Trump Plans to Skip White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner

The president said on Twitter that he would not attend the April 29 event, which has become a staple of the Washington social calendar.

Disneyland Paris: Beauty and the Beast

Disneyland Paris: Beauty and the Beast

Argentina apresenta: 5 lugares que você deveria visitar se deseja gritar

Campanha do Ministério do Turismo local explora experiências inesquecíveis no país vizinho

> LEIA MAIS: Argentina apresenta: 5 lugares que você deveria visitar se deseja gritar

Ghost Recon: Ruthless

Video of Tom Clancy’s Ghost Recon Wildlands: Ruthless Official TV Spot Director’s Cut

Elle Magazine: Women’s New Year

Video of Women’s New Year

Elle Magazine: Women's New Year, 2

Elle Magazine: Women's New Year, 2

Trump vs. the Press: A Small-Town Boy (Well, Sort of) in Washington

Donald Trump was no stranger back in the day to the art of news management. But even that did not seem to prepare him for the capital press corps.

For Marketers, TV Sets Are an Invaluable Pair of Eyes

Several companies, eager to help brands more efficiently spend advertising money, use devices to track viewing habits in surprisingly granular detail.

Culture as Weapon. The Art of Influence in Everyday Life

Culture as Weapon. The Art of Influence in Everyday Life, by Nato Thompson.

On amazon USA and UK.

Publisher Melville House writes: The production of culture was once the domain of artists, but beginning in the early 1900s, the emerging fields of public relations, advertising, and marketing transformed the way the powerful communicate with the rest of us. A century later, the tools are more sophisticated than ever, the onslaught more relentless.

In Culture as Weapon, acclaimed curator and critic Nato Thompson reveals how institutions use art and culture to ensure profits and constrain dissent — and shows us that there are alternatives. An eye-opening account of the way advertising, media, and politics work today, Culture as Weapon offers a radically new way of looking at our world.

From the Guggenheim Bilbao becoming the ultimate icon of urban revitalization to the Nazi Party stadium rallies throwing people into massive nationalist hysteria with their powerful speeches, Wagnerian music and what architect Albert Speer called cathedrals of light. From the Taco Bell Chihuahua dressed to evoke Che Guevara to the independent slogan “Keep Austin Weird” hijacked and copyrighted to serve a branding campaign for the capital of Texas. From corporate-driven bohemia in Berlin and Portland’s hippest neighbourhoods to rock stars wearing Reebok trainers while performing on behalf of Amnesty International. From Apple Store abolishing cash registers (that crude reminder of commerce!) and filling its aseptic spaces with with smiling people dispensing free advice to the McDonald’s Corporation supporting programs that improve the well-being of children while getting people addicted on its cheap, GMO-laden junks food served by under paid employees, etc. Culture, it seems, is intimately weaved into capitalism and politics. And vice versa.


The cathedral of light above the Zeppelintribune, Nuremberg, 1936. Photo: Allgemeiner Deutscher Nachrichtendienst – Zentralbild (Bild 183)

Using historical and contemporary examples gleaned from political campaigns, PR stunts, philanthropy, advertising or interior design, Nato Thompson efficiently demonstrates how culture can be turned into a set of tools and tactics that allows those in power to quietly manipulate the impressionable, irrational and social creature that we are.

Thompson wrote this book as a b-side of the exhibition Living as Form, as a kind of guide to how socially engaged artistic practices can be appropriated by PR companies, advertisers, politicians, corporations and other entities with only their own best interests in mind. They too understand the power of the visual, the importance of arousing emotions, of creating social connections, of devising more radical modes of communication, production and distribution.

Willie Horton political ad ran in 1988 before the presidential election

Some of the tricks deployed by businesses or politicians used to be revolutionary but seem almost banal nowadays. Paying women to smoke in public as an act of freedom in defiance of the taboo of women smoking, for example. Others appear as dirty as ever decades later, such as the infamous Horton ad which suggested that presidential candidate Michael Dukakis bore some responsibility in crimes committed by a murderer temporarily released from prison.

Thompson’s book is informative and entertaining. It is also troubling, thought-provoking and impossible to read without thinking about Trump (or Brexit, or anyone in Europe thinking time has come to make their country ‘great again’.) Especially when it shows how fear has become one of the main drivers of America mainstream culture. Fear permeates the news, is intensified through sensationalist discourses and images but most of all, it feeds millions of men to the notoriously voracious industrial prison complex, keeps Guantanamo Bay in perpetual and unjustified limbo and can turn anyone into a potential, innocent victim: Steve Kurtz, black teenagers, people who have names that don’t sound ‘right’, etc.


Billionaires for Bush

Somehow, there is also hope in this book. Humans might be irrational and fairly easy to maneuver but they are also capable of seeing through the smoke screen. They fight back. They use capitalism to overtake capitalism. They hijack media and write their own history of alternative media. They orchestrate civil disobedience with humour and brio. They can even re-purpose fear. To paraphrase Thompson they learn from power even if they do not agree with it.

I sometimes had the feeling that the author is more comfortable writing about some topics than others. He is moving when writing about Reverend Billy and more factual when detailing the military’s cultural approaches to counterinsurgency, for example. But that’s just a detail – that and the fact that there is absolutely zero photo in the book- because Culture as Weapon splendidly condenses into some 300-ish pages the many reasons why culture is exciting, liberating, deceiving and dangerous. Depending on who gets to pull its strings.

Source

LA Times & Propublica's "We will not shut up" T-shirts

As we’ve snarked, since advertising can not support a newspaper alone and people no longer pay for the product they consume, newspapers will like musicians have to “adapt” and make T-shirts. And do they have, a lot of the alternative media sites support their business by selling water, t-shirts, wallets and all sorts of things. Adding a dash of creative snark to it, the Los Angeles Times (top left) showed off their “we will not be shut up” T-shirt on Twitter after having been barred from the White House press briefings.

Today @latimes not allowed in WH press briefing. Our new T-Shirt: You can shut us out out, but you can’t shut us up! pic.twitter.com/JM6NxOSYFC— Davan Maharaj (@DavanMaharaj) February 24, 2017

Only a few tweets down the thread, Propublica the fiercely independent news org, pointed out that they had already done such shirts. “We said steal our stories, not our shirts,” and so a fresh Badlander was born.

.@DavanMaharaj @latimes Yo — we said steal our stories, not our shirts. 😉 https://t.co/q8T1PnOkrX (Srsly, though, we stand with you.?)— Hannah Birch (@hannahsbirch) February 24, 2017

Adland: 
Badland: 

4A's Names MEC's Marla Kaplowitz as New President


After an eight-month-long search, the 4A’s is poised to name MEC North America CEO Marla Kaplowitz as its new president-CEO, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

Although it was not clear Friday whether the appointment had been finalized, Ms. Kaplowitz, who has been MEC’s North American leader since October 2011, is set to succeed longtime 4A’s President-CEO Nancy Hill, the people said. Ms. Hill is expected to stay on with the association until June 2017.

Ms. Kaplowitz could not be reached for comment. Bill Koenigsberg, founder of Horizon Media and chairman of the 4A’s board of directors, declined to comment.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Desk-Embedded Bed Furniture – This Small Bedroom Furniture Piece Combines Necessary Items

(TrendHunter.com) It’s no secret that the size of the average home is shrinking, so this small bedroom furniture design is intended to offer a great solution to make the most of every inch of space. Designed by…

Exide: Building Wrap

Exide: Building Wrap
Exide: Building Wrap

Exide Building Vinyl Wrap: Exide, India’s largest battery manufacturer powers more than just automobiles.Starting from submarines to aircrafts and charging power-stations that light up cities, Exide is the moving force of the country.

The opportunity: The Exide headquarter in Calcutta has been a prominent landmark in the city for decades. It was an opportunity to give it a facelift with a spectacular vinyl wrap.

Execution: The Exide vinyl wrap shows the entire geography covered by the brand. Whether it is a vehicle on land, sea or air, the visuals depict that it is connected to Exide. In fact, all the roads connect to the Exide logo and demonstrate the presence of Exide batteries across twenty-four applications.

Ski Sunne: Warm up

Before you go on the big annual ski trip in the mountains you must make sure that you warm up properly. You know, to see that everything is in shape.

Video of Ski Sunne – Öva på fjällsemester – Long version

Sporting Clube de Portugal: Fans

Sporting Clube de Portugal: Fans

Only you give life to Alvalade. Campaign to active the purchase of the tickets pack of the club showing the energy that moves the show match comes from the fans.

Sporting Clube de Portugal: Fans, 2

Sporting Clube de Portugal: Fans, 2

Only you give life to Alvalade. Campaign to active the purchase of the tickets pack of the club showing the energy that moves the show match comes from the fans.

Sporting Clube de Portugal: Fans, 3

Sporting Clube de Portugal: Fans, 3

Only you give life to Alvalade. Campaign to active the purchase of the tickets pack of the club showing the energy that moves the show match comes from the fans.

Sporting Clube de Portugal: Fans, 4

Sporting Clube de Portugal: Fans, 4

Only you give life to Alvalade. Campaign to active the purchase of the tickets pack of the club showing the energy that moves the show match comes from the fans.

Sporting Clube de Portugal: Fans, 5

Sporting Clube de Portugal: Fans, 5

Only you give life to Alvalade. Campaign to active the purchase of the tickets pack of the club showing the energy that moves the show match comes from the fans.

Libresse: Vagina Varsity

Advertising pantyliners in the extremely conservative South African market posed quite a challenge. How do we talk about a product designed to take care of an area that’s hardly ever mentioned, and when it is spoken about it’s usually in code or with awkward pointing?

We decided we had to get people talking about, and understanding, what the product is for. The vagina.

Welcome to Vagina Varsity. A month-long, no holds-barred course to teach students everything they need to know about their vaginas, because being a vagina-haver, doesn’t make you a vagina expert. Once they signed up, the course was sent to students’ email, so they could engage with the material in private. The course consisted of video lessons and loads of extra vagina, period and product-related information. There were also weekly quizzes so learners could test their new-found knowledge, because the more you know, the less you have to fear.

Video of Vagina Varsity