Dior and I - Documentary about Raf Simons first collection at Dior
August 18, 2016Icons,Retail,Resistance,Psychology,Fashion,Branding,Fashion,Money,Culture,Lifestyle,Art,BusinessHaute Couture
Dior and I brings the viewer inside the storied world of the Christian Dior fashion house with a privileged, behind-the-scenes look at the creation of Raf Simons’ first haute couture collection as its new artistic director-a true labor of love created by a dedicated group of collaborators. Melding the everyday, pressure-filled components of fashion with mysterious echoes from the iconic brand’s past, the film is also a colorful homage to the seamstresses who serve Simons’ vision.
– Written by The Orchard
'I don't care where she is... I need her now'
Raf Simons
The Dior fashion house
In 1946 Marcel Boussac, a successful entrepreneur known as the richest man in France, invited Dior to design for Philippe et Gaston, a Paris fashion house launched in 1925.[10] Dior refused, wishing to make a fresh start under his own name rather than reviving an old brand.[11] On 8 December 1946, with Boussac’s backing, Dior founded his fashion house. The actual name of the line of his first collection, presented on 12 February 1947,[12] was Corolle (literally the botanical term corolla or circlet of flower petals in English), but the phrase New Look was coined for it by Carmel Snow, the editor-in-chief of Harper’s Bazaar.
Trespassing Bergman - Film makers about the influence of Ingmar Bergman
August 18, 2016Music,Knowledge,Education,Research,Psychology,Seduction,Fiction,Movies,Irony,Movies,CultureArt,Life,Music,Icons
Trespassing Bergman (re-edit from IMDB)
The idea of famous film makers on a pilgrimage to Ingmar Bergman’s Faro Island home is interesting.
Famous directors and actors who like to talk about the influences that shaped their own work and for whom Bergman represented one of the high achievers of their craft. The interviews Woody Allen playing it straight, Lars Von Trier getting laughs, Robert De Niro, who is notoriously awkward in interviews, at ease and making valid comment. To name but a few. Some music by The Radio Dept. one of Sofia Coppola’s (and my) favourite bands.
Check out the trailer and see the film if you’re interested in making a film yourself. Learn from the best in the industry.
Happyish - Starring Steve Coogan
August 16, 2016Branding,FictionBranding,Humour,Irony,Television,Culture,Business,Life,Psychology,Seduction
About Happyish (from IMDB)
It is “different” and does not belong to mainstream and regular type of shows that one may watch. It is not a kind of show that is talked about around water coolers and it is not to everybody’s taste. It is not a kind of show that one watches for sheer purpose of entertainment. Not a kind of show that soothes you, either. It is more like a mirror that reflects how we could get lost in banality of life. It is thought provoking, witty, and intelligent. It is truthful, wry, honest, and cerebral. One of the best shows (sadly underrated and overlooked) in the so called “golden age of television”, that tries to touch the vexed question of “happiness” in modern world and address the “tragic sense of life” in a roundabout way and blended with humor.
Best quote:
‘It’s only tragedy when you don’t see the comedy.’
Hear writer Shalom Auslander talk about an episode in this clip.
The Greatest Movie Ever Sold - Morgan Spurlock
August 15, 2016Resistance,Research,Psychology,Seduction,Branding,Fun,Irony,Movies,Money,Culture,LifestyleBusiness,Life,Knowledge
The Greatest Movie Ever Sold – Morgan Spurlock
A documentary about branding, advertising and product placement that is financed and made possible by brands, advertising and product placement.
Basically it’s post modern art that Marcel Duchamp would have loved.
Tom Vanderbilt - You May Also Like
August 15, 2016Music,Retail,Education,Research,Psychology,Seduction,Food,Fashion,Science,Branding,Money,Culture,Lifestyle,Business,LifeIcons
You may also like, taste in age of endless choice.
Why we like the things we like, why we hate the things we hate, and what our preferences reveal about us.
With a voracious curiosity, Vanderbilt stalks the elusive beast of taste, probing research in psychology, marketing, and neuroscience to answer myriad complex and fascinating questions. Comprehensively researched and singularly insightful, You May Also Like is a joyous intellectual journey that helps us better understand how we perceive, judge, and appreciate the world around us.
Check out this video to see him talking about the book
Noma - Clever branding by one of the best restaurants in the world
August 15, 2016Seduction,Food,Branding,Money,Culture,Lifestyle,BusinessLife,Knowledge
Noma by Rene Redzepi
Check out “A Very Short Film About the Past, Present and Future of Noma” by Rene Redzepi.
Noma is a two-Michelin-star restaurant run by chef René Redzepi in Copenhagen, Denmark. The name is a portmanteau of the two Danish words “nordisk” (Nordic) and “mad” (food).[2] Opened in 2003, the restaurant is known for its reinvention and interpretation of the Nordic Cuisine.[1] In 2010, 2011, 2012 and 2014, it was ranked as the Best Restaurant in the World by Restaurant magazine.[3][4][5]
Self fulfilling prophecies by Li Edelkoort
August 15, 2016Haute Couture,Icons,Music,Ballet,Retail,Furniture,Education,Research,Psychology,Seduction,Food,Culture,Fashion,Lifestyle,Science,Art,Branding,Travel,ArtBusiness
Self fulfilling prophecies:
When you have as much clout as Li Edelkoort, your prophecies become self fulfilling. However, it took her almost a lifetime to get there.
'It's the end of fashion as we know it'
Lidewij Edelkoort
Fashion is dead:
Trend forecaster Li Edelkoort has declared, describing the fashion industry as “a ridiculous and pathetic parody of what it has been”
Lidewij Edelkoort, one of the world’s most influential fashion forecasters, used her annual presentation at Design Indaba in Cape Town to fire a broadside at the industry. “This is the end of fashion as we know it.”
Edelkoort said her interest in fashion had now been replaced by an interest in clothes, since fashion has lost touch with what is going on in the world and what people want.
“Fashion is insular and is placing itself outside society, which is a very dangerous step,” she said in an interview.
Edelkoort listed a number of reasons for the crisis in fashion, starting with education, where young designers are taught to emulate the famous names. “We still educate our young people to become catwalk designers; unique individuals,” she said, “whereas this society is now about exchange and the new economy and working together in teams and groups.”
Barry Lyndon - Masterpiece by Stanley Kubrick
August 13, 2016Fiction,Fashion,Movies,Movies,Money,Culture,Lifestyle,Art,MusicSeduction
Barry Lyndon is a 1975 British-American period drama film written, produced, and directed by Stanley Kubrick, based on the 1844 novel The Luck of Barry Lyndon by William Makepeace Thackeray. It stars Ryan O’Neal, Marisa Berenson, Patrick Magee, and Hardy Krüger. The film recounts the exploits of a fictional 18th-century Irish adventurer. Exteriors were shot on location in Ireland, England and Germany.
At the 1975 Academy Awards, the film won four Oscars in production categories. Although having had a modest commercial success and a mixed reception from critics on release, Barry Lyndon is today regarded as one of Kubrick’s finest films. In numerous polls, including those of Village Voice (1999), Sight & Sound (2002, 2012), Time (2005) and BBC, it has been named one of the greatest films ever made.[3][4][5][6]
Barry Lyndon Blu Ray
Blu-ray ~ Marisa Berenson, Steven Berkoff, George Hamilton, Hardy Kruger Chieftains
Link: http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B01D6G4Y2E
'We were very fond of Sir Charles Lyndon'
King George III
Storyline:
In the Eighteenth Century, in a small village in Ireland, Redmond Barry is a young farm boy in love with his cousin Nora Brady. When Nora gets engaged to the British Captain John Quin, Barry challenges him to a duel of pistols. He wins and escapes to Dublin but is robbed on the road. Without an alternative, Barry joins the British Army to fight in the Seven Years War. He deserts and is forced to join the Prussian Army where he saves the life of his captain and becomes his protégé and spy of the Irish gambler Chevalier de Balibari. He helps Chevalier and becomes his associate until he decides to marry the wealthy Lady Lyndon. They move to England and Barry, in his obsession of nobility, dissipates her fortune and makes a dangerous and revengeful enemy.
Filming took 300 days during a 2 year span, beginning around May or June of 1973. The production suffered two major shutdowns and resulted in a then bloated budget of $11 million. It was finally released in December of 1975.
The film grossed $20,000,000 (USA) ( 1975) $31,500,000 (worldwide) ( 1975). And a lot of extra dollars since then.
How To Make It In America
August 13, 2016Fiction,Fashion,Television,Money,Culture,Lifestyle,BusinessLife,Branding
How To Make It In America
Nice HBO fiction about a couple of guys and girls who try to make it in the fashion industry in New York, or rather the world. Good performance from multitalent Kid Cudy.
Best quote:
‘Everybody has ideas, nobody wants to put in the work’
Catering the super wealthy
August 13, 2016Psychology,Seduction,Food,Television,Money,Culture,Business,LifeKnowledge,Research
The World’s Most Expensive Food:
Meet the people supplying and buying £195 chocolate bars, £80,000 bottles of wine and £1000-per-person bespoke dining experiences.
A fine example of extreme marketing for the super wealthy to cater their endless lust for things less wealthy people can’t have. And bloody entertaining too.
Series two of Channel 4’s The World’s Most Expensive Food meets William Hanson to see him at work teaching the art of afternoon tea.