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The Autoportrait Made With Blood

Quand on réalise un auto-portait on y met forcément un peu du sien. Ted Lawson, un artiste américain basé à New-York, a décidé de pousser le concept encore plus loin en réalisant son auto-portrait avec son propre sang. A l’aide d’une machine CNC, il a pompé son sang afin de l’utiliser comme encre et matière première d’un pinceau robotisé. Une vraie fusion du corps et de l’image.

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Turn Tweets into Art

La designer suédoise Amelia Shroyer a fait appel à tout une équipe créative pour imaginer le projet « Onehundredforty » : 5000 designs de posters pour faire de vos tweets et de 140 caractères, une oeuvre d’art à placarder dans votre salon. Il ne vous reste que quelques semaines pour supporter ce projet Kickstarter.

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Design "doesn't know how to democratise itself" says Shubhankar Ray

Design Indaba 2015: design brands operate in an “insider world” and are failing to connect with young consumers, according to the creative director of denim brand G-Star RAW (+ interview).

Talking to Dezeen after speaking at the Design Indaba conference in Cape Town last month, Shubhankar Ray said that elite furniture and lighting companies were failing to make their products accessible to wider audiences.

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Shubhankar Ray

“I think that’s the thing about the design world: it doesn’t know very well how to democratise itself,” he said. “It’s for the lucky few: people who know about the world of Vitra and Eames and Prouvé.”

Ray, who was creative director for shoe brand Camper from 2000 to 2006 before joining Dutch clothing company G-Star RAW, collaborated with Vitra in 2013 to produce Prouvé RAW, a customised collection of furniture designs by pioneering French Modernist Jean Prouvé.

Prouvé G-Star Raw Office Edition collection
Prouvé Raw: Office Edition collection

“There is a real Modernist heritage there and younger jeans consumers who know nothing about Prouvé suddenly got exposed to the idea of Prouvé,” said Ray, who is now preparing to launch a second collection of office furniture based on Prouvé’s designs. The Prouvé Raw: Office Edition will launch in Milan during the Salone del Mobile next month. 

Ray argued that both Camper and G-Star Raw are closer to industrial design companies than fashion brands, since shoes and jeans are industrial products.



“Both Camper and G-Star fundamentally do not believe in fashion,” he said. “So that means they don’t believe in the obsolescence of fashion. That means they are closer to furniture designers because somebody makes a piece of furniture not for six months, but to last for a long time.”

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Pharrell Williams in the G-Star RAW for the Ocean campaign

But most furniture and lighting brands fail to reach out beyond their existing consumer bases in the way that clothing companies do, he said. ‘There is a great opportunity to make design brands much more energised because their vibrational energy is today only on one level, in one particular audience,” he said. “So it never gets out of there.”

Ray also spoke about the importance of celebrities to brands, saying: “Today, celebrities are the biggest selling devices in the world, because they popularise everything from brands to behaviours to new ideas.”

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G-Star RAW by Marc Newson

However Ray has tried to use celebrities in more meaningful ways at G-Star Raw, getting actor Dennis Hopper to read poetry by Rudyard Kipling at a fashion show in 2008 and more recently collaborating with Pharrell Williams on the Raw for the Oceans project, which turns plastic salvaged from the sea into clothing.

“If you think about celebrities as currency, then every other currency is going to devalue and actually celebrity appears to be, over the last five years, resisting devaluation because of the internet and technology,” he said. “It keeps it going.”

Here’s an edited transcript of the interview with Ray:


Marcus Fairs: Tell me about your background.

Shubhankar Ray: I was born in India, in Calcutta. I arrived in England as a young kid. I grew up in a way where I was always playing with contradiction because outside my house was England and inside my house was India. And this is true of all immigrants. This created, like F. Scott Fitzgerald said, a sense that intelligence is the ability to carry around two contradictory ideas in your head at the same time.

Marcus Fairs: You were creative director of Camper in Mallorca from 2000 to 2006. How did that contradictory condition feed into your work for them?

Shubhankar Ray: I thought I was the opposite of Camper, you know. I had come from London; I had been working in New York and Tokyo and LA. Camper were rural farmers. The word Camper even means “farmer” in Catalan. I went to live in the countryside in Mallorca and this was like such a reversal of the life I had been living.

It allowed me to feed certain things from my world into their rural world. It became this brand that was on the one hand traditional, old, rural, slow; everything that the modern world is the opposite of. It was the opposite of Nike: if Nike said “air” we said “earth”. If Nike said “run” we said “walk”. And from this we made the positioning, advertising campaign, the design of the shops and how the brand would manifest itself.

Marcus Fairs: What was the impact of your work on Camper?

Shubhankar Ray: I was able to make them into a globally relevant player – operating with a very distinct identity, very highly differentiated, different to everybody else and almost a mixture of analogue and digital at a time where the whole world was going digital. Analogue was being replaced.

They increased their turnover significantly. They were able to go from having shops mainly in Spain to having shops in every major capital city in the world. And I think I helped them to translate their DNA and give it a visualisation where people who were not from their rural reality could connect with it in New York, in Berlin, in San Francisco, in Tokyo and London.

Marcus Fairs: And then you left Camper and went to G-Star RAW. What have you been doing there?

Shubhankar Ray: They wanted to become global and move from being a European challenger to a global player in the denim business. They had been mainly selling to retail customers, so there was no advertising. So I was mainly working on shifting them in a industry that is retro and nostalgic to a Modernistic positioning, taking influences from industrial design and not the world to fashion.

Marcus Fairs: Marc Newson has designed clothing for G-Star RAW. Were you involved in getting him on board?

Shubhankar Ray: He had already been working for G-Star and then he took a break. I hadn’t seen Marc for ten years, and then I met him randomly with the owner and we decided to start again. And Mark was somebody who we admired and he was a good input to put into your brand because he makes you think differently. Again, it’s the plus and minus of opposite views. He had never done clothing so it was a good, interesting thing for both of us.

Marcus Fairs: You collaborated with Pharrell Williams for the Raw for the Oceans project. Tell us about that.

Shubhankar Ray: Today, celebrities are the biggest selling devices in the world, because they popularise everything from brands to behaviours to new ideas. And if you think about celebrities as currency, then every other currency is going to devalue and actually celebrity appears to be, over the last five years, resisting devaluation because of the internet and technology. It keeps it going.

So normally what happens is that when a celebrity is in an ad, the audience knows that the celebrity has been bought. So they don’t believe in it. You’ve just spent $5-10 million on something that’s beautifully produced and everybody looks great, but the audience smells it as bullshit.

But another way to go might be to use a celebrity as a catalyst; not always show them in the campaign, not always use the easiest mechanism. And then be able to use the celebrity as an accelerator for the ideas, so they become also the champion of the idea.

So the way we have been working with Pharrell Williams is to not put him in the campaigns. He is not the poster boy for our RAW for the Oceans project. Instead we use him as an inextricable part of the acceleration of that idea. So we have put him in in his role of creative director of [recycled yarn brand] Bionic, involved in our product design process because the man has very good taste and likes clothing. He is very much involved, but we don’t put him in the ads.

So it becomes much more believable for the audience because Pharrell is really interested in the ocean, he grew up by the ocean. He is a business partner in our project so that means if the product sells and does well, he gets some of the profit. It is a very different type of relationship and I think you want to find different ways to collaborate with celebrity because they themselves are also brands, so they also want to do something creative and innovative. When you have good ideas, these have traction also for the celebrity because it’s good for them. You don’t just pay them five million to put them in the ads.

Marcus Fairs: Camper and G-Star RAW seem closer to industrial design brands than fashion brands. Would you agree with that?

Shubhankar Ray: Both Camper and G-Star fundamentally do not believe in fashion. So that means they don’t believe in the obsolescence of fashion. That means they are closer to furniture designers because somebody makes a piece of furniture not for six months, but to last for a long time.

Street culture, where many of these brands operate, has a heritage and is very resourceful. It recycles stuff and re-appropriates stuff. So it’s a very creative world. In that world, there are only two items or products that have a cultural value: jeans and sneakers. They cut through culture. They cut through everything in terms of age, race, taste, sexuality, young, old, and they have this cultural heritage.

If you look back in the history of denim and sneakers, they were originally made by technicians. So the designer was involved. Therefore they are driven primarily by functionally and durability and secondly by form. Today form becomes very important to dramatise that functionally, but it is secondary. So I think that is the key difference.

Marcus Fairs: Hella Jongerius was talking the other day about how some design companies have kind of lost their way, and have been taken over by marketing. You could argue that they are trying to do what fashion brands do very well. But what would you do with a furniture or lighting brand? Their marketing tends to be pretty unsophisticated.

Shubhankar Ray: Yeah, I’d make them more interesting and make them have an electric charge with their audience. I had this experience with Vitra, when we collaborated with Vitra to redesign Jean Prouvé’s furniture. It was brand-DNA crossover. And what was interesting was that you could democratise high design, which was for the lucky few.

Marcus Fairs: Is design too elitist?

Shubhankar Ray: I think that’s the thing about the design world: it doesn’t know very well how to democratise itself. But the design world could be quite open to that level of democratisation because it would get more people into what is a good thing.

But what I see in that world is that it is an insider world. It’s for the lucky few: people who know about the world of Vitra and Eames and Prouvé. It’s all good, but it’s an insider world. It doesn’t get outside.

Design can learn from the fashion business because the fashion business did get outside. It used to be for rich French ladies who would go to a couture show that was very private, and today on the street you can buy a pair of jeans that are 20 dollars, right up to 2,000 dollars. And jeans are interesting because they are a democratic item and much of design – the output – is a democratic item; a chair, a kitchen utensil.

And in a way I think that there is a great opportunity to make design brands much more energised because their vibrational energy is today only on one level, in one particular audience. So it never gets out of there. I would love to do something with a design brand because the challenge is: can you get other vibrational energies working? That can engage a lot more people.

So going back to the Vitra collaboration, what was interesting was that there was an interesting swap of audiences. There is a real Modernist heritage there and younger jeans consumers who know nothing about Prouvé suddenly got exposed to the idea of Prouvé.

Similarly our work with Marc Newson: how do you democratise one of the most important industrial designers of the 21st century? Who sells a chaise longue to a collector for 1.2 million? How do you democratise this? How do you put this in the street and give access to a young kid?

Marcus Fairs: And are these young consumers interested in Marc Newson and Jean Prouvé?

Shubhankar Ray: Well they will buy their sweatshirts, provided you can give them a sweatshirt for less than a couple of hundred euros.

Marcus Fairs: You’re about to launch a collection of Jean Prouvé office furniture with Vitra. How did that come about?

Shubhankar Ray: We launch the collection at Salone del Mobile in Milan next month. We wanted the furniture for our own offices, so that is how it started. We’d already done a Prouvé home-furniture collaboration with Vitra. We just moved in a year ago to our new building, G-Star HQ, which was designed by Rem Koolhaas and inside we needed furniture for ourselves. We primarily went into the Prouvé stuff because we were fans. So we developed an office system out of the Prouvé office furniture but tuning it a bit for our spec and for that building.

We ergonomically changed it so that it is set up for 21st-century modern interiors – we’re all a bit taller, so we had to extend things and make it for modern human beings rather than the size of people in the 1940s. It’s made by Vitra so the spec is great. We will retail it for $2,000 or €2,000. So suddenly it makes the world of Prouvé more accessible.

Marcus Fairs: And Prouvé wanted design to be democratic at the time didn’t he? But technology didn’t allow it to be cheap enough.

Shubhankar Ray: Yes he wanted his design to be democratic so it’s quite on point and quite honest. You’re not veering too far away from Prouvé’s original ideation.

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Last-ditch bid launched to save Robin Hood Gardens from demolition

A high-profile campaign to save the Brutalist Robin Hood Gardens housing estate in London has been revived.

Heritage organisation the Twentieth Century Society has filed a new report calling for the preservation of the Alison and Peter Smithson-designed estate, which is heralded by many as one of the UK’s most important examples of Brutalist architecture.

The complex is currently scheduled for demolition as part of a huge housing project led by development company Swan and supported by the local council Tower Hamlets.

Robin Hood Gardens by Alison and Peter Smithson

The UK government granted Robin Hood Gardens a five-year immunity from heritage listing in 2009 – meaning that the council were able to approve demolition despite a preservation campaign backed by hundreds of architects, including Richard Rogers, Zaha Hadid, Robert Venturi and Toyo Ito.

Now that five-year period has expired, the society has submitted a new report, claiming the decision not to protect the estate with a formal heritage listing the first time around was ill-judged.

It reads: “We believe that none of the reasons given for not listing Robin Hood Gardens is convincing or properly evidenced according to listing criteria, and that the previous decisions not to list were unsound.”

“It is therefore desirable in the interest of maintaining a consistent standard of assessment to reassess the building afresh and incorporate the new evidence.”

Robin Hood Gardens was completed in 1972 in Poplar, east London, by the Smithsons, who had already established themselves as two of the key protagonists of the so-called New Brutalism. Based on the concept of “streets in the sky”, the estate comprises two concrete slab blocks arranged around a garden made of up raised mounds.

Robin Hood Gardens by Alison and Peter Smithson

The 213-apartment complex was first threatened with demolition in 2008 when Tower Hamlets council revealed plans for a wider redevelopment of the area beside the Blackwall Tunnel – a major road that connects north and south London.

The campaign to save the buildings, backed by British architecture magazine BD, did not receive support from the government-run English Heritage and an immunity from listing was granted by then UK Culture secretary Andy Burnham.

Tower Hamlets Council has now applied to renew the certificate of immunity, prompting the Twentieth Century Society to respond.

The report accuses English Heritage of “a fundamental misunderstanding of the aesthetic intention of the project”, with references to the characteristics concrete structure and the success of the open-air “street decks”.

Robin Hood Gardens by Alison and Peter Smithson

It also states that the global reputation of the Smithsons has grown significantly in the past five years, and challenges claims by English Heritage that the building has suffered from decay.

“It is acknowledged that Robin Hood Gardens has produced divided opinions,” it reads. “If these are examined, it will be found that the adverse opinions may not be well informed in respect of the architectural significance, or the performance of the building in use, but based on prejudice against social housing as a type, against modern architecture, or against the idea of the architect as intellectual.”

A spokesperson for English Heritage confirmed the report has been received, following the application from Tower Hamlets Council, but that no action has yet been taken.

“We included Twentieth Century Society in our consultation process and they produced a report in response,” she told Dezeen. “We are currently in the process of considering all consultation responses before making our recommendation to the Secretary of State.”

Robin Hood Gardens by Alison and Peter Smithson

Amanda Baillieu, the former editor-in-chief at BD magazine, said she didn’t expect English Heritage to change its mind. “Of course it should have been listed, just like Park Hill, but it wasn’t and we need to move on,” she said.

Several architecture firms are involved in the multi-phase proposals for Robin Hood Gardens and the surrounding estate, including Aedas, Metropolitan Workshop, Jestico & Whiles and Karakusevic Carson. Some demolition work has already begun, but the Smithsons’ buildings are currently still intact.

Photography is by Luke Hayes.

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Shortlist unveiled for Nine Elms to Pimlico bridge competition

Amanda Levete and Hopkins are among the architects shortlisted to design a new pedestrian and bicycle bridge across London’s River Thames (+ slideshow).

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Ove Arup & Partners Ltd with Hopkins Architects and Grant Associates

Four teams of architects and engineers have been selected to design the new river crossing in south-west London between Nine Elms and Pimlico, rivalling Thomas Heatherwick’s proposal for a Garden Bridge elsewhere in the city.

The successful teams are: Buro Happold with Marks Barfield Architects and J&L Gibbons Landscape Architects; Bystrup with Robin Snell & Partners; Arup with Amanda Levete Architects; and Arup with Hopkins Architects and Grant Associates.



The finalists were selected anonymously by a jury including architect Graham Stirk of Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners, engineer Henry Bardsley, the Design Council’s Pam Alexander and council leaders from the London boroughs of Wandsworth and Lambeth.

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Ove Arup & Partners Ltd with AL_A, Gross Max, Equals Consulting and Movement Strategies

The shortlisted teams will now develop their ideas into detailed designs, and an overall winner is set to be named in late autumn.

“The quality of the submissions went beyond our best expectations and the interest this competition has generated across London has been tremendous,” said Wandsworth Council leader Ravi Govindia.

“The devil will be in the detail and the next stage will show us whether these four highly skilled and innovative design teams can meet the complex challenges this project presents.”

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Buro Happold Limited with Marks Barfield Architects, J&L Gibbons Landscape Architects, Gardiner and Theobald

The competition for the new pedestrian and bicycle bridge across the Thames was launched by Wandsworth Council in December 2014.

The project is expected to cost £40 million and is part of a wider £1 billion infrastructure overhaul for the area of south London known as Nine Elms, which stretches from Battersea to Vauxhall and includes the new US Embassy and the Battersea Power Station project.

Wandsworth referenced a 2013 Transport for London study as the justification for the scheme, and says it has assigned £26 million of funding from the Nine Elms projects towards building the winning bridge.

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Bystrup Architecture Design and Engineering with Robin Snell & Partners, Sven Ole Hansen ApS, Aarsleff and ÅF Lighting

A shortlist of 74 anonymous designs was unveiled in February. But Westminster Council, the authority responsible for the land in Pimlico on the north side of the river, said it did not want a bridge.

“Our officers have, and continue to express strongly the Council’s opposition to the proposed bridge, on the grounds of its visual and environmental impact including the impact that a new bridge would have at a landing site in Westminster, on traffic flows, pedestrian movement and on residential amenity,” said a statement posted on the website of Westminster’s Labour party councillors.

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to Pimlico bridge competition
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Morning Media Newsfeed: Durst Charged With Murder | Cablevision to Offer HBO Now

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The Jinx Director: ‘We Discovered We Had This Shocking Piece of Audio’ (TVNewser)
Andrew Jarecki, the director of HBO’s documentary The Jinx: The Life And Deaths of Robert Durst, told CBS This Morning he and his crew were wrapping up years of work on their film when they realized they had captured audio of what may be Durst’s confession. “We discovered that we had this shocking piece of audio,” he said. Variety In Sunday’s finale episode, Durst appears to acknowledge his role in three murder cases that he has been linked to since 1982. The heir to a real estate fortune was arrested in New Orleans on Saturday in connection with the murder of his friend, Susan Berman, in Los Angeles in 2000. “Killed them all, of course,” Durst says while talking to himself in a bathroom in a moment captured by the still-live microphone after he squirmed during an interview where Jarecki presents him with handwriting evidence pointing to his guilt in Berman’s shooting death. Capital New York Jarecki appeared Monday on two morning shows — ABC’s Good Morning America and CBS This Morning — to talk about Durst, the focus of the six-part series. He also gave an interview to The New York Times and to Jeanine Pirro’s Fox News show. Jarecki later canceled several scheduled appearances and said that he is no longer available for interviews. In a statement attributed to Jarecki and his fellow Jinx producer Marc Smerling, inquiring journalists were told: “Given that we are likely to be called as witnesses in any case law enforcement may decide to bring against Robert Durst, it is not appropriate for us to comment further on these pending matters.” THR / The AP Los Angeles prosecutors filed a first-degree charge against Durst on Monday that could trigger the death penalty. In Louisiana, Durst was rebooked on charges of being a convicted felon in possession of a firearm, and possession of a weapon with a controlled dangerous substance — a small amount of marijuana. Authorities didn’t immediately know whether prosecutors would try to keep Durst in Louisiana on those charges before he is sent to Los Angeles. LostRemote Sunday night’s finale of The Jinx made the list of top social TV last week, as Durst was conveniently arrested before its airing.

Cablevision to Offer HBO Streaming Service (WSJ)
Cablevision Systems Corp. will offer its broadband customers HBO’s coming streaming service, HBO Now, making it the first cable operator to strike such a deal, the companies said Monday. CNNMoney The channel already has HBO GO, a streaming service and mobile app that’s available to HBO’s cable and satellite subscribers. HBO Now will allow customers to stream programming without signing up for a cable package. It’s a move that will help the network cater to a younger market that mostly watches television online through stand alone services like Netflix. THR The partnership means that subscribers to Cablevision’s Optimum Online broadband service will be able to order HBO Now through Optimum and simply tack on the extra per-month fee to their existing bill. HBO Now launches in April and last week it announced a partnership with Apple so that it will be available by way of an app on iPhones and iPads, and it will be a channel on Apple TV. While HBO executives have already said HBO Now will cost $14.99 per month, Cablevision and HBO said Monday that the price Optimum users will pay won’t be announced until later. Deadline Apple has a three-month exclusive period for digital-only services, but HBO said that traditional pay TV providers also could offer HBO Now from the start if they want.

Apple Plans Web TV Service in Fall (WSJ)
Apple’s lofty plans to build an online television service are coming into sharper focus. The technology giant is in talks with programmers to offer a slimmed-down bundle of TV networks this fall, according to people familiar with the matter. Variety Apple is in talks with multiple TV programmers — but not NBCUniversal — about launching an over-the-top TV service later this fall that would charge $30-$40 for about 25 channels, including broadcast TV. THR Apple’s new service would be able to stream channels live to Apple TV, iPhones and iPads and devices using Apple’s iOS. The slimmed-down service would include well-known channels like CBS, ESPN and FX, leaving out the dozens of smaller channels found in a standard cable package. Last week Apple cut the price of Apple TV from $99 to $69, and also announced that HBO’s stand-alone streaming service, HBO Now, is launching in April exclusively on Apple devices. The Verge The long-rumored online TV service could be announced as soon as June.

Paramount Names Marc Evans President of Motion Picture Group (THR)
Paramount has named Marc Evans as president of the motion picture group, the studio announced on Monday. Evans will succeed Adam Goodman, who was ousted last month after a six-year stint in the role. Variety Goodman was pushed out because of strained relationships with top talent agencies, according to insiders. Goodman had a year remaining on his contract and was offered a production deal with the studio as part of an exit package. Evans, a 12-year veteran of the studio, most recently served as president of production. He will assume the new position immediately and will report to Paramount chairman-CEO Brad Grey. TheWrap While Grey did consider outside candidates, Evans was always seen as the favorite for the job, having earned his stripes at Paramount. He joined Paramount in 2003 as VP of production before being promoted to senior VP in 2006 and executive VP in 2008. Evans has worked with the industry’s top filmmakers and supervised production on some of the studio’s most critically and commercially successful films, including the Mission: Impossible, Star Trek, Transformers and G.I. Joe franchises, as well as World War Z, Interstellar and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.

News Streaming App Watchup Partners With Tribune (TVSpy)
Watchup, the news streaming app that delivers personalized newscasts, has announced a content partnership with Tribune Broadcasting. LostRemote Watchup users will be able to access online news segments from KTLA TV in Los Angeles, WGN in Chicago, and WPIX in New York. Seattle, Dallas, Oklahoma City, Ft. Smith, Houston, Salt Lake City, San Diego, Sacramento, Kansas City, Greensboro, New Orleans, Huntsville, Des Moines, Milwaukee, Cleveland, Scranton, Denver, Harrisburg, Moline, Memphis, Hartford, Norfolk, Indianapolis, Richmond and Grand Rapids are also included in the deal. Variety Tribune Media last fall led a $2.75 million round of funding in Watchup. Watchup, founded in 2012 at Stanford’s StartX accelerator, culls news from about 100 sources including Fox News, PBS Newshour, CNET, The Washington Post, Fusion, The Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg Media.

Millennials’ Nuanced Paths to News And Information (American Press Institute)
The American Press Institute has completed a broad study of millennials and their news consumption habits. The findings debunk the notion that younger Americans are choosing to focus their attention on only a few things, particularly so-called soft news and entertainment. TVNewser Millennials, the study concluded, prefer to seek out their own information — from trusted sources — on a variety of topics. They don’t go to trusted sources for a summary of the day’s news, but they do seek out stories to satisfy specific curiosity on a variety of topics. Millennials, the study found, will “dive deep” on a topic, but they won’t start with traditional news sources. Only 3 percent said they’d start with national TV, 4 percent said they’d start with local TV and just 2 percent said a newspaper. The go-to starting point: Google. FishbowlNY When it comes to getting news from social media, young people turn to Facebook first. The report found that a whopping 88 percent of millennials get news from Facebook at least occasionally. The runner-up was YouTube at 83 percent. Instagram (50 percent), Pinterest (36 percent) and Twitter (33 percent) rounded out the top five. PRNewser Young people aren’t dumb, though: the primary topics for which Facebook serves as a key news source are “pop culture,” “music, TV, and movies,” and “social issues.” National politics ranks near the bottom of that chart, so young people know that you don’t really turn to The Social Network for in-depth reporting.

Two Largest Onscreen Movie Theater Ad Companies Call Off Merger (THR)
A $375 million acquisition that would have brought together the two leading companies providing on-screen advertising in movie theaters, National CineMedia (NCM) and Screenvision, has been called off in the face of government opposition. Variety The Department of Justice’s Antitrust Division filed suit in November to block the proposed merger of the cinema advertising networks, citing antitrust concerns. The three largest movie circuits in the country — Regal Entertainment Group, AMC Entertainment and Cinemark Holdings — are majority owners of NCM. The suit alleged that Regal, AMC and Cinemark exercise “significant control and influence” over NCM’s actions. The DOJ contended that the chains could block NCM from entering into contracts with independent movie theaters that contain upfront payments exceeding $1 million, an important area of competition between NCM and Screenvision. Deadline NCM shares were down more than 8 percent in post-market trading after the companies decided it wasn’t worth what they called “the ongoing cost and distraction” of fighting the DOJ. The trial was scheduled to take place April 13.

ABC News Launches on Roku (TVNewser)
ABC News announced Monday it had launched on Roku, the streaming video service. ABC joins networks including CBS News, NBC News, Fox News and Sky News on Roku, reaching an audience of 10 million Roku players. LostRemote Earlier this year, the ABC News app was available on Apple TVs both in the U.S. and internationally. ABC News VP of digital Colby Smith said in an official memo: “Roku users now have ABC News live video and on demand content, local news from several major markets and a wide range of historical video footage from ABC News’ archives. During breaking news and special events, Roku customers will have immediate access to multiple content streams, live 24/7.”

Scripps Networks to Buy Controlling Stake in Polish TV Company TVN for $615 Million (THR)
Scripps Networks Interactive has agreed to acquire a controlling stake in Polish commercial broadcaster TVN for $615 million (€584 million) in cash, the cable networks group said Monday. Variety Scripps, which owns the Travel Channel, the Food Network and other channels, has agreed to buy a 52.7 percent stake in TVN from ITI and Canal Plus Group. Scripps will also take on €840 million ($885 million) of debt. The deal is subject to regulatory approvals. Once the deal is completed, Scripps will launch a public tender offer to up its stake in TVN. TVN had a market-leading 22 percent share of Polish viewing last year.

BBC Launches Investigation Into Top Gear Host Jeremy Clarkson (HuffPost / AP)
The BBC has launched an investigation into Top Gear host Jeremy Clarkson’s alleged “fracas” with a producer, trying to establish the facts of the incident before deciding its next move. The popular TV presenter has been suspended pending an investigation into whether he punched a producer during a dispute over a meal. THR After suspended the series last week, the show’s replacement on Sunday evening lost almost 4 million viewers.

Cameron Joseph Joins NY Daily News’ Washington Bureau (FishbowlDC)
The Hill’s Cameron Joseph will be heading to the New York Daily News’ Washington bureau, announced managing editor and head of political content Gregg Birnbaum on Friday.

Endemol Shine North America Reveals New Executive Structure, Ben Samek Named COO (Variety)
Endemol Shine North America, the result of a joint venture uniting Endemol, Shine and Core Media and now the largest independent production and distribution group in the world, has announced its new executive management structure.

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Edgy culture-focused editorial site Uproxx is launching its first daily news series. Called The Desk, the three-to-five minute program will tape Monday through Friday at noon PT and will stream on Uproxx later that day.

White House Office to Delete Its FOIA Regulations (USA Today)
The White House is removing a federal regulation that subjects its Office of Administration to the Freedom of Information Act, making official a policy under Presidents Bush and Obama to reject requests for records to that office.

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Politico to Launch European Site

Politico is preparing to expand to Europe with the launch of Politico Europe. The site will use the similar tactic taken by Politico and Capital New York — a free site with subscription-only verticals that focus on one subject, like tech.

Politico Europe is a partnership between Politico and German media company Axel Springer. It will launch April 21.

“We are assembling a roster of some of the most talented reporters and editors on the continent – a mix of respected veterans and ascendant younger journalists – who are ready to help shake up a European media scene, which, in our judgment, is in need of something different,” stated a memo from Politico Europe executive editor Matt Kaminski, Politico editor-in-chief John Harris and Politico Europe managing director Shéhérazade Semsar-de Boisséson.

Below are some of the most notable hires:

  • Ryan Heath joins as a reporter, responsible for penning a morning column much like Politico’s Playbook.
  • Pierre Briançon will lead coverage in France. He previously served as Europe editor Reuters Breakingviews and Dow Jones Paris bureau chief.
  • Jan Cienski, most recently The Economist’s Poland correspondent, will serve as energy edior.
  • Tunku Varadarajan will serve as a contributing editor. He is a former editor of Newsweek and editorial features editor at the Wall Street Journal.
  • Linda Kinstler, former New Republic managing editor, will also serve as a contributing editor.

Interview: 2015 TED Fellow eL Seed: The nomadic street artist on creating human connections through his distinctive Arabic calligraphy-based graffiti

Interview: 2015 TED Fellow eL Seed


Born and raised in Paris to Tunisian parents, graffiti artist eL Seed has left his mark all over the world (from the Jara Mosque to canyons to Louis Vuitton scarves), by spray-painting universal messages that funnily enough, the majority of viewers……

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Warrior Pack Outlaw Leather Purse

The Warrior Pack by Warrior Creek is a brown leather purse that you can wear eight different ways…(Read…)