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At the popular and busy outdoor Clover Market in Chestnut Hill Sunday, a photographer with “Poseybooth” took photos of anyone willing to pose and of at least one unwilling dog. Poseybooth is a modern version of the ubiquitous instant photo booths of yore. But instead of a getting a wet print, those posing received their photos in digital format via text or email. The freebie souvenir appeared to make many people very happy. Watch video here
Performing and visual artist Karla Milugo from Brooklyn and beyond is taking an artist hiatus in the Germantown section of Philadelphia. In the month she is planning to spend here, Milugo is doing art and exploring the Philly environs. Your interviewer encountered her wearing a large, crafted camera apparatus at the Germantown Kitchen Garden urban farm oasis where a potluck picnic and concert was taking place. The camera is also a balloon pumping station and Milugo entertains kids by blowing up balloons and drawing their likeness on them. Milugo also spoke of her Preacher Faith Faucet person and her book divination projects and she indulged your interviewer by demonstrating her whistling prowess and singer creds. As the sun was setting the lively salsa band Combo Melaza rocked the crowd including Milugo who videoed while she salsa-ed. Watch Milugo video playlist here
Athan's first television interview with Sean Daly from Tampa, Florida at Disney's Hollywood Studios for Star Wars Weekends 2014.
Olivia answers questions after speaking to the Economic Club of Canada about her plan for innovative economic development in the city. (Photo by Cathy Ord)
Zachary Fabri’s Black Tape Ebony Frame celebrates the living moments of Fabri’s African American family and friends by creating a reel-to-reel analog audio recording of one-on-one conversations. Originally, the project was created to record his father’s stories as a political refugee from Hungary in 1956, but soon expanded to provide space to contemplate the heightened culture of police violence against Black people. Through these conversations, Fabri’s Session examines mortality and immortality as they relate to both remembrance and refusal.
After each conversation is recorded, Fabri will wind the audiotape around an ebony frame, sealing it and thereby preventing access to the conversation. The only information revealed from the conversation will be the name of the participants, date, and time. By intentionally complicating this accessibility to the conversations, Fabri invites viewers to consider the future problems of technological obsolescence, as well as possible ways to safeguard Black cultural content against commodification.
How do black people create and control their own content? What is the role and responsibility of cultural organizations to facilitate critical discourse? How are “Black Futures” protected? While these are valuable queries, the goal of Black Tape Ebony Frame is not data collection or in-depth interviews. For Fabri priority is placed on having organic, pedestrian, and meandering “stoop chats” where guests can discuss these questions openly. As such, the Session gallery will be transformed into a live recording studio influenced by the portrait studio photography practice of Seydou Keïta and Malick Sidibé.
We were lucky enough to see the Meskal Festival that is dedicated to the true cross. Ethiopians believe that St Helena dreampt that she should build a fire and the smoke would lead her to the true cross, which she did and returned with a piece to Ethiopia. We were very lucky to witness this wonderful and colourful festival and luckier still to manage to get into the midst of it with our cameras and photograph and share the spirit of the festivities with the locals, who seemed to enjoy photographing us on their mobiles as much as we did them.
I got interviewed for Ethiopian tv!
[deutsch]
Das Filmfestival hat begonnen. Er ist kein Filmstar, er ist ein Star des täglichen Lebens.
[english]
The film festival started today. He is not a movie star, he is a star of daily life.
[info]
Olympus E-M5, Voigtländer Nokton 50mm/1.1
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It was such an honor to be interviewed by Kristen Rask for her Plush You blog. Check out my interview along with other amazing plush artists here. Make a comment on her blog and get a chance to win a free fawn!
plushyouinterviews.blogspot.com/2008/06/fantastic-toys-in...
My friend Andrew interviews with Hadi at Tellme back in 2000. Space was tight and the "conference room" available for their interview was to squeeze in between the ping-pong table and the Dell boxes. Andrew got the job, and is still at Tellme. I never did get to collect on my bonus for recruiting Andrew--a week of meals from our webmaster, but that is a story for another time . . .
I had lunch with blogger Biao (http://www.FreeBiao.com/) while I was in San Francisco for Macworld. While I expected to interview him about his life as a Singaporean working in the start-up world in Mountain View, CA, he ended up interviewing me instead. He asked lots of questions which I would have ask other bloggers, so I realized how useful it'd be to try answering them myself.
While the delicious Cha Kway Teow gave me short memory, here are some points I recalled from our first meetup:
1. Blogging as a social responsibility: One of the key notions we discovered was how it is really up to typical people like us to make the internet more useful. Content is still king and machines alone can't do squat without us.
2. Ever had that sinking feeling that your blog is a mish-mash of this and that? It's ok... there's no rule against that and it's all about being comfortable blogging. While I started out blogging about communication theories, I ended up blogging about tech and about my life. It's inevitable and it's perfectly fine for other parts of your life to seep onto your blog. Bloggers don't need to be as specific as Engadget, they can have a "me" blog and still be equally useful thanks to the search engines like Google.
3. Hard work pays off. I'm inspired by Biao's lucky break at a job fair in Stanford which landed him the tech-related job in Mountain View, CA (lots of big corporations there, including Google!) He's in a unique position to blog about his life and experience working there!
Interview with Gillian Gilbert - SmashHits june 1982
CREDIT: mari
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Barney's Angels - More photos and discussion about Bernard Sumner and New Order
KPRC's Byron Nichols (left) films the TV interview with Redlight Wreckers tow-truck driver Edward Wiley on a TV video camera, while Safety Vision's Christine Portillo (right) films the interview on a much-loved Flip Video ultraHD.
I haven't made anything with the music I do/did. Finally a local promotion agency decides to feature me on their site and interview me. This is the highlight. Thought I'd share on flickr.
Interview with Douglas Sarine and Kent Nichols, Co-Founders of Ask A Ninja at Coffee Bean & Tea leaf in Los Angeles, May 8th 2006
As you may know Raincity Studios is the web team of the Ninjas. So, while I was in LA, I had an opportunity to interview the dynamic duo about how their popular vlog, Ask A Ninja came to be. (Rank in the top 10 podcast on iTunes since January 2006)
We talked about the source of their inspirations, what's next for the ninja, the new upcoming website due out later in June and life as an podcast rockstar.
Ask A Ninja theme song by Neu Tickles.
Pictures by Crystal Williams