Archive for June, 2005

Ultimate Sneaker Bracket on ESPN.com

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ESPN is running now sneaker culture programs on it’s site as well as on-air. All summer on ESPN2, it’s running the program, “It’s the Shoes” hosted by Bobbito Garcia. It’s the Shoes will visit the sneaker collections of Allen Iverson, Nelly, Michael Vick and others throughout the summer. The show airs as part of ESPN2’s “Block Party” each Tuesday night (Wednesday morning) at 1:30 a.m.

Also, Page 2 on ESPN.com is running a campaign to find the greatest sneaker of all time. Page 2’s panel of sneaker freaks selected 48 classic athletic shoes and seeded three regions: the Old School Hoops Region, New School Hoops Region, and Non-Hoops Region. Visitors to the site are invited to place their votes.

Place your vote now.

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BringtheFast.com

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Check out Verizon’s branded entertainment campaign to build awareness of Verizon as a broadband company and its online DSL and FiOS products.

Go to the site.

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Rize the Movie – Opens 6/24

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Krumping mixes a frenetic style of dancing with clown-derived make-up and a theatricality that blends pantomime and performance art. It’s telling that this new hip-hop-related art form was conceived and popularized in Hollywood’s backyard, and yet only a few mass media outlets have reported on this phenomenon — until now. David LaChapelle’s hyperkinetic documentary, Rize, examines this extraordinary new dance scene, depicting not only its popularity in South Central LA, but also the ways that it has changed the lives of the district’s denizens.

Check out the site.

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Fever Video from Verve Remixed 3

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Here’s a link for the “Fever” (remixed by Adam Freeland) video taken from Verve Remixed 3.

Check out the video.

Verve Remixed 3 features classic jazz tracks from the Verve Records vault, remixed and re-invented by a slew of contemporary beatsmiths including: Postal Service, Adam Freeland, RSL, Brazilian Girls, RJD2, Lyrics Born, Danger Mouse etc.

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Negroclash

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[from earplug]
Mixed live to G4, the 24-track Negroclash mix is more than just a brilliant party document — it’s a manifesto. For years, the purposeful NYC party of the same name has thrown down month after month, and now its vibe has finally been documented for posterity. Three DJs make up Negroclash: DJ Lindsey relentlessly represents, DJ Language couldn’t work harder, and Duane, an Other Music store floor-osopher, is the best-kept secret in the record business. As a team, their mixing makes you want to break into applause. A brilliant blend of phuture funk and cosmic crunk propels the party here, brimming with hooks, hops, and hits. Principals like Cat Stevens, Frankie Knuckles, and Jellybean all show up, as do cuts from the Pointer Sisters and MAW, but the juiciest string comes when “Automatic” turns into Toney Lee, folding into In Deep, and winding up with Phil Asher’s break-up jam “Having Your Fun.” As the 75-minute arc soars, the floor goes with it. (DD)

Buy the album.

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NikeiD.com Wins Distinguished Silver in Industrial Design Excellence Awards Competition

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R/GA, the New York-based interactive advertising agency, today announced NikeiD.com won a silver award in the Digital Media category at the 25th Annual Industrial Design Excellence Awards (IDEA), one of the world’s most prestigious design competitions. Co-sponsored by BusinessWeek and the Industrial Designers Society of America (IDSA), the competition honored last year’s iteration of NikeiD.com, which was relaunched in March 2005. NikeiD.com empowers consumers with freedom of expression, allowing them to custom-design, personalize and purchase footwear and gear. R/GA worked closely with Nike to implement breakthrough uses for the Flash platform, producing a site that dispels the myths of incompatibility between Flash and commerce. A major part of this development was creating an innovative four-step build process that was fast and intuitive, while encouraging users to play with multiple designs. This fun experience was augmented with features for consumers to store favorite designs in personal “lockers” and share feedback with friends via email.

Read the BusinessWeek writeup.

Read more.

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I Love Baile Funk

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[from earplug]

The next chapter in the West’s continuing fascination with Brazil’s funk carioca, or baile funk, this mix CD from DJ Sujinho (aka New York hip-hop producer Kienyo Soulkid) is a lightning tour ’round the block, packed with well-worn classics and a few surprises. Concise snatches of favorites like the Trés Tenores’ “Pavarotti” and MC Cidinho and MC Doca’s “Rap da Felicidade” are meticulously collaged and cut up alongside the gruff tones of ghetto-superstar-to-be Mr. Catra, while Kienyo puts some spice into the mix by adding his own remixes and mash-ups. His version of Outkast’s “The Way You Move” perfectly captures the bastardizing nature of funk, and neatly closes the circle where Southern hip-hop converged with hillside favela parties, permanently changing Brazil’s musical landscape. (AC)

Check out the site.

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Audi Touts Success of “Heist”

Audi of America is crowing over the results of its alternate reality gaming (ARG) “Art of the Heist” viral campaign. The company says the game has generated four times more online buzz for the A3 compact car, has engaged more than 200,000 people in a single day, and has attracted 79 percent more qualified visitors to the Audi Web site, as compared with previous efforts.

“‘The Art of the Heist’ represents a true innovation in the way Audi connects with its target consumer,” said Stephen Berkov, Audi of America’s director of marketing, in a statement. The effort, which began on April 1 in New York, revved up with the fictional theft of an Audi A3. Since then, game players have followed — and participated in — the adventures of Nisha Roberts and Ian Yarbrough, two specialists in recovering snatched art, as they track down digital clues hidden in Audis across the country. The tale of game designer Virgil Tatum, who is developing a game based on Roberts, also plays into the narrative.

The ARG was created by Audi’s long-time ad agency, McKinney + Silver, in partnership with Campfire, which is an collaboration between Mike Monello and Gregg Hale of Haxan Films, GMD Studios and Chelsea Pictures.

Besides running online advertisements encouraging people to help find the stolen A3, the company has created a microsite at stolenA3.com where gamers can follow the action. Audi has also created a fictional site for Roberts and Yarbrough’s company at lastresortretrieval.com, and a site for Tatum at virgilkingofcode.com.

The campaign also uses blogs and wild postings to keep the public updated about the alternate reality action. Additionally, game players have themselves created wikis (define) and fan sites, such as heist.smirkbox.com, to help others follow the narrative.

Read more.

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EPIC 2014

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In the year 2014, The New York Times has gone offline. The Fourth Estate’s fortunes have waned. What happened to the news? And what is EPIC?

Check out a future history of the media by Robin Sloan and Matt Thompson.

Go to the site.

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Mobot – Like a QR Code, but not a QR Code

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Thanks for the link Aya! The Mobot site describes themselves as a mobile visual search technology, Mobot connects consumers using any camera phone on any wireless carrier to brands, mobile content and commerce. No complex codes, navigation or changes to cross-media campaigns are required.

Check out the site.

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ni9e.com

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I had fun digging through this webiste. Started by two designers, fi5e and max asare, ni9e’s mission is to provide a space on the web where they could experiment in ideas that explore notions of randomness and fluidity.


Check out the site.

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Just Do It Yourself

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Brooklyn based blogger, Set Speed, was kind enough to forward over this article from this past Sunday’s NYTimes Magazine. Eventhough, Nike’s new NIKEiD.com advertising campaign seems to have reached critical mass across the media waves the last few weeks, this article gives some nice insight into the ‘influencer-centric’ design studio that they have set up at the 255 Elizabeth space in NYC. Give it a read.

[from NYTimes Magazine]
By HORACIO SILVA

A store is born in New York about as often as a Broadway hopeful arrives at the Port Authority. These days, however, jaded consumers expect more boogie-woogie than the retail equivalent of a matinee for the blue-rinse set. Temporary guerrilla stores, traveling boutiques and hybrid emporiums, selling everything from Belgian fashion experimentalia to limited-edition Japanese toys, are just some of the novelties setting the stage for a serious denouement at the cash register.

So it should surprise exactly no one that the fad for members-only clubs now extends into the shopping arena. In the wake of exclusionary stores like Celux, the LVMH-owned retail club in Tokyo, Nike has opened the NIKE iD lab, a private design studio on Elizabeth Street complete with security guards to keep out the celebrity seekers and sneaker freakers who memorize bar codes and shrink-wrap their shoes for safekeeping.

Read more.

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Pixel Gasoline

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Pixel Gasoline’s portfolio site does a great job at leveraging video transitions to mimick the experience of moving from one environment to another. I love the choppy zooming in and out animations as well as how precisely and smoothly they integrate in their ‘Super Charged with Internet Fuel’ concept.

Pixel Gasoline is a design studio based in Montreal, Canada that specializes in 3D and flash animation.

Check out the site.

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