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Michael Rubens Bloomberg, aka Michael Bloomberg, is an American is the co-founder, CEO, and majority owner of Bloomberg L.P. Bloomberg was the mayor of New York City from 2002 to 2013. He is currently a candidate in the Democratic Party primaries for the 2020 United States presidential election.

 

This caricature of Michael Bloomberg was adapted from a Creative Commons licensed photo from Gage Skidmore's Flickr photostream.

about to go live. (Bloomberg video)

 

The professionals have custom ear pieces. The guests have to improvise when the ear plug inevitably falls out and you can barely hear the questions.

 

But the most amazing part was the virtual photography opportunities as I walked though the various checkpoints to the pink sofas and then the green room. There were fish tanks and reflective architectural surfaces everywhere, begging for exploration with the proper lens... Maybe next time.

151 E 58th Street

Built 2005

Photographed 2005

 

What if you could solve the energy crisis, the jobs crisis, and the deficit with the flick

of a little blue flame?

Illustration by John Hendrix

Photograph by Robyn Twomey

Nikon FM3a

Zeiss 28mm F/2 Distagon

Portra 800

Illustration by Craig and Karl

Illustration by Sarah King

US Newsstand / Photograph by Jamie Chung

Illustration by Jethro Haynes

Illustration for Bloomberg View. Read article here.

The really rather impressive Interior of the new Bloomberg building at Bank.

Akihisa Hirata

Exhibition Oct.29, 2011 - (Oct. 2012)

Another illustration for Bloomberg View! [Article]

Flap cover

/ Photograph by Jamie Chung

Was over at the in-laws one weekend and decided to log into bloomberg and see what was going on in world markets.

 

This is a shot of my macbook logged into bloomberg wirelessly via my mobile phone using a bluetooth connection between the two.

Pelli Clarke Pelli Architects design for 731 Lexington Avenue, a 55-​story office and residential tower in Midtown Manhattan, started with a modest program. Midway through schematic design, the client doubled the size of the project. This demanded a new approach to the design of the tower, its location on the block, and its entrance. As a result, the tower grew taller and more slender and was moved from the Third Avenue side of the site to Lexington Avenue. The building rises from a block-​long commercial base and is visible from across the East River in Queens, its lighted top softly glowing at night.

Photograph by Henry Leutwyler

Foster + Partners

 

I quite like this.

Photograph by Martin Schoeller

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