sorry, not sorry
27 Pulse survivors
Family members and first responders share their stories. Read their stories here.
"That night at Pulse, he was missing. We were celebrating our birthdays together. I didn't know where he was. When I got outside of that I ran like crazy and I forgot I was with Chris. I went back. I didn't care. I went back and I found him in the middle of the road, screaming. We hugged each other like we never hugged before." – Ramses Tinoco, survivor of the Pulse nightclub shooting, friend of Chris Brodman.
NVR Forget
MUVA
"Wendy from Wendy's"
The Hot New Hip-Hop Producer Who Does Everything on His iPhone
A couple of weeks ago, I attended a talk about "design thinking": practice and paradox. One of the moderators complained (and made assumptions) about younger artists not being versed in classical techniques (i.e for fillmmakers it would be splicing actual film together or using a bolex as a oppose to using premiere to edit or using a digital camera).
The moderator hated how "bad" design has become. My eyes rolled in the back of my head so hard.
I agree, there is too much noise - there's mediocrity in all disciplines. However, the democratization of technology has allowed those previously without access to traditional ways of producing art, a way of creating outside of their disciplines.
Process is important, but so is performance and intent.
Anyway, read the full article on Steve Lacy here
#textfrombae