Tuesday, 5 May 2026

Life Loop Lands in the UK

Functional chewing gum brand life loop has a nationwide listing in 1,600 Tesco stores. The start-up brand only debuted in early 2026 but already has secured distribution of its blister packs which retail at £2.50 and come in four different variants. Chewing gum is something many of us reach for without thinking — on the way to work, between meetings, before the gym. Life loop saw an opportunity to make that habit work harder. Their patented gum technology protects the ingredients inside each piece till you chew and this also allows the functional benefit to be absorbed into the body and begin working in just 5-10 minutes compared to a typical functional drink such as coffee or energy drinks which takes 35-40 minutes. To support the launch they are going to give away 10,000 samples at London Victoria station as part of a promotional event on 7th May.

BBQ - Is there a gap in the market for this product?

Amsterdam Advert Ban

 
Amsterdam has become the world's first capital city to ban public advertisements for both meat and fossil fuel products. Since 1 May, adverts for burgers, petrol cars and airlines have been stripped from billboards, tram shelters, and metro stations. Politicians in the city say the move is about bringing Amsterdam's streetscape into line with the local government's own environmental targets. These aim for the Dutch capital to become carbon neutral by 2050, and for local people to halve their meat consumption over the same period. Removing that constant visual nudge, she says, both reduces impulse buying, and signals that cheap meat and fossil heavy travel are no longer aspirational lifestyle choices. "The climate crisis is very urgent," says Anneke Veenhoff from the GreenLeft Party. "I mean, if you want to be leading in climate policies and you rent out your walls to exactly the opposite, then what are you doing?

BBC - How would you feel as a meat producer following this ban? Will other cities follow?


Claire's Closes All Stores

All Claire's standalone stores in the UK and Ireland have stopped trading after the accessories chain's financial woes saw it fall into administration twice in a year. Administrators Kroll said 154 stores have shut and more than 1,300 staff have been "notified of redundancy", though its 350 concessions will remain open. Known for its colourful shop fronts and racks of jewellery, bracelets and its ear piercing services, the brand's bright purple branding was a familiar sight for millions of teens during a Saturday shop. But it suffered in the face of competition from cheaper, online brands such as Shein and Temu. Changing consumer tastes also spelled the death knell for the retailer, which has struggled like many High Street firms. It also blamed the climate on the High Street, which it said "remains extremely challenging", adding that government policy had caused a tough trading environment by raising staffing costs such as National Insurance Contributions.Claire's was not only facing competition from online - other bricks-and-mortar competitors ate into its space too. Primark and Superdrug compete heavily with Claire's value offering, says retail analyst Catherine Shuttleworth. Plus, she added, young people had more places to spend their money, including spending on desserts, coffee, matcha and bubble tea.

BBQ - What did you think was the main reason for Claire's closing down?