Shared posts

28 Nov 09:55

Precancerous state found in blood

Researchers from the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Harvard Medical School, the Harvard Stem Cell Institute (HSCI), and Harvard-affiliated hospitals have uncovered an easily detectable, “premalignant” state in the blood that significantly increases the likelihood that an individual will go on to develop blood cancers such as leukemia, lymphoma, or myelodysplastic syndrome.

The discovery, which was made independently by two research teams affiliated with the Broad and partner institutions, opens new avenues for research aimed at early detection and prevention of blood cancer. Findings from both teams appear this week in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Most genetic research on cancer to date has focused on studying the genomes of advanced cancers, to identify the genes that are mutated in various cancer types. These two new studies instead looked at somatic mutations — mutations that cells acquire over time as they replicate and regenerate within the body — in DNA samples collected from the blood of individuals not known to have cancer or blood disorders.

Taking two very different approaches, the teams found that a surprising percentage of those sampled had acquired a subset — some but not all — of the somatic mutations that are present in blood cancers. These individuals were more than 10 times likelier to go on to develop blood cancer in subsequent years than those in whom such mutations had not been detected.

The “premalignant” state identified by the studies becomes more common with age; it is rare in those under the age of 40, but appears with increasing frequency with each decade of life that passes, ultimately appearing in more than 10 percent of those over the age of 70. Carriers of the mutations are at an overall 5 percent risk of developing some form of blood cancer within five years. This “premalignant” stage can be detected simply by sequencing DNA from blood.

“People often think about disease in black and white — that there’s ‘healthy’ and there’s ‘disease’ — but in reality most disease develops gradually over months or years. These findings give us a window on these early stages in the development of blood cancer,” said Steven McCarroll, senior author of one of the papers. McCarroll is an assistant professor of genetics at Harvard Medical School and director of genetics at the Broad’s Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research.

Benjamin Ebert, co-director of the HSCI Cancer Program, associate member of the Broad, and associate professor at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital, is the senior author of the other paper.

The mutations identified by both studies are thought to originate in blood stem cells, and confer a growth-promoting advantage to the mutated cell and all of its “clones” — cells that derive from that original stem cell during the normal course of cell division. These cells then reproduce at an accelerated rate until they account for a large fraction of the cells in a person’s blood. The researchers believe these early mutations lie in wait for follow-on, “cooperating” mutations that, when they occur in the same cells as the earlier mutations, drive the cells toward cancer. The majority of mutations occurred in just three genes; DNMT3A, TET2, and ASXL1.

“Cancer is the end stage of the process,” said Siddhartha Jaiswal, a Broad-associated scientist and clinical fellow from Massachusetts General Hospital who was first author of Ebert’s paper. “By the time a cancer has become clinically detectable it has accumulated several mutations that have evolved over many years. What we are primarily detecting here is an early, premalignant stage in which the cells have acquired just one initiating mutation.”

The teams converged on these findings through very different approaches. Ebert’s team had hypothesized that, since blood cancers increase with age, it might be possible to detect early somatic mutations that could be initiating the disease process, and that these mutations also might increase with age. They looked specifically at 160 genes known to be recurrently mutated in blood malignancies, using genetic data derived from approximately 17,000 blood samples originally obtained for studies on the genetics of type 2 diabetes.

They found that somatic mutations in these genes did indeed increase the likelihood of developing cancer, and they saw a clear association between age and the frequency of these mutations. They also found that men were slightly more likely to have mutations than women, and Hispanics were slightly less likely to have mutations than other groups.

Ebert’s team also found an association between the presence of this “premalignant” state and risk of overall mortality independent of cancer. Individuals with these mutations had a higher risk of type 2 diabetes, coronary heart disease, and ischemic stroke as well. However, additional research will be needed to determine the nature of these associations.

In the related paper, McCarroll’s team discovered the phenomenon while studying a different disease. They, too, were looking at somatic mutations, but they were initially interested in determining whether such mutations contributed to risk for schizophrenia. The team studied roughly 12,000 DNA samples drawn from the blood of patients with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, as well as healthy controls, searching across the whole genome at all of the protein-coding genes for patterns in somatic mutations.

They found that the somatic mutations were concentrated in a handful of genes; the scientists quickly realized that they were cancer genes. The team then used electronic medical records to follow the patients’ subsequent medical histories, finding that the subjects with these acquired mutations had a 13-times elevated risk of blood cancer.

McCarroll’s team conducted follow-up analyses on tumor samples from two patients who had progressed from this premalignant state to cancer. These genomic analyses revealed that the cancer had indeed developed from the same cells that had harbored the “initiating” mutations years earlier.

“The fact that both teams converged on strikingly similar findings, using very different approaches and looking at DNA from very different sets of patients, has given us great confidence in the results,” said Giulio Genovese, a computational biologist at the Broad and first author of McCarroll’s paper. “It has been gratifying to have this corroboration of each other’s findings.

Jaiswal will present the findings on Dec. 9 at the American Society of Hematology annual meeting in San Francisco.

All of the researchers involved emphasized that there is no clinical benefit today for testing for this premalignant state; there are no treatments currently available that would address this condition in otherwise healthy people. However, they say the results open the door to entirely new directions for blood cancer research, toward early detection and even prevention.

“The results demonstrate a way to identify high-risk cohorts — people who are at much higher than average risk of progressing to cancer — which could be a population for clinical trials of future prevention strategies,” McCarroll said. “The abundance of these mutated cells could also serve as a biomarker — like LDL cholesterol is for cardiovascular disease — to test the effects of potential prevention therapies in clinical trials.”

Ebert agreed: “A new focus of investigation will now be to develop interventions that might decrease the likelihood that individuals with these mutations will go on to develop overt malignancies, or therapeutic strategies to decrease mortality from other conditions that may be instigated by these mutations,” he said.

The researchers also say that the findings show just how important it is to collect and share large data sets of genetic information: Both studies relied on DNA samples collected for studies completely unrelated to cancer.

“These two papers are a great example of how unexpected and important discoveries can be made when creative scientists work together and with access to genomic and clinical data,” said Broad Deputy Director David Altshuler, one of Ebert’s co-authors. “For example, Steve’s team found stronger genetic relationships to cancer than they have yet found for the schizophrenia end point that motivated their original study. The pace of discovery can only accelerate if researchers have the ability to apply innovative methods to large data sets.”

 

0
27 Nov 09:45

Photo



25 Nov 13:20

Glow-In-Dark Bicycle Path Inspired By 'The Starry Night'

starry-night-bike-path-1.jpg This is the 1-kilometer (0.6-mile) Van Gogh Bicycle Path in Nuenen, the Netherlands. It gathers energy from a solar panel by day, and uses that energy to power the luminescent paint covering the path at night (previously: this energy-free glow-in-the-dark solution). Beautiful, isn't it? You know what I wish they had though? Bike paths that are wide enough to drive cars on. "They're called roads." DID I JUST INVENT SOMETHING?! Keep going for a couple more pictures and a video.
25 Nov 13:19

Thank You, Internet: Tiny Hamsters Share Thanksgiving Dinner With Rat And Rabbit (All in Pilgrim Hats)

Beast

Coisas que realmente importam:

tiny-hamster-thanksgiving.jpg This is Episode 4 of HelloDenizen's Tiny Hamsters Eating Tiny Things (previously: a burrito, hedgehog birthday party, and the Takeru Kobayashi competitive eating contest). This time two tiny hamsters gathered their pals the fluffy bunny and little rat and enjoyed a Thanksgiving feast cooked by a human friend. Man, I wish I could have been there. And I'm not just saying that because I'm sad I'll be spending Thanksgiving alone this year, but I did see my local KFC will be open from 10 - 6. That did not help. Keep going for the VERY worthwhile video.
14 Nov 11:16

Teacher Threatens Class With GAME OF THRONES Spoilers

by Armi Dimaranan

A high school teacher has pulled a vile ploy comparable to a Lannister’s promise: he’s threatened his unruly class with Game of Thrones spoilers.

When his class of misfits didn’t settle down, a Belgian math teacher asked how many of them watch the fantasy drama. After the majority of the class raised their hands, he responded with, “Well, I’ve read all the books. If there is too much noise, I will write the names of the dead on the board. They [the dead] are enough to fill the whole year and I can even describe how they die.”

When the students believed it was an empty threat, he began to write those who’ve been killed off in Season Three, which was enough for the students to continue working in silence. Personally, I’d take a ruler beating over Game of Thrones spoilers any day.

Think this is Ramsay Snow-style cruel and unusual punishment or a Littlefinger-genius type of move? Sound off in the comments below.

HT: The Daily Telegraph

13 Nov 16:47

Lag In Real Life: An OCULUS RIFT Experiment

by Armi Dimaranan
Beast

Made me laugh

If there’s one thing that absolutely makes me nerd rage, it’s lag, a gamer’s worst nightmare. Unluckily for four volunteers, Swedish internet service provider UME.net made that nightmare a reality in an experiment dubbed “Living With Lag.”

The experiment demonstrates the trouble people face if lag occurred in real life. In the video below, the volunteers are outfitted with an Oculus Rift that has a delay of one-third of a second or a full three seconds and given different tasks to perform, such as playing ping pong, cooking, and dancing. The results of their attempted actions are nothing surprising but still hilarious, especially if you’ve ever used a dial-up connection and understand the pain that came with waiting for an image to load.

Take a look at the agony below:

I have to admit, that’s one clever campaign and one in which I hope I never have to live.

13 Nov 16:24

You're A Rainbow!: Macro Shot Of A Hummingbird's Face

macro-hummingbird-face-small.jpg Note: Larger version HERE in case you ever wondered if a hummingbird's stare can steal your soul (it can). This is the macro shot of a Green-Crowned Brilliant Hummingbird's face taken by photographer Chris Morgan while on vacation at the Bosque De Paz biological reserve in Costa Rica. You know, Mother Nature -- sometimes you are alright. I mean it's RARE, but when you do, it almost seems to make up for all the other horrible, horrible shit you do. I'll tell you what -- let's call a truce this weekend. You promise I won't find any spiders in my bedroom, and I won't do anything bad for the environment. "Wait -- are you burning car tires?" Haha, I had my fingers crossed you filthy forest nymph! Thanks to Carlo, who informed me hummingbirds are his fourth favorite kind of bird behind owls, eagles and falcons. Good information to know.
11 Nov 12:59

Hueso Restaurant in Mexico

by Donnia

Les architectes mexicains Cadena+Asociados ont pensé l’intérieur du restaurant Hueso, situé dans le district de Guadalajara, au Mexique. Le projet était de rénover un bâtiment construit dans les années 40 et d’en faire un lieu qui laisse entrevoir le squelette de la structure. Un intérieur qui rappelle les cabinets de curiosités, avec une dominante de blanc, de bois et de céramique, à découvrir avec les photos de Jaime Navarro.

huesorestau-11 huesorestau-10 huesorestau-9 huesorestau-8 huesorestau-7 huesorestau-6 huesorestau-5 huesorestau-4 huesorestau-3 huesorestau-2 huesorestau-1
11 Nov 12:58

This Moon Isn’t A Death Star, But It Might Have An Ocean

by Amy Shira Teitel

When it comes to Saturn’s moons, Titan gets most of the extraterrestrial love. But there are plenty of other interesting little bodies orbiting the ringed planet. Take Mimas, the little moon that looks suspiciously like the Death Star. And adding to the intrigue, scientists suspect the moon might harbor a subsurface ocean of liquid water.

The tip off to the possible ocean is Mimas’ rhythmic wobble. A team of scientists led by Radwan Tajeddine, a planetary scientist at Cornell University, noticed in analyzing pictures from NASA’s Cassini spacecraft that the moon, which orbits around Saturn every 23 hours, wobbles around its axis.

This isn’t uncommon for a moon. Most moons, including our own, wobble just a little as they orbit. What was surprising was how much Mimas wobbles. The moon is small, just 250 miles in diameter. A moon that size is expected to wobble by less than 2 miles. Mimas’ wobble is twice that.

Moon wobble GIFThe slight wobble of our moon, visualized over the course of a month.

The scientists used computer simulations to try and figure out what could be making Mimas wobble so dramatically. One possibility pointed to the Herschel impact crater, the one that gives the moon to look of a fully operational battle station. Scientist played with the idea that remnants of an asteroid are buried under the crater, offsetting the moon’s center of gravity. But that doesn’t work. If that were the case, Mimas would have settled into a different orbit, likely with the crater pointing permanently towards Saturn.

Another idea was that Mimas has an oblong rocky core, making the moon slightly football-shaped and wobbly without affecting its orientation relative to Saturn.

A subsurface ocean could have the same perceived orbital effects as a football-shaped moon, especially if it’s lying between a spherical core and a shell of ice. A partially fluid core sloshing around inside the moon could account for Mimas’ irregular spin around its axis.

For the time being, the existence of Mimas’ subsurface ocean remains in the world of conjecture. But it’s not impossible. Planetary scientists have gathered significant evidence that Jupiter’s moons Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto, as well as Saturn’s moon Enceladus, all have subsurface oceans. Finding that Mimas should be on that list wouldn’t be that fantastical.

It would also give us a compelling reason to visit the moon; liquid water beneath the surface could harbor life. Maybe. And besides, the moon only looks like a Death Star.

Feature image from NASA/JPL

11 Nov 12:53

Vandals Deflate 80-Ft Inflatable Butt Plug In Paris Square

inflatable-art-paris.jpg Oh-hoh-hoh -- zat is ze second largest butt plug I have seen! A group of angry art-critic vandals successfully deflated American artist Paul McCarthy's work "Tree", which had been on display in Paris's Place Vendôme as part of an international contemporary art fair. The piece was inspired by both a butt plug and a Christmas tree. Although, minus the color, it looks almost entirely butt plug to me. And, SURPRISE, some Frenchies weren't cool with that!
"An unidentified group of people cut the cables which were holding the artwork, which caused it to collapse," police told Reuters. Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo said the attack was unacceptable and also denounced an assault on McCarthy the day he installed the work, when a man hit him in the face before running away. "Paris will not succumb to the threats of those who, by attacking an artist or a work, are attacking artistic freedom," she said in a statement. "Art has its place in our streets and nobody will be able to chase it away."
Wow, for a group that sounds so anal, you'd think they'd be cool with a giant butt plug. Get it? Because that's where butt plugs go -- in the anal. "Anus." Whatever. Also, I can't believe Paul McCartney went from the Beatles to giant inflatable butt plug sculptures. "Paul McCarthy, NOT McCartney." Don't even act like you didn't think that at first too. Thanks to Ed and E V I L A R E S, who agree we should inflate a string of increasingly larger helium balloons that look like anal beads and call it "Necklace".
03 Nov 19:19

Second Graders Eating a $220 Tasting Meal – You Can’t Help But Smile

by Bobby Solomon

The conceit is simple: Bring seven second graders to Daniel, a two Michelin star New York restaurant (it recently lost a star) to enjoy a seven-course meal valued at $220 a person. The result is a charming, honest look at food, taste, and the pleasures of eating. You can;t help but smile as these children give their genuinely honest critiques of each meal, in a way that only a child can do.

I appreciate head chef Daniel Boulud’s take on the endeavor, and his commitment to serving the food as it is, saying, “Children crave food they can identify. The seasoning has to be mild in a way, and simple. Here, we did it the real way.”

24 Oct 09:02

Dutch Organic Food 'Experts' Taste Test McDonald's Not Knowing It's McDonald's

organic-mcdonalds.jpg Note: Turn on the closed-captioning if you don't speak Dutch. This is a video of Dutch organic food purveyors ("experts" is the video maker's word, not mine) being tricked into trying a McDonald's Big Mac and McNuggets after being told they're actually new unnamed organic burger and nugget products. They love them. Of course, it's kind of unfair they lied and told them they were organic. You probably just gave these health nuts cancer. Besides, I guarantee these people haven't eaten McDonald's in years, it's not like they really remember what it tastes like. Of course they're going to say this tastes better when you ask them how it compares. I guess I'm not really sure what I was supposed to learn from the video. That people think McDonald's is delicious, especially if you tell them it's organic? That's like giving a bite of filet mignon to a vegetarian and convincing them it's a new vegetable. They're going to ask for seconds. Keep going for the video.
24 Oct 08:57

valleycruisepress: #tbt That time we sent out 200 copies of...



valleycruisepress:

#tbt That time we sent out 200 copies of Gangster Doodles Vol. 1 in one day #gangsterdoodles #illustration #zine #hiphop #veryrare (at Valley Cruise Headquarters)

22 Oct 13:48

IKEA Halloween – Shining Tribute

by Donnia

Pour Halloween, la marque IKEA Singapore a voulu rendre hommage au film « Shining » de Stanley Kubrick. Tout y est : un enfant qui pédale dans les couloirs d’IKEA, l’inscription « RedRug » et les effrayantes jumelles Grady en robes bleues. Un spot avec un dénouement un peu plus rassurant, à découvrir.

ikeahalloweenshining-5 ikeahalloweenshining-4 ikeahalloweenshining-3 ikeahalloweenshining-1 ikeahalloweenshining-0

22 Oct 10:15

Spider Burrows Under Guy's Skin, Lives There For 3 Days

spider-inside-you.jpg This is the scar left on Australian vacationer Dylan Maxell after a spider in Bali burrowed into his appendix scar and traveled up through chest over the next three days. Note to self: cancel honeymoon in Bali, look into Antarctica instead.
"Well after running tests and putting things inside my stomach they finally found out it was a tropical spider that's been living inside me for the last three days," Maxwell posted... "Haven't felt so violated in my life before! Just glad it's all over", he said. After returning to Australia earlier this week, doctors removed the tropical visitor.
Wait -- he was allowed to fly with a tropical spider living inside his chest?! I would have cut that f***er out myself. Did he have to claim it with customs? I feel like countries generally frown on bringing foreign plants, animals and insects home with you. "This is Australia we're talking about." TRUE. What does the rest of the world have that Australia doesn't have twice as bad? I bet this spider was beat up and mugged by some real spiders before it even left the airport. Keep going for a video news report.
22 Oct 10:14

The early 80s DC Hardcore scene.

Beast

Costumava dizer que a minha tattoo do círculo era por causa dos Germs. Ou então por causa do Senhor dos Anéis.





















The early 80s DC Hardcore scene.

22 Oct 08:56

Film Projection Without Any Film

by Daniella

L’artiste français Julien Maire a combiné impression 3D avec projection de lumière pour créer un film en stop motion sans pellicule. C’est à l’aide de 85 figurines miniatures imprimés en 3D se succédant dans des positions évolutives que l’artiste utilise de nouvelles techniques et réinvente le septième art à sa façon. Plus de détails en images.

Film Projection Without Any Film-8 Film Projection Without Any Film-7b Film Projection Without Any Film-7 Film Projection Without Any Film-6 Film Projection Without Any Film-5 Film Projection Without Any Film-4 Film Projection Without Any Film-3 Film Projection Without Any Film-1b
21 Oct 16:55

Cabin Fever Reboot Speeds Into Production Using ‘Exact Same Script’ As Original

by Gem Seddon
Beast

Cause pancakes.

CabinFever Still9 Cabin Fever Reboot Speeds Into Production Using Exact Same Script As Original

Eli Roth’s original Cabin Fever is only twelve years old. I remember going to the cinema to see it and being bowled over by its repugnant gore and frank nudity; it possessed all the key elements required to become a truly great horror classic. While there’s no definite time span one can use to determine the transformation from ‘awesome new gorefest’ to ‘cult horror fave,’ isn’t twelve years a bit too soon?

Apparently not. Today, Armory Films, Cassian Elwes, and Contend announced their plans to remake Roth’s body horror. This reboot-remake will be shot “from the exact same script that Roth directed 13 years ago, as opposed to going through a long, delayed studio development process.” Heading up production is Evan Astrowsky (who also produced the original film), Chris Lemole and Tim Zajaros.

Travis Zariwny (Intruder) will be keeping the director’s chair warm this time around with Roth on board to executive produce with Ike Suri, Jaclyn Ann Suri, and Peter Fruchtman. In fact, Eli seems pretty jazzed about the idea of someone else re-appropriating his material:

“Travis had an amazing vision for my original script, and as a scary movie fan I really wanted to see it. I almost see this like re-staging a play, and I’m excited to see what ideas Travis and the cast bring to it. They’re all fans of the original and want to make a film that’s a new classic, and I believe they will,” said Roth in a press release.

That’s a positive angle that I applaud wholeheartedly. I wonder if Hitchcock would have slapped Gus Van Sant on the back and offered him a cigar if he’d been alive when his pointless shot-for-shot remake of Psycho emerged. It’s strange to conceive of a remake-reboot that’s equally as unnecessary as the Van Sant atrocity. Cabin Fever continues to pack the same recoiling horror in repeat viewings, so why bother? Still, if Roth’s excited, then so am I.

Thanks for reading We Got This Covered

21 Oct 08:53

Photo

Beast

já não há line-ups destes



16 Oct 08:57

Encoded Movie Posters To Guess

by Donnia

Film The Blanks s’est amusé à reprendre les grands classiques du cinéma américain pour en faire des posters abstraits et codés associés à des citations qui vous feront deviner à quel film se rapporte l’affiche. Nous avons compilé pour vous quelques posters mais bien d’autres sont à deviner sur leur site.

Empire of the Sun / Little Miss Sunshine.

Jurassic Park / March of the Penguins.

Kill Bill Volume 1 / Public Enemies.

Lost in Translation / Alien.

28 Days Later / Full Metal Jacket.

2001 : A Space Odyssey / Where the Wild Things Are !

Forest Gump / A Clockwork Orange.

Star Wars : Return of the Jedi / West Side Story.

star wars return of the jedi-west side story forest gump - A clockwork Orange 2001 A space Odyssey - Where the wild things are 28 days later - Full metal Jacket 5-Lost in translation-alien 4-Kill Bill Volume 1 - Public Enemies 3-Jurassic park - march of the penguins 0-Empire of the sun-Little Miss Sunshine
16 Oct 08:49

Moment Photo Series by Wolfgang Hildebrand

by Dirk Petzold

Selected images from the “Moment” photo series by Wolfgang Hildebrand.

In 30 large format works, German photographer Wolfgang Hildebrand creates surreal new portraits of our urban world. By merging numerous photographs of the same location but taken at different times of the day, he transfers ordinary places to somewhere between fiction and reality. Even though this new unique moment never actually happened, it looks somehow familiar to the viewer. Only at second glance we lose orientation and realize the complex new reality – questioning not only our common photographic perception.

Wolfgang Hildebrand was born in 1969 and grew up in Hamburg. He studied communication & design and he already worked as an art-director. Since 2012, he is working full-time as an artist and photographer.

Below you can see some examples of the series. The full Moments photo series can you find on: wolfgang-hildebrand.com

Experimental photography in an urban environment.

Experimental photography in an urban environment.

Image by Hamburg, Germany based photographer Wolfgang Hildebrand.

Image by Hamburg, Germany based photographer Wolfgang Hildebrand.

Image from the Moment photo series by Wolfgang Hildebrand.

Image from the Moment photo series by Wolfgang Hildebrand.

Merging numerous photographs of the same location but taken at different times of the day.

Merging numerous photographs of the same location but taken at different times of the day.

Photographic work by Wolfgang Hildebrand.

Photographic work by Wolfgang Hildebrand.

Urban photography in Asia.

Urban photography in Asia.

Work from a photo series called "Moment".

Work from a photo series called “Moment”.

The post Moment Photo Series by Wolfgang Hildebrand appeared first on WE AND THE COLOR.

16 Oct 08:48

This App Translates The Meaning Of Classical Music

by Mark Wilson

But psst, we can still see you playing Angry Birds from the balcony.

Let's admit it: when most of us spend a night at the orchestra or ballet, we have little to no clue what's going on. So we find ourselves shyly inspecting the Playbill, trying to recall which movement we're in, and just what the heck that movement means to the larger piece on whole.

Read Full Story








16 Oct 07:29

Movie Theaters in India

by Donnia
Beast

Diogo

A travers leur série « Movie Theaters of India », les photographes allemandes Sabine Haubitz & Stefanie Zoche ont voulu témoigner de la culture cinéma ancrée dans le Sud de l’Inde. Tantôt colorées et fantasques, tantôt froides et bétonnées, les façades défilent et révèlent des influences architecturales à la fois modernes et traditionnelles. Un travail qui nous rappelle la belle série de Franck Bohbot.

Cinemas_of_India_09 Cinemas_of_India_08 Cinemas_of_India_07 Cinemas_of_India_06 Cinemas_of_India_05 Cinemas_of_India_04 Cinemas_of_India_03 Cinemas_of_India_02 Cinemas_of_India_01
15 Oct 09:27

Best Movie Posters Finalists At The Key Art Awards 2014

by Donnia

The Key Art Awards récompense les bandes annonces, les teasers mais aussi les posters qu’on a pu voir tout au long de notre année de cinéma, sur Internet, sur des panneaux publicitaires, dans des magazines ou dans le métro. Voici la liste des finalistes pour la catégorie des posters et prints : de Fury à Gravity en passant par Godzilla, Nebraska et Hunger Games.

By The Refinery.

By BLT Communications.

By BLT Communications.

By Concept Arts Inc.

By Gravillis Inc.

By P+A.

By The Refinery.

By BLT Communications.

By Concept Arts Inc.

By Gravillis Inc.

By IGNITION.

By Phantom City Creative.

By IGNITION.

By Art Machine.

By Art Machine.

By IGNITION.

By IGNITION.

By IGNITION.

Les gagnants seront révélés lors d’une cérémonie le 23 Octobre à Hollywood.

by IGNITION-5 by IGNITION-4 by IGNITION-3 by Art Machine by Art Machine-2 14-by IGNITION-2 13-by Phantom City Creative 12-by IGNITION 11-by Gravillis Inc-2 10-by Concept Arts Inc-2 9-by BLT Communications-2 8-by The Refinery 7-by PA 6-by Gravillis Inc 5-by Concept Arts Inc 4-by BLT Communications 3-by BLT Communications-3 247813id1h_Ver1_Gravity_2ndLook_27x40_1Sheet.indd 0-moviepostersawards
15 Oct 09:21

Bikini Girl Tries To Take The Perfect Drunk Selfie

Beast

No fundo, há, pelo menos, 3 géneros: os homens, as mulheres, e as gajas.

bikini-selfie-girl.jpg Note: Woman filming drops some nasty, possibly jealous f-bombs. This is a painful portrait-mode video of some lady in a bikini at the pool on a quest for the perfect selfie. At one point I'm pretty sure she's only taking pictures of her privates. Also, I don't know if she's actually drunk or not, that's just something I had to tell myself to dull the pain. Like pinching yourself before you tear off a band-aid. Or poking yourself with a throwing star before stabbing yourself with a ninja sword, which I'm about to do. Keep going for the video.
15 Oct 09:13

Norway’s new Banknotes by Studio Snøhetta & The Metric System

by Dirk Petzold

Pixelated designs on Norway’s new banknotes.

Norges Bank (The Central Bank of Norway) has selected the design proposals submitted by the two Oslo based design offices Snøhetta and The Metric System as the new official designs for their Kroner banknotes.

Earlier this year, numerous design studios were asked to submit proposals for Norway’s new banknote design. Each design proposal will be exhibited in Oslo this month. Snøhetta’s and The Metric System’s designs will each represent one side of Norway’s new Kroner banknotes. Studio Snøhetta has created a design based on cubical patterns in order to represent pixels - the visual language of our digitized and modern time. In addition, the pixelated design represents décor surfaces like a mosaic – put together by different materials and colors, which create a picture.

The combination of pixelated designs and analog images creates a dynamic effect.

Norway's new banknotes by the two Oslo-based design studios Snøhetta & The Metric System. A beautiful blend between pixelated designs and analog images.

Norway’s new banknotes by the two Oslo-based design studios Snøhetta. A beautiful blend between pixelated designs and analog images.

The post Norway’s new Banknotes by Studio Snøhetta & The Metric System appeared first on WE AND THE COLOR.

15 Oct 08:49

Archer Drops ISIS In Season 6, Spy Agency Will Merge Into CIA

by Isaac Feldberg

archer sea tunt part 2 lana captain murphy fx Archer Drops ISIS In Season 6, Spy Agency Will Merge Into CIA

With the terrorist group ISIS, alternately known as ISIL or the Islamic State, making headlines worldwide with its murderous tactics and inflexible ideology, FX’s animated comedy Archer has smartly chosen to distance itself from the group by renaming the spy agency at its center.

For five seasons, the series has focused on a group of spies working for ISIS (International Secret Intelligence Service), but now that the other ISIS has forever besmirched the acronym, FX and the creative team behind Archer  – including creator Adam Reed and exec-producers Matt Thompson and Casey Willis – decided it was necessary to discreetly ditch the name. “We quietly did,” Reed told The Daily Beast, noting:

“We were waiting for it to go away—at least I was. Back in Season 5, FX said, ‘This might be a thing,’ and I thought, ‘Maybe it won’t be? Maybe it’ll be the mole that I’m gonna ignore and nothing will happen.’ We got sort of lucky and could organically make a merger with the CIA, so we went back and retroactively painted out the ISIS logos in parts of the show, and we just don’t talk about it in dialogue.”

In the season six premiere, movers are seen rolling the ISIS sign out of the spy agency’s headquarters. From now on, Archer will simply address its setting as ‘the agency.’ Thompson explained:

“We won’t say ISIS anymore, and the only visual representation of it will be that sign rolling off the show. It’s just the most awful thing, and we didn’t want to have anything to do with it. There were people online saying that we should address it and say, ‘Oh, I can’t believe these guys have co-opted our name.’ That’s the way South Park would do it, coming after them and saying, ‘These assholes stole our name,’ but that’s not the way the Archer universe works, where it’s all our own creations. In our universe, they don’t exist.”

Of course, as obviously necessary as the name change was, simply eliminating ISIS from the upcoming season doesn’t make all of FX’s problems go away. The network can’t retroactively erase the name from previous seasons, and almost all of the popular merchandise made for Archer includes the acronym. Said Reed, maybe joking, maybe not: “So I guess that’s all going to a landfill somewhere.”

Whatever steps FX and the creators take to distance Archer from ISIS, it’s a real shame that the series has been impacted by such horrific real-world events. Hopefully, as Reed said above, the name change won’t feel forced or uncomfortable, and the series can now continue along its own wacky path without ever again encountering any outside interference.

Thanks for reading We Got This Covered

14 Oct 12:46

onlytheyoungdieyoung: REPO MAN, directed by Alex Cox, 1984





















onlytheyoungdieyoung:

REPO MAN, directed by Alex Cox, 1984

12 Oct 10:06

currently listening to the new Iceage album, Plowing Into The...

Beast

vi ao vivo e foi uma mer-da



currently listening to the new Iceage album, Plowing Into The Field Of Love. after releasing one of the more exciting rock albums of the last 10 years these Danish boys have apparently decided instead of just delivering another energetic blast of fractured art-punk that they were gonna change things up for the 3rd go ‘round. Iceage have stayed with 1980s post-punk as the era of music guiding their sound but they have traded in their Joy Division and Death In June fetishes for the jangly cow-punk and piano ballads of Crime & The City Solution and The Gun Club. this is the kind of album that hopefully will be a gateway record for kids to the more difficult and eclectic realms of punk rock. this isn’t the sort of album I would have guessed these guys were gonna be making when I first saw them about 3 years ago but I am glad they are growing and trying new shit. 

Plowing Into the Field of Love isn’t as instantly catchy or engaging of You’re Nothing or New Brigade but it’s still a solid album from one of the more interesting contemporary bands around. 

recommended

10 Oct 12:09

Hatsune Miku Makes Her American Debut on DAVID LETTERMAN

by Malik Forté
Beast

Pronto...

Remember that futuristic stage performance Abel told us about on yesterday’s Music Dispatch? Well, a wild Hatsune Miku did indeed appear to make her American performance debut on The Late Show With David Lettermanlast night. Viewers got to rock out to her recent single “Sharing the World,” which seems apt for the virtual Japanese pop star who often steps out of virtual reality to share the IRL-verse with us meat sacks. You can take a look at the image-projected performance in all of its glory right here:

Letterman’s response after the round of applause garnered by Hatsune Miku’s performance: “It’s like being on Willie Nelson’s bus.” Many who’ve never seen Hatsune Miku in action will surely share this sentiment, and I can’t say they’d be wrong for feeling that way either. The song choice and the hardly distinguishable English-dubbed lyrics aren’t as catchy as what we’re use to from the Vocaloid princess, so this is probably not the best first impression Hatsune Miku could have made on American television. The good news is, however, that we’ve still got the Miku Expo coming up for people who might not have enjoyed or understood last night’s showcase.

What did you think of Hatsune Miku’s American TV debut? Project your 3D thoughts into the comments below.