Consisting of writer Christopher Louie and artist Bill Barminski, Walter Robot does music videos, commercials, and experimental video. They’ve worked with Modest Mouse, Gnarls Barkley, and most recently on Death Cab For Cutie’s newest track Grapevine Fires (about the 2007 wildfires in California).
Walter Robot uses a really simplistic style that works well in both Grapevine Fires and Mystery Man (the Gnarls Barkley song, awesome running word monster).
I looked around for some more of Bill Barminski’s work and came across these from a few years back. He has an eclectic style that appears to pull from American culture in the 50’s and 60’s.
Sweet logos.
Make sure you click around the links, watch some videos, and look at some artwork. Thanks to Death Cab For Cutie and Cornerstone Promotions for the heads up.
Quest for G for Gatorade, agency: TBWA\Chiat\Day Los Angeles, Production company: @Radical Media, director: Tarsem
For your Friday afternoon pleasure, here is a selection of new commercials and music videos that have caught our attention of late. First up is a spot for Gatorade, directed by Tarsem, which looks to Monty Python & the Holy Grail for inspiration.
House of Cards for Shelter, agency: Leo Burnett, production company: Outsider, director: Dom & Nic
Turning serious now, here is Leo Burnett’s new campaign for homeless charity Shelter, directed by Dom & Nic and set to a soundtrack of Radiohead’s track Videotape. This ad marks the first occasion that the band have allowed their music to be used in a commercial.
Ray-Ban ad, agency: Cutwater, production company: Agile Films, director: Mini Vegas
Ray-Ban’s advertising has taken an unexpected turn with this spot from Cutwater.
While this ad for Cheese Strings from Fallon is just plain bizarre (but quite funny).
Mr Strings website
There are more to view at the website, here, where you can also create your own Mr Strings character.
Oxfam print work from RKCRYR, copywriter: Steve Moss, designer/art director: Jolyon Finch, illustrator: James Taylor
This new print work for Oxfam from RKCRYR aims to raise awareness of the charity’s campaign against the global arms trade.
Still from Keith Schofield’s video for Move by MIMS
Now for some music videos. First up is yet another excellent video from Keith Schofield (who previously brought us this slice of brilliance for Supergrass). His latest is for hip hop group MIMS. I can’t find it on YouTube anywhere, but it’s well worth clicking here to watch it.
Evident Utensil by Chairlift, directed by Ray Tintori
Next up is the latest from Ray Tintori. This video for Evident Utensil by Chairlift sees the director return to the style previously seen in his MGMT Time To Pretend vid.
Synthesise by Simian Mobile Disco, directed by Kate Moross & Alex Sushon
Finally, here’s the first video from ubiquitous cool kid (and CR Creative Future from last year) Kate Moross. Directed in collaboration with Alex Sushon, the promo is for Simian Mobile Disco track Synthesise.
Shepard Fairey’s Obama poster and The Guardian’s infographics both appear in the Brit Insurance Designs of the Year show which opens today at London’s Design Museum
When the Design Museum’s Designs of the Year Show debuted last year it had a mixed reaction. ‘Good first attempt, but plenty to think about for next time’ seemed to be the consensus. This year’s exhibition opens today – CR went along to the private view…
I have to declare an interest here – I was a nominator both this year and last. The process is fairly informal. A letter from the Design Museum invites you to suggest worthy projects from the current year (although, judging from some of the work included, time scales are flexible). You can nominate as many projects as you like in whatever categories. And then a few months later they tell you which of your suggestions will feature and ask for some text on your choices.
A segment demonstrating the technology used in Troika’s All The Time In The World installation at Terminal 5 which displays the time in London and at interesting sites around the world – such as the world’s highest mountains or most popular museums
Inevitably, this approach results in what appears to be a fairly random array of projects in the final show, and certainly a selection that differs markedly from the results of the industry award schemes, but it is this idiosyncrasy that I enjoy about it.
The weakness of all award schemes (and, yes, I include our own Annual in this) is that the only way to make them work economically is to have paid entries. Inevitably, then, choice is limited. The Design Museum show, on the other hand, is a totally blank canvas.
The Pixel Clock, designed by Francois Azambourg for Ligne Rosset – the clock’s face is made from honeycomb-effect fibreglass
Tony Mullin’s Green Felt Protest Suit – the idea is that demonstrators can wear the suit in areas in which political protests are banned. When filmed for TV, the protester’s suit will act like a green screen meaning that messages can be projected onto it visible to TV viewers but not the authorities
Juries on award schemes can flatten things out – the majority view holds sway. During judging there are often conversations about how the industry will receive the choices being made – is the selection a fair reflection of the year? Do we have enough of this type of work or that? Should we include a certain project because it did well at a rival scheme?
The Design Museum show method, on the other hand, encourages the quirky and the controversial – pieces of work that one person feels strongly about. That inevitably means that some will divide opinion and, as a result, encourage debate – both about the work and about what constitutes ‘good design’. Which is surely what a good exhibition should be all about.
Personally, I also think that this show is not necessarily about the ‘best’ design projects of the year but more about selecting projects that in some way have had an impact – either by changing thinking or influencing the culture or offering a new viewpoint.
The July 08 Black issue of Italian Vogue featuring only black models
From Onkar Kular and Noam Toran’s The MacGuffin Library – in Hitchcock movies the MacGuffin was always an object at the heart of the story, usually being sought by the protagonists eg The Maltese Falcon. The designers her imagined a new set of such objects, created using rapid prototyping.
There are obvious weaknesses in the show. Relying on the personal experience of the nominators can mean that geographical spread is uneven – I chose the Design Indaba 10×10 housing project, for example, because I had seen it in action in Cape Town.
And from a communications point of view it in no way represents the work that the average designer will have been engaged upon for the majority of his or her year. There are no big branding projects. Very little mainstream work at all. So it doesn’t provide a snapshot of the design industry as most practitioners will experience it. It’s not an accurate portrait of where the majority of activity is, but then neither are most awards.
The work of Job Wouters, aka Letman, including CR’s February cover
What the Design Museum show does provide is an interesting snapshot of where the design profession would like to be. It reveals design’s aspirations and its ideals. For that reason I think it is a valuable addition to calendar.
Norman Cook’s latest venture, Brighton Port Authority, has Iggy Pop providing guest vocals on the track, He’s Frank. Directed by Nick Ball at Draw Pictures, the promo for the song features a well-worn Iggy puppet, in his traditional “top off” mode. The twist is that as the track progresses Iggy begins to turn on his “bunraku” puppet masters. But what’s got Iggy so annoyed? Maybe he’s finally seen those Swiftcover ads he did not so long ago…
CR August 2001 issue. Cover: The Designers Republic
As we exclusively revealed last week, The Designers Republic, one of the most influential graphic design studios of the last two decades, has closed its doors. In 2001, to mark tDR’s 15th anniversary, CR ran a lengthy interview with founder Ian Anderson, which is reproduced here (writer: Paula Carson), along with Anderson’s pick of his favourite tDR work up to that point
They’re not called “The Designers Republic Ltd, Sheffield, Soyo, North of Nowhere” for nothing. Staying up north is a statement for The Designers Republic: a symbol, geographically (and mentally) of an unshakeable desire to remain aesthetically distinct.
“The physicality of the location isn’t so important, this is where I live and I don’t see why I should move and change my lifestyle to satisfy the demands of printers or clients,” explains founder Ian Anderson a little tiredly. But anybody who declares themselves a Republic must secretly like the idea of a separate existence.
Both the name and location have served them well. Because to the outside world TDR is mysterious: an intriguing anomaly, miles away, and often miles ahead of the mainstream design scene. It’s a machine that feeds itself: the less that people know about TDR, the more interesting, to some, it becomes.
Despite a slight allergy to all things south of Crewe, Anderson’s actually a Londoner, although he’s honed the accent northwards. Entertainingly outspoken, his theories about everything from mass consumerism to the pretentious evils of London’s Hoxton Square prove rich and varied. Classic outbursts which go something like this: “Sheffield doesn’t have places like Hoxton Square and I think, ‘Good, that’s why we’re here. I’d rather slit my throat than have to work with people like that’,” or “You might as well chuck any old shit out because the client isn’t interested in doing anything interesting” regularly tumble out. He gets seriously irritated when you get him on the subject of people ripping off TDR’s ideas (which, incidentally, happens a lot). He’s not a man to mince his words.
SAY A RED CAR IS YELLOW AND YOU’LL GET A RESPONSE But anyone familiar with TDR’s work already knows that Anderson and colleagues thrive on provocation. Taking a contrary stance on more or less everything is obligatory: “It’s about disinformation, because disinformation provokes more of a response than information,” says Anderson. “Say a red car is yellow and you’ll get a response… confront peoples preconceptions of what is, by presenting what could be, and you get a response: maybe not the one you wanted, but you’ll still provoke dialogue.” And dialogue, for TDR, is what it’s all about.
Their legions of fans lap it up. Many a 30-something designer will readily admit to buying everything on the Warp label, for the sheer pleasure of looking at an extensive array of TDR work. Back issues of the magazine Emigre #29, with its cover by TDR, have become so avidly sought after that they now change hands for around $400 a copy. After one week online, TDR’s website got over a million hits. People love being “in” on the dialogue, tracing TDR’s activities with a passion one might accord a band.
I CAME TO SHEFFIELD BECAUSE OF THE BANDS I LIKED Despite opting to read philosophy (“It teaches you to think, to argue logically that black is white, which is very handy when it comes to dealing with clients. It’s probably that which makes The Designers Republic different from the outset,” Anderson claims), it’s perhaps not surprising to discover that his early ambitions were music-oriented. “I came to Sheffield because of the bands I liked, Cabaret Voltaire, The Human League,” he says.
But the Sheffield social scene is what really captured Anderson’s imagination: meeting locals, going clubbing and participating in various bands, both in a musical and managerial capacity. The band involvement prompted the propitious sideline in flyer design: “At first The Designers Republic was me enjoying mucking around with Letraset, cutting it up, playing around with letter shapes,” he explains. “I was into semantics, codes of communication, how far you could use numbers instead of letters before you lost any kind of legibility.”
Gradually, managing this personal creativity became more interesting than managing bands: “Some people, for whatever reason, have the desire to communicate,” he reasons.
TDR (then Anderson and ex-business partner Nick Philips) first came to the wider public’s attention in 1986 when they designed the sleeve for Age of Chance’s cover of Prince track Kiss: “It got us into loads of magazines,” says Anderson. “We went from being two people arsing about in Sheffield with all these preconceptions about what a designer was or wasn’t, to being one of the most written about design companies.”
ONE DAY SOMEONE’S GOING TO SUSS OUT THAT WE DON’T KNOW WHAT WE’RE DOING More work for Age Of Chance, Krush and Pop Will Eat Itself (for whom TDR famously bastardised the Pepsi Cola logo, as part of a whole PWEI corporate identity) followed. “People used to say ‘you’re at Designer’s Republic because you break the rules’ and we’d say ‘we’re not really, we just don’t know the rules… Every time someone rang up about work we’d put the phone down, piss ourselves laughing and say ‘one day someone’s going to suss out that we don’t know what we’re doing’,” admits Anderson happily. “We used to take on students for work placement so that we could learn from them. I got my first lesson in typography from someone at a typesetters who was sick of trying to work out my instructions.”
Of course, the beauty of this situation is the freedom it gave them to run roughshod over all the traditional design parameters. They explored and exploited every emotive topic from mass consumerism to politics to nuclear war. They searched for their own global visual language; busily re-examined the layers and processes of design, nonplussing their audience by stripping it down to the basics: to rows of shapes and lists of Pantone colours. “Use information in that context and it confuses people even more. It’s part of the function of the brain to make sense of what you’re given. It’s very difficult for viewers not to build their own realities,” explains Anderson.
CONSUMERISM IS AN INTERESTING GAME TO PLAY… IT’S VISUAL AND CONCEPTUAL SAMPLING Like magpies, they’ve plundered everything from multinational corporate logos to Japanese type: “Consumerism is an interesting game to play… and there is that sense of piracy, that sense of ‘fuck you, if you want to ram your logo down my throat’,” he laughs. “It’s kind of visual and conceptual sampling really, motivated by the same interests and desires as people who sample music; it’s taking stuff you like and using it your own way.”
Now situated across the road from Nigel Coates’ amazing (but sadly defunct) National Centre for Pop Music building, TDR comprises seven members, although, typically enigmatic, Anderson prefers specific details be kept to a minimum. Over the years they’ve accumulated clients ranging from Warp Records, to Issey Miyake, Sony, Powergen, and even Pringles, for whom they recently developed a TV commercial. They’ve just published their first book 3D > 2D, exploring the communication of 3D experiences in print. The definitive TDR book, actually commissioned eight years ago, is still an ongoing project.
THE MAJORITY OF CLIENTS HAVEN’T GOT THE FAINTEST IDEA WHAT THEY ARE GETTING INTO “The majority of clients haven’t the faintest idea what they’re getting into when they work with us, and a lot of them just haven’t got the balls to see it through. It’s really disappointing to realise that so many people involved in commissioning creativity haven’t got the faintest idea what creativity is,” complains Anderson. They still a turn a lot of work down, and are famed for being difficult, but they are also, quite rightly, famed for turning out one of the most distinctive bodies of work the British, and indeed global design industries have seen. “We’re analytical concerning what surrounds us, and the subject matter we deal with, but a lot of the work is very intuitive. We go for a drink and then talk and then ‘do’, we don’t plan and formalise,” Anderson says casually of their working methods. “It’s funny how finite people see us as being. The whole process is about changing, getting bored, moving on.”
Whatever their equation is, it keeps working: and TDR has lost none of its subversive power, or for that matter its sense of humour. “We know we’re good,” states Anderson certainly. This self-assurance has kept the group close to their instinctively provocative codes and themes. As ever, where they belong within the design community is, for TDR, immaterial: “The honest answer is we don’t really give a shit about what anybody else does, or about being in anyone else’s band,” says Anderson firmly. He means that.
For the issue, Anderson selected some of his favourite pieces from the tDR archives up to that point
1986 AGE OF CHANCE: KISS 12 INCH “It was our first high profile job, the first that got noticed. It was the first vehicle for our vision,” says Anderson of this hand drawn cover: “It was done in Letraset with a tiny bit of typesetting and photocopying… the back of it is a real cut-up technique: between the band and ourselves we found loads of quotes and images that we liked, almost without looking we took phrases and images and put them together, things that didn’t really have a meaning, but unavoidably had a meaning to the viewer”
1987 KRUSH: HOUSE ARREST “This was actually at the time when all the Beastie Boys people were nicking VW badges, so we came up with the idea that if the Beastie Boys were VW, then Krush was going to be Mercedes Benz, so the cover has got a Mercedes look built into it. People were also wearing a lot of those Russian badges, so there was a zeitgeist thing going on there”
1988 FUNKY WORM: HUSTLE “We thought it would be fun to have a swipe at all the people who said our work was cartoony. It was really a sort of Sheffield piss-take of the music industry”
1989 POP WILL EAT ITSELF: THIS IS THE DAY “This was the second project we did in terms of creating worlds, like ‘the world of Pop Will Eat Itself’. There’s Doomsday imagery, the eleventh hour, radiation, the world being destroyed. There were still lots of politics about nuclear weapons, so this was kind of political, but not anything specific, more an entertaining prediction”
1989 POP WILL EAT ITSELF: WISE UP SUCKER This cover is on permanent display at the V&A. “Really, it’s another consumerist thing, it doesn’t have any of the meanings that people have attributed to it,” says Anderson. “It is based on different spines of recordable video tapes. I was just sitting at home looking at my shelves when I thought of it. There is a reason though: I liked the tapes’ cases more than I liked what was on them, so it was about why you’d buy into one brand over another”
1991 POP WILL EAT ITSELF: 92˚F “It’s the temperature at which the majority of murders are committed,” says Anderson of the title of this record. “So basically the cover is about murder and shooting: the blood splat in the background, the bullet hole represented by the target in the middle, the white PWEI that looks like a 007 gun. This is one of the first pieces where we took Japanese characters that looked a little like PWEI and 92°F, it was an experiment for us, using those characters to express something in English. It was about seeing how far we could abstract legibility, it asked questions of the viewer”
1991 LFO: LFO “This was one of the early releases on Warp Records. We were trying to establish an identity for Warp and that was the font we were using for them. So we just went for LFO. The shaded character was a doodle by Mark out of LFO, and we played around with the position of it to make it read as UFO”
1992 DR SPACEMAN POSTER Says Anderson: “The text here is a really early example of taking icons and elements and running them like statements. You can look at it as abstracting legible language, as building a new communication based on intuitive responses”
1993 AUTECHRE: INCUNABULA “Incunabula is really about early stages of development, so we wanted to create a sense of genesis. Our concepts were getting so convoluted… we were trying to express them in a way that wasn’t literal, that would express ten things in one. So we started playing around with the idea of lots of layers, cutting away layers to expose other parts. With Incunablula there’s lots of layers, which is a way of expressing lots of different things about the music”
1994 EMIGRE magazine ISSUE #29 “Emigre summed up the whole American multinational corporation thing: that idea of being cute and nice to people, but having a big baseball bat hidden behind your back”
1995 WIPEOUT PACKAGING “With Wipeout you’ve already been given your target market, so you’re playing this consumerist game. The fun is that you’ve got a choice of deliberately going for them, or deliberately trying to alienate them”
1996 FOSTER’S ICE BANNER “There’s nothing there to do with Foster’s apart from the actual word Foster’s. The background is actually a Foster’s beer can we cut open and laid flat and scanned into the computer. The DR stickers were stuck on and the words ‘n(ice) not nice’ were pasted on. It was interesting because we were playing with this whole idea of layering at the time and this was the ultimate expression of this whole thing. Now people do it just for the sake of doing it. It was an experiment, it wasn’t meant to be a style that carried on for five years”
1996 SIGN-AGE POSTER “We did a joint exhibition with people like David Crow and Swifty at the Blue Note in London. The content of the Sign-Age project was about multi-layering of designs and images and constructions. It was about taking existing designs and abstracting them, reducing them to the basic elements, so that every piece we did was part of the evolution of our designs”
1996 SPEEDJACK: SURGE A TDR remix of the sleeve for Speedjack on R&S Records, Belgium. For the working method behind this project see notes from Sign-Age poster (above)
1997 FLUKE: RISOTTO Album artwork for Virgin Music, with food mixer shot by Peter Ashworth. “We’d do a lot more of this kind of thing if people had the vision to come to us.”
1997 AUTECHRE: CHIASTIC SLIDE “I was looking at the skyscrapers in New York. When I came back we started playing around with abstracting architectural forms. The natural lines of the skyscrapers, from these photos I’d taken, gave lines of perspective that formed an almost 3D grid. The black shape in the foreground of the cover is one of the towers of the Brooklyn Bridge, as seen from the Empire State Building. The type isn’t a font, it’s all just hand done, making a font that’s just made up from blocks”
1998 SUPERCHARGER: PUNK SKUNK FUNK “Context is important to us, so when we do record sleeves the idea isn’t to design a record sleeve, but something that is autonomous within its own physical space”
1999 SUPERGRASS: SUPERGRASS Record company Parlophone might have been tempted to go for a pretty cover of the band, for Supergrass’ album Supergrass. TDR gave them the portrait, but of course, it wasn’t the most traditional picture.
1999 SATOSHI TOMIIE: FULL LICK “This is more about the buildings than abstracting them into grids,” says Anderson of this phase in TDR’s work. “We started looking at 3D buildings, or photos of buildings and rebuilding them as impossible structures. These architectural projects are part of a whole evolutionary thing: you work on ideas and they converge. There is an architectural drive in this work. Rather than wanting to deconstruct buildings and create them as 2D objects, the idea was to create an image of an impossible building, then go to an architect and say ‘build that’”
1999 REMIXED BY FUNKSTÖRUNG As well as sleeve design, tDR produced an ‘aesthetic standards manual’ for !K7 Records’s act Funkstörung, treating the band like a corporate brand
2000 WARP 10 “When we designed the identity for Warp, we chose a particular purple colour. For its tenth birthday we had the idea of turning the world Warp… we overpainted buildings and objects with slabs of Warp colour, it’s part of this ‘The World Of Warp’ thinking”
FUNKSTÖRUNG: GRAMMY WINNERS VIDEO TDR’s first music video (included on Creative Review’s June 2000 CD-Rom). Developed for !K7 Records, Germany
2001 3D > 2D Adventures In and Out of Architecture with Sadar Vuga Arhitekti and Spela Mlakar. Based on the Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Ljubljana. TDR’s first book
CR August 2001 back cover
Apologies for the slightly shonky pictures – if anyone has links to better ones, please let us know in the comments. Thanks
Life in Technicolour by Coldplay, directed by Dougal Wilson, production company: Colonel Blimp
Dougal Wilson’s video for Coldplay’s new single, Life in Technicolour, sees the band reinvented as puppets, who provide a musical interlude to a Punch and Judy show at a local village fête.
The video sees the Punch and Judy theatre slowly transformed (with some help from a suitably ‘tached puppet roadie) into a stage fit for a rock band, including lights and piles of miniature amps. “Coldplay were on their big tour so they couldn’t really be in the video,” says Wilson. “They suggested they could be puppets instead. There’s been a few videos with puppets so I tried to think of a puppet genre which hadn’t really been used yet. I remembered Punch and Judy. I thought it would be interesting to attempt to recreate the spectacle of a stadium gig with everything shrunk to this size.”
Sketches from Wilson’s treatment for the video are shown below.
Bubblicious by Rex The Dog, directed by Geoffroy De Crecy, production company: Partizan
Here’s a selection of some of the best videos to pass through CR Towers lately, kicking off with this charming hand-made promo from Geoffroy De Crecy for Rex The Dog track, Bubblicious.
An Eluardian Instance by Of Montreal, directed by Jesse Ewles
New talent Jesse Ewles has directed this promo for Of Montreal’s snappily titled single An Eluardian Instance.
Skeleton Boy by Friendly Fires, directed by Clemens Habicht, production company: Nexus
Director Clemens Habicht has taken a literal approach to his video for Skeleton Boy by Friendly Fires, turning the band into dancing skeletons with the help of double-sided sticky tape and a load of bean-bag balls.
Under The Pines by Bodies of Water, directed by Andy Bruntel, production company: Directors Bureau
Andy Bruntel has directed this frankly bizarre vid for Under the Pines by Bodies of Water (dog lovers beware….).
Ulysees by Franz Ferdinand, directed by thirtytwo, production company: Pulse Films
The video for Franz Ferdinand’s latest Ulysees (directed by thirtytwo) sees the band mooching moodily around the city with their instruments, strolling desert plains and, um, getting into tumble dryers. We’re not sure why, but it’s all quite watchable.
Close My Eyes by Sander van Doorn (featuring Robbie Williams), directed by John Major’s Daughters, production company: P for Production
Ladies jump around in this video for Sander van Doorn (featuring Robbie Williams) track Close My Eyes, directed by John Major’s Daughters.
Money by N.A.S.A (featuring David Byrne, Chuck D, Ras Congo, Seu Jorge & Z-Trip), directed by Syd Garon & Paul Griswold
Syd Garon & Paul Griswold utilise the artwork of Shepard Fairey for this video for Money by N.A.S.A (featuring David Byrne, Chuck D, Ras Congo, Seu Jorge & Z-Trip).
Leave by VV Brown, directed by OneInThree, production company: Colonel Blimp
Directors OneInThree have come up with another inventive vid, this time for Leave by VV Brown.
Aer Obama, directed by GOLD
Finally, directing team GOLD has created this music video to celebrate Obama’s inauguration later on today. The film brings together Adam Freeland’s remix of Daft Punk’s Aerodynamic with a selection of toys by artists including Dalek, Bill McMullen and Kubrick and a voiceover courtesy of retro toy Speak and Spell to create a great piece of Obamarama.
The February issue of Creative Review is out on Wednesday 21 January, with features on Luke Hayman, Letman, Indian advertising, The Guardian’s new home, The Elms Lesters Painting Rooms and more…
Our Work section features first sight of the logo for Condé Nast’s forthcoming Love magazine, Dougal Wilson’s puppet-tastic video for Coldplay and Spin’s identity for Argentina’s PROA gallery
Features include an interview with Pentagram’s Luke Hayman in which he reveals the secret of his success – CR, of course (ahem)
A profile of Job Wouters, aka Letman, hand-lettering artist extraordinaire and brother of our former Creative Future, Roel. Job also designed our cover this month, which carries on our theme of basing the design around a listing of that month’s content. Also, our guest typeface this issue (as seen here) is Dessau Pro Stenzil Variant by Gábor Kóthay, distributed by Fountain
How The Guardian’s editorial design has grown, almost accidentally, into an all-encompassing visual language for the paper, which now includes signage at its new home (by Cartlidge Levene)
And an examination of the role that advertising can play in ensuring that India doesn’t repeat the mistakes of the west in the face of growing consumerism
Plus, in Crit, we have all the usual discussion and comment including a look at advertising’s love of pain
And the all-important findings of our research into studio snacking and listening habits
Plus, subscribers will notice a change to Monograph this month. We are now using this rather beautiful Stephen Sultry Grey cover stock
Inside this month we feature Paul Belford’s collection of vintage Bollywood posters
And here’s the back cover with a key to the various pens that Letman used to design the front
So far, on CR Blog, we have limited the moderation to anything that is openly offensive or potentially libellous. However, of late the quality of the debate here has been suffering from a rash of comments that really contribute nothing.
We don’t mind swearing, but to post a comment along the lines of “shit. the lot of them” or “that’s crap” does nothing to generate the type of informed debate that we hope the site can foster. We are all for criticism but, if you don’t like something, we want to know WHY.
So, as from now, we are instigating a more active moderation policy. Anything that, in the opinion of the moderators, is pointlessly abusive or adds nothing to the debate will be deleted.
And, as a reminder, here are the other criteria that we would ask you to observe:
“CR encourages comments to be short and to the point. As a general rule, they should not run longer than the original post. Comments should show a courteous regard for the presence of other voices in the discussion. We reserve the right to edit or delete comments that do not adhere to this standard.”
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