Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Posted: 2015-09-01T13:01:15Z | Updated: 2015-09-01T15:14:43Z Exclusive: Gatorade Unveils Serena Williams Mural In Brooklyn, Releases Moving 'Serena 21' Ad | HuffPost

Exclusive: Gatorade Unveils Serena Williams Mural In Brooklyn, Releases Moving 'Serena 21' Ad

The new commercial is a real tear-jerker.
|
Open Image Modal
Gatorade

Serena Williams coasted through her first-round U.S. Open match  on Monday in Flushing Meadows, New York, dominating Vitalia Diatchenko 6-0, 2-0. While Williams was in Queens taking her first step towards securing a record-tying 22nd Grand Slam title  and a true Grand Slam summer, artists from Overall Murals  worked diligently in Brooklyn to finish a mural of Williams. 

Open Image Modal
Gatorade
Open Image Modal
Gatorade

Commissioned by Gatorade as part of their "Serena 21" art series, which honors her current total of 21 Grand Slam championships, the mural was painted on the corner of Kent Ave and Grand Street in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. All of the paintings were designed by Vault49 , a New York-based creative agency. 

Open Image Modal
Gatorade
Open Image Modal
Gatorade

The mural is comprised of 21 different paintings, with each individual work pegged to a historical moment in Williams' career. 

Open Image Modal
Gatorade
Open Image Modal
Gatorade
Open Image Modal
Gatorade
Open Image Modal
Gatorade

To walk us through these key events in Williams' career, Gatorade has also released a new commercial, featuring stunning footage from an interview she did as a little girl interspersed with clips tracking her growth as a player and as a woman.

In the commercial, the reporter asks her, “If you were a tennis player, who would you want to be like?”

Then, footage plays from her days in Compton, to winning her first U.S. Open and Grand Slam singles title in 1999, to her 2013 upset loss at the Australian Open  quarterfinals. The ad depicts what Williams, 33, has been able to accomplish, and, perhaps more important, battle through.

“I’d like other people to be like me,” she beams.

 

 

Also on HuffPost: 

Support Free Journalism

Consider supporting HuffPost starting at $2 to help us provide free, quality journalism that puts people first.

Support HuffPost