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#Steven Briand
techstartro · 2 months
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vm4vm0 · 2 years
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Nike Japan - New Girl from Christian Lopez on Vimeo.
Nike Tokyo
Japan is currently ranked 123 of the 151 countries on the gender equality index. It's still frowned upon to speak up in meetings (we're looking at you, Yoshiro Mori), to step into a sumo ring (multiple locations denied us to shoot there because women would be in the sacred ring), to come back to sports after you've had a baby ('you're a mom now') and the gender pay gap index is enormous. Whereas the only question should be to a newborn: Hey girl, what do you want to do? Here's to all girls. Moms. Sportswomen. Bosses. And anyone who wants to step into the sumo ring. To anyone willing to change their minds.
WIEDEN+KENNEDY TOKYO @wktokyo Creative Director - Curro de la Villa @currodlv Lead Creatives - Max Pilwat @maksmaks, Andrew Miller @oylmiller Head of Production - Kerli Teo @kerliteo Account Director - Shinya Kamata @kmt_3a Account Supervisor - Kana Ikushima @chankana_kana Creatives - Asami Yamashita, Christian Lopez @christianlopez Producers - Jennifer Chien @jenchien929, Yuka Nakamura, Eisuke Arai @a_sk_e Comms Planning Director - Justin Lam @justinclam Strategic Planning Director - Thijs van de Wouw @thijs.vandewouw Studio Designer - Shohei Kawada @_showhei Studio Manager - Aiwei Ichikawa Agency Editor - Vinod Vijayasankaran @videovinod PR - Midori Sugama @midorisugama Translator - Mako Tomita Executive Creative Director - Scott Dungate @scotty_fingers Managing Director - Yosuke Suzuki
FILM PRODUCTION Production - BWGTBLD GmbH @bwgtbld Director - Caroline Koning @carokoning Executive Producer - Philipp Ramhofer @philipp.ramhofer Producer - Jule Everts @edelwatz Director of Photography - Kaname Onoyama
SERVICE PRODUCTION Production - NAKAMA @nakamafilm Executive Producer - Kenji Lepretre Sato @kenykilla Producer - Simon Amar @ramanomis Line Producer - Sadami Hwang Production Manager - Anna Briand Hashimoto, Shusaku Kakizawa, Toru Hyakawa Assistant to Director - Risa Nakatomi Casting Director - Kensaku Watanabe (E-spirit), Yuko Yamamoto Lighting Director - Tetsu Moritera Wardrobe | Costume | Styling - Maiko Yoshida @stylist_maiko Hair & Make up - Takahiro Okada Production Design - Masami Tanaka
POST PRODUCTION Editor - Trim Edit @trimediting, Carla Luffe (Trim Editor) @carlaluff, Jacques Simons (Trim Assistant) Noreen Khan (Trim Producer) Music Composer (Teaser) - Joe Farley / Freddie Denham Webb (Father) @father_insta Music Composer (Long Form Film) - Chris White (SIREN) @sirenmusic Music Supervisor & Producer - Siân Rogers (SIREN) Sound Designer - Jon Clarke (factory) @jon__clarke Audio EP - Lou Allen (factory)@factorystudiosuk Colorist - Mikey Rossiter (The Mill New York) @mikolour @mill_ny VFX Production Company - SWISS @swissinternationalab Executive Producer - Erik Holmedal VFX Supervisor - Andreas Weidman Producer - Andres Rosas Hott Compositer - Felix Davlin, Filip Gernandt, Jon Wesstrom, Kristian Zdunek, Markus Bergqvist, Martin Sazesh, Kalle Kohlström 3D Artists - Joel Sundberg, Marguerite Chantel, Simon Voigt Jansson FX Artist - Sebastian Björk Supervisor - Oskar Wahlberg Rigging - Nathalie Roy Animation - Steven Lecomte Match Move - Sebastian Ekman Lighting - Linus Holm
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motioncollector · 5 years
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DCN Video Pick: Plume by STEVEN BRIAND // Light and poetic, Plume captures the emotion of the first kiss, when time stops and the world disappears. Two lovers above the sky levitating in a languid embrace.
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placerdiario · 4 years
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Billie Eilish - Bellyache (Marian Hill Remix) from STEVEN BRIAND on Vimeo.
Billie Eilish ft. Marian Hill - Bellyache a film by Bounty / Banana aka Steven Briand & Julien Jourdain de Muizon IG: @bountybanana @stevenbrianddirector @julienjdm_banana FB: facebook.com/bountybanana
with Eva Studzinski Producer - Manuel Cam Cinematographer - Johan Leclerc - Bottarelli Editor - Benjamin Bruel Choreography - Cathy Ematchoua First AD - Luc Finalteri Make-up - Julie Larher Grading - Nicolas Gautier Flame - Jao Eka M'changama Fx Consultant - Nicolas Fuminier Post Prod Assistant - Romuald Carruesco Thanks - Mustafa Mazouzi, Hugo Vincent Interns - Pierre Comte, Nathan Morisseau
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amethyst1995-20xx · 7 years
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PROTEIGON from STEVEN BRIAND on Vimeo.
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burkemiles · 4 years
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PROTEIGON by STEVEN BRIAND
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amp-wrks · 5 years
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PLUME from Psyop on Vimeo.
Steven Briand's latest short film, Plume, harnesses the magic of a first kiss.
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H.G. Wells is famous for having predicted air and space travel, the atomic bomb and the tank, satellite television and something like the internet. He is infamous for another claim: World War I would be “the war to end all war.”
The British science fiction writer made that prediction in 1914, at the beginning of the war. The four years of carnage that ensued and the subsequent failure to secure a lasting peace – World War II broke out 20 years later – made his catchphrase synonymous with naive optimism and his prophecy as false as time travel.
But on the 100th anniversary of the armistice that ended the war (at 11 a.m. Nov. 11, 1918 – the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month) Wells’ optimism looks prescient after all.
Although World War I was not the war to end all wars, it was the beginning of the end of a certain kind of war. In the past 70 years, war as Wells knew it – between nations – has declined.
To anyone following news from Syria, Yemen, Sudan, Iraq or Afghanistan (where the United States fights its longest war), that might seem preposterous.
But partly because of ideas and institutions inspired by World War I, state-vs.-state, cross-border warfare has faded. Despite civil war and rebellion, terrorism and cyberwarfare, our time is more peaceful than its predecessors.
Will it remain so? President Donald Trump, who went to France to commemorate the armistice’s centennial, has been more critical than any other president since World War II of the security and trade policies that did not end armed conflict but promoted what’s known as the Long Peace.
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War then and now
Forget what you learned in school. “World War I did start a process that has made the world safer,” says Scott Shapiro, a Yale University expert on attempts to outlaw war. Steven Pinker, a Harvard polymath who’s studied global violence, calls the war “a watershed in the transition to a more peaceful world.”
The war discredited several assumptions widely held in 1914.
War was romantic and glorious.
There was no romance and little glory on the Western Front, just vast, indiscriminate, constant death. The war decimated the elite classes that had nurtured lofty ideas about wars. The third marquess of Salisbury, Queen’s Victoria’s last prime minister, had 10 grandsons. Five perished at the front.
War invigorated society and “cleansed” it of decadent values and bad habits.
This notion was particularly popular in Britain. Arthur Conan Doyle, who enlisted in the government propaganda campaign, had Sherlock Holmes tell Dr. Watson that the war “will be cold and bitter … and a good many of us may wither before its blast. But it’s God’s own wind none the less, and a cleaner, better, stronger land will lie in the sunshine when the storm has cleared.’’
Instead, the war left even its European victors, Britain and France, weaker and more divided. It soured its strongest survivor, the United States, on a level of international engagement that might have kept the peace.
 War solved conflicts between nations.
To the contrary, the war led to the overthrow of half its combatants’ governments – Czarist Russia, Imperial Germany and the Ottoman Turkish and Austro-Hungarian empires.  It worsened enmity between France and Germany.
A war in two acts
If the idea that World War I lived up to Wells’ audacious promise still seems bizarre, look at the two world wars as many historians do – part of a single conflict.
After this long war ended in 1945, its traumas were not forgotten. The victors established institutions (such as the United Nations), treaties (NATO) and aid programs (the Marshall Plan) based on ideas that dated to the end of World War I.
Thanks to these initiatives, and the fear of nuclear weapons, since 1945, there has been no major war between major powers; even the biggest conflicts, such as Korea and Vietnam, have been limited in scope; the amount of sovereign territory that has changed hands – once war’s raison d’etre – has been small.
Exceptions prove the rule. From 1980 to 1988, Iran and Iraq fought an old-school war, complete with trenches. In 2014, Russia seized the Crimean Peninsula from Ukraine. Neither war set a happy precedent. Iraq-Iran was a bloody draw, and Russia suffered from economic sanctions.
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The world still has plenty of armed conflict. But war, says Rachel Kleinfeld of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, “has metamorphosed into something else” – more typically within nations than between them. In 1958, the number of internal conflicts – usually civil wars – passed the number of external ones for the first time since World War I.
Some of the world’s most dangerous places aren’t even at war, Kleinfeld notes. In 2015, for instance, there were more violent deaths in Brazil than Syria.
News vs. numbers
Why does an end to war, or even a more peaceful world, strike people as ludicrous?
Pinker says it’s because we follow the news instead of counting the numbers.
The decline in international warfare is quantifiable. In 2016, there were 49 active conflicts in the world that caused 25 or more battle-related deaths. Only two – border clashes between India and Pakistan and Ethiopia and Eritrea – were between sovereign states.
Public opinion is formed by news reports that focus on the unusual and the violent; if it bleeds, it leads.
Hence, an irony: In World War I, censorship of casualty figures made those on the home front think the world was less violent than it was; today, free movement of news makes us think the world is more violent than it is.
The pacifist who cried ‘War!’
In 1914, H.G. Wells, author of “The War of the Worlds” and “The Time Machine,” was a prominent internationalist and peace advocate. But he’d become convinced that the key to peace was war against militaristic, imperialistic Germany.
“This, the greatest of all wars, is not just another war,” Wells argued. “It is the last war.”
“This is now a war for peace,” he wrote in “The War that Will End War.” “It aims straight at disarmament. It aims at a settlement that shall stop this sort of thing forever. Every soldier who fights against Germany now is a crusader against war.”
Like most, he expected decisive battles and a short war. Instead, the armies got bogged down in a network of trenches that stretched from Switzerland to the North Sea. Repeated frontal charges produced minuscule advances and staggering casualties.
The slaughter made Wells’ promise even more important – for only the highest of causes could justify such suffering.
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President Woodrow Wilson, who’d campaigned for president in 1916 opposing U.S. entry into World War I, led his nation into the war in 1917. He said it would “make the world safe for democracy.” And he was associated with the claim that the conflict was “a war to end all war.” (Photo: Courtesy of Library of Congress)
The United States entered the war in 1917, largely because of German submarine attacks on neutral shipping. President Woodrow Wilson, who’d pledged to keep the nation at peace, took a cue from Wells: The war would “make the world safe for democracy.”
It ended in 1918 with a de facto surrender by Germany and its exhausted allies. During the war, British Prime Minister David Lloyd George privately mocked Wells, reputedly saying, “This war, like the next war, is a war to end war.” But on Nov. 11, he rose in Parliament and said, “This, the greatest of all wars, is not just another war. It is the last war.”
The Allied powers gathered in France to draw up a peace treaty. The victors, especially the French, demanded terms that seemed outrageously harsh to Germans. Adolf Hitler would use that resentment to seize power in the 1930s.
In the USA, the idealism of 1917 was replaced by disillusionment with European politics and fear of entangling alliances. The U.S. Senate rejected membership in the newly formed League of Nations, the world body fiercely promoted by Wells.
The peace treaty was signed in the Hall of Mirrors at the Palace of Versailles. Some called it “the peace to end peace.”
There were attempts to redeem the Great War. In 1926, the major naval powers agreed to reduce the number of warships. Two years later, most nations signed the Kellogg-Briand Pact, which outlawed war to settle international disputes.
But war was not through with the world. In 1935, Italy invaded and conquered Ethiopia. In 1937, Japan invaded China. In 1939, Germany touched off another world war when it capped years of aggression by invading Poland.
People in 1918 thought nothing could be worse than a war that killed 9 million combatants. This one would kill 15 million. Wells’ dream was as dead as the 20,000 Britons lost on the first morning of the Battle of the Somme.
A day to remember
In 1954, the 11th of November, known for 35 years as Armistice Day, was renamed Veterans Day in the USA. It was part of the slow process of forgetting the war to end all war.
But the day was never forgotten by Franklin Roosevelt, who in 1918 was assistant secretary of the Navy; nor by Harry Truman, an artillery officer in France; nor by George Marshall, a staff officer for the U.S. commanding general, John Pershing; nor by Dean Acheson, a naval officer.
In the 1940s, these men clutched the lessons of World War I as they created the institutions and forged the alliances that helped produce the Long Peace. They never spoke of anything so grand as the end of war.
Wells lived to see the start of World War II. This time, he issued a small book called “The Rights of Man; Or What Are We Fighting For?” in which he argued for a declaration of human rights as a key war aim.
In 1948, two years after his death, the United Nations adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Wells would have been pleased. He’d suggested his own epitaph: “I told you so. You damned fools.”
via The Conservative Brief
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equipedefranceinfo · 6 years
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La Gazette de la L1 : 3e journée
   Les résultats de la journée
Olympique Lyonnais 2 - 0 RC Strasbourg Alsace Paris Saint-Germain 3 - 1 Angers SCO Amiens SC 4 - 1 Stade de Reims Montpellier Hérault SC 0 - 0 AS Saint-Étienne FC Nantes 1 - 1 SM Caen OGC Nice 0 - 4 Dijon FCO Toulouse FC 1 - 0 Nîmes Olympique LOSC 3 - 0 EA Guingamp Girondins de Bordeaux 2 - 1 AS Monaco Olympique de Marseille 2 - 2 Stade Rennais FC
          Les gestes
L'ouverture de l'extérieur du pied d'Ole Selnaes pour Loïs Diony dans le dos de la défense montpelliéraine.
  Le contre lyonnais commencé par une ouverture en une touche de Martin Terrier dans la course de Memphis Depay, et conclu par Bertrand Traoré après avoir éliminé le gardien et un défenseur strasbourgeois.
  #Replay???? BUUUUUUUUUUUUT DE BERTRAND #TRAORE pic.twitter.com/kaa8iTIFiM
— Inside Gones (@InsideGones) 24 août 2018
  L'entrée en jeu fracassante du Dijonnais Jules Keita: provoque le coup franc du premier but dijonnais, puis réussit une passe décisive avant de marquer un doublé, le tout en vingt-cinq minutes.
  De Jules Keita, on notera surtout qu’il se permet de tricoter un chandail, deux paires de moufles et une écharpe dans la défense niçoise, sans être trop inquiété. À surveiller!
  En pleine surface monégasque et dans les arrêts de jeu, la remise en retrait de Younousse Sankharé après un joli centre de Maxime Poundjé pour François Kamano, qui reprend instantanément et place le ballon dans le petit filet de Diego Benaglio.
  Toutes les parades de ce dernier qui vient nous rappeler qu'il est un très bon gardien.
  Le but xeki Xeka des Lillois.
  Samuel Kalu qui va vite, très vite. Trop vite?
  La splendide et lointaine tête de la recrue amiénoise Saman Ghoddos, un des nombreux nouveaux visages du championnat à avoir brillé ce week-end.
  Le tour sur lui-même de son partenaire Eddy Gnahoré avant de conclure.
  La parade du pied de Kalle Johnsson, qui empêche un superbe mouvement collectif lillois d'aller au bout.
  Les jaillissements de Paul Bernardoni, devant Max-Alain Gradel sur penalty puis devant Aaron Leya Iseka seul face au but nîmois.
  Le jeu en triangle Mbappé-Rabiot-Neymar, simple, fluide et imparable.
  Le centre d'Angel Di Maria, si parfaitement déposé que Kylian Mbappé a tout le temps d'ajuster sa reprise de volée
        Les antigestes
Le tacle mal maîtrisé du Rémois Romain Métanire sur Steven Mendoza, lui coûtant un carton rouge.
  Les deux reprises de la tête expédiées à côté par le Niçois Myziane Maolida, pourtant idéalement servi par deux centres précis d'Olivier Boscagli et Bassem Srarfi.
  La passivité de la défense niçoise, en particulier sur les deux derniers buts dijonnais.
  L'hésitation de Jules Koundé en position de dernier défenseur, permettant à Pietro Pellegri de lui piquer le ballon et d'égaliser.
  La défense monégasque qui s'arrête de jouer après une ouverture du Bordelais Samuel Kalu, permettant à celui-ci de partir en duel avec Diego Benaglio et de tirer sur le poteau.
  La tête plongeante mal maîtrisée de Yohann Pelé qui reprend le ballon du menton et permet à Ismaïla Sarr de doubler la mise. Avec, en bonus, l'intervention d'Adil Rami sur Ismaïla Sarr avec la finesse d'un bulldozer et la tête remarquablement placée dans son propre but de Ramy Bensebaini pour parachever l'oeuvre globale.
  Le tout petit saut de Dante qui perd son duel de la tête, sanctionné directement par un but.
  Nice qui joue à onze, mais sans défenseurs.
  La MLS qui a fait oublier à Patrick Vieira le niveau du foot français.
  Le maillot kaki de Reims.
  Les hors-jeux au millimètre de la VAR.
  MHSC-ASSE, quatre-vingt-dix minutes exemptes de gestes ou d’antigestes. Juste un antimatch.
        "Je te serre pas la main trop longtemps pour pas choper ta lose du Mondial."
            Les observations en vrac
Jouer sans assurance défensive à l'Allianz Riviera c'est ironique.
  Victoire de Bordeaux et défaite de Guingamp. La malédiction Jimmy Briand serait-elle enfin levée?
  Avec ses deux tentatives du week-end, Toulouse devient l'équipe à avoir bénéficié du plus de penalties dans les cinq grands championnats depuis 2017/18 (treize).
        Le coin fraîcheur
Le Sporting Club Bastiais a reçu ce jour un don financier extrêmement généreux de la part de son ancien joueur Wahbi Khazri ! ???????? Grazie à tè Wahbi ! Turchinu un ghjornu, turchinu per sempre ! ?????? ?? https://t.co/vXiajc3IB9 pic.twitter.com/OmPv2CnoUr
— SC Bastiais (@SCBastia) 27 août 2018
        Les mots croisés
  Horizontalement: 1. Stade de promus. 2. Prénom d'un génie du foot malheureusement peu courant en Corée / Avec LI fut le bourreau d'un soir des Monégasques. 3. L'aigle des Açores en désordre. 4. Ville d'olympique. 5. Centre de Chapuisat / Milieu droit de la barre / Un centre de Yerry. 6. Complément naturel de Ben / Tableau de Sri Lanla - Tokelau. 7. Les Bordelais sans un rond / Chaîne de foot sans consonnes. 8. Le grand Fréderic / Lloris sans H. 9. Famille de footballeur finlandais, Roman et Alexeï jouant encore.
  Verticalement: 1. Football rémois. 2. Milieu gauche du coach / Abonné à la chicha . 3. Mbappé et Grizou le sont. 4. Premier doublé coupe-championnat fut pour eux (en désordre) / Durée qui en football ne contient qu'une saison. 5. Vêtement d’entraîneur les jours pluvieux / Pays nordique abrégé. 6. Frappes / Le milieu de la gagne. 7. 323 buts pour le Real / Parfois plus commenté que le style de jeu. 8. Résultat nul. 9. Meilleur buteur de la Coupe du monde sur un match.
La réponse est ici.
           Le championnat à l'envers
Guingamp d'un côté, Angers de l'autre. Les deux dernières équipes au parcours parfait ont porté haut leurs couleurs ce week-end, s'inclinant respectivement à Lille et Paris, deux déplacements abordables mais tout de même marqués par des solides performances. 0-3 d'un côté, 1-3  de l'autre: peu importe la manière, on peut déjà saluer le résultat. Et c'est bien la première chose qu'on retiendra côté angevin où, après une entame difficile, il fallut un excès de confiance adverse et un malheureux changement de système pour revenir dans la partie, la différence de talent faisant le reste.
  Pour les Bretons, en revanche, il y a beaucoup de positif dans les intentions. Des trous défensifs aux relances ratées, en passant par une stérilité de tous les instants quand l'adversaire laissait la balle et une expulsion une fois le score acquis en fin partie... Même le duo d'attaque composé de Nolan Roux et Ronny Rodelin, qui aurait pu être motivé par le retour dans un stade Pierre-Mauroy qui a apprécié leurs exploits (on se souvient du légendaire chant "C'est notre meilleur joueur, Ro-nn-y-Rod'-Lin"), a retrouvé des vieux réflexes en arrosant les tribunes. Pour les hommes d'Antoine Kombouaré, qu'on avait rarement connu si inspiré, on frôle la masterclass.
  Ce terme sera évidemment réservé aux Niçois d'un Patrice Vieira qui s'affirme déjà comme LA bonne pioche de cette intersaison. Sous les ordres du champion du monde 98, les partenaires d'un Yoan Cardinale très affuté ont longtemps peiné, même si leur maladresse faisait plaisir à voir, avant de dérouler dans la dernière demi-heure. Et les quatre ballons qu'ils sont allés chercher dans leurs filets, récompense méritée d'une science défensive qui doit faire de nombreux envieux, leur permet de soigner une différence de buts qui les amène avec fracas sur un podium qui a fière allure.
             Vu de Twitter
???????????????????????????????????? pic.twitter.com/hhxYmk0aLM
— Sika (@SikaPronos) 27 août 2018
  Ici on n'a pas la mer... Mais on a la Vague Verte!!! ????????????????#ASSE #LePeupleVert pic.twitter.com/2sMNK19rtL
— ASSE-Le Peuple Vert (@LePeupleVert42) 21 août 2018
  Mon Galtier sûr pic.twitter.com/LoWrQQHba8
— Pierre Prugneau (@Prugneau) 24 août 2018
  Qu’il soit intéressant est sans doute facultatif pic.twitter.com/3oyxcKeBVm
— Matteu Maestracci (@MMaestracci) 24 août 2018
    Merci à Gouffran direct, Mama, Rama & Papa Yade, Mik Mortsllak, Moravcik dans les pré, Yul rit cramé pour leurs contributions. La compilation de AKK rends tes sets, les mots croisés de parkduprince et les lucarnes sont de xx.
   via https://ift.tt/2wuLBCi
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str9led · 6 years
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vimeo
Steven Briand - SUPA SUPA Teaser from Blacklist on Vimeo.
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vm4vm0 · 3 years
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vimeo
Nike - New Girl from Caroline Koning on Vimeo.
Nike Tokyo
Japan is currently ranked 123 of the 151 countries on the gender equality index. It's still frowned upon to speak up in meetings (we're looking at you, Yoshiro Mori), to step into a sumo ring (multiple locations denied us to shoot there because women would be in the sacred ring), to come back to sports after you've had a baby ('you're a mom now') and the gender pay gap index is enormous. Whereas the only question should be to a newborn: Hey girl, what do you want to do? Here's to all girls. Moms. Sportswomen. Bosses. And anyone who wants to step into the sumo ring. To anyone willing to change their minds.
WIEDEN+KENNEDY TOKYO @wktokyo Creative Director - Curro de la Villa @currodlv Lead Creatives - Max Pilwat @maksmaks, Andrew Miller @oylmiller Head of Production - Kerli Teo @kerliteo Account Director - Shinya Kamata @kmt_3a Account Supervisor - Kana Ikushima @chankana_kana Creatives - Asami Yamashita, Christian Lopez @christianlopez Producers - Jennifer Chien @jenchien929, Yuka Nakamura, Eisuke Arai @a_sk_e Comms Planning Director - Justin Lam @justinclam Strategic Planning Director - Thijs van de Wouw @thijs.vandewouw Studio Designer - Shohei Kawada @_showhei Studio Manager - Aiwei Ichikawa Agency Editor - Vinod Vijayasankaran @videovinod PR - Midori Sugama @midorisugama Translator - Mako Tomita Executive Creative Director - Scott Dungate @scotty_fingers Managing Director - Yosuke Suzuki
FILM PRODUCTION Production - BWGTBLD GmbH @bwgtbld Director - Caroline Koning @carokoning Executive Producer - Philipp Ramhofer @philipp.ramhofer Producer - Jule Everts @edelwatz Head of development: Alex Göke Lead DA: Leonor Alexandrino DA: Jan Hellwich
SERVICE PRODUCTION Production - NAKAMA @nakamafilm Executive Producer - Kenji Lepretre Sato @kenykilla Producer - Simon Amar @ramanomis Line Producer - Sadami Hwang Director of Photography - Kaname Onoyama Production Manager - Anna Briand Hashimoto, Shusaku Kakizawa, Toru Hyakawa Assistant to Director - Risa Nakatomi Casting Director - Kensaku Watanabe (E-spirit), Yuko Yamamoto Lighting Director - Tetsu Moritera Wardrobe | Costume | Styling - Maiko Yoshida @stylist_maiko Hair & Make up - Takahiro Okada Production Design - Masami Tanaka
POST PRODUCTION Editor - Trim Edit @trimediting, Carla Luffe (Trim Editor) @carlaluff, Jacques Simons (Trim Assistant) Noreen Khan (Trim Producer) Music Composer (Teaser) - Joe Farley / Freddie Denham Webb (Father) @father_insta Music Composer (Long Form Film) - Chris White (SIREN) @sirenmusic Music Supervisor & Producer - Siân Rogers (SIREN) Sound Designer - Jon Clarke (factory) @jon__clarke Audio EP - Lou Allen (factory)@factorystudiosuk Colorist - Mikey Rossiter (The Mill New York) @mikolour @mill_ny VFX Production Company - SWISS @swissinternationalab Executive Producer - Erik Holmedal VFX Supervisor - Andreas Weidman Producer - Andres Rosas Hott Compositer - Felix Davlin, Filip Gernandt, Jon Wesstrom, Kristian Zdunek, Markus Bergqvist, Martin Sazesh, Kalle Kohlström 3D Artists - Joel Sundberg, Marguerite Chantel, Simon Voigt Jansson FX Artist - Sebastian Björk Supervisor - Oskar Wahlberg Rigging - Nathalie Roy Animation - Steven Lecomte Match Move - Sebastian Ekman Lighting - Linus Holm
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babaalexander · 6 years
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Great Birthday greetings Web Stars Born on December 12 MrCrainer Adin Kolansky Hila Klein Kaylor Keeling XboxAddictionz Kimberly Loaiza Joakim Berg Amanda Trieschman Brooke Sanchez Farah Dhukai Ravan Richards India Jasmijn WhosChaos Mike Jerry Nick Klokus Zaydaleigh Haley Letter GamingMermaid Kristen Leanne Tommy Smith Tyler Peaslee Kipkay Anna Briand Steven Bonnell II Rachel Aust Daniel Rich MCPEMike Whatdafaqshow GhostSickness Lightsen Eimear McElheron Lisa Bakker Jacob Challinor Keiser Gonzalez Trinity Lay Jake Rogers Dale Gill Leandro Manuel Pita Maylin Jülide Heily Chong Clara Silverman Austen Marie Karolina Golebiewska Banu Mourad CherylPandemonium Emmanuel Guzman Margaret Krohn Elvia Putri Mahallany #MrCrainer #AdinKolansky #HilaKlein #KaylorKeeling #XboxAddictionz #KimberlyLoaiza #JoakimBerg #AmandaTrieschman #BrookeSanchez #FarahDhukai #RavanRichards #IndiaJasmijn #WhosChaos #MikeJerry #NickKlokus #Zaydaleigh #HaleyLetter #GamingMermaid #KristenLeanne #TommySmith #TylerPeaslee #Kipkay #AnnaBriand #StevenBonnellII #RachelAust #DanielRich #MCPEMike #Whatdafaqshow #GhostSickness #Lightsen
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an-ephemeral-blog · 7 years
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Linkspam #1
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The Supermanagerial Reich by Ajay Singh Chaudhary and Raphaële Chappe at the LA Review of Books:
Supermanagers provide a very specific kind of governance needed in very specific kinds of regimes. The supermanager and their seemingly outsized share of national income is not merely a phenomenon of our own neoliberal era, from the Reagan/Thatcher “revolutions” to the Clinton/Blair era. It was a conspicuous feature of Nazi Germany (and although the data is thinner, it would seem 1920–’30s fascism in general). The most plausible explanation for this compensation draws not from any particularly radical theory of value, nor from moralistic parables about corruption, nor from fairy tales about superheroic capacities. The most plausible explanation is that supermanagers are paid for governance where the state has been redeployed elsewhere or, even, effectively dissolved.
Aftereffects: In the U.S., Evidence Says Doing More Time Typically Leads to More Crime After by David Roodman at the Open Philanthropy Project:
After tough review, the bulk of the evidence says that in the United States today, prison is making people more criminal. The short-term crime reduction from incarcerating more people gets canceled out in the long run. [...] If the aftereffects of incarceration at least cancel out the during effects, and the before effects are practically zero, as the intro post essentially concludes, then at current margins, building and filling prisons is not making people safer. It may even be endangering the public. In that case, the cost-benefit case for decarceration is a no-brainer: all benefit and no cost.
I never signed up for this! Privacy implications of email tracking by Steven Englehardt at Freedom to Tinker:
What happens when you open an email and allow it to display embedded images and pixels? You may expect the sender to learn that you’ve read the email, and which device you used to read it. But in a new paper we find that privacy risks of email tracking extend far beyond senders knowing when emails are viewed. Opening an email can trigger requests to tens of third parties, and many of these requests contain your email address. This allows those third parties to track you across the web and connect your online activities to your email address, rather than just to a pseudonymous cookie.
Fundamentalism is Not Conservatism (Biblically or Constitutionally) by Fred Clark at Patheos:
Again, that dismissal of every other view means this is not a conservative-vs.-liberal argument, no matter how much fundies love to portray it as such. It’s a fundamentalist-vs.-non-fundamentalist argument meant to dismiss and belittle everything in the entire universe other than its own brand of reflexive fundamentalism. It dismisses every conservative tradition just as much as it does every liberal tradition. In a sense, its disdain for tradition and precedent may be more offensive to conservatives than to liberals.
I was going to add a link to “‘Terrible Purity’: Peter Singer, Harriet McBryde Johnson, and the Moral Significance of the Particular” but it is no longer open access.  Fie!
Other Favorites
Source Code Review for Thee... But Not For Me... by Paul Rosenzweig at Lawfare - source code review, government contracting, and national security
Outlawing War? It Actually Worked  by Oona A Hathaway and Scott J Shapiro at the New York Times - how the Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928 ended territorial conquest
On the fetishization of money in Galt’s Gulch by Benjamin Ross Hoffman at Compass Rose - Ayn Rand’s Atlas Shrugged and money as ritual
Why Do Teen Magazines Idealize Relationships Between Underage Girls And Adult Men? by Erika W Smith at The Establishment - spoiler: it’s because our culture is fucked up
Surviving sexual assault in Japan, then victimized again by Megha Wadhwa and Ben Stubbings at the Japan Times - other cultures are fucked up too
The different media spheres of the right and the left — and how they’re throwing elections to the Republicans by Lisa Wade at Sociological Images - the right is locked into an unaccountable bubble of polarized and untrustworthy news
Facial Recognition for Porn Stars Is a Privacy Nightmare Waiting to Happen by Samantha Cole at Motherboard - how PornHub is risking the safety and privacy of porn actors
Vested interests in ‘openness’ by Mark Carrigan - on the ways major tech companies benefit from free/open content
Who gets to have a good death? by Tessa Love at The Establishment - "A good death is often a privileged one. The bad deaths — violent, patterned deaths — are disproportionately experienced by the marginalized.“
And, let’s end on a lighter note... Oldest and Fatherless: The Terrible Secret of Tom Bombadil.
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Chimera
Amazing editing to merge 3 dancers together
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cyberdetective · 7 years
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oldguardaudio · 7 years
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PowerLine → Fresno  Allahu Akbar!
ISIS Head Syrian Refugee at HoaxAndChange.com
ISIS Terror Allahs law – beheading
Woman beheaded in Saudia Arabia in the middle of the street
Daily Digest
→→→→
Allahu Akbar!
Can Universities Be Fixed?
Remember the Doolittle Raid
The stakes in Georgia
Urgent: Trump’s “Read My Lips” Moment
Allahu Akbar!
Posted: 18 Apr 2017 02:11 PM PDT
(John Hinderaker)
A 39-year-old man named Kori Ali Muhammad went on a rampage in Fresno today:
Kori Ali Muhammad
A man shot and killed three people in downtown Fresno on Tuesday before surrendering to authorities, the Fresno Police Department said.
The suspect was identified as Kori Ali Muhammad, a 39-year-old man who was wanted in connection with the shooting death of a security guard outside a motel Thursday, said Police Chief Jerry Dyer. The FBI has been notified of the shooting deaths.
“This was a random act of violence,” Dyer said.
Well, it wasn’t entirely random.
An officer in the area spotted the gunman running south on Fulton. The gunman then “dove onto the ground” and taken into custody, the chief said.
“As he was taken into custody, he yelled out ‘Allahu Akbar,’” Dyer said.
At least three of the victims were white, Dyer said.
Dyer said Muhammad had expressed hatred toward white people and the government.
Actually, given the nonsense that is taught in universities, propagated in the popular culture, and promoted by some politicians, it is fortunate that hatred of white people isn’t more common.
Can Universities Be Fixed?
Posted: 18 Apr 2017 12:45 PM PDT
(Steven Hayward)
Turns out even The Simpsons has taken aim at the rot in higher education, with this scene from last week’s episode:
Yes, I’m sure that eight new deans can indeed get to the bottom of the Halloween costume policy for Yale. When you’ve lost The Simpsons. . .
But this video, from the Center for Freedom and Prosperity, suggests one method for spreading economic literacy that just might work:
Remember the Doolittle Raid
Posted: 18 Apr 2017 11:22 AM PDT
(Scott Johnson)
If you’ve ever learned the story of Doolittle’s Raid and Doolittle’s Raiders, you remember. After Pearl Harbor, as Japan was racking up victories in the Pacific, then Army Air Force Lt. Col. Jimmy Doolittle led something like a suicide mission to bomb Tokyo. Today is the seventy-fifth anniversary of Doolittle’s Raid. On the occasion, Gerald Skoning recalls the story’s highlights in “How Doolittle little did so much for so many 75 years ago today.”
The Naval History and Heritage Command has a somewhat more detailed account in Halsey-Doolittle Raid.” CNN has posted a good account by Richard Roth along with a brief video here. Michael Paradis puts the story in a contemporary context in the Weekly Standard column “Bombing for show.”
Doolittle and his Raiders rose to almost unbelievable heights of martial valor and patriotic self-sacrifice on this mission. The video below gives a sense of the difficulties that had to be overcome as well as the skill necessary to pull off the mission. As can be seen in the video, it was a challenge even to get the Mitchell B25s to take off from the USS Hornet’s flight deck.
Both in the planning and as it played out, this was an incredibly improbable mission. Luck certainly played a part in its success. Three of the 80 Raiders were nevertheless captured by the Japanese and executed; one starved to death in the captivity of the Japanese.
Doolittle thought the raid would be assessed a failure after its completion. Instead, his service was recognized with the Medal of Honor. Of the Raiders only Doolittle co-pilot Richard Cole survives. Today is a day to remember them all and to be thankful.
The stakes in Georgia
Posted: 18 Apr 2017 09:23 AM PDT
(Paul Mirengoff)
Scott writes below about today’s special election to replace HHS Secretary Tom Price in Georgia’s Sixth Congressional District. He observes, “If [Jon] Ossoff were to win today, Democrats and their media adjunct won’t let us stop hearing about it.” He is correct.
If Ossoff doesn’t win today and doesn’t come close enough to 50 percent to suggest he will win a runoff, we won’t hear much about it. Yet, it will be news.
The left has poured more than $8 million into the race on Ossoff’s behalf. Hollywood is all-in. The GOP field is beyond fractured. President Trump’s approval rating is low. A president’s party typically struggles in off-year elections.
Special elections favor the side that’s energized and focused. In Georgia’s Sixth District, the Democrats fit that description; the Republicans are its antithesis or were until very recently.
Under these circumstances, if Ossoff fails to get to 50, or within reasonable shouting distance, it will be remarkable. Whether the mainstream media remarks on such an outcome is another question.
How will Ossoff perform? Erick Erickson, who knows Georgia politics well, thinks the Democrats and their media allies are “engaging in wishful thinking.” He notes that “there hasn’t been any significant poll showing Jon Ossoff equaling or exceeding Hillary Clinton’s 46.8%” in the district.
Thus, the race probably comes down to turnout, as Scott says. One can imagine Ossoff polling at 45 percent but winning 50 percent of the vote due to low turnout by Republicans. That’s why Republicans in the Sixth District really should take the time to vote for one of the Republican candidates today.
Finally, a question. How did a 30-year-old documentary film maker (whose company has produced films for Al Jazeera) and an ex-congressional staffer who doesn’t even live in the Sixth District become the vessel of hope for Democrats everywhere? Wouldn’t Democrats be better off, other things being equal, with a more conventional candidate?
Other things being equal, I think Democrats would be, although it can be argued that Ossoff’s youth works in his favor. But other things aren’t equal in Democratic politics.
Ossoff may be immature. He may not live in the Sixth District (his excuse is that he’s living outside the district to support his girlfriend while she finishes medical school). His views, which he is taking pains to conceal, may be far to the left of voters in a district represented by Tom Price and, years ago, Newt Gingrich.
But Ossoff is in tune with the Democratic/Hollywood left and quickly became the darling of left-wing blogs like the Daily Kos. Thus, he was able to attract the $8 million needed to make a strong run at wresting this district from Republican control. A more conventional candidate might not have generated that kind of “outside” support.
So today’s contest can be viewed more as a test of the left’s ability to game the political process in special circumstances than of Republican strength in the early days of the Trump administration.
Urgent: Trump’s “Read My Lips” Moment
Posted: 18 Apr 2017 08:41 AM PDT
(Steven Hayward)
Few of Donald Trump’s campaign promises were as clear and emphatic as his pledge to withdraw the United States from the Paris Climate Accord, which I have often called the Kellogg-Briand Pact of climate diplomacy, arising from—to borrow Churchill’s great phrase about the disarmament fetish of the 1930s—the “prolonged and solemn farce” of the UN climate change circus. But there is widespread reporting that the Trump White House is going wobbly on this pledge and that senior staff and key cabinet members are meeting later today to discuss the issue.
Our friends at the Competitive Enterprise Institute have put together this 45-second video showing what Trump promised:
CEI has also put together a petition to President Trump, which you can access and sign here, calling on him to honor his campaign promise. Worth a few minutes of your time I think.
More background in the New York Times.
PowerLine → Fresno Allahu Akbar! PowerLine → Fresno  Allahu Akbar! Daily Digest →→→→ Allahu Akbar! Can Universities Be Fixed? Remember the Doolittle Raid…
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