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WIN on the TODAY Show - November 4, 2009
WIN detergent was featured on the TODAY Show as a essential tool of any fashionista's arsenal. WIN detergent is one of the things you want to have around so you can look good all the time, especially when your working out. As TODAY Show's guest expert put it, you spend a lot of money on your hi-tech sports clothes whether it is lululemon, Nike, or REI, so treat them well and get those smells out too.
WIN is mentioned about two minutes into the video. Watch the whole thing if you want to find out about other handy things in the fight to look good and smell good.
Click here now to order WIN! Use special coupon code 5OFF8 to get an additional $5 discount plus free shipping on WIN and WIN Green 8-packs. Offer good through December 31, 2009.
Top Olympian Takes His Shirt Off To WIN
NEW YORK -- (June 20, 2008) Olympic decathlete Brian Clay has teamed up with WIN Products Inc., creators of WIN High Performance Sport Detergent and the official licensed detergent of the U.S. Olympic Team, for a new charity initiative called “Take Your Shirts Off to WIN.” Clay will announce a national program calling all fans to donate workout apparel to WIN, who will wash the clothing and send it to Giving is Winning, an organization that promotes sport activities for the youth in refugee camps throughout the world.
UPDATE JULY 18, 2008.
Clay, a 2004 Olympic silver medal winner will “take off his shirt to WIN” prior to heading to Beijing, and people who want to follow in his Olympic footsteps can donate clothing at local retailers which are listed on the WIN website at www.SweatLifter.com. Consumers are also invited to log onto the WIN website for a mail-in address where they can send their clothing.
BEIJING -- While training for a marathon in 2002, Mark Konjevod never imagined that a berth at the Olympic Games might be at stake.
And sure enough, Mr. Konjevod isn't here in Beijing.
What is here, however, is a product that emerged from his awful-smelling marathon-training apparel. Called WIN, it is the official detergent of the U.S. Olympic Committee, and it even has its own Olympic pitchman, U.S. decathlete Bryan Clay, who not long ago never imagined himself endorsing soap.