ADWEEK Thursday March 19, 2026
The more AI evolves, the more apparent it becomes that marketing is not just susceptible, but peculiarly vulnerable to its machinations, notes Adweek, citing the new Labor Market Impacts report from AI company Anthropic. AI’s impact has already infiltrated market research via synthetic data, which is not only quicker and faster than traditional market research—but more accurate too. The same is true for competitive intelligence and analysis. What once required a small internal team, now requires a prompt. Read the full Story >>
By
David Schonauer Thursday March 19, 2026
One day in late 1936, photojournalist Robert Capa paused on a street in southeast Madrid and took a picture that would echo around the world and down through the decades. His photo showed three
children sitting amid rubble in the working-class Vallecas district of the Spanish capital, in front of a house pitted with shrapnel from bombs dropped by Italian and German fascist forces … Read the full Story >>
ADWEEK Wednesday March 18, 2026
Calvin Klein (CK)’s advertising hall of fame is defined by two things: big stars and provocative imagery. And now the clothing line’s Spring 2026 campaign leans back on this time-tested formula, showing a day in the life of actress Dakota Johnson. The campaign, directed and photographed by Gordon von Steiner, features Johnson playing pool topless while wearing a CK thong and covering her breasts with items like pomegranates and milk jugs. The ad follows a debate around the return of the “male gaze” in advertising, notes Adweek. Read the full Story >>
The Photographers’ Gallery Wednesday March 18, 2026
On view at The Photographers' Gallery in London through June 7 is the annual exhibition featuring the finalists for the 2026 Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation Prize. The award, which is worth £30,000 (about $40,224) to the winner, is awarded for an exhibition or book that has been deemed to have made a significant contribution to photography in the previous 12 months. This year’s shortlist includes Jane Evelyn Atwood for her publication Too Much Time / Trop de Peines and Weronika Gsicka, for her work “Encyclopaedia.” Read the full Story >>