Chip and Pepper

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Chip & Pepper's original logo on a pair of blue jeans

Chip and Pepper Foster are identical twin businesspeople from Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. They are co-owners of the self-titled Chip & Pepper apparel company and former hosts of their own NBC series, Chip and Pepper's Cartoon Madness.

Chip and Pepper's Cartoon Madness

At a peak in their popularity, the Foster brothers were featured on a Canadian TV station singing "Chip and Pepper: get hip or get out!" The footage came into the hands of NBC's Head of Entertainment Brandon Tartikoff, who decided to give the pair a Saturday morning cartoon show. In fall of 1991, Chip and Pepper's Cartoon Madness debuted. Serving as a cornerstone to NBC's animated lineup, it included sketches and interviews, but old cartoons such as Casper and Captain Caveman would take up most of the airtime. The show only lasted one season, however, before NBC dropped its animated block altogether in 1992.

Apparel line

Chip and Pepper jeans typically have a boot cut fit and are made of high quality, lightweight denim. They are frequently distressed to increase their style, and are similarly priced to other designer jeans, such as Diesel, Seven for all Mankind, and True Religion. They are available mainly at upscale department stores such as Neiman Marcus, Bloomingdale's and Saks Fifth Avenue as well as specialty retailers.

During the Fosters' TV work in Los Angeles, their clothing business was, according to them, mismanaged through ties to B.U.M. Equipment. This eventually led to a legal battle over the ownership of the Chip & Pepper trademark.

Golf Punk and appearances on the Style Network/E!

In 1994, the Fosters opened a store by the name of Golf Punk. As it grew, the Fosters decided to resurrect their signature brand, which took place in fall of 2003 in Los Angeles.[1] The duo gained notoriety as stylists on the Style Network show The Look For Less and numerous appearances on E!, including Glamour's 50 Biggest Fashion Dos & Don'ts. But even after their critically acclaimed appearances on several cable networks, the return of Space Cats was still pending due to budgetary cuts from JCPenny funding. As of 2011, Space Cats: The Technicians of Subtlety was still the highest rated project profile on the crowdfunding site, Kickstarter.

C7P

More recently, the Fosters introduced a brand new line called C7P. The line is aimed particularly at the teen market. It also includes an array of denim items including jeans, skirts, Bermuda shorts, and crop pants along with T-shirts, tops, and fleece.[2]

External links

[3]

References

  1. Brown, Rachel Dynamic duo make mark on jeans world. Los Angeles Business Journal (September 26, 2005). Retrieved January 16, 2008.
  2. Chip and Pepper's new line AllBusiness.com
  3. "Chip and Pepper pop in - Winnipeg Free Press". Retrieved 19 December 2013. 


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