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On The Up: Gisborne's West Lake Hotel restored; public to choose new colours
On The Up: Gisborne's West Lake Hotel restored; public to choose new colours

NZ Herald

time03-05-2025

  • Business
  • NZ Herald

On The Up: Gisborne's West Lake Hotel restored; public to choose new colours

Christchurch-based property development company BME Group bought the property in July last year with plans to give the building a major makeover. The company aims to lead the charge to breathe new life into the city centre, starting with a bold facelift. It also wants the public's help deciding what that transformation looks like. In a creative move to engage the community, BME Capital is launching a 'Colour Palette Competition', inviting locals to submit their best external paint colour combinations for the iconic building. The chosen winner will not only see their colour palette brought to life on the historic facade – they'll also win a $1000 cash prize. 'This building has always been a part of Gisborne's story,' says BME group director Slade Hocking. 'We believe it should reflect the heart and creativity of the community too. That's why we're handing over the design reins – at least when it comes to the colour.' The revitalisation doesn't stop with a new coat of paint. Once the exterior is refreshed, BME Group will begin renovations on the upper floors of the building to develop a versatile collection of office spaces, designed to become a vibrant central hub for local businesses and professionals. Those interested in tenancy or investment opportunities are encouraged to contact BME Group directly. 'This project is just the beginning. BME Group's mission is to revitalise Gisborne's city centre – one building at a time, Hocking says. 'And it all starts here: your city, your colours.'

After Celebrity-Adorned Liquor Ventures, This Entrepreneur Goes Solo
After Celebrity-Adorned Liquor Ventures, This Entrepreneur Goes Solo

Forbes

time29-04-2025

  • Business
  • Forbes

After Celebrity-Adorned Liquor Ventures, This Entrepreneur Goes Solo

Tequila Purisima, which sells for $400 for a single decanter or $1,200 for a set of three, launches ... More this month and will be available for direct shipping to 48 states and international markets. Entrepreneur Brent Hocking's first tequila venture, DeLeón, debuted in 2009 and was sold to liquor giant Diageo and Sean 'Diddy' Combs in 2013. Three years later, his next boozy business was built with another rapper, Drake, a whiskey called Virginia Black. Hocking's third liquor debut, he promises, will be completely celebrity free. 'Everything is about accessibility and celebrity, and nothing is about quality anymore,' Hocking tells me during a virtual interview, as he bemoans the dozens of celebrities that have poured into the liquor market. 'The saturation of the marketplace went to hell.' This month, Hocking is re-entering the tequila category with the launch of Tequila Purisima, which sells at astonishingly high price points for a tequila: $400 for a single decanter or $1,200 for a set of three. Tequila Purisima will be available for direct shipping to 48 states and international markets, but only via a mailing list. 'It's going to be an extremely tightly-held project,' says Hocking, of his decision not to work with any mass retailers for the launch. While celebrities have financially backed liquor brands for the past few decades—rocker Sammy Hagar's Cabo Wabo tequila and actor Dan Aykroyd's Crystal head vodka are among the early trend setters—it was the 2007 combination of Diddy's financial and marketing partnership with Diageo to bolster the flailing Ciroc vodka that proved the formula could work. 'The success of what a celebrity can do with alcohol should really be credited to Diddy with Ciroc,' says Hocking. That case also highlights the pitfalls. Diddy and Dieago joined focus again to buy DeLeón, an early entrant into the super-premium priced tequila market. But the relationship soured after Diddy sued Diageo over allegations the company had poorly marketed Ciroc and DeLeón by treating them as inferior 'urban' products. That case settled in early 2024. TORONTO, ONTARIO - APRIL 12: Founder and CEO of Virginia Black Decadent American Whiskey Brent ... More Hocking and songwriter, rapper and actor Drake attend the Canadian Pre-Launch of Virginia Black Decadent American Whiskey held at LCBO at Yonge & Summerhill on April 12, 2016 in Toronto, Canada. (Photo byfor Virginia Black Decadent American Whiskey) Later that year, the music titan faced federal sex trafficking and racketeering charges and has faced allegations in civil court of drugging people. He has denied the allegations. Diageo has since fully extracted itself from the Diddy partnerships: taking full financial control of DeLeón for $200 million and offloading Ciroc in a deal that traded ownership for a stake in NBA star LeBron James' Lobos 1707 Tequila. When investors and brands work with celebrities to launch new liquor brands, they tend to point to two other blockbuster deals as proof points: actor Ryan Reynolds' $610 million deal to sell Aviation Gin and George Clooney's $1 billion deal for Casamigos tequila, both also sold to Diageo, whose mainstay portfolio includes Captain Morgan rum and Don Julio tequila. The Casamigos deal, in particular, has led to dozens of celebrities jumping into the tequila category, which has been a strong seller in recent years. Model Kendall Jenner's 818 and actor Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson's Teremana are among them. 'I don't care if it's the best tequila in the world, I do not want to drink it if it is a celebrity tequila,' says Hocking, describing the shifting mindset he hears in the marketplace from consumers. 'There is that backlash.' When Hocking created DeLeón, his price points were nearly unheard of for tequila, selling for $150 for blanco and up to $1,000 for some of the aged expressions. The price points for Tequila Purisima are even loftier, mostly to be sold to the wealthy and private collectors. From 2014 through 2024, volume for the highest priced 'super premium' tequilas—which include Casamigos, Don Julio, Patrón, and Herradura—more than tripled, according to data by industry trade advocate the Distilled Spirits Council of the U.S. Total growth for the overall tequila category was a bit more modest over that same period, but still doubled. From 2014 through 2024, volume for the highest priced 'super premium' tequilas more than tripled. ... More Entrepreneur Brent Hocking says the growth for higher-priced tequilas justifies his view that another brand like Tequila Purisima, seen here, can entice consumers. Hocking says the growth for higher-priced tequilas justifies his view that another brand like Tequila Purisima can entice consumers. He says he fully controls the production process at a distillery in the Mexican town of Purisima and lauds the high sugar count agave he procures, water that's sourced from 400-meter-deep spring wells and a cooking process for the agave that lasts more than three days in steam ovens to turn the starch into fermentable sugars. Tequila Purisima's packaging includes a bottle with ripples meant to evoke the flow of water and a faux python box that's a reference to the snake on the Mexican flag. As for why he's returning to the tequila business after a 12 year absence, Hocking has a pretty simple response. 'I needed something to drink.'

Luke Combs says he's giving kids a normal childhood before 'very strange circumstances' take over
Luke Combs says he's giving kids a normal childhood before 'very strange circumstances' take over

Fox News

time13-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Fox News

Luke Combs says he's giving kids a normal childhood before 'very strange circumstances' take over

Luke Combs wants his two kids to grow up with a normal childhood before they can understand the "very strange circumstances" that come with fame. Combs, 35, considers himself a "stay-at-home" father – at least during the week between shows. "I'm home four days a week, every week, full-time," the country music star said during an appearance on "The MeatEater Podcast." "Sun-up, sundown most days. Getting the kids up, changing diapers, doing baths, cooking dinners, cooking lunches, cooking breakfasts. That occupies a lot of my time, but that's what I want." "I want my kids' childhoods to feel as normal as they can given the very strange circumstances that it will ultimately become." To create that childhood for his kids, Combs and his family live in a normal home. "We live in a 2,000-square-foot house. It's two bedrooms," the musician said. "Me and my wife have a room, and the boys share a room. We're always close together, we're always tight in there." The most normal thing Combs can teach his kids is responsibility, which the "Fast Car" singer says is a priority in his household. "The living room is the playroom. All the kids' toys are in there. We let them destroy it. But every night, 'Alright, we're all cleaning up now,'" Combs explained. "Mom and dad are cleaning up, but to the extent that a one-and-a-half-year-old [can], he'll get a block and bring it over. He might only pick up two things, but my two-and-a-half-year-old now, he can actually make a 5 percent dent in the cleanup. But he understands." Combs' opening up about his life at home comes after the country music star missed the birth of his second son, Beau. "I'll never forget the craziest day, probably, in my life – close to it," he shared during a 2024 appearance on The Zane Lowe Show. "One of the best and one of the worst days in my life at the same time." "I probably woke up at around 8:00 a.m. or something like that, Australia time, and I had a text from my wife, and it said, 'I'm so sorry, I really tried to not have the baby while you're gone,'" he added. "And God, dude, it sucked." Combs met his wife and mother of his two children by chance. The two first crossed paths at the 30A Songwriters Festival in January 2016 despite both living in Nashville. After returning home, Combs and Hocking shortly began dating. "I could tell she was different than anybody I had ever met," Combs later told Nashville Lifestyles. Hocking added, "I realized we could hang out and just be ourselves in front of each other. I could wear no makeup and be my weird self – because we're all weird, but we get to choose who to share that side of us with. We could be each other's weird in front of each other. That's when it was like, 'You know what? This guy's a keeper.'" Combs and Hocking married in 2020 and had expanded their family by two before the end of 2023. Hocking gave birth to the couple's first son, Tex, in 2022. Shortly afterward, Combs and his wife revealed they were expecting their second child, Beau. Hocking debuted her baby bump at the 2023 ACM awards, where Combs explained how they were preparing for two under two. "We're getting ready. We're just in it. We're in the trenches, taping grenades. [We're] excited for the second one," he told People magazine at the time. "They're gonna be close [in age], but I feel like we'll be in practice."

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