Live Your Childhood Dreams

[iDevice Link] <— 12,985,313 I came across this Randy Pausch lecture while YouTubing today... and what a reminder it was to live life to the fullest. It sounds cheesy, but if you are having a hard time comprehending what the point of life is - this lecture will help you. I remember when Randy passed away in 2008 and shortly following I spent a good amount of time consuming his thoughts and lectures and found him to be truly inspirational. I'm glad I ran into him again on the internets... and this time have a bloggish video reminder memory bank tool to share and remember his story forever.

The quick history on Randy:

Randolph Frederick “Randy” Pausch (October 23, 1960 – July 25, 2008) was an American professor of computer science and human-computer interaction and design at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Pausch learned that he had pancreatic cancer in September 2006, and in August 2007 he was given a terminal diagnosis: “3 to 6 months of good health left”. He gave an upbeat lecture titled “The Last Lecture: Really Achieving Your Childhood Dreams” on September 18, 2007, at Carnegie Mellon, which became a popular YouTube video and led to other media appearances. He then co-authored a book called The Last Lecture on the same theme, which became a New York Times best-seller.

Pausch died of complications from pancreatic cancer on July 25, 2008.

[Facebook]
[Wikipedia]
[Carnegie Mellon]
[Randy Timeline]
[The Last Lecture]

Randy’s last speech – May 18th, 2008.

[iDevice Link] <— 1,302,675

Cravendale – Cats with Thumbs

[iDevice Link] <— 141,504 I don't like cats - but I love Wieden + Kennedy... and their London Group nailed another. Follow Bertrum the cat on The Twit or F-book.

Just look at Bertrum’s facebook photos… he is an incredible scrabble player.

Genius.

Full Credits
Agency: Wieden + Kennedy London
Client: Cravendale
Creative Director: Sam Heath
Agency: Wieden + Kennedy London
Creative Director: Chris Groom
Creative: Hollie Sayers
Creative: Freddie Powell
Agency Producer: Lucy Russell
Planner: Theo Izzard Brown
Media Planning: Carat
Production Company: Smith and Jones Films
Director: Ulf Johansson
Production Company Producer: Philippa Smith
Offline Editor: The Whitehouse
Editor: Russell Icke
Post Production: MPC
Lead Flame/VFX Supervisor: Kamen Markov
Assist Flame: Richard McKeand
Assist Nuke: Ryan Hadfield
Assist Nuke: Heather Goodenough
Assist Nuke: Neil Griffiths
Matte Painter: Charlotte Tyson
Telecine: Jean Clement Soret
Post Producer: Josh King
Sound Studio: Wave London
Engineer: Jack Sedgwick
Music: Tonic Music
Composer: Multiverse

The Black Mamba

[iDevice Link] <— 1,478,782 Nike Basketball taking the creative process and turning it into a film. Genius.

Full Credits

Agency: Wieden + Kennedy Portland
Client: Nike Basketball
Creative Director: Alberto Ponte
Creative Director: Ryan O’Rourke
Copywriter: Sheena Brady
Copywriter: Brandon Pierce
Art Director: Mike Warzin
Producer: Erin Goodsell
Executive Creative Director: Mark Fitzloff
Executive Creative Director: Susan Hoffman
Agency Executive Producer: Ben Grylewicz
Production Company: Radical Media
Director: Robert Rodriguez
Executive Producer: Frank Scherma
Executive Producer: Donna Portaro
Line Producer: Mala Vasan
Director of Photography: Mauro Fiore
Editorial Company: Rock Paper Scissors
Editor: Angus Wall
Post Producer: Esther Gonzalez
Post Executive Producer: CL Weaver
Post Executive Producer: Cassie Hulen
VFX Company: Hybrid
VFX Supervisor: Rodney Brune
Flame Artist: Pierre Blain
Flame Artist: Mathieu Dupuis
Flame Artist: Nadine Homier
VFX Producer: Daniel Leduc
Titles/Graphics: Kurt Volk
Finishing Company: A52
Finishing Company: The Mill
Flame Artist: Paul Yacono
Flame Artist: Gareth Parr
Flame Artist: Phil Crowe
VFX Producer: Hameed Shaukat
VFX Producer: Jamie McBriety
VFX Producer: Enca Kaul
Composer: Robert Rodriguez
Sound Designer: Robert Rodriguez
Engineer: Robert Rodriguez
Mix Company: Troublemaker Studios
Mixer: Bradford Engleking
Producer: Robert Rodriguez

How Far Has Skiing Come

SKI RACER – a film by Paul Ryan on the 1969 World Cup circuit – A Summit Films Production

I made Ski Racer in 1969, 39 years ago. I watch the film today and wonder about all the choices that go into making a film. There is no traditional narrative, no singular event was portrayed; rather I was trying to use the cinematic process to convey the visceral element of ski racing and its nuances, in particular the emotional dichotomy between severe racing competition among individuals and the more reflective joy of free skiing. I wanted to create a cinematic equivalent to all this.

As Dumeng Giovanoli says in the film, “I like to race because I like to be better than my friend… to go faster than him. But when the racing season is over, I go back home and ski for myself… free, in powder, it’s like you fly… that’s really skiing not racing. Racing is something different, much different.”

The film is impressionistic, it treats Slalom, Downhill and Free Skiing as separate experiences with different emotions. Fragments of many different races are edited together to create nature of each discipline.

The significance and the appeal of Ski Racer probably lies more in the film making than the subject matter. It was perhaps the first film to combine the irreverent energy of rock music, optical effects and complex quick cut editing to create a transcendent subjective representation of racing.

I avoided traditional narration in favor of using the very personal voices of the racers themselves. Billy Kidd, Jean Claude Killy, Spider Sabich, Dumeng Geovanolli, Karen Budge, Karl Schranz, and many others, seemed to welcome the chance to express their motivations and feelings of what racing meant to them.

The film is reflective of the times. The ferment of late sixties is echoed in the interlacing of music from The Grateful Dead, Steve Miller, Mike Bloomfield, and Indian Ragas with the ski action.

Paul Ryan November 10, 2008

What Planet the Fuck are You From?

[YouTubeUlar] <— 4,722 Ridiculous. Brain Farm and Red Bull kill it again with Travis Rice and The Art of Flight Movie Trailer. There are at least 8 “Holy Shit” elements in the first half of this teaser… I don’t even know what to say — Guess we’ll just have to wait to see the full film.

Genius.

HYDLE – Get Pumped

[iDevice Link] <— 9

IMPORTANT! HOW TO USE YOUR SHAKE WEIGHT

READ THIS FIRST!

  • Keep the Shake Weight at least 6″ away from your face at all times during exercises to avoid injury
  • The Shake Weight is not motorized, it is a mechanical device that you move back and forth with your own muscle power
  • Simply hold the Shake Weight with both hands, lock your wrists and move the Shake Weight slowly back and forth on and even plane, about 3 inches in each direction.
  • Hold with both hands, elbows close to the body and tighten the muscles in your upper body.
  • The faster you move it, the more intense the workout will become

Super Bowl Advertisement Rankings

I haven’t concluded my super bowl ad recap yet, but as usual… rankings are coming in from all over.

Animal Ads Resonate with Viewers
The overall number one ad with viewers (overall score of about 72.3) was “Saluting Beaver” from Bridgestone, featuring a motorist who is able to avoid hitting a beaver and then plunging into a river thanks to tire traction (and a little rodent-supplied assistance). “Saluting Beaver” scored first in both emotion ranking (evoking most possible positive and least possible negative emotions) and water cooler ranking (likelihood of participants discussing the ad at the water cooler the next day), and third in interest ranking (how well it held the interest of viewers).

Meanwhile, the self-explanatory “Dog Party” ad from Bud Light, which came in third overall, ranked first in viewer interest.

Automotive Ads Take Three Top 10 Spots
Three of the top 10 ads, including the number one ad, were for autos or automotive products. Two ads were for snack food, and one ad promoted a product in each of the following five categories: the NFL, beer, film, soda, and online portal.

[Read Full]

Your Welcome, Hydle

Thank You from NIMBUS INDEPENDENT on Vimeo.

Thank You is exactly what the title states; a thank you to everyone who watches Nimbus.

Thank You begins by interviewing individuals from every walk of life about how they predict the winter. The movie then recaps the best of the last three years of Nimbus. Enjoy!

Nimbus Independent was started in 2007 by Eric Pollard in collaboration with Pep Fujas, Andy Mahre, and Chris Bencheter. The four like minded skiers began Nimbus to bring a different perspective to the world of ski movies.

For more please subscribe on Vimeo and visit:

http://NimbusIndependent.com/
Facebook.com/NimbusIndependent

Top 10 December Viral

[iDevice Link] <— 4,875 views Top 10 Most-shared Online Videos December 2010

1. DC Shoes – Ken Block’s Gymkhana Three, Part 2 – Ultimate Playground, L’Autodrome
2. Danny MacAskill – Way Back Home
3. TAC Campaign – 20-Year Anniversary Retrospective
4. Coca-Cola: Snow Globes: Coca-Cola 2010 Christmas Commercial
5. Nike Basketball: Michael Jordan’s Response to LeBron James What Should I Do Commercial
6. Evian – Roller Babies
7. T-Mobile – Welcome Back
8. NSFW – A Hunter Shoots A Bear
9. DC Shoes – Ken Block’s Gymkhana Two, The Infomercial
10. Heineken – The Entrance

Genius: 4, 10
Not: 7

[READ FULL]