
Remy Blumenfeld
Coach and business adviser to the creative industries. Format creator. Indie Founder. Contributor to Forbes, Inc., Thrive Global
Articles
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1 week ago |
meer.com | Remy Blumenfeld
Driving over the hill from the airport, past the designer boutiques of Gustavia and the buzz of St. Jean, it’s hard to imagine that somewhere on this small island, peace still exists. But turn off the main road and head toward the remote Anse de Toiny, and you find it. The pace slows, the noise fades, and the rhythm of Le Toiny begins. I spent three days here on a solo retreat of sorts—part reset, part research—and found the experience quietly remarkable.
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2 weeks ago |
hollywoodreporter.com | Remy Blumenfeld
There was a time—not ancient history—when a star’s greatest currency was mystery. You could be luminous, aloof, unreadable, and still beloved. The less you gave away, the more iconic you became. Looking the part was enough. Now? Visibility demands vulnerability. You’re not just acting—you’re emoting, explaining, confessing. On cue. In HD. Preferably with a filter that still shows your pores. Fame today is an emotional striptease. You’re not just promoting a project—you’re promoting your pain.
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1 month ago |
msn.com | Remy Blumenfeld
Continue reading More for You
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1 month ago |
hollywoodreporter.com | Remy Blumenfeld
Once, scandal was a strategy. Hollywood feuds were curated, glamorous, and — crucially — controlled. Today, they’re chaotic, real-time, and reputation-shredding. What used to build brands now risks blowing them up. As a former reality TV producer — and now a coach to creatives and public figures — I’ve seen this shift up close. In television, we could shape tension into narrative. In old Hollywood, publicists sculpted scandal into legacy. But now? There’s no shaping.
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2 months ago |
meer.com | Remy Blumenfeld
Gathering six family members with different tastes and interests could have been daunting, but Lucknam Park turned out to be a fitting choice for my mother’s birthday celebration. Nestled in the picturesque Wiltshire countryside, the setting made a strong first impression. Driving through the mile-long avenue of lime and beech trees, a sense of occasion emerged long before we glimpsed the golden Bath stone of the main house.
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