Rampfest – Massive BMW Launching Ramp Aims to Become ‘9th Wonder of the World’ (VIDEO)

(TrendHunter.com) Filmmaker Jeff Schultz is launching a clever online ‘documentary’ about a small town in Bavaria, Oberpfaffelbachen, where a giant BMW launching ramp was built (yes, its planted marketing).

The four video series is a conical of the mystery and legacy that surrounds the ramp.

The alleged goal of t…

15 Digital Paper / e-Paper / Electronic Ink Innovations (SUPER GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) For several years, we’ve been watching breakthroughs and ideas in the world of digital paper / e-paper / electronic ink. The concept is that paper thin digital screens will eventually redefine our consumption of paper and applications for display technology.

Unfortunately, the world still hasn’t s…

Dentistry 2.0 – Massage Chairs, Internet, Flavored Oxygen and Digital X-Rays

(TrendHunter.com) Today I surfed the internet and had a massage from the comfort of a… dental chair? That’s right. There’s no reason that going to the dentist has to be ‘entirely’ unpleasant, which is why cutting edge dental offices are liberating the dental experience with a combination of high-end technology an…

High Heel Shoes for Men – The Latest in Male Shoe Fashion?

(TrendHunter.com) High heels for men are here and women the world over are rejoicing and… Wait, you call these high heels? I mean, I don’t expect to see 6 inch stilettos on men’s shoes to become wildly successful. But who knows.

The Times notes, “If short men could all be magically made 5ft 8in (the male average…

Storm Brewing Inside Sierra Club

Once upon a time I helped to orchestrate a deal between Calistoga Mineral Water and American Rivers, where I worked on the development team. So, I know firsthand what it means to bring corporate dollars to an environmental group. The basic premise is tread carefully, so as not to upset the dues-paying grassroots members of the group.

According to sources, Sierra Club may have glossed over that key point when it struck a deal with Clorox, maker of Green Works, a “green” product line of household cleansers. The agreement includes a Sierra Club endorsement on Green Works’ packaging.

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Given that Sierra Club members and other environmentalists have been battling chlorine pollution for years, this fit seems unnatural at best. Sierra Club activists in Florida have been particularly outspoken about the matter and now find their “keep it clean” hands slapped by Sierra Club mucky mucks.

The Sierra Club’s national board voted March 25 to remove the leaders of the Club’s 35,000-member Florida chapter, and to suspend the Chapter for four years. It was the first time in the Club’s 116-year history that such action has been taken against a state Chapter.

The leadership of the Florida Chapter had been highly critical of the national board’s decision in mid-December 2007 to allow The Clorox Company to use the Sierra Club’s name and logo to market a new line of non-chlorinated cleaning products called “Green Works.” In return, Clorox Company will pay Sierra Club an undisclosed fee, based partly on product sales. The Clorox Company logo will appear on the products as well.

A 2004 report by the U.S. Public Interest Research Group Education Fund named The Clorox Company as one of the nation’s most chemically dangerous.

Florida in the house!

The Guardian has more on the story.

Copycat Swimsuits – The Record Breaking Speedo LZR Racer Swimsuit (and Copycats) (VIDEO)

(TrendHunter.com) Speedo’s LZR Racer Swimsuit is already invoked controversy, with critics believing that the swimsuit is, “Too slippery when wet.” In fact, officials at the International Swimming Federation (FINA) have already contemplated banning the suit.

However, FINA made the decision to allow the LZR Racer un…

Machine Guns for Kids – Redneck Training Contrasted With Ad Campaign (VIDEO)

(TrendHunter.com) Last August, we featured a Machine Gun Camp for kids, which was actually a spoof ad for a Canadian charity. The concept of the camp was viral and shocking enough to get a lot of viral attention.

However, today, we bring you an actual video that shows American kids firing machine guns. The latter …

WatchThePope.com: Pray-by-pray

WatchThePope.com: Pray-by-pray

Advertising Agency: Cesario Migliozzi, Los Angeles, USA
Creatives: Enzo Cesario, Michael Migliozzi
Published: March 2008

WatchThePope.com: Poperazzi

WatchThePope.com: Poperazzi

Advertising Agency: Cesario Migliozzi, Los Angeles, USA
Creatives: Enzo Cesario, Michael Migliozzi
Published: March 2008

WatchThePope.com: Kneeling

WatchThePope.com: Kneeling

Advertising Agency: Cesario Migliozzi, Los Angeles, USA
Creatives: Enzo Cesario, Michael Migliozzi
Published: March 2008

WatchThePope.com: Holy reality

WatchThePope.com: Holy reality

Advertising Agency: Cesario Migliozzi, Los Angeles, USA
Creatives: Enzo Cesario, Michael Migliozzi
Published: March 2008

WatchThePope.com: All Pope

WatchThePope.com: All Pope

Advertising Agency: Cesario Migliozzi, Los Angeles, USA
Creatives: Enzo Cesario, Michael Migliozzi
Published: March 2008

WatchThePope.com: Radio

WatchThePope.com: Radio

Live coverage of the Pope’s visit to the US (Washington DC and NYC). This campaign was created for The Prayer Channel who will have extensive live coverage. TV, Radio and outdoor as well as the site WatchThePope.com are part of this campaign.

Advertising Agency: Cesario Migliozzi, Los Angeles, USA
Creatives: Enzo Cesario, Michael Migliozzi
Aired: March 2008

Braziers As Wearable Art – The La Perla Dragon Bra

(TrendHunter.com) The spring and summer ’08 Lovers & Dragons collection for La Perla includes Black Label features the are wearable art.

This example is an ornate metal bra that features two golden dragons fastened together with black satin ribbon.

Perhaps this bra is a tad lavish, and likely uncomfortable (watc…

AyMan and His Top 20 Trends (Featured Trend Hunter)

(TrendHunter.com) Although Ayman is one of our newest Senior Trend Hunters, he’s also been one of our most active. He’s also knocked our server off-line with several blazingly hot discoveries. His quick publication of the controversial Running Free ad was even quoted in The National Post.

Ayman describes himself a…

Visualizar workshop: Casas Tristes (“Sad Houses”)

I’m on the lookout for a new flat in Berlin again and i still have to recover from the discovery that prices have increased fast and implacably, at least in the Prenzlauerberg area. Which brought back to my mind a project i discovered while visiting the Visualizar workshop at Medialab Prado last November (more Visualizar stories).

0aalascasaaai.jpgCasastristes.org, by Mar Canet, Gerald Kogler, Jordi Puig, explores housing problems in Spain. Its objective is to serve as an information and resources exchange platform in line with the Web 2.0 philosophy, through the creation of a reliable public database of empty houses in Spain.

By providing data visualization and a list of references on the website, the project also aims to offer resources likely to help clarify ambiguous concepts and strengthen the network of citizens, associations, collectives, etc. concerned about housing and on the lookout for a a way to communicate with each other, become visible, and make proposals.

Casastristes.org questions concepts such as “the advantages of buying a home instead of renting”, and highlights the abundance of empty houses in contrast to the generally accepted theory of “a lack of buildable land”. The purpose is to look for solutions given the extremely high percentage of empty homes in Spain, evaluate the reasons so many people do not leave their parents’ home until age 35, and propose alternative housing policies.

I asked interactive designer Mar Canet, a member of Derivart, an interdisciplinary art group whose work focuses on the intersection between art, technology and finance, to tell us more about the project:

Casastristes.org “aims to provide a broad overview of housing problems in Spain, examining both causes and consequences. Its objective is to serve as an information and resources exchange platform in line with the Web 2.0 philosophy, through the creation of a reliable public database of empty houses in Spain.” Last November in Barcelona, I saw another work you collaborated to as part of the collective Derivart. The interactive installation El Burbujometro explores the housing market in Spain as well. Before focusing on Casas Tristes would you mind telling us a few words about El Burbujometro?

A year ago, we started exploring the polemical question “Is there a real estate bubble in Spain?” Apartments were more expensive than ever, some financial analysts were forecasting that the bubble would burst and others were predicting the opposite. Official data showed that the prices of apartments kept getting higher and higher. Starting from this ambiguous situation, and taking the opportunity offered by Javier Duero to participate to the festival Observatori 2007, we came up with the idea to create the Burbujometro, an installation in which Spanish cities are represented as bubbles. Their respective sizes differ according to the price per square meter. Users, equipped with a gun, have to shoot the bouncing bubbles on the screen to discover the price of a home in that particular city.

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We’ve noticed how some users would shoot with energy, very often asking us if they can make them all explode…. but the bubbles keep on reappearing after a few seconds, triggering a strange (and sometimes frenetic) desire to reach an impossible end: the empty screen coming after a metaphorical burst.

User can see how prices have increased in a general manner all over the country, and not only in big cities like Madrid or Barcelona. The phenomenon impacted also smaller cities which are influenced by their proximity to or by the influence from a bigger city. Through the game people dedicate a relaxed time to the exploration of the price in the whole Spanish holography.

The prices were collected from the well-known estate portal Idealista. For this work, we didn’t want to use statistical data emerging from State organisms, like the Instituto Nacional de EstadÃŒstica (INE – National Institute of Statistics) or the Banco de Espana (BDE – Bank of Spain). We felt it was extremely important to work with the prices that people would encounter when looking for a house at any time. With Idealista we were able to update the data with more regularity.
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Is Casas Tristes a project which puts the finishing touch to your interest for the estate market in the country?

We are preparing other projects which have a very different theme. And we still don’t know for sure if Casas Tristes will be the last project that tackles the issue of the real estate.

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You exhibited Casas Tristes at Medialab Prado in Madrid. Did you have a chance to discuss with visitors of the exhibition? Do you know how they reacted to the project?

Yes, during the day of the presentation we had the opportunity to discuss to quite a few people who gave a wide range of opinions and ideas. For example some people warned us that the maps of empty houses could be used by people whose profession is to look for buildings to buy and later sell them to build. We actually have little control on the final use of the database, only the users can decide that.

We nevertheless believe that it is important to open the debate on the housing issue. Similarly other people asked us if we wanted to encourage the illegal occupation of empty houses. Our database aims to raise a discussion. Of course we believe that houses exist for people to live in. New laws are approved such as the one on the Right to have a house, approved on December 17 by the Autonomous Government of Catalonia. The law tries to enforce the renting of empty houses in areas where there is a high demand for flats to rent.

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Now that the project is online and working, do you find that the research on data visualization taught you elements that you didn’t suspect would emerge?

The projects changed over the production process at the Visualizar workshop in Medialab Prado. The collaborators and tutors (Adrian Holovaty and Ben Fry) had a key role in improving the original idea. Of a great help was also Daniel Remeseiro’s surrender of the Drupal platform casasvacias.org. It was a big change of paradigm for the project as we suddenly found ourselves with the implementation of the system that enabled to visualize houses on the maps and upload them on the web. We were thinking of creating visualization on the theme in order to build up a community around a database made of empty flats and created by its users.

We wanted to use the same aesthetic employed in journalism infography, where data graphics are easy to understand. But we wanted to add a level of interaction that allowed the user to navigate historically in the data, the daily press doesn’t allow you to do that.

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Do you have any plan to develop the project further?

This is only the first step of the project because the theme is very large. For the time being, our main interest is to encourage the participation of users who are invited to add new empty houses to the database and create a community which goes beyond the virtual aspect of the project. For example, by having a walk around their city and spot empty houses and by generating discussion.

We have several visualizations which will be published over the next few months. Among them, let’s highlight the realization of a visualization that uses the data provided by idealista (a weekly compendium of news related to real estate and published in the media). Another visualization we are working on attempts to show the mortgages currently active.

We also have more ambitious ideas but they are long-term ones such as the development of a map which displays the houses built over the last decades and use that data to create an animated evolution (with several levels of zoom) of the houses constructed.

Thanks Mar!

The Burbujometro will be on view at LABoral in Gijon (Spain) as part of Homo Ludens Ludens, an exhibition which will explore play in contemporary culture and society. The show opens on Friday and will run until September 22, 2008.

All images courtesy of Mar Canet Sola.

Related: Santiago Cirugeda’s “Casa de pollo” (Chicken House), a 30 sq meter prototype of urban dwelling.

Hot-Tub meat snacks: Tandoori chicken bite vs Black hole

Hot-Tub meat snacks: Tandoori chicken bite vs Black hole

Advertising Agency: Saatchi & Saatchi, Stockholm
Creative Directors: Adam Kerj, Fredrik Preisler
Art Directors: MÃ¥rten Hedbom, Gustav Egerstedt
Copywriter: Nima Stillerud
Productioncompany: The Producers
Director: Erik Nilsson
Producer: Anna Bergström
Postproduction: Nostromo
Special FX: Syndicate
Sound design: Red Pipe
Screenwriter: Sindre Kartvedt

Hot-Tub meat snacks: Chilli meatballs vs The great white shark

Hot-Tub meat snacks: Chilli meatballs vs The great white shark

Advertising Agency: Saatchi & Saatchi, Stockholm
Creative Directors: Adam Kerj, Fredrik Preisler
Art Directors: MÃ¥rten Hedbom, Gustav Egerstedt
Copywriter: Nima Stillerud
Productioncompany: The Producers
Director: Erik Nilsson
Producer: Anna Bergström
Postproduction: Nostromo
Special FX: Syndicate
Sound design: Red Pipe
Screenwriter: Sindre Kartvedt

Hot-Tub meat snacks: Chicken wings vs Freak sister in basement

Hot-Tub meat snacks: Chicken wings vs Freak sister in basement

Advertising Agency: Saatchi & Saatchi, Stockholm
Creative Directors: Adam Kerj, Fredrik Preisler
Art Directors: MÃ¥rten Hedbom, Gustav Egerstedt
Copywriter: Nima Stillerud
Productioncompany: The Producers
Director: Erik Nilsson
Producer: Anna Bergström
Postproduction: Nostromo
Special FX: Syndicate
Sound design: Red Pipe
Screenwriter: Sindre Kartvedt

Hot-Tub meat snacks: Mini hot dogs vs Piranhas

Hot-Tub meat snacks: Mini hot dogs vs Piranhas

Advertising Agency: Saatchi & Saatchi, Stockholm
Creative Directors: Adam Kerj, Fredrik Preisler
Art Directors: MÃ¥rten Hedbom, Gustav Egerstedt
Copywriter: Nima Stillerud
Productioncompany: The Producers
Director: Erik Nilsson
Producer: Anna Bergström
Postproduction: Nostromo
Special FX: Syndicate
Sound design: Red Pipe
Screenwriter: Sindre Kartvedt