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I am very happy to get this interview as doll customiser.
Thank you Fanny such a wonderful job :D
Complete interview: www.blythe-doll-fashions.com/2012/06/25/customizer-interv...
The essential parts & pieces to impressing your future employer.
- Know the employer
- Your resume
- The job description
- Pratice perfection
- Look sharp, be sharp
- Before your walk
A mission participant from FAO is recording the interview with a beneficiary in Maw Ya Wadi, Maungdaw township, Rakhine State, Myanmar.
Read more about FAO and the floods in Myanmar.
Photo credit must be given: ©FAO/Hkun Lat. Editorial use only. Copyright FAO
In the deeper part of a streaming site called, Twitch, there are people using webcams to perform their music, live.
These musicians stream their talents, their challenges, and their personalities in real-time; while the viewers interact with them by typing in the chat box.
They perform on a daily basis and keep in touch with their audience on the internet.
Check out the full web interview:
blankdox.tumblr.com/tagged/musicians
If you have a Tumblr account and you like this web interview, please comment, like, or reblog it!
Hey, I was interviewed for a Developer position in some firm at KHI, this was the table, i was all alone for a while before the interview, my resume lied at the table.
This shot of Peter Slen works much better, even though I had to bring it up a bit in Photoshop, which caused the white tent in the background to go too hot. Unfortunately, the C-SPAN bus was behind David Corn, and it was black with some colors to it. There wasn't the situation like there was three years before, when the bus was behind Slen, and it was also a bright red. Perhaps too many people mistook it for a firetruck.
Peter Slen is the host of "Book TV" on C-SPAN. It is one of his many programs he hosts on that channel, based out of Washington, D.C.
Went to an interview today (Web Artworker). To be honest I'm not sure how it went ;) I didn't say all the things I wanted to say cause all the stress made me forget half of the things I wanted to say... anyway it was an amazing and fun experience. I would totally love to get this job cause it's pretty much awesome but who knows... maybe there was someone who fits this role better then me. Anyway I'm really grateful for all the support I received from you guys
Interview with me in Bokeh Magazine this month.
bokehonline.com/blog/2014/07/bokeh-mag-vol-20-is-now-avai...
I have recently been interviewed by www.happyphoton.de about my photography.
Read more about that and an english translation here on my Blog
This is an interview I did last June with the owner of the Hotel New Azuma and Nero, a Yokohama photographer. I will use this and many more in my Tokyo Raw documentary film.
I would greatly appreciate any feedback you have regarding subtitles, content, flow, and interest.
Try watching this full screen and see if the subtitles work better. They seem to for the people I have shown in Austin.
Tony
PS
Would a voiceover be more effective...to have the original Japanese start and then fade out to a narrator?
2nd Lt. Ryan Johnson, a paratrooper assigned to Alpha Company 1-503, 173rd Infantry Brigade Combat Team, Airborne, speaks to a local reporter April 25, 2014, after a ceremony commemorating new exercises at Adazi Military Base Training Center, Latvia. The paratroopers, part of a company-sized contingent, arrived here to begin exercises with Latvian troops in a series of expanded U.S. land forces training activities in Poland and the Baltic region scheduled to take place for the next few months and beyond. The multinational training fulfills the USAREUR strategic objective of preserving and enhancing NATO interoperability and demonstrates the United States' commitment to NATO allies. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Daniel Cole/Released)
Drayton Blackgrove interviews Scott Ogle & Brent Norvell for a piece on the Three Rivers Rambler he's making for his Youtube channel, Delay In Block Productions. 12-15-18
TNIG: Interviewer
LS: Logan Summers
TNIG - Hey Logan! How does it feel to replace Molly and win this thing?
CK - It's so surreal. I honestly can't believe it! I'm still in a place of shock, and it feels so great to have your hard work pay off.
TNIG - So, many people are wondering. Is Jane Summers actually your sister?
CK - Yup, she is 2 years older then me. None of the girls knew in the beginning, only the judges. The rest of the girls founf out when we did "Flash back Splash". That's when all hell broke loose. They though it wasn't fair and evyerthing. Alexandria was really, really pissed. I saw it comming, but I held in there.
TNIG - Did you ever think you would make it this far?
CK - Not at all! I was so nervous in the beginning, as this was my first time doing anything sort of modeling. I think I improved week to week though, and I really learned a lot.
TNIG - Who were you closest to in the house?
CK - Gretchen for sure. She stuck by my side the whole time and we're like sisters/ Though many people thought we were loud and crazy, we didn't care. People thought we were "lesbians" but that's not the case at all. We just like having a fun time together. I was so sad when she went home! I wanted her to be in the top 2 with me.
TNIG - What was your favorite and least favorite photoshoot in the compettion?
CK - My favorite would have to be "Flashback Splash" as working with my sister was a complete blast! My least favorite would have to be "Wild Flower". I'm not proud of that shot at all.
TNIG - We can't wait to see you as TNIG!
CK - Me too! It's gonna be so werid to be an actual, working model now. I can't wait to get started!
Interview with a skier after a race. One of those humorous moments. :)
Part of my set Sports at an angle.
Portigal, Steve. 2013. Interviewing Users. New York: Rosenfeld Media. rosenfeldmedia.com/books/interviewing-users/
© Ben Heine || Facebook || Twitter || www.benheine.com
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I made this portrait of her several years ago and I also interviewed her (see below)
Mary Joyce is an American researcher and consultant living in Boston, USA. In June 2005, she founded Demologue.com demologue.com/index.html, an online network for worldwide digital activists. This site is not active anymore but Mary now runs a new Blog, Zapboom.com www.zapboom.com/ which is about "digital activism from a global perspective". Mary Joyce can be contacted through her blog.
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For more information about my art: info@benheine.com
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Interview with Mary Joyce
Ben Heine: How was Demologue.com founded? How did the first members of the network meet? Which role did you play in its creation?
Mary Joyce: I founded it in June of 2005, but there were never any other members. I collaborated with different individuals on isolated projects, as you can see here, but I was the only real member of Demologue.com.
BH: Which audience does Demologue.com target?
MJ: The goal was to target the whole world. That is why I published it in 4 languages (English, French, Spanish, Arabic), but I never promoted the website, so no one ever found it. Certainly no community ever formed around it.
BH: Is the word « demosphere » comparable to the words « cyber democracy » or « e-democracy»? Could you explain?
MJ: According to the Demosphere Manifesto, which I wrote with Paramendra Bhagat, "The demosphere is an international digital democracy network. It is a digital ecosystem of web sites, blogs, and digital citizens who would like to support democracy movements around the world." I would say that it could be a part of cyber democracy or e-democracy in that it is a network that spreads cyber/e-democracy practices
BH: Is Demologue.com totally independent? How does it evolve financially speaking?
MJ: Actually, the financial side of Demologue.com is something I'm really proud of and something that had an impact on my later work. Basically, Demologue.com is almost free and completely self-financed by me. It costs me $20 a month for the live software hook-up that allows me to edit the site. I designed and created the site myself using Homestead's tools. All the projects I did were free because I and the collaborators volunteered their time. I also never did any fundraising for Demologue. That is the cool thing about the internet now. You can do a lot of cool things for free or almost free meaning that political activism over the internet is accessible to more and more people.
BH: One of the main goals of Demologue.com is to bring global democracy through a network of worldwide digital activists controlling their own government. Do you think this is achievable in the short term? If not, why?
MJ: Well, I think activists connecting themselves digitally is very important, but worldwide, very few people have access to the internet, thus the need for bridge activists. I do think that the internet can help spread activist practices and strengthen individual citizen campaigns, but if national transformation is going to occur, a lot of activity will occur offline.
BH: Your proposition to reach activists in the Global South, who sometimes live under autocratic governments, is to connect them with "bridge activists". How do you build and train this needed community of "bridge activists"?
MJ: Ha ha - yeah... I didn't really have a plan for training bridge activists. My idea was that some people in each country are internet savvy and that they would just step into the role of bridge activist. I don't know if this has happened or not, but I certainly can take no credit for it.
BH: Demologue.com is growing every day, how do you recruit "bridge activists" (and hopefully local activists as well)?
MJ: I don't recruit them and Demologue.com isn't growing. Actually, it's dead.
BH: Blogging about politics is a good way of taking part into the world's affairs, which other advantages do you find in running a personal Blog?
MJ: Blogging helps me to develop my ideas by writing them down. It forces me to think about my concerns on a daily basis. Also, it gives me an opportunity to share my concerns with the public.
BH: What are the benefits for the demosphere community in having a Wiki site?
MJ: Wikis are a good way for a disconnected group to create something collaboratively because group members can contribute to the wiki on their own schedule.
BH: Although some analysts say they are mainly places for entertainment, do you think that the cyber cafés (and the other public centres where a low cost Internet connection is available) are a good weapon against the digital divide in poorer countries?
MJ: Cyber cafés are incredibly important in increasing the number of people who can get online. I would guess that the vast majority of people who use the web worldwide use a shared public computer to get online, rather than having their own. Although most kids in cyber cafés do use the internet for entertainment, the possibilities for activism are there.
BH: Don't you think that the Northern political rhetoric about the digital divide is a kind of political slogan which purpose is to force the countries of the Global South to conform their economic system to the Northern one, for example, by inciting them to buy the same Northern softwares and hardwares?
MJ: Um, that's an interesting interpretation that I've never heard before. While I do believe that the digital divide is real, I think the global south will conquer it in their own way, not the way the North did. People in India aren't going to be buying thousand-dollar desktop computers. They're going to be accessing the internet from their cell phones.
BH: We have recently heard about very cheap « generic » laptops being sold in Africa and in India. Do you think that the individual access to these computers and their potential Internet connection might be better to bridge the gap than collective access in public centres? Wouldn't it be easier for peace activists in poorer countries to work individually with these cheap laptops rather than in public centres where they often sit next to people who have no specific militant mood.
MJ: When we in the North think "digital" we think "computer" but this is not the reality in the global south. The reality is cell phones. Millions of people have them. Millions of people are using them to organize, send messages, take video and pictures. We in the North love laptops, so we want to give them to the South, but the South is creating their own solutions. We need to follow there lead and help them do something that is sustainable and makes sense for them.
BH: My last question : How would you define the ideal digital society in a few words?
MJ: Equality of communication. Equality of information. Environmentally sustainable design. Low cost and high quality. Technology guided by the needs of people and not by trade and governments. Finally education technologies should be accessible to all.
I have never met Jodie, aka Snuffy, in person but I feel we have so much in common. The day we met, and I really hope some day in this life, I am pretty sure it will feel like we have always known each other. I love the way she photographs her dolls, I love the way she dresses them up, I love the way she loves Blythe and I love the way she uses humor to brighten her life and others’!
Jodie is a member of the red “Aussie” team and we are all so happy to have her in the For the Love of Blythe book project. Jodie is also a fantastic fashion designer for Blythe, with a great eye for fabrics and colors. She makes our dolls look like princesses with a sassy look and this is irresistible!
Interview: www.blythe-doll-fashions.com/2013/03/10/fashion-designer-...
This video is an interview with people who are in LGBT community. During the process of doing this interview, I have thought a lot, not only about this project but also my life. If the norm in our society is same-sex love, what kind of situation wills hetero face? Will it be similar to the homo face today? Also, I had a hard time to find people who are willing to grant the interview. Too many rejections made me frustrated at that time even though I can understand why they rejected me. Fortunately, I have found an organization called Quest, where is a place students are free to talk about sexual orientation in our college. Then I joined the meeting to introduce myself and my project. Finally, I did this interview with amazing supporters and learned plenty of inner thoughts from them, which are different from what I thought before and need time to let society understand them.
NIH Director Dr. Francis Collins interviews NPR host Diane Rehm at the April 7, 2016 Rall Lecture.
More information: nihrecord.nih.gov/newsletters/2016/05_20_2016/story1.htm
Credit: National Institutes of Health
I'm a bit anal retentive. I didn't actually use half this stuff during the interview, but I'm glad I had it in front of me.
I did an interview with Jess Gibson who is working on a "blockumentary" on the AFOL world. I also did a little blurb about my stick bug and tire octopus with Scott Decoteau and Roger Cameron of LEGO Club TV: club.lego.com/en-us/news/NewsDetails.aspx?id=125590
All three were awesome guys, I had a great time talking with them!
Mingle Media TV and our Red Carpet Report team with Diana Espir were on the red carpet to interview talent from a number of Netflix shows from The Crown to Stranger Things at a 24,000 square foot exhibition in Beverly Hills where they were showcasing their Emmys For You Consideration (FYC) shows with their FYSee Space kick-off party and month long event.
Get the Story from the Red Carpet Report Team, follow us on Twitter and Facebook at:
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About Netflix FYSee
Netflix has created a showcase for their FYC shows for this year’s Emmy Consideration in Beverly Hills with a number of installations that had activations from selfies to interactivity with some props from shows like Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, Luke Cage, Stranger Things and more! The kick-off event is had DJ Grandmaster Flash and Adrian & Ali entertaining the guests while the red carpet was busy with talent from the shows including Millie Bobby Brown, Finn Wolfhard, Caleb McLaughlin, Noah Schnapp Gaten Matarazzo, Joe Keery, Shannon Purser, Natalie Dyer (Stranger Things); Katherine Langford, Dylan Minnette, Christian Navarro, Alisha Boe, Brandon Flynn, Justin Prentice, Miles Heizer, Ross Butler, Devin Druid, Michele Selene Ang, Tommy Dorfman, Brandon Larracuente, Tom Everett Scott (13 Reasons Why); Norman Lear, Gloria Calderon Kellett, Justina Machado, Isabella Gomez (One Day At A Time); Uzo Adubo, Blair Brown, Danielle Brooks, Taryn Manning, Samira Wiley, Laverne Cox (Orange is the New Black);
Alan Yang, Lena Waithe and Kelvin Yu (Master of None); June Diane Raphael and Peter Gallagher (Grace and Frankie); Chelsea Handler (Chelsea); Mike Colter and Cheo Coker(Marvel’s Luke Cage); Eric Newman (Narcos); Gillian Jacobs, Paul Rust and Claudia O’Doherty (Love); Jason Isaacs, Brendan Merer and Brandon Perea (The OA); Logan Browning, Brandon P. Bell, Marque Richardson, Antoinette Robertson, Ashley Blaine Featherson, DeRon Horton and John Patrick Amedori (Dear White People) and more.
About Netflix
Netflix is the world’s leading Internet television network with over 100 million members in over 190 countries enjoying more than 125 million hours of TV shows and movies per day, including original series, documentaries and feature films. Members can watch as much as they want, anytime, anywhere, on nearly any Internet-connected screen. Members can play, pause and resume watching, all without commercials or commitments.
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