New York Post

Vedder thrills with song & stories

- Emily Smith Claire Atkinson

Eddie Vedder rocked the festival on Wednesday night, performing an acoustic set at a stunning villa in the hills overlookin­g the Côte D’Azur.

The Pearl Jam rocker played a lengthy set to a small but enraptured crowd at a private villa party hosted by Live Nation and Citi, which was the hottest ticket of the advertisin­g festival, with just 200 guests allowed inside.

He performed at sunset at the sprawling Villa Alang Alang, which sits on the hills overlookin­g Cannes and rents at up to $78,000 a week.

Vedder, who is in the middle of a European tour, also entertaine­d the crowd with stories from his lengthy career, including one where he took magic mushrooms while he was staying with Tim Robbins.

Vedder (below) said that after he took the mushrooms, Robbins asked him to record a song for the actor and director’s thengirlfr­iend Susan Sarandon.

The rocker said after struggling for what seemed like forever to plug in the recording equipment, “I recorded it first take. It was incredibly mov- ing — beautiful. I rewound the song, and I hit the levels and there was nothing — I hadn’t put it into record mode. Finally, Tim asked me, what do you think? And I said, ‘I think you can do better’ I [bleeping] lied. Try lying on mushrooms. The moral of the story is, it was the last time I took mushrooms, and that was also a lie.” Guests included singer Ellie

Goulding, Pepsi CMO Kristin Patrick, Hilton CMO Geraldine Calpin, Citi global consumer chief marketing officer Jenni

fer Breithaupt, and AT&T chief branding officer Fiona Carter.

Publicis pause?

Mega-yachts, five-star hotels and private concerts with rock-and-roll legends? This ad agency has had enough.

Publicis Groupe, the behemoth that owns top ad firms like Leo Burnett and Saatchi & Saatchi, shocked the crowd at Cannes Lions Thursday when it announced it will take a break from the boondoggle next year, griping about its crippling costs.

Publicis submits the third-largest number of entries for the festival’s Cannes Lions awards competitio­n, shelling out around $2 million for the submission­s, Ad Age reports. Add hotels, food and the endless slew of shindigs, and the tab for the week can come to $20 million.

The Publicis pullout could put a serious dent in next year’s proceeding­s — and it isn’t the only ad giant with mixed feelings.

“There is general concern about the positionin­g and cost of Cannes,” WPP CEO Martin Sor

rell (inset) told The Post after Thursday’s bombshell. “My view is it will have to change, maybe even its location.”

Sorrell signaled, however, that a wholesale WPP withdrawal wasn’t in the offing.

“I don’t think boycotts work,” he said. “Better to work with the parties involved to craft a better solution.”

Creative executives, who rely on awards to boost their résumés and gain credit with clients, are fuming about the move, fretting it could hurt their careers, sources told The Post.

Yannick Bolloré, CEO of Havas Group, told The Post that his company would be back. Bolloré said he was thrilled Havas had won a huge number of awards this year — 37 as of Thursday evening.

“The industry is full of talent — I wanted to hire everyone,” Bolloré gushed. “Creativity is our core value, more than consulting.”

Even so, watching the magnums of rose splashed at the Carlton hotel terrace bar by the winners and their entourages, it’s easy to see why the bean counters might cringe. A drink at the bar is anywhere upwards of 20 euros. To add insult to injury, Publicis’s new CEO Arthur Sadoun, who has been in the job under a month, said the money would be spent instead on artificial intelligen­ce technology. Cost hasn’t been the only sticking point. The main event at Cannes Lions is an awards show for advertisin­g creatives. But increasing­ly, the heart of the proceeding­s has been squeezed by an endless program of speakers holding forth about creativity and innovation. What’s more, each ad agency — as well as a growing assortment of tech giants like Facebook, Google and Microsoft — has its own separate track, leading to growing confusion and exhaustion among attendees.

According to an internal memo reported by Adweek, Publicis is “looking for 2.5 percent cost synergies for 2018” and is “eliminatin­g all award/trade shows for the next year,” including CES in Las Vegas.

Ad Age reports that Publicis submits the third largest number of entries, costing around $2 million to submit, and with hotels and food, the entire weeklong event can cost up to $20 million.

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 ??  ?? BRIGHT MOMENT: Screenwrit­er/actress Lena Waithe shares a smile during a discussion at Cannes Lions.
BRIGHT MOMENT: Screenwrit­er/actress Lena Waithe shares a smile during a discussion at Cannes Lions.
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