Category Archives: CULTURE
National Geographic: Follow Me
One of the best shot Mountain Bike videos I’ve seen. Directed by Darcy Wittenburg and produced by Ian Dunn.
The Complex Guide To Camo
Complex takes an indepth look into the variety of different camouflage patterns. Click here to see the full story.
Sean Dunne: American Juggalo Docuementary (NSFW)
Director/filmmaker Sean Dunne goes into the sub-culture of the American Juggalo. Characterized by their love for Insane Clown Posse, face painting, and cravings for violence, Juggalos and Jugalettes from across America converge upon the woods of Cave-In-Rock, Illinois, once every year for four days at The Gathering of Juggalos. This was a big eye-opener for me into this culture and as easy as it is to judge or laugh at them. They’re a culture of their own and all share common lifestyles which I respect. These guys look like they do some aggressive partying.
Acronym Fall/Winter 2011 “FW-1112” Video
ACR-FW-1112-M from ACRNM on Vimeo.
Freakin’ love this video and the clothing design!!! Functional design is my kinda style! The Acronym Fall/Winter 2011 video was produced by Ken-Tonio Yamamto and designer Errolson Hugh. Simply entitled FW-1112, Errolson Hugh breaks down each piece and the innovation behind it.
Jay-Z Announces the Brooklyn Nets, Will Design New Uniforms
As part owner of the Nets basketball team, Jay-Z announced Monday that the Nets will take the name of their new home, Brooklyn, when they leave New Jersey in 2012, officially becoming the Brooklyn Nets. The rap mogul also announced that he’ll personally open the Barclays Center with a special concert series when the 18,000-seat arena opens next September, as well as playing a role in the design of the team’s new logo and uniform alongside adidas. Boom! Can’t wait to see new identity.
A Fashion’s Night Out with 4AM DJs
A Fashion’s Night Out with 4AM DJs from Dubset.com on Vimeo.
Some of the world’s best DJs. DUBSET.com has the exclusive video from 4AM DJs at New York City’s trendiest retailers during Fashion’s Night Out.
FASHION WEEK RADIO powered by DUBSET.com dubset.com/NYFW
Conference of cool
agnès b. FLEURISTE Hong Kong
Hong Kong is short of agnès b. stores and cafes. Accept this one has more of a Southern-France feel to it. With a boulangerie-cum-open-kitchen that makes freshly baked bread and various pastries, while serving diverse European dishes.
agnès b. FLEURISTE
Shop D, 1/F, Devon House, Taikoo Place
Quarry Bay
Hong Kong
p: 852.2284.4800
VERBAL & Swizz Beatz: Reebok Ree-Done
HB Interview –
How did the opportunity come about?
VERBAL: Long story short, I met some cool people from Reebok, just having drinks with them and telling them about my first basketball shoes: the Reebok Pumps. I told them that I wrote a paper on Reebok as a business major back in 1993/1994. They kind of knew that I did music and arts, so they thought that it’ll be exciting to have me on board as a Creative Director and to come up with new ideas for the future. That’s why I’m here I guess.
Swizz Beatz: The opportunity came about through mutual friends, they were looking to do something new and my name was on the list I guess. Following up with the work I did with Christian Louboutin, I kind of wanted to tone things down and reach the masses.
What does your job and role encompass?
V: As a Creative Director for Asia-Pacific, I came in right in the middle of the Reethym of Lite Campaign, so I started off by doing the visuals, the ads and the overall campaign. And for the near future, we’ll be working on some products, so you’ll see them coming out in 2012. For the creative side, they gave me 100% freedom as some of the ideas I came up with are probably physically impossible, but they’ll add on to them and translate my concepts in some other ways.
SB: My job is to make sure the brand is ahead of the curve, the campaign is cutting-edge, the designs are on point, and the brand connects to the right people. My job is almost everything.
Coming from musical backgrounds, how difficult was it to make a transition into fashion and product?
V: I think music and fashion just goes hand in hand you know, like hip-hop music – people are dressed in a certain way from a certain background. Doing music and going into fashion and designing just kind of came naturally for me, so I think hopefully I’ll be able to use my experiences and translate that to what I’ll do for Reebok.
SB: It wasn’t even a transition, I was into fashion since I was a break dancer in the South Bronx in the ’80s, and I used to have the denim jackets with the graffiti on the back, fat shoe strings and things like that. I’ve always been in fashion, but I guess my first transition was working with Kidrobot and that’s how it started officially as a business.
Does working on product with Reebok require a different creative mindset?
V: It definitely does. I have a lot of ideas on jewellery but probably not as much for apparel, so it’s a challenge for me in a good way. I’ve been given opportunities in the past by brands like Topman and A Bathing Ape. For example, NIGO will let me work on his BAPE STAs, so that was kind of my first experience with sneakers. But obviously with Reebok, it is even bigger as there are so many resources. I don’t even know where to start as I’m an apprentice now and I’m still learning. It might be a bit rocky in the beginning, but I have a vision so hopefully I can get there with the help of many people.
SB: Yes definitely, it requires a different mindset, as Reebok is something that has so much heritage and it’s now living in the future. So it’s about how you can translate that to a kid who never had a pair of Pumps and how do you introduce something new to get their attention to bring them back to the Pump, and it’s also about rebuilding the brand by redoing something old. The project is about reinventing the history with new technology, new everything.
Do you think your Reebok customer is the same as your musical customer?
V: I would say yes, for example the other day somebody asked me what sneaker is to you and I immediately said culture. Most of the memorable sneakers are models from the past which had something to do with culture, like music and film. Like when you listen to certain music, it gives you energy, courage and it makes you feel a certain way.
SB: I think they’re definitely the same customer, but I think it’s even people outside of music, as I can see Reebok is hitting to different audience around the world, I can definitely see that happening.
What were deciding factors in you guys working together respectively with Reebok?
V: From what I understand, I think they kind of saw that when I create, I’ll include everybody from the whole scene. When I do collaborations for my brand AMBUSH, I’ll work with people from George Jensen to local designers and I think that eclectic vibe is the key to bringing in new blood for Reebok. They also believe that I have a very good understanding of the industry and that I’m the right person at the right time for the job. When you have a pair of sneakers which has the same emotional attachment and image to that particular culture, then you’ll feel the same.
SB: The deciding factor was being able to fix things I didn’t like about the brand. That the brand can be something that’s cool again and I think we started off pretty decent. Reebok hasn’t really been talking to the culture for many years so it’s about putting things back on the radar and setting the record straight.
How familiar were you with each other’s work? What can you guys learn from one another?
V: I just started to get to know Swizz as a creative, like previously I’ve known most of his music work obviously but this is definitely the first time to work as a creative duo. We both do music, but now we’re together in doing something totally different. I already see the big things he’s been doing in the States and global, definitely inspired. On the Asian side of Reebok, we can start local, make some noise and hopefully it’ll organically spring back to the rest of the world.
SB: VERBAL is a creative mind, even when I met him through NIGO back in Japan years and years ago. I knew he was different and seeing him now with his crazy jackets and stuff, it just shows that he’s not scared to reach out and to create something new and that’s something what the brand needs.
What are you looking to achieve with this opportunity?
V: It’s an honor to be a Creative Director but it’s also nerve-racking and it’s a big role to fill. I think people are excited and I’m really happy about it but at the same time there’s a lot of pressure, as I have to deliver some fun projects and make some cool products from the ideas I have. What it comes down to is that we have to achieve numbers to call it a success and hopefully I’ll follow-up on that end. Hopefully I’ll be a good asset to Reebok.
SB: Simple, I just want to make history. Everything comes and goes, but history stays, when people think of Reebok, I want people to think about Swizz and VERBAL coming on board and changing the whole thing.
What is the biggest cultural difference between Asia and the rest of the world?
V: I think like Japan, it’s a very secluded country, they have a dosage of influence. They import stuff and they’ll create their own entity, that’s why J-Pop is only J-Pop in Japan, it doesn’t make sense anywhere else. Like fashion here only makes sense here, but when it goes out of Japan, it’ll stay fresh as it’s so different. I was in Shanghai and Beijing couple of weeks ago for tours, China is a superpower but it’s too closed in, but then it has an energy of its own and I think it’ll create something that is powerful over time as it harnesses this creative energy. The western world encourages freedom, so that gives a certain direction and vibe, Asia on the other hand has boundaries on particular purposes, so I believe Asian countries like China and Japan are ready to come full force. The West doesn’t know what Asia has in store yet and we’re ready to explode.
SB: The Japanese market is amazing, it’s ready to explode, it has a voice that needs to be heard around the world and I think that moment is coming and I’m just happy that I can be part of it.
Where does Reebok’s Classics product line stand now and where do you want to take it?
V: It’s safe to say that people are bored of sneakers in general, but Reebok always had cool products and what I wanted to do is maybe do some interesting marketing to make these products more visible. I think everyone at Reebok likes to have fun, that’s the first impression and it was one of the reasons for me to join this team. I just want everyone to start opening up more and come up with crazy schemes and get the products out there. It’s like the shy guy at class who’s ready to blow up, this is what Reebok is to me.
SB: There’s very clever ways to reintroduce things and I think this ultralight material is a great start. Reebok has a mass group of clients, that’s why the campaign is very international. You can’t get caught with just rap and this and that – when I’m thinking, I’m thinking of the world.
How much of the regional differences will factor into the overall aesthetic of your products?
V: There have already been so many cool designs out there, so obviously I want to try to come from a more conceptual angle which I can’t really disclose at this point, but there’s this one theme where it’ll string together the whole Asia-Pacific region together. So with this concept, all the places can just go crazy with it. Right now there are a lot of good models, but people want that product because of the names which are involved in the collaboration, and my goal is to use what I have to bring it back to the product itself – that’s what made the whole culture very potent in the past, as it was about the product at the end of the day.
SB: Maybe 30%, I wanted to make it as new as possible. The fresher it is, the easier it is to introduce. If you have something new and innovative, it’ll become a conversation piece as people will be like, “Wow, I haven’t seen that before.”
Any musical collaborations to come of this and any last words?
V: Actually my group M-FLO is coming back, we haven’t had an album since 2007. Starting with Reebok, we’ll pop off with our new song called “Run.” We’ll be doing more stuff with M-FLO, we’re also in talks with Swizz about maybe doing something more together so yeah I guess you’ll hear more from that. Watch out for 2012!
SB: Yeah we’re actually going into the studio soon and who knows? I just want to tell the fans that Reebok is back and sky is not the limit.
PUMPED UP KICKS DUBSTEP
Apple Products Destroyed!
The Pursuit Of (Cool): Coltrane Curtis
The Pursuit Of (Cool): COLTRANE CURTIS from R+I creative on Vimeo.
Very informative watch –
Coltrane Curtis, MTV personality and founder of the marketing agency Team Epiphany, is the latest figure to be profiled in R+I Creative‘s “The Pursuit of (Cool)” series. In this installment, Curtis identifies the jazz musicians who have most influenced his personal style, something he calls “accessible elegance.” He cites Duke Ellington and his signature white dinner jacket; Wynton Marsalis, the “epitome of cool”; and Mos Def, a “little dude” who wears clothes well. Click through to see the engaging video in full.
Gucci Museum Opening In Florence, Italy
A general view of the dinner set up for the Gucci Museum opening at Salone dei Cinquecento in Palazzo Vecchio on September 26, 2011 in Florence, Italy. (Vittorio Zunino Celotto / Getty Images Europe)
F8 2011 Keynote: Mark Zuckerberg talks about the NEW Facebook
This may be the geek in me coming out, but I’m so excited about the new layout, features and future of Facebook and how we use it to communicate with people. In the past 10 years we now have some many different platforms to communicate our message across to others. Some love it others hate it. I personally think it’s great from a creative perspective because it challenges me to express my ideas in ways I never could of imagined before. This keynote is a great watch, but it is almost 2 hours long so get comfortable.
Range Rover Evoque: 2012 Dakar Rally Edition By RaBe Race Cars
This year the Dakar Rally, will cover three countries — Argentina, Chile and Peru — over 14 days. They’ll start the race on the shores of the Atlantic Ocean and cross the finish line at the Pacific. The Excite Rallye Raid Team, the first professional British Dakar team, will enter three vehicle built by RaBe Race Cars, and if they look familiar it’s because the body is borrowed from the new Range Rover Evoque. Power, meanwhile, will be supplied by a BMW 3.0-liter turbocharged straight-six diesel engine delivering 275 hp and 479 lb-ft of torque; expertise by RaBe Race Cars’ 15 years of experience in desert racing. Let’s see how it sizes up to the Mitsubishi.
Illustrations by Tae young Choi
I love looking at illustrations like this because it get’s my imagination running wild and I have some much respect for artists that can illustrate at this level. Tae young Choi is from Burbank, USA.
IS TROPICAL: Lies
The music video for IS TROPICAL “Lies” from the album NATIVE TO (Kitsuné), directed by Jonathan Leder of Jacques Magazine.
NOWNESS: 25 Years of Def Jam Recordings
Rizzoli publication will be releasing – Def Jam Recordings: The First 25 Years of the Last Great Record Label book next month. Follow the founders Rick Rubin and Russell Simmons as they catalog the “experimental art project” which turned into one of most influential rap labels in history. This is a must have for those that lived and breathed the birth of hip hop and the young cats can learn where it all began. Due to drop 11th October.
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