airs on Oct. 7, he haunts flea markets in Paris and sprints through an Avignon antiques show. Other episodes will follow his shopping exploits in Holland, South Africa, Belgium and other global destinations.
Promotional material describes Johnson as having “the greatest job in the world.” It’s a job he was seemingly born to. The son of a global-trotting art dealer, Johnson often accompanied his father on excursions around the world. His association with Anthropologie dates back to 1994, when his partner and company president Glen Senk (now CEO of Anthropologie's parent company Urban Outfiitters) asked Johnson to find decorative antiques and found objects for the company’s first store. As the brand grew so did Johnson's responsibilities. He now buys for Anthropologie’s 123 U.S. stores and two in Canada, and also curates the brand’s art gallery in its Rockefeller Center location.
To see a preview of “Man Shops Globe,” click here.
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