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The Monocle Weekly signs on with a mix of smart discussion, previews, field reports and feature interviews. From our studio in London and our bureaux in Tokyo and New York, Monocle's editors focus on the horizon and explore the looming stories within the five areas that define our editorial agenda: global affairs, business, culture, design and consumer culture. Sponsored by TOTO. For more information about Monocle’s print and online offerings please visit www.monocle.com.
The Monocle Weekly
InDesign Secrets, hosted by David Blatner and Anne-Marie Concepcion, provides Adobe InDesign tips, techniques, answers, and of course ... secrets ... about the design professional's page-layout program of choice. Visit us at indesignsecrets.com or contact us at info@indesignsecrets.com. We want to hear from you!
InDesign Secrets
From Igor the mad Russian and Stinky Steve to filthy Phyllis and hungry Luigi, Crazy Cabbies is a fly on the wall look at the bizarre antics of crazy cab drivers, whose behaviour entertains, bemuses and terrorizes their unsuspecting passengers. Dynamic camera positioning and witty dialogue coupled with over the top antics drive the humour in this fast paced, exaggerated animated series.
Crazy Cabbies
Stanford students lead 15 min. interviews featuring leading entrepreneurs, venture capitalists and innovators. The focus of the interviews is innovation and entrepreneurship. By grad students at the Stanford design and business schools.
iinnovate
Random Observations on Art, Photography, and the Creative Process. These short 2-4 minute talks focus on the creative process in fine art photography. LensWork editor Brooks Jensen side-steps techno-talk and artspeak to offer a stimulating mix of ideas, experience, and observations from his 35 years as a fine art photographer, writer, and publisher. Topics include a wide range of subjects from finding subject matter to presenting your work and building an audience. Brooks Jensen is the publisher of LensWork, one of the world's most respected and award-winning photography publications, known for its museum-book quality printing and luxurious design. LensWork is sold in over 1500 stores in the USA and has subscribers in 62 countries. His latest books are "Letting Go of the Camera" (2004) and "Single Exposures" (2005).
LensWork - Photography and the Creative Process
Join the most active entreprenuers in Cleveland, Ohio -- Len and Nora, as they podcast from high atop their attic studio and from various locales around town. Listen once and you'll be hooked!
Jawbone Radio
Boston Legal TV Show Podcast: Hosted by Dana Greenlee of Boston-Legal.org: Commentary on Boston Legal TV Show, featuring episode audio, guests experts that discuss show news, in-depth commentary about plot lines and show characters on Boston Legal TV Show seen on the ABC TV Network.
Boston Legal TV Show Podcast
Every week, the chaps discuss the latest doings in the world of soccer.
The Sound of Football Podcast
Spoofing early learning programming, themes such as co-operation, compassion, feeling sad and sharing are taught by a host of misplaced Mafiosi types with unusual ways of demonstrating these valuable life lessons. Just a few of the many important things you will learn are – why The Little Mermaid sleeps with the fishes and how Hansel and Gretel disposed of the witch’s body.
ABC Wid Da Mob
The most compelling and creative audio documentaries and features produced worldwide, including episodes of the Third Coast Festival's "Re:sound" and audio treats such as producer profiles and more experimental work. In mp3 and updated Fridays.
Third Coast International Audio Festival
Nick Campbell's Show about How to Be Creative and Get Paid
Greyscalegorilla Podcast
Each film noir weaves its own yarn of longing, corruption, and fateful decisions. On the first of every month, Clute and Edwards investigate one noir or neo-noir in detail. Following various threads of inquiry, they attempt to unravel the vast canvas of noir.
Out of the Past: Investigating Film Noir
An Anime Podcast. We've got our fingers on the pulse of Anime, with reviews, rants, and stories.
Anime Pulse » Ze Shows
Video podcast that covers opening receptions / previews of selected art venues and interviews artists and other protagonists of the world of contemporary art, design and architecture. Web site: www.vernissage.tv
VernissageTV art tv
Are you a busy person who just never got around to learning the basics of cooking? We built startcooking.com just for you. You'll learn how to make quick and tasty meals, plus learn the basic cooking skills you'll need. Get ready to start cooking!
Start Cooking video
Interviews, humor, original music and more, from host Jeff Horwich and crew. Get "In The Loop" and help build the show. Produced by Minnesota Public Radio.
In The Loop with Jeff Horwich - Minnesota Public Radio
NPR (National Public Radio) is an internationally acclaimed producer and distributor of noncommercial news, talk, and entertainment programming. A privately supported, not-for-profit membership organization, NPR serves a growing audience of 27.5 million Americans each week in partnership with more than 860 independently operated, noncommercial public radio stations.
NPR
WNYC 93.9 FM and AM 820 are New York's flagship public radio stations, broadcasting the finest programs from National Public Radio and Public Radio International, as well as a wide range of award-winning local programming.
Public Radio International/WNYC
American Public Media, a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization, is the largest owner and operator of public radio stations and a premier producer and distributor of public radio programming in the nation. It is also the largest producer and distributor of classical music programming in the United States.
American Public Media
Home | American Public Media
Contemporary drama in a rural setting from the world's longest running radio soap opera.
BBC Radio 4
TED is a small nonprofit devoted to Ideas Worth Spreading -- through TED.com, our annual conferences, the annual TED Prize and local TEDx events.
TED
TED: Ideas worth spreading
Arts, culture and city life from WNYC, New York Public Radio, 93.9 FM, 820 AM.
WNYC Culture
Today, as I update this on October 31, 2009, the COW itself is over eight years old, opening in April of 2001. But the story goes back much further than the COW and the success of the COW is far from the "overnight success" many assume.
CreativeCOW.net Team
Latest news, sport, business, comment, analysis and reviews from the Guardian, the world's leading liberal voice
guardian.co.uk
Latest news, comment and reviews from the Guardian | guardian.co.uk
Podcasting, RSS Feed, XML Feed. Visit Business Week for up-to-date podcasts, news feeds and online news. Podcasts use an RSS feed (which stands for Really Simple Syndication) to deliver updated information in an xml feed.
BusinessWeek
Online News Feeds : RSS Feeds, XML Feeds
Photo History Summer School – July 16
History of Photography Podcasts
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On this date in 1926, National Geographic Magazine published color underwater photographs; a photographic first. This wasn’t the first attempt at underwater photography, however; photographers had been taking pictures below the waves since 1856. svgallery=underwater Links: Wayne Levin Photography National Geographic Underwater Photo History
Photo History Summer School – July 16
0:04:36
Alexander Gardner photographed the hanging of the Lincoln Conspirators on July 7, 1865. This image and a pair of Gardner’s portraits of two of the men who are about to be executed are the subjects of this Photo History Summer School session. Click on images for larger views: Above Left: Alexander Gardner – The “cracked [...]
Photo History Summer School – July 7
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Powerful and horrific photographs of the effects of the Battle of Gettysburg by Timothy O’Sullivan and Alexander Gardner are the subject of today’s Photo History Summer School. Click Images for a larger view Above: Timothy O’Sullivan – A Harvest of Death – July, 1863 Above: Alexander Gardner – The Home of a Rebel Sharpshooter, July, [...]
Photo History Summer School – July 5
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In this summer school session, we explore two remarkable photographers; the Vietnamese photojournalist Nick Ut whose best-known image was created on this date and the Chinese pictorial master Don Hong-Oai, who died on this date in 2004. svgallery=ut_hong-oai Links for this session: Nick Ut at DigitalJournalist.com Kim Foundation International Don Hong-Oai at PhotoEye Chin-san Long [...]
Photo History Summer School – June 8
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Today’s summer school session is all about color. On this date in 1904, The Parisian brothers Louis and Auguste Lumière presented their patented color photographic process, the Autochrome, to the French Academy of Sciences. The Autochrome was the first commercially feasible color photographic process; the first time photographers could reliably produce color images. This is [...]
Photo History Summer School – May 30
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In today’s May 25th edition of Photo History Summer School, we note the birth dates of the avant garde Cech photographer Jaroslav Rossler and the oddly surrealistic American photographer Ralph Eugene Meatyard as well as the anniversary of the death of the preeminant war photographer Robert Capa. Some images by Rossler, Meatyard and Capa: svgallery=meatyardrosslercapa
Photo History Summer School – May 25
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Cornell Capa, the photojournalist and tireless advocate of humanistic photography died today, May 23, 2008. He was 90 years old. A great and committed photographer, Capa’s heartfelt images were often overshadowed by two other elements in his life. One was the photography of his brother, the pre-eminent war photographer Robert Capa. The other was the [...]
Photo History Summer School – May 23
0:04:46
It’s summer, but photo history doesn’t rest… May 13th is the anniversary of the birth of Czech photography Jan Saudek (1935, Prague) and also the anniversary of the death (1980) of German photographer Otto Umbehr, known as Umbo. This “summer school” podcast briefly presents their work. Some images by Jan Saudek & Umbo svgallery=saudek_umbo Websites [...]
Photo History Summer School – May 13
0:05:29
From the very beginning of the medium, photographers have wanted to portray their sense of wonder and awe in the face of the natural world through the camera’s lens, often offering up nature as the Great American Cathedral. This romantic tradition continues, but the mid-20th century saw a change in the way photographers looked at [...]
The Camera in The Cathedral: A Brief History of Photography of the Natural World
0:56:27
The cyanotype was one of the earliest photographic processes and with its rich, blue color, remains one of the most beautiful. Invented in 1842 by the amazingly prolific Sir John Herschel, the easy-to-produce cyanotype lives on today in the darkrooms of many photographers and artists. Links for this episode: Sir John Herschel – at the … Continue reading History of Photography Podcast 11 : The Cyanotype →
History of Photography Podcast 11 : The Cyanotype
The Kodak Brownie camera was one of the most popular cameras in the history of photography. The Brownie popularized low-cost photography and introduced the concept of the snapshot to a public eager to preserve their personal and family memories. With its simple controls and initial price of $1, it was intended to be a camera … Continue reading History of Photography Podcast 10 : The Kodak Brownie →
History of Photography Podcast 10 : The Kodak Brownie
When light sensitive material is exposed to light, a chemical change happens, but this change isn’t necessarily visible. This idea is perhaps part of why early photographers – and early viewers of photographic images – had a hard time with the concept of the latent image, yet it was one of the most important components … Continue reading History of Photography Podcast 9 : Latent Image and Immediate Image →
History of Photography Podcast 9 : Latent Image and Immediate Image
The photographs of pioneer color photographer Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorsky (1863–1944) give us a remarkable view into a world that is now lost – the Russian Empire just before the Russian Revolution and World War I. In this podcast we explore both Prokudin-Gorsky’s photographs and the unique tri-color photographic technique he employed to create them. Links … Continue reading History of Photography Podcast 8 : Sergei Prokudin-Gorsky →
History of Photography Podcast 8 : Sergei Prokudin-Gorsky
Tina Modotti (1896 – 1942) was an Italian photographer who was most active in Mexico between 1923 and 1930. Known for her romantic and business relationship with Edward Weston and her friendships with Diego Rivera, Frieda Kahlo and other Mexican artists, Modotti was also a political activist during the Mexican Revolution and beyond. Links for … Continue reading History of Photography Podcast 7 : Tina Modotti →
History of Photography Podcast 7 : Tina Modotti
John Szarkowski’s book Looking at Photographs: 100 Pictures from the Collection of The Museum of Modern Art is one of the best ways to learn not only about the history of photography, but also about photography’s aesthetics as well. Szarkowski, the former Director of the Department of Photography at MOMA from 1962 to 1991, pairs 100 … Continue reading History of Photography Podcast 6 : Looking at Photographs →
History of Photography Podcast 6 : Looking at Photographs
Photographer Gordon Parks, born 1912 and died 2006, was one of the most important figures of twentieth century photography. A humanitarian with a deep commitment to social justice, race relations, poverty, civil rights and honest depictions of urban life, Parks’ work provides an amazing chronicle important aspects of American urban life in the last half … Continue reading History of Photography Podcast 5 : Gordon Parks →
History of Photography Podcast 5 : Gordon Parks
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