Inherent Vice Contest

A l’occasion de la sortie du film Inherent Vice de Paul Thomas Anderson, le 4 mars, nous avons réuni pour vous les 8 illustrations très colorées qui ont été révélées pour chaque personnage principal : Benicio Del Toro, Eric Roberts, Reese Witherspoon, Joaquin Phoenix, Owen Wilson, Martin Short… Plus d’informations sur le concours dans la suite de l’article, afin de remporter des affiches, places, livres et bien d’autres choses.

Bande annonce :

Concours :

Pour participer, commentez et partagez cet article sur Facebook et en le retweetant sur Twitter.

Le tirage au sort aura lieu le 10 mars à minuit. Lots à gagner :
– 1 enceinte portable.
– 10 affiches 60×40.
– 10 Tshirts (mix S,M et L).
– 10 colliers.
– 10 livres.
– 10×2 places pour le film.

z-INHERENT VICE_120_WEB
Reese Whiterspoon
Owen Wilson
Martin Short
Katherine WaterSton
Joaquin
Hong Chau
Eric Roberts
Benicio
Inherent Vice Contest

BIG and Heatherwick unveil "vibrant new neighbourhood" for Google's California HQ

Breaking news: Google has released a movie detailing its plans for a new California headquarters designed by the studios of Bjarke Ingels and Thomas Heatherwick.

Danish firm BIG and London-based Heatherwick Studio plan to redevelop four sites in Mountain View, California to create the Google campus – marking the first time the internet giant has designed and built an office complex from scratch.

The concept for Google North Bayshore is to create lightweight block-like structures that can be moved around, rather than investing in permanent buildings. According to Google, this will offer flexibility as the company invests in new product areas.

google-big-heatherwick-468

Translucent canopies will cover buildings and outdoor areas, designed to control the climate whilst also allowing natural daylight and ventilation throughout the Silicon Valley facility.

“With trees, landscaping, cafes, and bike paths weaving through these structures, we aim to blur the distinction between our buildings and nature,” said Google in a post on its official blog.

The campus is also expected to feature shops and restaurants, as well as environmental additions including enhanced owl habitats and widened creek beds.

“We chose Mountain View for our headquarters 15 years ago because we love the beauty of the bay, the close proximity to great universities, the family-friendly environment and the chance to work in a city at the heart of Silicon Valley,” added Google. “Today, we want to create office spaces that don’t just provide a great home for Google, but which also work for the city that has given us so much.

Bjarke Ingels said the project will create “a vibrant new neighbourhood of Mountain View” that will offer an alternative to typically insular corporate headquarters.

“Silicon Valley has been an engine of innovation driving technological evolution and global economy,” he said. “So far the majority of these vast intellectual and economical resources have been confined to the digital realm – Google North Bayshore expands this innovative spirit into the physical realm.”

“Together with Heatherwick Studio and Google we have set out to imagine the work environments of future Googlers to be as adaptable, flexible and intelligent as the rest of Google’s wide spanning portfolio.”

Ingels and Heatherwick are both in their 40s and could still considered upstarts in the industry – although both have an impressive portfolio. Heatherwick’s projects include the proposed Garden Bridge for London and the cauldron for the 2012 Olympic Games, while BIG has designed a combined power plant and ski slope, and the underground Danish Maritime Museum.

In the movie both designers emphasise the importance of nature in their proposal.

“Google’s presence in Mountain View is really so strong that it can’t be a fortress that shuts away nature or that shuts away the neighbours. It really has to be a neighbourhood in Mountain View,” said Ingels.

Heatherwick adds: “It’s interesting to try and look at how you can really augment or turn the dial up more on that nature, at the same time as looking to protect the land use.”

BIG revealed to Dezeen earlier this week that is working Google and Heatherwick on the project, which was later confirmed by Heatherwick Studio.

The move follows in the footsteps of fellow Silicon Valley companies Apple and Facebook – both of which are working with high-profile architects on their new office complexes. Foster + Partners is behind Apple’s huge ring-shaped headquarters underway in Cupertino, while Facebook enlisted Frank Gehry for its new campus on the edge of San Francisco Bay.

More information to follow.

The post BIG and Heatherwick unveil “vibrant new neighbourhood” for Google’s California HQ appeared first on Dezeen.

The "Shotgun Balloon Drop:" Thrill Seeker Hoisted 8,000 Feet High, Blasts His Balloons Out With a Shotgun

When did climbing to the top of a very tall structure, then BASE jumping off of it, become no longer enough?

I wonder if people always did crazy stuff like this, and there was just no such thing as a GoPro to record it, so we never got to see it. In any case, now that the diminutive camera has changed the way we’re able to view spectacles, by providing previously impossible-to-record POV’s, it seems folks are upping the ante and creating feats outside the realm of normal extreme sports competitions or run-of-the-mill thrill seeking.

Hence BASE jumper Erik Roner hops into a lawnchair, letting a crew rig it up with 90 weather balloons that carry him to a height of 8,000 feet. Then he starts shooting the balloons out with a shotgun:

New York Daily News Loses $20 Million a Year

NY_DNThe hot media story of the moment is that New York Daily News owner Mort Zuckerman is considering selling the tabloid. The logical question that emerges out of that is who in their right mind would want to buy it? Especially considering Capital New York’s report that the Daily News loses about $20 million a year.

The first person that comes to mind is Rupert Murdoch, if only because there were rumors of a New York Post/Daily News merger a few months ago. Another potential buyer could be Cablevision. Or there’s always the old fall back — Michael Bloomberg.

FishbowlNY’s take? We don’t see anyone or any company buying the Daily News. It just doesn’t make any sense. It loses way too much money and there’s really no answer for that. There simply aren’t pockets deep enough to dig it out of a hole that has no bottom.

The most likely scenario is that Zuckerman retains the paper for another year or two before deciding to shutter the print version. The potential sale story is fun for now, but it in reality it’s the Daily News’ last rites.

CNNMoney Promotes Seven

CNNMoney has promoted seven staffers. Details are below.

  • Stephany Cardet has been promoted from webmaster to web developer. She served as webmaster for the past two years.
  • Melanie Hicken has been name a staff writer. She joined CNNMoney in 2012 and most recently served as a personal finance reporter for the site.
  • Greg Wallace has been promoted from reporter to associate editor.
  • Jose Pagliery has also been promoted to staff writer.
  • Richa Naik has been upped from production assistant to associate producer.
  • Alanna Petroff has been promoted from international business reporter to senior reporter/producer.
  • Peter Valdes-Dapena has been promoted from senior writer to digital correspondent. He has been with CNNMoney for 15 years.

For Mimi Sheraton, It Started with Caviar and a Frozen Candy Bar

There are bucket lists. And then there are bucket shopping lists.

Mimi Sheraton, former food critic for the New York Times, is currently on a tour to promote her book 1,000 Foods To Eat Before You Die. The book took ten years to compile and, as she recently told Connecticut Post contributor Christina Hennessy, it began with an extremely unusual culinary combo:

“The first two items that I wrote down, that I wanted in the book, was the frozen Milky Way bar and caviar,” Sheraton said. “That kind of describes the range of the book. There are wonderful low-down, very good things that we remember as kids, and then there are the luxuries, each as evocative as they were the first time and as exciting to have again and again.”

Sheraton will be giving a free talk tomorrow afternoon at Connecticut’s Westport Library. Also participating with her in the discussion will be local chef Matt Storch, a Westport native who has a hand in the South Norwalk eatery Match as well as The Chelsea in Fairfield.
 
[Photo courtesy: Workman Publishing Company]

Red Ribbons on Display as Search Continues for ESPN Writer’s Son

Like many others this week, we have been actively hoping and praying that the search for missing 21-year-old Rochester Institute of Technology student Max Maisel has a happy ending. The son of ESPN writer Ivan Maisel has been missing since Sunday evening, after last being seen near the shores of Lake Ontario.

From a report by Rochester Democrat & Chronicle staff writer Jeff DiVeronica:

Max was thinking of majoring in history or psychology at RIT, but at the end of his first semester he knew photography was for him. A strong student, he earned a merit scholarship, too, but he’s far from boastful about his work. In fact, he’s quite private, his family said.

His family saw some of his landscape portraits for the first time on Wednesday. They included one of sunlight shining through tall forest trees and a long pier with some wicked clouds over water. The photos are now spread out on a pool table at the Beach Avenue house.

Residents in the Stratford neighborhood of the city have affixed red ribbons to trees as a show of support for the efforts to locate young Max. Dad Ivan has been with ESPN since 2002. He previously wrote for Sports Illustrated, Newsday and the Dallas Morning News.

[Photo via: rti.edu]

Link About It: Full Body Transplants are Near

Full Body Transplants are Near


Italian surgeon Sergio Canavero is stirring up some controversy in the medical world by proposing that successful full-body transplants are only two years away. The operation itself is mind-boggling as it consists of grafting a living person’s head……

Continue Reading…

What Color is this Dress: Solved With Science! ( Video )

What Color is this Dress: Solved With Science!..(Read…)

Self-Sealing Water Balloons You Never Need To Tie

Zorbz have a cool solution, automatically sealing water balloons with just a quick tug on the..(Read…)