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David Gandy at Vogue Fest 2013's Body Image Panel Discussion (Video)

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This past weekend was the highly anticipated Vogue Festival 2013, at London Southbank Center - Purcell Room in association with Vertu. And as we all knew David Gandy participated in the panel "Too Fat, Too Thin....Will We Ever Be Content?" Also joining David on the panel was Christa D'Souza, Patsy Kensit and Daisy Lowe led by Vogue editor Alexandra Sulman. A candid discussion took place about body issues and how we and the panel view our own body image, without focusing on topics from the modeling world.

And today, a day later, thanks to the generosity and kindness of our dear friend Gabi Goncalves (London) we will be able to remember it all, at least a little, as if we had the chance to get a ticket for this great opportunity to see David Gandy in person ourselves. THANK YOU one more time Gabi!, for donating your photos and video to DjG.comin exclusive, to get some pictures with excellent quality and a HD video and, of course... Congratulations!! Why did one of your dreams come true and here is the proof to confirm: In Gabi's words:
"The whole experience has been overwhelming. He is an absolute doll, sweet, a gentleman, beautiful inside and out....and I'm short of adjectives for him. But mostly he is an absolute pleasure to talk with. He is so attentive, looks at you when you talk and mostly you can tell he pays attention of what you are telling him. I am gonna defend this man ALWAYS!!! Cause he is accessible and has no ego whatsoever.So this is what happened when we left the panel (which was less than 45 minutes and not an hour as they said, aw well). We were waiting at the guests entrance for almost 2 hours in the freezing cold London spring weather :/ He came out once thinking his car was there waiting for him, went back again inside and then after a while he finally came out for good. He was smiling walking towards us. When my turn arrived we got the photo taken and he made me feel such at ease next to him that we started talking."
"He was so amazing and I touched his arm and he touches mine while we were talking.Nathan took some photos while we were chatting. I didn't notice he was taking photos of us talking...he told me when we were in the train coming back home. My man rocks and what a lovely memory of this meeting with David besides my photo with him:)...it has been such an emotional exhausting day and I am still thinking it was a dream...a dream come true ♥"



Patsy Kensit, David Gandy & Daisy Lowe

Dolce&Gabbana "Light Blue" 2013 Fragance Campaign

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David Gandy and Bianca Balti return once again, under the expert eyes of Mario Testino, to the crystal blue waters of the Mediterranean and the island of Capri for the newest installment of Dolce & Gabbana's Light Blue fragrance.



Shot in Capri by Mario Testino, the campaign sees David Gandy reprise his role as the white-trunks-clad male fragrance face, while Balti makes her debut in a Fifties-style high-waisted bikini.

"During the shoot David and I laughed a lot, so I think it made us very comfortable with one another and after a while it started feeling like we had known each other for ages. And he's got such an amazing body!" Balti said. "It was really relaxed and playful. It felt like David and I were on holiday together! Working in the sun was such a luxury. For me it was fun to work in such an idyllic location, that's the great thing about photo shoots - they can take you anywhere."






Behind the Scenes Video


 Screencaps
Source: Vogue.co.uk & Dolce & Gabbana 

John Walker & Sons Voyager: "Portofino" by David Gandy

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John Walker & Sons Voyager is a glamorous 1920's-style yacht which will be traversing the four corners of the world this year. The yacht's journey will re-create the epic ocean voyages that took Johnnie Walker from Scotland to the four corners of the world. It will arrive in Europe this May to mark the launch of the new triple malt John Walker & Sons Odyssey. To mark their centenary in 1920, the Walker family commissioned a luxury travel guide called "Around the World." After completing the Asian leg of its journey, which retraced the original spice route, the yacht will begin its European voyage from the historic port of Genoa in  May 8, 2013. It will visit Cannes, Monaco, Athens, Barcelona, Amsterdam, London, Hamburg and Copenhagen before finally docking in Edinburgh in August - returning to the brands home of Scotland1).



Brand Ambassador for Johnnie Walker and Game Changer David Gandy has written a beautiful article for the JW & Sons site on the magnificent port city of Portofino.



Portofino
By: David Gandy 2)

Tucked deep in a cleft on the ragged coast of Liguria, Portofino should be able to hide its glories from prying outside eyes. But - perhaps because of its relative isolation - a once sleepy fishing village has become an icon of global exclusivity. Elegance, style, heritage, refinement – this Italian jewel has become a byword for them all. It is still home to some fishing craft, remnants of its history, a safe haven for those who sought their living from the gifts of the Mediterranean. But today they are outnumbered by the yachts – a clue, if one were needed, to the changing fortunes of Portofino. Today this tiny village is home to less than 500 ‘genuine’ locals but year after year thousands more are won over by its timeless appeal. It’s the holiday home of the jet set; the private party destination of celebrated actors, models and musicians; the luxury destination for society’s elite. Step back 100 years and that story was just beginning. British aristocrats and European travellers were just starting to explore this unspoiled corner of Italy. But its fame didn’t take long to spread and by the mid-20th century the likes of Frank Sinatra, Marlene Dietrich, Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman could be seen strolling its narrow pavements or relaxing in its intimate piazza. Tourism had become its business, celebrity its currency.
I first visited in 2010 for a fashion shoot and everything I’d heard was true. Portofino is beautiful and romantic - the setting is extraordinary and the views are picture-perfect. But more than that, there is something about this secluded village that captures the very essence of Italian style. Portofino is effortlessly sophisticated and deeply traditional, the embodiment of a generations-old commitment to luxury and excellence – it is organically elegant. Italy will always be important to me... In many ways it’s where I learnt my profession and made my mark. At a time when the fashion was for androgynous male models, I found kindred spirits in Italian designers who were prepared to take a risk, to challenge and change the industry. I loved their ambition, their commitment to creating iconic imagery, their vision for celebrating those things that are classically masculine. At an important time for the fashion industry as a whole, we shared a passion for change and innovation – and, perhaps more importantly, the conviction to see it through. Today, of course, those values are thriving in fashion houses across Europe, not least in the country of my own birth, Britain, where craft and invention know no limits. In the world of fashion, Italian ideals and British principles are comfortable bedfellows, each informing and inspiring the other, driving new levels of creativity, thinking and accomplishment. The times are changing and in an ever-evolving world of digital photography, online content and apps, Portofino is, to my mind, a pretty good metaphor for the best way to go about things: be authentic, stay true to the values that are important but grow with the times. The hillsides around this extraordinary village are dotted with private and secluded villas, the bay and harbor act as temporary homes to floating modern luxury palaces and the celebrities who walk its streets have moved-on from old-style Hollywood glamour to include the likes of Madonna, Heidi Klum, Beyoncé and Eva Mendez. But its spirit is still that encountered by its early tourists – warm, rich and relentlessly charming. Portofino is both history and the present, comfortable hand-in-hand; a story of heritage and progress interwoven; style and craftsmanship seamlessly joined. This iconic port is the Riviera destination and the perfect departure point for a new adventure in luxury.

Source: 1) Dramscotland.co.uk , 2)JWSVoyager

David Gandy hosts the Launch of Johnnie Walker and Sons Voyager in Portofino (Video Update)

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Yesterday, May 9th, 2013, the arrival of John Walker & Sons Voyager, took place in Portofino, Italy. And to celebrate this event, the luxury yacht is hosting, from yesterday until today, a series of  events designed to celebrate Portofino’s story of progress over the last century and to recognize a series of Italian ‘Game Changers’.

The 1920s-style sailing yacht's visit was hosted by Johnnie Walker Blue Label Ambassador, David Gandy, the world’s leading male model  who will be joined by John Kennedy President of Diageo, Western Europe, and Matt Barwell Consumer Marketing and Innovation Director for Diageo Western Europe, at the launch of this epic European journey.

Commenting on his appearance on board, David Gandy said: “It’s a privilege to join John Walker & Sons Voyager on its arrival in Portofino and celebrate the start of this great adventure. As the J. W. Blue Label Ambassador I’m honoured to be part of this creative and innovative campaign and to celebrate the achievements of Game Changers from across the region.

As a part of the activities which take place place on board, several Game Changers including David Gandy will be sharing their own stories of progress in a modern reinterpretation of Around the World – one of the first luxury travel guides commissioned by the House of Walker almost 100 years ago -.  David Gandy will author the opening chapter on Portofino.
New!



David Gandy with John Kennedy (left), Diageo President of Western Europe& Matt Barwell, Marketing Director (right), Diageo Western Europe 

 

Ph: Tim Bishop/Diageo PLC
Source: Luxuriousmagazine.com

David Gandy on Alan Carr: Chatty Man (Channel 4) (HD Video)

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Yesterday the 9th episode of the award winning chat show "Chatty Man" aired. The show is presented by Alan Carr on Channel 4. Guests on last night's show were the Essex born supermodel David Gandy, Rob Brydon and Amanda Holden. If you missed this hilarious episode you can enjoy it in HD via youtube or the mirror link added here
 




 
 


Countdown to the 2013 Mille Miglia

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One day left to the 2013 Mille Miglia. An endurance race that only the very best cars and very best drivers could endure.

For 30 years - from 1927 until 1957-, la Mille Miglia was the excellence in car racing and one of the competitions most loved by Italians. It was the race that passed very close to home, which allowed people to see their idols. The original Mille Miglia ended in 1957 after a series of fatal crashes that made the event untenable on public roads, but it returned in 1977 as the Mille Miglia Storica, a wonderful race around Italy of classic cars – which must have taken part in the original 1927-1957 race –.

In this edition, Jaguar Heritage Racing enters three C-Type and three XK120 classic cars into the famous event, followed by, on the majority of the driving route, five new Jaguar F-TYPE sports cars. Taking the seats of them will be six-time Olympic cycling Champion Sir Chris Hoy, the world’s only male supermodel David Gandy, Le Mans 24 Hours race winner Andy Wallace, Chairman & CEO of 20th Century Fox Jim Gianopulos - who will drive with a film industry colleague, German actress Hannah Herzsprung, Italian Salvatore Ferragamo Jr., fashion icon Yasmin Le Bon and Michael Quinn, the grandson of Jaguar founder Sir William Lyons. This exciting list of classic car enthusiasts will be led by Jaguar Heritage Racing's own multiple race winner Alex Buncombe and motoring journalist Chris Harris who will be driving a Jaguar C-Type once owned by Juan Manuel Fangio.




During the past week, in a driver training session with the 2013 Jaguar Heritage Racing team at Goodwood Motor Circuit which was captured on film, we could see David Gandy alongside his glamourous co-driver Yasmin Le Bon and the rest of the Jaguar team. 


As always, the race will start in Brescia, off to Rome and back again, mixing history, nature & sport. Three intense days ahead, we hope you all enjoy this unforgettable experience. Congratulations David, because one of your dreams is about to become reality. Good Luck and Good Journey!


David Gandy and the start of the first leg of the 2013 Mille Miglia

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Today, May 16, 2013, David Gandy is participating in a life long dream. He has started the first leg of the very famous Mille Miglia race in Italy. 

We will shortly summarize the schedule. There are 422 participants this year, proving that the ‘Mille’ is still very popular despite the current economic circumstances.



8:30 am local time all cars reported to the Piazza della Loggia in Brescia. The "punzonatura"( as the Italians call it) or the registration took place at that time.






18:45pm.- First leg of the race starts from Brescia-Ferrara: starting line is located on the Viale Venezia



00:30 Arrival of first leg to Ferrara. Cars will be park along the C.so della Giovecca and shuttle service to hotels for a much needed rest for the participants.


2013 Mille Miglia (Day 2)

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The second day of Mile Miglia started at 7:45am when the cars left Ferrara to the Mighty Apennines reaching the Republic of San Marino around 11:45am. Between control points, David Gandy and Yasmin Le Bon, at the wheel of a Jaguar XK120 suffered a mild accident on the road between Ravenna and Gambettola. We are very glad that neither one were hurt. 

We are reminded again that the Mille Miglia, one of the most legendary races in automotive history, holds an adventure in every turn, straight away, moment or unforeseen event. All together it is part of a single goal: to complete the 1000 miles.



Short interview video with David and Yasmin about the crash

Fortunately they were able to hit the road again towards the Castel Sant'Angelo in Rome. The arrival is just taking place live as we write (22h00 Italy local time). Now, we look forward to tomorrow, when they will cross the finish line.

2013 Mille Miglia (Day 3)

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The third and final stage of the Mille Miglia from Rome (6h15) back to Brescia, took the drivers through the scenic Tuscan cities of Siena, San Casciano, Val di Pesa (Province of Florence) and Modena and to the finish line at Viale Venezia in Brescia around 22h00.




Passing through Siena                                          Passing through San Quirico

David Gandy and Yasmin Le Bon crossed the finish line around 23h00 where they great joy and satisfaction for completing their participation of  this chapter of the Mille Miglia. In an interview at the end of the race David said that if it were up to him he would return next year.



David and Yasmin are now part of Mille Miglia History. Tomorrow there will be an awards ceremony and celebration to begin the road to the 2014 Mille Miglia, but for now, it's time to enjoy the experience. Congrats!

David Gandy covers Spectrum Magazine (May 2013)

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David Gandy appears on the cover of Spectrum Magazine's latest issue. Photos were taken at The Shard in London.











 THIS has been a long time coming. Four months, to be precise. One hundred and twenty eight e-mails and innumerable phone calls have passed back and forth, forth and back, between PRs and photographers, stylists and editors. There have been financial negotiations, security clearance and venue approval. Even at the last minute we are finalising the timing.

 David Gandy is not a world leader – Gandy, not Gandhi, remember – he’s a male model. He wears clothing for a living. Or, as often as not, takes it off (his most famous role is still as the Dolce & Gabbana Light Blue man, looking for all the world like Michelangelo’s vision of male perfection, sporting a pair of tighty whites and just the hint of a smile). Yet, judging from the effort it takes to get an audience with the man, he’s very hot property indeed (after our interview, this is confirmed when my tweets about the encounter generate in excess of 100 breathless responses).

 When, finally, the moment arrives, I am almost overcome with Gandy fatigue. Or perhaps it’s vertigo, considering the venue for our meeting is the as-yet-unopened Oblix restaurant, on the nosebleed-inducing 32nd floor of the Shard, amid the scaffolding, the men in hard hats and the dizzying views of London far below.

 First impressions? There’s no denying he’s handsome. Almost too handsome (can there be such a thing?). Tall. At 33 he is at ease with himself. He greets everyone in the room, shaking hands and making eye contact, with those magnetic baby blues drawing you in. I might even swoon a little if it hadn’t been for those 128 e-mails.

 If it is Gandy who is the diva or just the army of people surrounding him, I’ll never know, because when we eventually talk – after hair, make-up, photographs and four changes of clothing (he’s forced to disrobe in the ladies’ loos, for heaven’s sake – we run into each other unexpectedly after I’ve flushed and he has just stripped down for the next shoot, and I am definitely the more embarrassed of the two of us) – he is personable and professional.


 If only he didn’t have an unnerving habit of lapsing in and out of the royal ‘we’. “I think about the brand in the third person,” he explains of the regal tone, in his own deep, London voice. “It’s a business, it’s a name. That’s what a lot of male models don’t do. Look at the top female supermodels. They look at it as a business, they have a lot of money, a lot of dedication, they have branding and own the rights to their product. They have managers, a PR, a PA, everything.”


 So does he have an entourage? “Not an entourage, no.” He looks askance at me as if I’m being provocative – which, of course, I am – and laughs. “I’ve come here alone today,” he says. “Of course, when we travel I do have a PR and my agency will come along with me. And what I love to do as well is to introduce people like Larry King and Joe Ottoway, who are hair stylists and stylists. But I don’t have a team. I wouldn’t be so forward as to consider them my underlings. They work with me on a project. I always use the royal ‘we’ – I know I sound like Margaret Thatcher – but it’s a team effort; it’s not just me.”

 Put like that, it all seems very sensible and businesslike. Gandy studied multimedia marketing at the University of Gloucestershire. This is simply him putting that knowledge into the development of Brand Gandy, yes? “The only thing I learned at university was not to go to university,” he insists.

 “I worked very hard, we had fun, and when we left I was doing very well. It was probably quite a positive thing to get into – multimedia – but at the time I had a computer that was 2MB, with 16MB of RAM. Now we have 100GB on our phones. Technology was moving at such a rate we couldn’t keep up with it, the tutors couldn’t keep up with it – in fact the tutors were learning from us. It was a bit of a disaster really.”

 It wasn’t a complete disaster, though, was it? Because while at university a friend submitted his photograph for a find-a-model competition on the Richard & Judy daytime TV programme, back in 2002. “The funny thing is that when she put me up for the competition she was supposed to come on the television show with me but didn’t want to,” he says.

 “I thought, ‘I’ve got to have someone.’ I knew my mum wouldn’t want to do it because she hates being in front of the camera, so I told her the day before, ‘By the way, ITV are coming round tomorrow, you have to do this.’ She did. And it was nice, actually.

 “When we won, my grandfather was quite ill with emphysema, he wasn’t able to breathe very well, but he was jumping up in the air. He lived for a couple more years after that so that was good. I was very close to my grandparents.”

 After the win, Gandy did a healthy line in catalogue modelling, but didn’t really fit the standard sample sizes of the time for more profitable work; the trend was for androgyny, when Karl Lagerfeld famously slimmed down from porky to peaky so he could squeeze into Dior Homme’s size 28 skinny jeans. So man-sized Gandy didn’t immediately become flavour of the month. Then Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana came calling, casting the Billericay-born Essex boy as their ‘white pants guy’ in the campaign for the Light Blue fragrance in 2006. Within five years he was to become the world’s highest-paid, most in-demand male model. “People think that for the first five years I wasn’t really working, but actually I was working really well, doing what most male models do, earning a very good living doing some very commercial stuff.

 “But it wasn’t what I wanted to do,” he says. “I wanted to work with the best creatives. I didn’t understand why men were happy with a certain level in the industry when women were earning so much more money and so much more acclaim.”

 As an indication of the disparity, it’s worth pointing out that, last year, Gandy earned a very perky £500,000, while Gisele pocketed something closer to £15 million. As a woman working in a male-dominated industry, it’s hard for me to have much sympathy, but you’ve got to admire the man for his attempts to redress the balance. He chooses who he works with carefully, and as well as his Dolce & Gabbana contract he has partnerships with Jaguar, writes regular columns for GQ and Vogue and has a range of fitness apps. He has even made a short film with Friends star David Schwimmer. “Most people have a very clichéd view of the industry,” he says. “I know what they think: they think models are not very intelligent, you have a very short lifespan in the industry, you don’t eat. It’s very boring.

 “It’s not hard work, don’t get me wrong, but at the same time, I’m still getting dressed in a toilet in a building site today, which probably isn’t what people expect. That’s why I write for Vogue and GQ and do the interviews, because it’s very different.

 “There are so many intelligent models; it’s not about the modelling, it’s about the business. And I’m very, very particular about who I work with. It has to interest me. Success in the fashion industry is really as much about what you say no to as what you say yes to.”

 He says he has refused “many many things” in the past. “There are probably more things I’ve refused than things I’ve actually done. It might have been wrong for a reason; it might be wrong now but in a few years it might be correct. M&S I wouldn’t have said yes to at the beginning of my career, but now we are in a position to be able to work with some stores and to be in control of a project. You want to be in creative control of your brand.”

 Most recently he was announced as the face of Johnnie Walker Blue Label whisky – a link that, whether deliberately or not, mixes nicely with Gandy’s oft-proclaimed Scottish roots. “My grandmother’s maiden name is Bruce – you can’t get much more Scottish than that,” he says. “We’ve been around for a long time, the Bruces, and I look like my great-great-grandfather, with dark hair, dark skin and blue eyes – that’s my Scottish heritage.”


 More than anything, though, he’s proud to be British, and is deeply disappointed that his beloved grandfather didn’t live to see him strut the gold-themed catwalk at the closing ceremony of the Olympics last year – the only man alongside Naomi Campbell, Kate Moss, Stella Tennant and Lily Cole. “I am a huge advocate of everything British. I live in London and we have so much going on here.


 “I am also interested in history – Winston Churchill, the Second World War, anything like that – and Johnnie Walker has been going since 1867, so it works well.”

 He also admits to being fond of the odd dram – sipped with ice-cold water – though we can neither confirm nor deny that whisky was responsible for the drunken night out in New York that resulted in that scar at the corner of his right eye. 

So let’s talk about the body, shall we? All 6ft 2in of its lean, sun-kissed muscle (and, I am reliably informed by our make-up artist, with a healthy smattering of man-hair). It must be high-maintenance, but he tries to make it sound easy. “I have a great love of sport. I did it before I was modelling and was always careful about what I ate. But I don’t stay away from carbs, it’s all in moderation.

 “I hate the word diet. It’s a lifestyle. There’s not enough education about nutrition in the UK.”

 He feels so passionately about the subject that the weekend we meet he is due to speak at the Vogue Festival on the title ‘Too Fat, Too Thin, Are We Ever Going to be Happy?’ “My point is: why are we still talking about it? There have to be solutions. People want to talk about fitness and there’s no quick fix – I wish there was – but it’s bloody hard work. I’m in the gym at 10.30pm at night then at 9am I’ll go again, or I’ll fit it in during the day. People say, ‘You have a great body.’ It’s not. It’s a healthy lifestyle. It’s what everyone should be doing.”

 The modelling industry – both male and female – has been plagued by issues over eating disorders and the debate refuses to go away, but Gandy says, “What you hear about is the negative side. Not everyone’s the same, not everyone’s body’s the same, not everybody reacts to food in the same way. I’ve been out with models who are very, very thin and they eat more than me. Of course, there are girls who struggle and it affects them, but there are lots of girls who are naturally skinny and that’s why they are supermodels. You don’t complain about jockeys or athletes or ballerinas who train and are very careful about how they eat, but there are probably the same problems.

 “You have to educate models as well,” he adds, “They don’t have to follow the trend. Lara Stone is not a size zero but she’s one of the most successful models in the world – she has a couple of great assets.” He flashes that crinkly smile again. 

Another passion is his charity, Blue Steel, named, self-mockingly, after Ben Stiller’s most famous pose in the male model spoof Zoolander. During Comic Relief, an eBay auction of lots – ranging from a dog walk in Richmond Park with Yasmin and Simon Le Bon and a Dolce e Gabbana suit worn by Tinie Tempah to VIP tickets to the Scottish Fashion Awards and lunch for two in Louis Vuitton’s private apartment – raised in excess of £150,000. One of the most hotly contested prizes was to go on a shoot with Gandy himself. “If you’re in the public eye it’s a privilege if you can help people,” he says. “I don’t think it’s a choice.”

 As a lifelong dog lover, he is also an ambassador for Battersea Dogs Home. “I would have loved to have been a vet – that would have been my dream, probably still is in some ways, if my brain hadn’t let me down. So this is my way of helping animals.”

 He doesn’t keep a dog himself – “You try to press for responsible ownership, and if you travel 90 times a year that’s not going to be responsible” – but he adds, “We do sponsor animals – me and my parents up in Suffolk. The fourth dog we’ve fostered has just been rehomed, in fact.”

 It’s clear, then, that he is broadening his horizons, looking beyond the modelling world to other career opportunities, always with an eye on the credibility of the brand. Through his partnership with Jaguar he drives an S-Type and XKR-S, while he is also getting a 1960 Mercedes restored and has a project in the offing with Morgan. “My mum’s a bit worried actually – it could be a bit dangerous.” He has also been asked to produce his own clothing line. “So I’ll be stepping away from in front of the camera.” 

There’s also his private life – such as it is. I have been told he will not answer questions of a romantic nature – for the record, he has been linked with the Saturdays’ Mollie King and fellow model Sara Ann Macklin – but he volunteers, “I can’t be working as much as I am just now. I want to have a family at some stage. I want to find a girl who will …” he searches for the right word so I suggest, “Put up with you?” “Yes,” he smiles, “put up with me. Thank you. But it’s true, it’s hard. I’m never there. It’s not just the travelling – a lot of people travel, then when they come home they do nothing. I’m shooting, I’ve got the apps, I’ve got the company, I’ve got the charities, I’m constantly working, then training in between that. When most people are out having a nice time, I’m probably at the gym.

 “But I’m finally building a house, which I got planning permission for today. So maybe I’m building a nest, I don’t know, we’ll have to see.”

 Form an orderly queue …

David Gandy attended the Chelsea Flower Show 2013

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Today, David Gandy attended the Chelsea Flower Show press and VIP preview day, hosted by the Royal Horticultural Society at the Royal Hospiral in London.










David Gandy's editorial for Glamour Spain (June 2013)

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David Gandy is decked out from head to toe in Dolce & Gabbana for 'Glamour' Spain latest editorial on the model. Shot in Milan by photographer Sergi Pons, he recreates a scene typical to the region of Sicily. Styled by Miriam Arruaga, Make-up and Hair by Noemí Corral



 
Photos courtesy of David Gandy's Assistant


Screencaps courtesy of Dreamysim

  • Magazine (HQ) pages by DjG.com


 


  • Translation by DjG.com
By Carol López

David Gandy is the major model of the world and in this report we discover why.

FANTASY WITH DAVID GANDY

He is the best model in the world. The top British model stars in the new water movie for Dolce and Gabbana's Light Blue fragrance....Dive In!

Malpensa Airport (Milan) The city welcomes us with its usually gray sky. Walking past the duty free shop, a succession of giant Dolce and Gabbana pictures instantly transports us to Summer in Sicily. Light, heat, wind, salty air, the scent of lemon, the touch of the uncomfortable Tyrrhenian beach pebbles.....The cold sensation dissipates. It is as if in just those few seconds we traveled the thousand kilometers that separates a stern and sophisticated Italy of an Alpine paradise from the regions of the south. Monica Belluci and Bianca Balti watch us from a 10 x 10 instant snap shot, ones in which Dominica Dolce and Stefano Gabbana have managed to capture the essence of Summer in the South.

But in Milan we have to meet David Gandy, the model that best represents the energy of the Mediterranean so often imagined by designers. The man puts a face ( and what a body!) to the advert that is forever etched in our minds thanks to a tiny white pant.

The vital and anarchic atmosphere of the kitchen of an arty flat in the heart of Milan takes us back to Sicily. The Glamour styling and photography team have a arrived from market with artichokes, basil, tomatoes, speck(ham), parmesan, red wine and a fish that weighs more than five kilos. A pot of al dente spaghetti rages on the fire. As if moved by a spring, the prop master removes from the scene the watch that the best model in the world has just taken off his wrist before getting to work. "Can we leave it there? It was a gift from Stefano," asks David Gandy.

Frying pan in hand, the man who spent his youth lamenting because he could not get into a pair of Heidi Slimac pants confesses that he loves to eat. "But I have to take of what I eat, so I follow a Mediterranean diet with lots of white fish, grilled vegetables and organic food."

He is fond of luxury cars ( he has a classic jewel in his garage and he writes a column for GQ magazine about cars), he has launched a style app (davidgandystyleguide.com) and a fitness app (davidgandyfitness.com), writes a blog for Vogue.uk and has his own foundation aimed at raising funds for charity called Blue Steel Appeal. With this initiative he has managed to involve his collegues in the fashion world such as Kate Moss and designers such as Stella McCartney and House of Holland. There were Ebay auctions to meet Naomi Campbell, VIP passes to go backstage for a Victoria Beckham fashion show and a spend a day with Gandy on one of his photo shoots, these are some of the things done to raise money for underprivileged children. The name he chose for his foundation was taken from the movie Zoolander, it is a statement of intent regarding his vision of the fashion business: The fashion world is a bit too serious. the industry needs more of a sense of humor.

He summarizes his beauty routine in four simple words: Moisturizing cream and gym." Born in Essex, east of London 33 years ago, he has worked for brands like Ermenegildo Zegna, Carolina Herrera and Massimo Dutti. the White Pants Guy has no time to complain about is overwhelming genetics.

His potent and viril image traces the archetypal Mediterranean man of the collective imagination. Maybe that's why, upon seeing him for the first time in 2006, Domenico and Stefano knew that David Gandy was the guy they were looking for. There was no casting, a chance encounter in London, one in which the model didn't even think to go to. But his agent persisted and convinced him that he could not return home without meeting the Italian designers in person. "When we were introduced, Stefano and Domenico eclaimed: WOW! David Gandy, Dolce and Gabbana... We share initials, DG!" It's been seven years that have resulted in three Light Blue campaigns, directed by Mario Testino, in the idyllic waters of Capri.

"Measurements", "girlfriend" and "hot" are the most typed searches when you enter his name into Google. On the first one he says " There are no tricks or magic wands. It's only possible with daily training." He does an hour a day, six days a week. On the second we found out he broke up with British model Sara Ann Macklin (current Topshop image) after being together over a year. About his blazing looks, Gandy downplays it with such poise, that one comes to think he is right and that he's not that attractive. This perverse thought barely holds for a split second, the time it takes to blink. You open your eyes and you are faced with reality: Gandy is physically impressive. But the model insists: "It's an honor to have become the sexy prototype of a Mediterranean lover, but I am only like that when I pose in front of the camera."
 Our conversation is interrupted by someone offering  us something to drink. " Cappuccino, espresso..?" Gandy opts for tea, an unexpected choice for an Italian production team. There is no tea in catering, there was no tea on the list for the prop team...In the kitchen that served as the backdrop for the photo shoot we find a can of Earl Grey. "Seeing me for the first time, most people think I'm Italian- laughs- but I'm actually very British." The tea is nothing more than just one anecdote, but his sleek menswear vision clears all doubts. Gandy has what the English call charm. He tells us that his wardrobe is traditional with contemporary touches. And your style? "Very old school. My icons are McQueen and Newman." He admits he's scrupulous about shoes. 'Everyday I see guys with horrible shoes, and I think that is essential: You need to buy good footwear and take care of them. A good pair of shoes is an investment."

He realizes as a male model his greatest challenge is to be as good as his female counterparts ( before him, top models such as Claudia Shiffer, Eva Herzigova, Naomi Campbell and Gisele Bundshen or occasional models such as actress Scarlett Johansson have been the face of brands that have subsequently signed Gandy.) "Men do not have as many possibilities as they do. Jeans, pants and suits." he says. "That's why I blindly trust classic tailoring. We bet on a good tailor made suite without hesitation."

David Gandy covers ShortList Magazine (May 2013)

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David Gandy graces the cover and spread inside of the lastest issue of ShortList Magazine. He appears under the lens of photographer David Goldman  in a new set of black & white photos. Showing his personal and unique style, dressed in Dolce & Gabbana, he is the vision of sensuality plus the epitome of today's male beauty.









Go Big or Go Home

David Gandy is the working-class Essex boy who took over the fashion industry. ShortList’s Tom Bailey talks fast cars and spent whisky bottles with a model of manliness

“You, the viewer, have chosen ‘David’ to be the Male Face Of 2001,” announced erstwhile This Morning presenter Richard Madeley airily. Cue a ripple of studio applause, a corny fanfare sound effect and some half-hearted handshakes. “He’ll be taken on to the books of Select model agency and he’s gonna have a fantastic career ahead of him,” concluded Madeley blithely, without a shred of conviction. “Coming up later in the show...”

Twelve years on from that forgettable TV debut, ShortList is sitting opposite ‘David’, who is now the highest-paid male model in the world. When he isn’t serving as Dolce & Gabbana’s muse, the 33-year-old, 6ft 3in Essex boy, dubbed ‘Dagenham Dave’ by some, is jetting round the world, building on a global brand already worth millions and turning down offers from Hollywood.

Even if you don’t know his name, you’ll almost certainly recognise his seminal work: the now-iconographic 2007 advertising campaign for D&G’s bestselling, award-winning male fragrance, Light Blue. It saw him spread-eagled over a 50ft billboard in Times Square, wearing nothing but pair of white trunks, garner 11 million hits online, and gain a new moniker: ‘The White Pants Man.’

More recently he took centre stage at the Olympics closing ceremony with Kate Moss, signed contracts with Marks & Spencer and Jaguar, and found himself endorsing Johnnie Walker’s £180-a-bottle Blue Label whisky. As for his effect on women, check his Facebook wall.

Up close, he is perfectly stubbled, well-chiselled and radiating health; Clark Gable with a touch of the Count from Sesame Street. The reason for our meeting? To talk about the launch of the third campaign for Light Blue, which – we later glean – involved flying to Capri to have bikini-clad Italian model Bianca Balti wrapped around his waist for a morning.

Gentlemen, meet David Gandy. The man we’d all (not so) secretly like to be…

You’re the world’s biggest male model today, but what did you look like at 16?

I was nothing to write home about. I was a bit chubby and had no idea about fashion. I was playing every sport under the sun, so I just dressed in a utilitarian way. Cricket gear, football gear or a tracksuit; there was no time for fashion.

In other words, you shopped at Mad House...

[A smile creeps over Gandy’s face] No... I was very shy as a 16-year-old. I still am. Puberty is a horrid time. I was slightly bigger because I had puppy fat, then I shot up to 6ft 3 and got skinny, then I got broad. It was a weird development.

You didn’t have much luck with girls, then?

When I was 17 I had a Ford Fiesta 1.1 Ghia. ‘The Beast’, as we called it. The guy who owned it before me put aftermarket electric windows in, so you had to press the button and bang the door to get the window to fall down. I was on a date once and the passenger door was broken, so my date had to climb across me to get out, but then the other door broke. She climbed out of the window. I thought, “This isn’t happening.” I told my dad he was ruining my chances of ever getting laid.

Were you a boy racer, then?

After that I had a Peugeot 106 GTi. I crashed it. It’s never good when you have to push a car back on to four wheels.

And now Jaguar pays you to drive its cars.

Hey, you learn from your mistakes. If everything went right you’d never learn anything. And, yes, I have an XKR-S, and it’s my favourite car in the world.

So in your youth, becoming a world-famous model wasn’t on the cards…

No. I had just graduated with a degree in marketing when I won the modelling competition on This Morning. My friends said they’d sent my pictures in – I thought they were joking. Modelling wasn’t seen as an aspirational thing back then. It wasn’t a manly job. Fashion is kept very elitist – most people’s only tangible link to male modelling is Zoolander.

Which reinforces certain preconceptions...

Exactly – the preconception that it’s all up its own arse. There are plenty of those people, but my motto has always been work hard and be persistent. Nowadays, people don’t seem to want to work from the bottom up. I came from university and did five or six years of catalogues.

Is catalogue modelling as cheesy as it sounds?

It’s awful, cheesy clothing most of the time. You’re seen as ‘Male Model A’.

Did you ever walk out?

I’ve walked off shoots. Sometimes they talk about you in the third person while you are standing there. Other times they start doing your hair without even saying hello. I’d speak up for myself and they’d be like, “Oh, sh*t. This guy talks.” That’s why I wanted more respect for guys in this industry.

Correct us if we’re wrong, but isn’t modelling simply a matter of good genes?

Modelling is like acting. The photographer knows what they want, and you have to portray that. But you can’t use voices like an actor can – you have to do it with a look. One look.

You’re back in your underwear for Dolce & Gabbana’s Light Blue adverts. Does that image of you get annoying?

I didn’t want to be known as ‘The White Pants Guy’ forever, because that would drive me round the bend, so I started thinking about how I could make my name outside of it. But I’m hugely grateful to Dolce & Gabbana because, before the Light Blue campaign, male models were skinny and androgynous. I adopted a ‘go big or go home’ mentality and decided to bring back a sense of masculinity.

Who are your male style icons?

I love Paul Newman. There is an element of me that thinks, “What has happened to men?” Someone emailed me this great thing the other day: a picture of a young kid from a boy band: 16 years old, hair flipped over. And beneath that a picture of Sean Connery as Bond, cigarette hanging out of his mouth. And it said in big letters, ‘Men: what happened?’ When I look at Paul Newman, Steve McQueen, James Dean and Sean Connery, it’s a question I ask myself.

You missed Harry Styles off that list…

I’m not going to knock Harry. One Direction were incredibly generous and supported my charity, Blue Steel Appeal.

Why call it Blue Steel Appeal?

I can’t change it, so why not embrace it? It puts a smile on people’s faces. There’s not enough fun in fashion.

Do your parents ‘get’ the fashion world?

Mum and Dad are retired, but they’re still the hardest working people I know. Everyone in my family is self-employed, which probably says something about the family mentality; that control thing.

How do they feel about their son being on billboards?

They’re proud, but in a subdued way. I’m in the only industry where women are more powerful than men – and earn about five times as much. My dad still finds that hilarious.

Do your friends rib you?

My friends from back home don’t know about the industry and they don’t want to talk about it. We just rip the p*ss out of each other and reminisce about our teenage years; nights out in Billericay and the fact that nobody died.

Care to elaborate?

I can feel my PR manager going, “No.” A typical night out was in Billericay – when I wasn’t old enough to drink – then walking home across a field.

Do you get a kick out of fame?

People presume you’re going to be up your own arse. I was in Sainsbury’s the other day and a guy came up to me and went, “David Gandy?” “Er, yeah.” “What are you doing shopping?” “I dunno, I’m hungry.” “Oh, you don’t have someone to do that for you?” It’s amazing what people think. He ended up walking round with me and we had a chat.

Has a fan ever crossed the line?

A girl superimposed my head on to her family portrait and came to my agency saying I was her long-lost brother. It was during Men’s Fashion Week, so she could get the timetable and know where I was going to be. Luckily my driver was ex-Scotland Yard and dealt with it.

And do you get trolled?

Yes. Trolling is disgusting and I’ve had cases where I’ve had to get the police involved.

That explains why you don’t have a personal Twitter.

I don’t understand that world of ‘Look at the restaurant I’m in’, ‘look at my car’, ‘look at the beach I’m on.’ And why do high-profile people complain about press intrusion, then tweet where they are and complain about being papped? But then, the biggest stars often don’t tweet. Daniel Radcliffe said, “Why would anyone want me to tweet? I haven’t got anything interesting to say.” Straight away, I liked him.

What do you do when you’re not working?

I love cars. I’m having a classic Mercedes 190SL restored and fitted with a bespoke, five-piece leather luggage set. I also ski. But these days I look at a double black run that I flew down at 24 and think, “Nah, I’ll have a bit of lunch.” Self-preservation kicks in at 27 and you realise you’re going to hurt yourself. It just hasn’t happened with my driving yet.

You’ve just got a racing licence – how’s that working out?

I did a Jaguar driving day recently and spun off in an LP1 [Le Mans] racing car, but just kept the accelerator pinned. We carried on across a field – I really wanted that lap time. I came in and the guy said: “You did good – but I think you broke the car.” I’m better at rallying.

You also endorse Johnnie Walker whisky. Is every corner of your house filled with stacked bottles?

Ha! No, but a friend I hadn’t seen for a while came round recently and we polished off a bottle of whisky between us.

Finally, when was the last time you had a Big Mac?

I had a burger on Saturday – but not a Big Mac. We didn’t hold back. I think we were recovering from the whisky...

Highlights of 2013 Mille Miglia with David Gandy & Yasmin Le Bon

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After a few days and with the official classification of the Mille Miglia published, David Gandy and Yasmin Le Bon, driving the Jaguar XK 120 from 1950, finished the race at #169 of 320 cars that returned on Sunday to Brescia. But we did not want to close those intense days without giving you the opportunity to relive them once again. So we have decided to give you a best of moments from all 3 stages of the race. We hope you enjoy this collection of highlights we have gathered for this video. 

We would also like to give our sincerest thanks to Morena Tipitina (m-ouse.tumblr.com) from Italy for kindly allowing us to incorporate her excellent recording of the Teletense interview on the end of the first stage in Ferrara. Thank YOU so much!


Revisit the Mille Miglia experience:

TAG Heuer Host 2013 Monaco Grand Prix Party

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On Saturday May 25, 2013, David Gandy attended the TAG Heuer's 50 Years of Carrera event at the 2013 Formula 1 Grand Prix in Monaco.

David Gandy with Samantha Barks

Johnnie Walker Gold Label Reserve Cocktail Party

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Last night, David Gandy, as Johnnie Walker Blue Label Ambassador, attended the Johnnie Walker Gold Label Reserve cocktail party aboard the luxurious John Walker & Sons Voyager yacht to celebrate the partnership between the leading Scotch Whisky brand with Vodafone Mercedes McLaren in Cap-d'Ail, France.                                             



 
David Gandy with Percy Parker


Source: Aizakbuyondo.com

David Gandy's 'Corazon, Corazon' TV Report

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The Spanish program Corazon, Corazon, once again delighted us this morning with a broadcast report on David Gandy for the launch of his latest editorial for the Spanish edition of Glamor (June 2013). Using beautiful images from the behind the scenes video of the shoot, along with clips from +Gente and Corazon, Corazon interview. The report mentions out takes from David's interview with the magazine.                                                                

Source: rtve.es 

A Look Back at 2009: Hurriyet Interview

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Today, we want to look back at 2009, our friend Ilknur Sozuneri from Turkey has brought to you this vintage interview of David Gandy for the Turkish magazine, Hurriyet. Thank you so much Ilknur for finding this rare interview, for translating it and for your kindness to us from the beginning, we really appreciate it.




 May 02, 2009 By Sibel ARNA

Take the magnifying glass and look, you can’t find a flaw when you see him “If you are human, what are we, brother”, he is the one type that you riot. David Gandy (29), he is one of the most famous male models. He was the catalogue face of Massimo Dutti, Stefanel,  Zara, etc. But he was well-known as Dolce&Gabbana’s underwear model.

Everybody remembers that he posed for Dolce&Gabbana's perfume on a boat. David Gandy, is the 2009-2010 autumn-winter collection face for Turkish brand Sarar. He posed on various corners of Istanbul, and he answered only our questions.

Q: How was your family?
D: A British family very, very normal. I grew up with my grandfathers and my grandmothers. My mum and dad are very disciplined. Both of them very hardworking.

Q: I know that you won a modeling competition and then you became a model.
D: Yes, but I joined that competition not by my own decision. When I was at the university doing a Marketing degree, my flatmate was interested in photography. He took some photos of mine, for homework, and sent those images to the modeling competition. I was shocked when they called me that I got to the finals.

Q: When did you came at the first level, did you become an instant success?
D: No, my career was run on very slowly. When I first started into modeling, very skinny and very thin guys were popular. All the biggest brand were working with that androgynous stereotype. They found me very handsome, as an old rugby player, my muscles were bulged. But I felt that in the future the models like me will be in great demand, so I waited.

Q: How did you make money when you were waiting?
D: I posed for the brands catalogues which were in the foregrounds, not the main catalogues. My first job was for Paul Smith’s catalogues.

Q: How did your luck turn?
D: Thanks to Dolce&Gabbana. It was six or seven years ago. My PR told me that, Stefano Gabbana had a big birthday party and I had to go there. Incidentally, I was sitting with Stefano and Domenico at the same table all night. Two weeks later, they called me for fashion show and they wanted to me to be a part of their new perfume campaign “Light Blue”.

Q: Did you remember the moment you first stood stark naked in the face of the lens?
D: I wasn't completely naked at any time.

Q: But I saw your completely naked images
D: They are trick photography.

Q: When didn’t it become a problem to undress next to others and to be in only your underwear?
D: I remember the first day I stayed in my underwear, I convinced myself that it is a very normal thing. But of course, I was comfortable since the first days. I don’t get undressed for everyone who says to get undressed. I get undressed for V Man magazine, photographers like Mario Testino or brands like Dolce&Gabbanna.

Q: Does everybody want you to get undressed?
D: Yes. They do, but I say no. 

Q: How did you have a body like that?
D: I did three years in sports. But I love drinking, eating. I don’t do very strict diets. If I eat too much, the next day I will do sports for three hours.

Q: For how many years will you be modelling?
D: I think one more year, then I will quit.

Q: This means outright early retirement. Do you have another plan?
D: I am on the top of modelling. In this job, men aren’t at an advantage like women in this industry. For me, I don’t have a chance to be like the male Kate Moss. 

Q: Don’t you want to be involved in the film industry?
D: Many people say it, but it requires some abilities. Maybe in the future, I will take some lessons, then we will see if I have the talent or not. 

Q: Your fans are thinking that you have the Italian and Mediterranean fever. What do you think about that?
D: My foot! I wish I were, but I am exactly a British guy with this  British accent.

Q: I want to finish and ask that question that those who have seen you: If you are a normal man, then what are the rest of us?
D: When someone asks me, automatically I’m trying to prove that I’m normal person. 

Q: Are you on good terms with women?
D: I love them!

Q: The women, do they easily talk with you?
D: I have two close girlfriends, they thought that women are afraid of me and stayed back from me. But I’m not sure. Self-confident women come and talk to me.

Q: Are you one of the celebrities who think that you can date other celebrities?
D: Yes, we haven’t got a choice. There are always popular people around us. For example Brad Pitt, after such a beautiful woman like Jennifer Aniston, then comes another like Angelina Jolie, like a goddess on a movie set. It’s a very difficult situation.

White lingerie was in fashion again, because of me. I wear only Dolce&Gabbana underwear. I prefer white colour. Because White underwear was justified because of me, it is in fashion again. After I posed with White underwear, David Beckham posed with white underwear for Armani and he became Armani’s face.

David Gandy talks to Grazia Spain (May 2013)

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The Dolce & Gabbana Light Blue perfume's worlwide promotional tour arrives this afternoon in Madrid. The world renowned Italian brand along with the presence of David Gandy will present its new perfume campaign in an event that will take place in the center of the capital city and in which David will hold several interviews with major publications. We hope it's a success!
So before this event Grazia caught up with David in Milan a few weeks ago.


One on One with David Gandy

The model visits Spain this week to participate in a summer party. Grazia in Milan spoke to him before his arrival.

Madrid prepares for the visit of the world's most wanted man. The top model, David Gandy, arrives this week in the capital to present the new perfume campaign Light Blue byDolce & Gabbana, which he has been the face of since 2007. But also to participate in a summer welcome bash which promises to be one of the events of the season.

Invited by Italian designers, we find this model (33 years old) in the football stadium of Milan, a team that wears the fashion house's label since 2004. There, dressed in a team jersey created for him, Gandy shares a glass of wine and talks about his life and miracles. To begin, we discovered that he is more than a guy on a boat with the cliffs of Capri in the background ( an image that has made him a myth), where the model is most comfortable is in the dust and mud of the roads, driving sports car. Your perfect vacation? Going around the world in 4x4. "Cars are my passion it comes before fashion and women," he says. "The craziest experiences of my life have been driving a race car. Some have been destroyed by crashing into a tree. In fact, if I can square it away with my charity commitments, perhaps I can participate in the next Paris-Dakar ".

Muscles with a Heart.

Gandy refers to Blue Steel Appeal, the foundation that he has launched to help finance the organization Comic Relief, an English association that helps children in need. "It started with my trip to Uganda to see gorillas up close. We slept in a village and there I saw these children with no shoes, with nothing, and thought that working in fashion and living in luxury I could not, not do something. More than a choice, it was a way to give back everything that life gives me. " It is not the first time the top model commits to charity. For example,he is an ambassador for Battersea Dogs & Cats Home, and at times fosters dogs for this association which defends animals. He also participates in charity auctions. In fact, their presence in the stadium in Milan was from one of those auctions where Dolce and Gabbana auctioned two tickets to their private box.

Film? There's no rush.

"I'm not just a model," he says, stating that "advertising campaigns and photo shoots do not take up more than 50% of my schedule. The rest of the time I write for the English editions of GQ and Vogue. I am also co-producer of films and I think soon I will be making my debut as an actor, but there is no hurry. The important thing is to choose the right script, because I do not want be the handsome muscular powerhouse, but a character that strays from the clichés and surprises ". Our conversation is interrupted by a group of girls surrounding Gandy looking to take a photo with him and, incidentally, openly grope. A smile of his is enough to render them speechless. "David, you have more groupies than a rock star," I tell him jokingly. He laughs and says, "You have no idea what they are capable of. There was one that left me speechless: she had my face tattooed on her back. " It is time to speak of love. "I'm single," he says. The heavy tone in his voice prompts me to ask if you would change anything in your life. "No," he says seriously. "Only a fool does not understand the importance of their errors. It's very easy when all goes well, but with mistakes you learn a lot. " In the end, besides Gandy being a sex symbol, he is a very intelligent guy.

David Gandy talks with Telva during the Dolce&Gabbana Light Blue Launch in Madrid (Video)

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Last night, before the launch of D&G Light Blue in Madrid and The Mediterranean Summer Cocktail at the San Mauro Hotel, David Gandy sat down with Telva.com and gave them his best trick for seduccion and what the key to his physique is.


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