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Karen after finishing her backing vocals. The screenshot for the video is priceless. That's what you get for making funny faces, Karen :)
Transcript:
Nelson: Karen Rustad, you've just finished recording all of your vocals for the Stay Awake album. How does it feel?
Karen: Uhhhhhheehhhhhhhhh [Karen fakes dying]
Nelson: Speak words, woman.
Karen: :P Nah, it's good. I'm glad we got it done in time - barely. I'm happy with the new harmonies we were able to add on, maybe. We'll see... It's something different!
Nelson: Alright. And what was your favorite song to record?
Karen: Probably Contained. It was easy. And, sounds good as ever.
Nelson: OK, least favorite?
Karen: Break Free took too long! Ohmigod! I think it'll sound really cool, but it took *forever*, and I had problems with pitch, until I realized that it's a lot easier if you only cover one ear.
Nelson: Interesting. So just having one ear outside the headphones...
Karen: Yeah, even though you have a monitor feeding it back to you, for some reason it's a lot easier if I hear my voice for real, rather than it being broadcast back. A lot easier for me to adjust.
Nelson: OK! And how do you think the album is coming?
Karen: I think it's coming really good! This is wayyy better-sounding than the previous attempt. And I expect it's going to be really playable and I hope that it gets lots of interwebs attention :D
Nelson: Alright, well, thank you :)
Katy Perry outside Radio 1 after her interview with Scott Mills
©Richie Soans Photography Please do not use without permission. If you want to use any images for any publications, please do ask
Governor Hogan Speaks with Rob Petree from WMDT by Patrick Siebert at 100 State Circle, Annapolis, MD 21401
An interview with current champion Jordyn Wieber and past champions Nastia Liukin and Mary Lou Retton
Claus Rehfeld Moshøj, CEO, Aarhus Letbane, takes part in an interview on his experience of International Railway Summit 2015, held at Fairmont Rey Juan Carlos I in Barcelona, Spain.
© 2015 IRITS Events Ltd. Photo: Richard Hadley
La veille de la première réunion des ministres européens de l'Éducation, Najat Vallaud-Belkacem est interviewée sur CNN en duplex par la journaliste Christiane Amanpour, ce 16 mars 2015.
En effet à la suite des attentats terroristes de janvier, Najat Vallaud-Belkacem a souhaité réunir à Paris les ministres européens de l’Éducation, le mardi 17 mars 2015.
Photo © Razak
An interviewed Portrait I did with the ever so lovely Aisha A.K.A Miss Betty-Sue.
Read more here: (In Dutch) www.twentwatchers.nl/people/2016/03/30/aisha-reehuis-bett...
Taken for the London Cycling Campaign magazine.
Lighting: 2 x 580ex at 1/2 power in a 28inch westcott softbox camera left
"Okay, one at a time. No pushing no shoving just step right up. Your interview will begin as soon as you are seated."
"What the...??? TK-420, did you let a sponge into the line???"
"Um... maybe..."
1. 365(19): Nervous, 2. Interview Wear 2, 3. Interview Wear 1, 4. Interview Wear 3, 5. I hope you got the job, 6. Job Interview for Lowes, Hired!, 7. 151/365 job interview, 8. You never see a man do this (Jan 26th), 9. I have a job interview!, 10. Day 105, 11. Not that usual..., 12. 1-11-07, 13. relax after job interview, 14. Hotel_2350, 15. ToDetroit_2306, 16. ToDetroit_2305, 17. ToDetroit_2308, 18. ToDetroit_2309, 19. ToDetroit_2307, 20. Hotel_2349, 21. Henry_2360, 22. Henry_2359, 23. Henry_2363, 24. Hotel_2346, 25. ToDetroit_2310, 26. Hotel_2348, 27. Back2Albany_2366, 28. Henry_2362, 29. Hotel_2347, 30. Back2Albany_2368, 31. Back2Albany_2365, 32. Henry_2361, 33. Back2Albany_2367, 34. Job Interview Ready, 35. i'm an idiot at times, 36. day 40 - who's a well-dressed man then?
Created with fd's Flickr Toys.
I am totally excited to present you my next interview! This time, I met Vae (aeiko.rieko) from the label The Plastik.
Read the full interview on my >> BLOG <<
All pictures were taken at The Plastik's mainstore
after water-aerobics, it was off to interview #2... here you see me posing in the car, waiting a few minutes before entering the building too early!
what we have here:
* [unseen, underneath it all] Terramar wicking tee (STP)
* Old Navy Perfect Fit Long-Sleeved Stretch Tee in Mulberry (my new favourite clothing color... it all started out with the wicking tee I'm wearing underneath, then I picked this up, and finally a tank from torrid that denoted the name for the fabulous color!)
* Old Navy pants (source: unclear)
* [unseen, down by the gas pedal] LImited Edition Breast Cancer Awareness [Lavendar] Birki Clogs
* ring (I picked this up, ages ago, off the floor at church... later came to find out whom it originally belonged to, and they were happy to be rid of it: free!)
* Gap pink purse
* reversible DaKine tote bag (I think the style is Ivy; I got this as a Volunteer/Staff recognition gift from Helping Hands a couple Christmases ago)
[blogged]
Have you ever wondering what it would be like to sell customs at cons? Victor (eclipseGRAFX) has taken the first step in the journey.
Read the full interview at the KA-GO blog now...
James Turk, Founder and Chairman of GoldMoney, interviewed by Goldseiten.de during the Edelmetallmesse.
I got back from our 3 day survey trip. This is a misleading picture. I was actually the one that got the 10 seconds of fame on channel 6 news... They threw this guy's interview out the window and just showed a bunch of shots of me squatting using my clinometer
We almost killed the news guy trying to get him out to this spot.
It's late and there is a thunderstorm outside. I'm off to bed. I'll talk more about my trip later
October 6, 2016 - WASHINGTON DC., World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim in an CNBC interview. Photo: Simone D. McCourtie / World Bank
Photo ID: 100616-JYKOpener-0214f
That would be me, interviewing Dub FX. Great artist, I'm so grateful for this opportunity ~ Black Book!
Here's my full correspondence with Jim and Karla. Most of this interview was edited out of the book to give a little bit of info on everyone. Thanks again to the Murrays. Enjoy:
Hope you had a good holiday weekend. Sorry it took so long to get back to you but here are a few questions for the book. Thanks so much for taking the time to answer them! Also, just curious are you the same BANE that painted with the MSG guys on the 1492 wall in Ft Lauderdale that was done around 2001? We know you painted on the wall with the elephant background but weren't sure about that other wall.
To answer your "pre-question", yes I was on that wall and crew. That wall was put together by myself and DASK. We had PRISCO coming down from NY and he wanted to have an old explorer type feel to a production. So we sat down and banged out a layout.
1. How did you get your tag? Is there a story behind it?
BANE was a name I chose for a few reasons. I enjoyed it's definition as being poisonous, bringing a downfall, feeling of woe. At the time I was looking for a smaller, more fitting tag to use for bombing and I liked the letters/definition.
2. How would you describe your style of painting?
Well, in the beginning I concentrated a lot on the fluidity of my pieces. Learning this required a lack of complexity to my sketches. In other words, my pieces looked smooth, easy to interpret and not very noisy/busy. Lately, as is with everything in life I have begun building on this and adding to the complexity of them. I think, or I would like to believe that looking at something as simple as writing your name is a clue into what kind of person you are. This carries over into the question you asked and would say that my style of painting is well-thought-out. Calculated. Every letter, bit, extension, piece of 3-D, etc is positioned the way it is because that is exactly the way I felt it should be. I think the term "science fiction" works because I am using laws that I have put in place yet still being creative.
3. Did you have a mentor or are you self-taught?
My relationship with my mentors wasn't the typical teacher/apprentice relationship. The guys that schooled me were my peers. Friends. COMA showed me how to piece. CAR and OBAE, bombing. SEFER showed me how to sketch. CHASE gave me can control. CROME pushed me and that allowed me to advance my style. I think between the two of us we established how to do productions.
4. What crew/ crews are you down with?
I push my crew, RM. In the past I have been affiliated with some of the bigger crews in Miami: MSG and DAM. However I feel that we went in our different directions and I wasn't along for the ride either by my own decision (MSG) or the crews (DAM).
5. Do you mostly freestyle your pieces or sketch them out?
I have done both. I do prefer having a sketch though (refer back to question 2)
6. How did you get interested in graffiti in the first place? What was the motivation?
It was fascinating. Seeing the tags. Hearing the stories. Meeting new parts of the city. Breaking the law and getting away with it. Getting fame by recognition. Creating these masterpieces. Chilling with others that have different ways than your own. It actually gave you an honorable feeling when you met another writer whose work you've seen and they give you props.
As for the motivation, a lot of writers depend on competition to motivate them. I personally think that my graffiti is a way for people to know me that I haven't met and that it will outlast me as a person. I am just a man who lives in Miami during this period of time. Through documentation (like this book), my graffiti is accessible throughout the world and for the rest of civilization. I think that says something.
7. What do you think of the Miami graffiti scene in general?
Going back to what I was saying about motivation, I think a lot of people in this city are specifically concerned with what everyone else is doing. "We gotta do this cause they did that" or "I'm gonna go over so-and-so to get fame". Bullshit. You have the freedom to do whatever you want and you're stuck looking at everyone else and measuring against what they're doing? We need more originality down here as well as more self-focus.
As much as everyone talks about how much beef there is in this city at the same time there is a lot more unity as well. Look at how many more events there are. You guys are publishing a book. It's the whole "glass half-full" philosophy.
For today interview we had the opportunity to talk to Alexa Waters is a British model. She currently works for Storm Model Management in London