Elizabeth Warren Proposes Breaking Up Big Tech

Look out, Amazon, Facebook and Google–Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren is coming for you. The Massachusetts senator, who is running for president in what has already become a crowded and chaotic Democratic primary, said Friday that if she is elected president, she intends to break up the biggest technology companies “to restore the balance of power…

LaCroix owner plunges as CEO cries 'injustice' after weak quarter


National Beverage Corp. fell the most in two decades after the owner of LaCroix brand sparkling water posted disappointing results and was downgraded to sell at Guggenheim. The CEO blamed the weak quarter on “injustice.”

“We are truly sorry for these results stated above. Negligence nor mismanagement nor woeful acts of God were not the reasonsmuch of this was the result of injustice!” CEO Nick Caporella said in a statement.

Moving past the unusual statement, analyst Laurent Grandet wrote that the company’s sparkling water brand LaCroix is unlikely to see a sales rebound given the “prolonged softness in U.S. retail and the increasing competitiveness of the category.” Grandet added that social media trends are “decisively negative” and slashed the firm’s price target on the stock to $45 a share from $72.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Obos: The Same

The Nordic Cooperative Building Association OBOS is a proud sponsor of women’s football in Norway and Sweden. Equality is one of the most important values for all of OBOS’ business. This ad, featuring Ballon d’Or winner Ada Hegerberg, is made to show respect for the effort and dedication girls in football puts in every single day. Happy Women’s Day!

Part of Collection

Video of OBOS. ‘The Same’ feat. Ada Hegerberg.

Unreasonable Woman – Michele Aboro

Anomaly has marked International Women’s Day by celebrating unreasonable women from around the world. This year, building on the launch of its global gender equality offering, Unreasonable Equals, Anomaly partnered with Unreasonable Studios, a global creative production company, to create a short documentary.

The story focuses on the incredible journey of former undefeated seven times world champion boxer, Michele Aboro, from her beginnings in London to her present in Shanghai, China. It is a journey of breaking down barriers, from first learning boxing when the sport was banned for women to becoming an undefeated world champion, from professional athlete to gym owner to philanthropist, and from breast cancer survivor to mother and mentor.

Video of Unreasonable Woman | Michele Aboro

Alzheimer's Association / WAM: Raise Your Voice For Women's Minds

Part of Collection

Video of Raise Your Voice For Women’s Minds

‘Mockingbird’ Play Publisher Demands $500,000 From Harper Lee Estate

A filing seeking arbitration says the estate allowed eight theaters around the United States to stage “To Kill a Mockingbird,” then flip-flopped at the last minute.

Luke Perry tributes hit newsstands, Jason Priestley says 'Goodnight Sweet Prince'


Continue reading at AdAge.com

WPP Names Wunderman’s Judy Jackson to New Global Head of Culture Role

This morning WPP CEO Mark Read confirmed the appointment of Wunderman veteran Judy Jackson to the newly created role of global head of culture. The announcement follows last week’s news that the holding company had hired Walmart’s chief people officer, Jacqui Canney, to fill the same role. Judy Jackson will report to Canney, who begins…

To Uplift Female Creatives, We Need to Actually Discuss Their Creativity

“It’s a Tide ad.” “We’re the superhumans.” “Exclusive the rainbow.” What do these campaigns all have in common? They all won a gazillion awards, yes, but more importantly, there are talented female creatives behind these campaigns. And yet very few people know about this second point. Why isn’t there enough focus on female creatives? In…

Shoot the Women First

“Shoot the women first!”, a German official is reported to have advised in the 1980s when members of GSG-9, the country’s elite anti-terror squad found themselves in front of a large group of people suspected of being terrorists. Eileen MacDonald used the order as the title of the study of female terrorists she wrote in 1991. Navine G. Khan-Dossos, in turn, borrows it for an exhibition that looks at the theme of female targets.


Navine G. Khan-Dossos at Z33 House for Contemporary Art. Photo: Kristof Vrancken Photography and Research


Navine G. Khan-Dossos painted in pink one of the walls at the entrance of Z33 House for Contemporary Art. Photo:

For Shoot the Women First, her solo exhibition at Z33 in Hasselt, the artist recreated a shooting range. Paintings in soft colours are hanging on the wall and from the ceiling. The first ones you encounter carry symbols similar to the type of targets used in Discretionary Command training. During those police and military trainings, shooters receive a chain of commands which require them to shoot at triangles, circles and squares of various colours in a certain order.

As you walk through the exhibition space, the reference to a body become less abstract and you soon recognize human shapes on the paintings. The exhibition is choreographed so that your body comes in close proximity of the targets, making the experience feel somewhat ominous and almost visceral.


Navine G. Khan-Dossos, Pink Discretionary Command, 2018 at Z33 House for Contemporary Art. Photo: Kristof Vrancken Photography and Research


Navine G. Khan-Dossos, Pink Discretionary Command, 2018 at Z33 House for Contemporary Art. Photo: Kristof Vrancken Photography and Research


Navine G. Khan-Dossos, Pink Discretionary Command, 2018 at Z33 House for Contemporary Art. Photo: Kristof Vrancken Photography and Research

All the works in the series feature the colour pink. Not any type of pink but the particular shade of pink used to paint the doorways of brothels in the Metaxourgeio neighbourhood of Athens.

The area was the theater of police brutality against women in 2012 when a group of drug-users were arrested and forced to undergo HIV tests. It was assumed that the women were prostitutes. They were imprisoned on charges of grievous bodily harm for transmitting the virus through sex work. Most of these women had never worked as prostitutes and were not even aware they were HIV-positive. The violence towards them didn’t end there. The police published their mug-shots and personal data on their website and the images spread from there to major TV channels and other media. Eventually the charges were dropped, but some of these women struggled to recover from this experience of incarceration and public shaming.


Navine G. Khan-Dossos, Grey Discretionary Command, 2018 at Z33 House for Contemporary Art. Photo: Kristof Vrancken Photography and Research


Navine G. Khan-Dossos, Grey Discretionary Command, 2018 at Z33 House for Contemporary Art. Photo: Kristof Vrancken Photography and Research

Being diagnosed with HIV meant that, for the authorities, the body of these women epitomized deviance and bio-terrorism. They were both a danger and a target, both victims of society and perpetrators of sexual disorder. The colour pink in the paintings is thus not one that evokes innocence and romanticism but violence, violation of privacy and HIV criminalization.

Khan-Dossos managed to give a presence to these women without ever using the humiliating mugshots that had been shared online and in the Greek mainstream media.

Shoot the Women First demonstrates that it is possible to use abstract forms to convey a poignant narrative, to talk about violence without using explicit images. Perhaps, that’s the smartest way to do it now that images of violence are so commonplace online that we barely register them.

The work doesn’t address only the fate of these women but also the one of other marginalized bodies. The pink triangles in some paintings allude to the rise of AIDS activism, and in particular ACT UP’s SILENCE = DEATH posters. The work also refers to the militarization of the US police and their use of lethal weapons against civilians. And in general, the harassment of women worldwide which, as recent stories like the Ligue du LOL in France and the Spanish far-right parties pushing back against gender equality indicate, shows no sign of abating. Not even in 21st Century EU.

While writing this review, i also couldn’t stop thinking about 19 year old Shamima Begum. In 2015, she was an English schoolgirl who left her family to join the so-called Islamic State. We don’t know whether she committed crimes while in Syria. The United Kingdom has nevertheless decided to revoke her citizenship and the young woman now sits in a Syrian refugee camp with her newborn son. A few days ago, a shooting range in north-west England has made headlines for using a photo of her face as a target, following “a large number of requests from customers.”


Navine G. Khan-Dossos, Bulk Targets 1-100, 2018. Opening at Z33 House for Contemporary Art. Photo: Kristof Vrancken Photography and Research


Navine G. Khan-Dossos, Bulk Targets 1-100, 2018. At Z33 House for Contemporary Art. Photo: Kristof Vrancken Photography and Research

One room features heaps of gouaches on cardboard, ‘Bulk Targets 1-100’. The shape and number also refer to the target models for training. The vast number of these works on a humble material suggests their throw-away use, the sheer banality of violence. On the other hand, they also hint at the possibility that we can make them ours and train as an army that would fight against the demonization of vulnerable people.

The exhibition also features one of Khan-Dossos’ motifs: a standard forensic ruler that runs the walls of the exhibition rooms and transforms the gallery into a crime scene. Crime investigators use forensic rulers to facilitate photographic documentation of evidence at crime scenes. Its title, Below the Belt, evokes not only the unfair and slightly cowardly practices that often accompanies gender politics but also the physical and metaphorical site of domestic violence and control.


Navine G. Khan-Dossos, Silent Latitude (detail) and Below the Belt (detail), 2018 at Z33 House for Contemporary Art. Photo: Kristof Vrancken Photography and Research


Navine G. Khan-Dossos, Silent Latitude, 2018 at Z33 House for Contemporary Art. Photo: Kristof Vrancken Photography and Research


Navine G. Khan-Dossos, Silent Latitude, 2018. Opening at Z33 House for Contemporary Art. Photo: Kristof Vrancken Photography and Research


Navine G. Khan-Dossos, Silent Latitude (detail), 2018 at Z33 House for Contemporary Art. Photo: Kristof Vrancken Photography and Research

The last work Khan-Dossos is showing in Hasselt is Silent Latitude. This new commission is part of the other exhibition you can visit now at Z33: Dissidence – Quilting Against. Silent Latitude is a quilt designed together with the members of the Greek Trans Support Association in Athens and embroidered with the help of MIA-H Fashion Incubator for Accessories in Hasselt. This “community-made textile” evokes the value of collective labour as a healing and bonding activity, referring to the Beguines, laywomen from the urban middle class who lived together in domestic spaces (such as the ones that house Z33 exhibition spaces), supporting themselves with their labor, outside of male control and without submitting to monastic rule.

Ending the show with the quilt lifts up the spirits. The work points to a more hopeful humanity, one that relies on solidarity to create, defy and resist.

Navine G. Khan-Dossos – Shoot the Women First was curated by Silvia Franceschini. Dissidence – Quilting Against was curated by Ronald Clays. Both exhibitions remain open until 26 May at Z33 – House for contemporary art in Hasselt, Belgium.

Photos of the opening ‘Shoot the Women First’ & ‘Dissidence’.
India Doyle did a fascinating interview with Navine G. Khan-Dossos for Twin back when the artist was showing the first iteration of Shoot the Women first at The Breeder gallery in Athens. Also worth your time: Ruins – Chronicle of an HIV witch-hunt, a documentary directed by Zoe Mavroudi about the women victims of HIV criminalization in Athens.

Previously: Painting on and painting off ISIS propaganda.

Source

Signs and End

Signs and End

Part of Collection

Softweave Towels: Wipe The Stereotype – Protect Themselves

Softweave Towels Print Ad - Wipe The Stereotype - Protect Themselves

For decades, the society has imposed stereotypes on women. Considering them as the ‘weaker sex’, objectifying them and constantly derogating their abilities. How often have we heard comments being passed when a woman drives on the road? Judgmental glances when she’s a single mother raising a child? Scoffs when she climbs up the corporate ladder and doubts when she supports her entire family?

Picking up from this deep-seated subject, we, at Pixel Fox Studios, decided to create a simple and effective campaign with Softweave Towels for International Women’s Day.

The basic purpose of a towel being wiping, we related it to #WipeTheStereotype. It’s actually so simple to wipe away a shouldn’t to should, a can’t to can, but difficult to implement it. But here’s a stepping stone.

Softweave Towels: Wipe The Stereotype – Play Sports

Softweave Towels Print Ad - Wipe The Stereotype - Play Sports

For decades, the society has imposed stereotypes on women. Considering them as the ‘weaker sex’, objectifying them and constantly derogating their abilities. How often have we heard comments being passed when a woman drives on the road? Judgmental glances when she’s a single mother raising a child? Scoffs when she climbs up the corporate ladder and doubts when she supports her entire family?

Picking up from this deep-seated subject, we, at Pixel Fox Studios, decided to create a simple and effective campaign with Softweave Towels for International Women’s Day.

The basic purpose of a towel being wiping, we related it to #WipeTheStereotype. It’s actually so simple to wipe away a shouldn’t to should, a can’t to can, but difficult to implement it. But here’s a stepping stone.

Softweave Towels: Wipe The Stereotype – Drive

Softweave Towels Print Ad - Wipe The Stereotype - Drive

For decades, the society has imposed stereotypes on women. Considering them as the ‘weaker sex’, objectifying them and constantly derogating their abilities. How often have we heard comments being passed when a woman drives on the road? Judgmental glances when she’s a single mother raising a child? Scoffs when she climbs up the corporate ladder and doubts when she supports her entire family?

Picking up from this deep-seated subject, we, at Pixel Fox Studios, decided to create a simple and effective campaign with Softweave Towels for International Women’s Day.

The basic purpose of a towel being wiping, we related it to #WipeTheStereotype. It’s actually so simple to wipe away a shouldn’t to should, a can’t to can, but difficult to implement it. But here’s a stepping stone.

Softweave Towels: Wipe The Stereotype – Support Their Families

Softweave Towels Print Ad - Wipe The Stereotype - Support Their Families

For decades, the society has imposed stereotypes on women. Considering them as the ‘weaker sex’, objectifying them and constantly derogating their abilities. How often have we heard comments being passed when a woman drives on the road? Judgmental glances when she’s a single mother raising a child? Scoffs when she climbs up the corporate ladder and doubts when she supports her entire family?

Picking up from this deep-seated subject, we, at Pixel Fox Studios, decided to create a simple and effective campaign with Softweave Towels for International Women’s Day.

The basic purpose of a towel being wiping, we related it to #WipeTheStereotype. It’s actually so simple to wipe away a shouldn’t to should, a can’t to can, but difficult to implement it. But here’s a stepping stone.

Softweave Towels: Wipe The Stereotype – Travel

Softweave Towels Print Ad - Wipe The Stereotype - Travel

For decades, the society has imposed stereotypes on women. Considering them as the ‘weaker sex’, objectifying them and constantly derogating their abilities. How often have we heard comments being passed when a woman drives on the road? Judgmental glances when she’s a single mother raising a child? Scoffs when she climbs up the corporate ladder and doubts when she supports her entire family?

Picking up from this deep-seated subject, we, at Pixel Fox Studios, decided to create a simple and effective campaign with Softweave Towels for International Women’s Day.

The basic purpose of a towel being wiping, we related it to #WipeTheStereotype. It’s actually so simple to wipe away a shouldn’t to should, a can’t to can, but difficult to implement it. But here’s a stepping stone.

Softweave Towels: Wipe The Stereotype – Voice

Softweave Towels Print Ad - Wipe The Stereotype - Voice

For decades, the society has imposed stereotypes on women. Considering them as the ‘weaker sex’, objectifying them and constantly derogating their abilities. How often have we heard comments being passed when a woman drives on the road? Judgmental glances when she’s a single mother raising a child? Scoffs when she climbs up the corporate ladder and doubts when she supports her entire family?

Picking up from this deep-seated subject, we, at Pixel Fox Studios, decided to create a simple and effective campaign with Softweave Towels for International Women’s Day.

The basic purpose of a towel being wiping, we related it to #WipeTheStereotype. It’s actually so simple to wipe away a shouldn’t to should, a can’t to can, but difficult to implement it. But here’s a stepping stone.

Self-Defense Coin Carriers – The EASYANT Coin Purse Bag Stores Currency and Offer Protection (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) The EASYANT Coin Purse Bag is an unlikely accessory that will provide users with a way to carry their essential currency with them, while also staying safe in the event of an attack. Crafted from…

Pointy Mountain Treehouses – Peter Pichler Architecture's Design Entertains Modern Sensibilities (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) After completing the ultra-elegant Hotel Schgaguler, Peter Pichler Architecture takes another stab at the area of the Dolomites with a series of pointy mountain treehouses. Located in Northern Italy,…

YouTube Wants to Teach Marketers How to Create More Targeted Advertising at SXSW

In recent years, YouTube has used festivals like South by Southwest and Sundance to showcase work intended to teach marketers how to become better storytellers on the platform. This year, YouTube will continue that tradition, but instead of spotlighting different ad formats or introducing six-second spots as it did in 2017, YouTube will show marketers…