Tag Archives: inspiration

Are You Familiar With This Cocktail?

Link: http://www.bestweekever.tv/2010-04-22… Do you know its name? I need to know what to ask for at Happy Hour. Thanks for the inspiration, Snooks. Read

Fergie Is ‘Perfect’ in ‘Gettin’ Over You’ Video, David Guetta Says

‘This is going to be my best video ever’, DJ/producer tells MTV News of new collabo, also featuring Will.I.Am and LMFAO. By Akshay Bhansali, with reporting by Damian Vaca David Guetta Photo: MTV News The French house-music DJ/producer who produced last summer’s Black Eyed Peas hit “I Gotta Feeling” is planning a repeat chart assault. David Guetta just shot the video for his “Gettin’ Over You,” a song he’s convinced will be the summer anthem of 2010. “I have no words. This is going to be my best video, I’m sure,” Guetta told MTV News when we caught up with him at the SLS Hotel in Beverly Hills, California, fresh off the video shoot. The seemingly endless obsession with “I Gotta Feeling” hasn’t gone unnoticed by Guetta, who may be following a formula for success by reuniting with some of the song’s key players. (The massive hit from the Peas’ album The E.N.D. spent 14 weeks atop the Billboard Hot 100 last year and remains a club staple.) “Gettin’ Over You” features Will.I.Am, Fergie and LMFAO. It’s only fitting, then, that the new clip includes a nod to the first collaboration that helped make Guetta a crossover star. “The video is the story of what happened to me when I came to produce ‘I Gotta Feeling’ for the Black Eyed Peas,” Guetta said. “It was my first time in that studio called Record Plant. I was so impressed, and we started to work with Will.I.Am and more and more artists were coming to say, ‘Hello,’ and were like, ‘Oh, this music is different.’ And they were staying. Girls were starting to dance on the couch. “So the inspiration for my video is really that. We’re in recording sessions — me, Fergie, LMFAO, [singer] Chris Willis — and then more and more people are partying in the studio. We party in the streets. Partying in the area … partying in the city.” Oddly enough, Guetta’s energetic onstage demeanor is in direct contrast to his comfort level with the acting required for a music video. “I’m so bad. I can only be myself,” he laughed. “I’m such a bad actor, it’s terrible. If you tell me, ‘Do what you usually do,’ it’s kind of OK. So I’m producing that record, that’s what I’m doing in the video.” But the dance-music phenom could only rave about Fergie’s performance. “I look stupid, you know, totally suck,” Guetta said. “Her, it’s the opposite. They say ‘rolling,’ and she knows exactly what she’s doing, like, the angle, the look, the light. I asked her after we shot, ‘Did you have a monitor? Could you see yourself?’ Because it was so perfect.” What do you think of David collaborating with the Peas again? Let us know in the comments below! Related Artists David Guetta Fergie

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Fergie Is ‘Perfect’ in ‘Gettin’ Over You’ Video, David Guetta Says

So You Need a Typeface…

A typography decision flowchart with a sense of humor. My version of this flowchart would replace Helvetica with the Insane Clown Posse font. The Best Links: Originally Posted on Inspiration Lab via MetaFilter View

To All Pollicle Dogs And Jellicle Cats

A letter from T.S. Eliot to his godson Thomas on the occasion of his fourth birthday. Also, incidentally, the inspiration for Practical Cats , which is pretty much all you can ask for out of a birthday letter. (Via Letters of Note .) View

Christina Aguilera Says Bionic Shows Off Her ‘Superhuman’ Side

‘You will find on this album songs that represent the many sides of me,’ she writes in a blog post. By Jocelyn Vena Christina Aguilera Photo: Denise Truscello/WireImage With her new album, Bionic, about to drop in June, Christina Aguilera took to her Web site on Wednesday (April 7) to talk about the inspiration for the project. The pop star even teased touring plans, telling fans she looked forward to seeing them “on the road very soon.” “Each album I release is a representation of my personal life experiences and how they have shaped me,” she wrote. “I strongly believe that life is all about growth, self-discovery and self-expression. Making music allows me to define my experiences and share them with others who might hopefully relate. “You will find on this album songs that represent the many sides of me,” Aguilera continued. “I have learned that like all women I am sometimes capable of being superhuman. Like all women I am BIONIC.” Last week, Aguilera released the first single from Bionic, “Not Myself Tonight,” and she said the new music will reflect her evolution since her last studio album, Back to Basics. “I have become a mother, a wife, and most recently, an actress. There are so many characteristics that define me, and this album was put together to represent all of those different parts of myself. The sound is not necessarily easy to define because I am not easy to define.” Aguilera also said that working with a variety of artists, including Santigold, M.I.A. and Ladytron, is giving her music a different vibe than what fans might expect from the vocal powerhouse. “This allowed me to challenge myself by using my voice in ways I never had before,” Aguilera wrote. “It also allowed me to push personal boundaries and explore what is possible for my future and me as an artist.” Are you looking forward to Christina’s new album? Are you excited about her working with new artists? Let us know in the comments below! Related Artists Christina Aguilera

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Christina Aguilera Says Bionic Shows Off Her ‘Superhuman’ Side

Lady Gaga Rumored To Be Designing Sunglasses Line

Singer is reportedly teaming up with British eyewear company Linda Farrow. By Jocelyn Vena Lady Gaga Photo: Michael Buckner/ Getty Images Lady Gaga is a creative director for Polaroid and has created her own pair of Heartbeats headphones . Now there’s a rumor that she is in talks to design her own line of sunglasses for British eyewear company Linda Farrow. Fans of Gaga know that she isn’t new to the world of sunglasses. Most of her videos have included some Gaga take on them. And now, WWD.com reports that Gaga could be the latest person to collaborate with the company, which has been creating eyewear for 40 years and has worked with a number of designers, including Alexander Wang, Matthew Williamson, Dries Van Noten and singer R

Does Michael Lewis Snatch His Ideas From College Kids? [How Things Work]

The hot book of the moment, Michael Lewis ‘s Big Short , was influenced by a Harvard undergraduate’s thesis . But few people know the bestselling author has followed the footsteps of someone else’s college thesis before, with Moneyball. Lewis’s skill at adapting smart ideas from academia is no doubt one of the reasons the financial writer has had no sophomore slump: A decade or so after publishing his first hit book, Liar’s Poker , the author is on top again with the Big Short , poised to be the latest in a series of more than half a dozen bestsellers. The acknowledgements section of Big Short credits for some measure of inspiration a prize-winning thesis from 24-year-old financial analyst A.K. Barnett-Hart (top pic, left), who while at Harvard analyzed reams of data on instruments at the heart of the financial meltdown, Collateralized Debt Obligations The Wall Street Journal recently suggested that people ” read [her] Harvard thesis instead ” of Lewis’s book, even though Lewis has been the one featured on the Daily Show and in glowing press notices . Although she’s in Lewis’ shadow, Barnett-Hart has already received far greater notice than Gregg Bell (top pic, right), who at the University of California, Berkeley’s Graduate School of Journalism wrote a thesis entitled, “Toeing the Bottom Line: Trying to Compete Within Baseball’s Skewed Financial Structure.” Bell’s research examined how the general manager of the Oakland A’s baseball team, Billy Beane, sifted through other teams’ scrap heaps to find cheap players; relentlessly cut expenses to make the most of his small budget; and had trouble retaining talent under the free-agent system. When Bell was completing his thesis, Lewis was a visiting fellow at his journalism school, sponsored by the Koret Foundation. Bell finished his thesis during his second and final year, ending in 2000, only several months after Lewis had begun work at Berkeley. Not long after Bell’s thesis was turned in, Lewis was hanging out on the A’s beat, doing the reporting for Moneyball. Published in 2003, Moneyball was, like Bell’s thesis, a look at how sifted through other teams’ scrap heaps to find cheap players. The book was later slated (and then un-slated) for adaptation into a movie . According to a person familiar with both works, Lewis definitely went beyond Bell’s analysis, digging into Beane’s methodology and the statistics behind it, and contrasting his recruiting strategy with more traditional approaches to scouting. Bell, now a sports reporter with the Associated Press, had largely avoided a discussion of the stat-geek stuff Lewis delved into. Credit to Lewis, then, for promoting an idea that had been languishing in obscurity of academia. But students from the school gossiped years later over whether Lewis should have given Bell more acknowledgment — i.e., any — for helping to inspire his book, if in fact Bell’s provided such inspiration. Despite the groundwork Bell laid and Lewis’s close proximity to his work, there’s been no confirmation that Lewis got the idea for Moneyball from Bell’s thesis. It remains something of a mystery, even to some of the people involved. Those people include Neil Henry, the professor and thesis advisor who pushed Bell to explore the money side of the A’s. Henry, now dean of the Berkeley journalism school, wrote the following after we asked him about Moneyball : How Michael Lewis happened on the idea, I don’t know. I also don’t know if Gregg knew Lewis while he was a student here, and perhaps had enrolled in one of his courses… I also don’t know if Lewis saw Gregg’s project before he began work on the book. In any event, Gregg’s project was really great. He spent nearly his entire second year with Beane to flesh out the profile, which focused on how a GM for a low budget, small market baseball team manages to keep competitive with other teams. We’ve tried to reach Lewis through a couple of different channels for comment, and not yet heard back. Still, some points in his defense are readily apparent: As his books and must-read magazine articles have demonstrated, Lewis a skilled and prolific writer with a knack for soaking up information from insulated subcultures — sports, Wall Street, his hometown of Berkeley, California — and explaining developments in those subcultures to the world at large. If a writer like that isn’t taking some inspiration from academia, he should be. Also, no one we’ve spoken to denies that Moneyball is a much fuller realization of Billy Beane’s story than Bell’s “Toeing the Bottom Line,” and given the how much longer Lewis had to work on his book than Bell had to work on his thesis, that’s about what you’d expect. Lewis definitely should have acknowledged Bell if Bell’s work was the inspiration for his book, but that doesn’t make Moneyball any less his own success. Big Short , meanwhile, is bigger and better still in comparison with Barnett-Hart’s thesis, even though the latter won the Harvard Hoopes prize and “virtually every thesis honor,” according to the Journal . Barnett-Hart told us, Although there has been some talk about how my thesis inspired Lewis’s book, that is actually far too generous to say. He was being very kind by acknowledging my work and while I did try to share my ideas with him, he already knew most everything I could have told him. I can in no way take credit for anything he did in his great book. I am very happy that he acknowledged me because it has gotten people to read my thesis which I honestly thought no one would ever read. Let this be a lesson to Bell and the smart students who followed him: Have your thesis readily accessible online . That way you can ride the publicity wave if and when a top author expands on some of your ideas. And it’s the sort of move financially savvy authors like Michael Lewis don’t think twice about.

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Does Michael Lewis Snatch His Ideas From College Kids? [How Things Work]

Justin Bieber Releases ‘U Smile,’ Announces Summer Tour Dates

‘ ‘U Smile’ is one of the best songs I have ever recorded,’ 16-year-old tweets of new song. By Jocelyn Vena Justin Bieber Photo: Getty Images On Tuesday (March 16), Justin Bieber released the Motown-style ballad “U Smile,” the second single from his new album My World 2.0, which drops on March 23. And, as is his habit, the 16-year-old immediately went to Twitter to announce the release and urge his fans to make the song reach the top of the iTunes chart. ” ‘U Smile’ is already #12 on iTunes and climbing!! Thanks,” he

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Justin Bieber Releases ‘U Smile,’ Announces Summer Tour Dates

Lady Gaga’s ‘Telephone’ Video: Pop-Culture Cheat Sheet, Part II

From Andy Warhol to ‘NCIS,’ there are plenty of references we didn’t spot the first time. By James Montgomery and Eric Ditzian Lady Gaga in her video for “Telephone” Photo: Interscope It is perhaps tribute to Lady Gaga’s sprawling, spot-the-references “Telephone” video that, even after we published a fairly comprehensive Pop-Culture Cheat Sheet on Friday, there was still enough ephemera left over for a second piece. Seems there was plenty we missed in our first go-round, so we’re back for round two, with special note of thanks to the intrepid readers who pointed out many of the following to us. Without further ado, here’s our Pop-Culture Cheat Sheet, Part II. Once again alphabetized and cross-referenced for your perusal. ‘Telephone’ Cheat Sheet Photos Blue, Alektra : American porn star. A former Penthouse Pet of the Month with credits to her name like “Housewives Hunting Housewives” and “Tease Before the Please 2,” Blue shows up as a leather-clad inmate welcoming Gaga to lockup with a suggestive roll of her eyes. “Chicago” : Musical based on a sensational 1924 murder trial. The play’s “Cell Block Tango” number (and its “Six Merry Murderesses of the Cook County Jail”) are nodded to in the “Telephone” prison dance sequence. “Command & Conquer” : Long-standing video game serious with both real-time strategy and first-person shooter iterations. One of three fictional ingredients in Gaga’s Cook ‘N’ Kill lunch special is a cup of Tiberium, a valuable yet toxic resource within the series’ gameplay. Dal

American Idol: It’s Reigning Men [American Idol]

Well. I think it’s official. Men are more interesting and better at things than women. Sorry JezeFriskyXX.com. It’s just how things played out in the ol’ game of evolution. I’m basing this on scientific Idol Evidence, mind you. Truly credible. Last night the final eight dudes crooned for their life and, I gotta say, they did well. They did better , and were more interesting, than the ladies. It had a lot to do with song selection, but it also had to do with the fact that the Girls side of the competition is four versions of the same white lady singing and then Paige Miles wandering around and bumping into walls. Whereas the Boys team is five versions of the same white lady. VARIATIONS. If it worked for Diabelli, it should work for Idol . But here’s the real reason the girls officially lost last night. Kara Dio Gordy cried. Yes, she wept like a nincompoop after Big Mike sang his stirring Kate Bush number and it was the most ridiculous and awful thing any of us have ever seen. I was watching the show last night with an old fellow who liberated the camps during the war. He shook his head at Kara of the Gourds crying there and said “Worst damn thing I ever seen.” Lynne Curtin’s husband stopped staring at his wife in mild terror for a moment to watch Idol last night and when Kara started crying he thought This is the ugliest thing I’ve ever seen . It was very, very bad. Not that Big Mike’s performance wasn’t good. It totally was. But Kara. Kara . This is American freaking Idol , not the end of Gallipoli . You don’t cry. The singers can cry if they want I suppose. But the judges?? That is only allowed if you are Paula Abdul. And Kara, I served with Paula Abdul, I knew Paula Abdul, Paula Abdul was a friend of mine. Kara, you’re no Paula Abdul. So can it with the waterworks please. Also, Ellen? If you like Tim so much why don’t you just marry him? Did you see when she ran out and hugged Tim Urban after his emotions-lite performance? I don’t understand what she’s doing on this show. Is it some sort of weird, inscrutable sexual politics performance art? I really hope that’s what it is. So that’s why the girls lost last night. Here’s Why the Boys Won As mentioned above, Big Mike did a nice job. He sang Kate Bush’s “A Woman’s Work,” though I suppose he was really taking his inspiration from Maxwell’s version, if Randy Jackson is to be believed. And, actually, he’s not, so Big Mike was doing a Kate Bush homage last night. Normally I’ve found him to be super boring, and he still sort of is — his voice and carriage in performances are rather bland, potato buds from a box rather than mom’s homemade heartattack mashed. But he just picked such a great song. Have we ever heard that on Idol before? I really don’t think we have. Which makes it an automatic win, as long as it’s pulled off with some level of competency. So yes, it was good. Not worth blubbering and stopping the show completely and standing up and clapping robotically while mascara streams artfully down your face, but good. I don’t think Big Mike is destined to win the big dance, but this ought to guarantee him safe passage for a least a few more rounds. Carol Brady with the Carol Brady hair did well again. I don’t know. I think I kind of like him. He just sort of has this weird, interesting tone to his voice. He sounds not unlike Jennifer Coolidge’s character in A Mighty Wind . But he’s always clear and clean and crisp and seems to actually know his limits, which is something of a compliment for this particular season of Idol , for this miserable overreaching theatre troupe. Well done, Carol. I wonder if he misses his son, Johnny Bravo nee Greg. I’m sure he does. Why the Rest of Us Are Crying Oh my beloved Egghead Latino. Where did he go? There used to be a guy named Andrew Garcia who was interesting and had big Carol Channing glasses and sang fun, moody reworked covers of pop songs. I don’t know where that dude went. He hopped a plane to Biarritz. He rode a bicycle over a hill one day and no one ever saw him again. He disappeared into the abstract. Now we’ve got something else, a snatched body, an avatar. Last night there was a dark-ish cover of “Genie in a Bottle,” but it just didn’t feel right, it didn’t work. Plus, there’s an element of the grotesque in singing about getting rubbed the right way on American Idol . It’s just unpleasant. I’m sorry, Mr. Garcia. Might he go home tonight? Casey Potato Head Johnson is in danger too. I can’t even remember what he sang. It was something, y’know, strummy and croony and all that other stuff that he does, or tries to do. But he’s such a blur, so insubstantial in one’s memory. He’s like trying to remember what you did in high school. Not things that happened in high school, but what you did. How did classes work, day in, day out? What did you do on the weekends? I don’t know about you, but I can’t remember that stuff for the life of me. When I was seventeen, what did I do on a Saturday afternoon? What did Casey Johnson sing last night? I don’t know. But I’m sure both involved watching TV. Dweezil Zappa or whatever that reheated David Cook (recooked?) guy’s name is can’t really sing all that well, can he? I mean for the world he can, but for the music industry, I don’t know. He kind of overthrows it every night, doesn’t he? He’s going for stadium roar and it just comes out like a reasonably talented kid in a garage band and they’ve got the door open because it’s spring and getting warm and then a cute girl from school walks by so he tries to sound extra Into It and Emotive. But I’m just not sure America is going to want to make out with you at Mike Fenster’s party next Friday after hearing that, Dweezil. I’m just not sure that’s how it’s going to play out. The teenaged boy who sang “I’m Already There” just makes me sad — a kind of soft, sprawling sad — so I don’t really want to say anything about him. He’s got miles to go before he’s himself, I’ll just say. Urban Renewal Well, well, well. They liked it, they really liked it. After last week’s slight uptick, Tim Urban studied his recent Idol history and busted out the “Hallelujah,” Jeff Buckley edition, which served Jason Castro so well during semis two years ago. This has gone from a song that makes pond-eyed 19-year-olds who smoke too much feel deep and weary to a song that makes the souls of pimply explode-o-teens do mournful jigs. Yes being Sad is sort of in these days, like it was almost twenty years ago for a different generation I suppose, and Jason Castro sang “Hallelujah” and then Justin Timberlake sang it (very well) with another dude on the Hope for Haiti telethon thing, so it’s just very Now. So it was a clever choice on Timmy Kapowski’s part. How’d he sing that shit? Oh, well enough. It was near flat as Nebraska, not dynamic at all, but it’ll do, it’ll do. One thing that was funny and annoyed me was at the very end (you can see it above) he was like “Hahhh layyy looooooo…” and then took this breathy pause and went “Yahhhhhhhhh.” Which, like, a full separated “Yuh” is not a terribly pretty way to end a pretty song. If you go listen to professionals sing the tune, they smooth out that ending, shade it. It was sort of another little cutesy telling sign that wee Timothy Bertinelli has no idea what he’s doing. So who will go home tonight? Of the ladies I suspect it will be Lacey and Paige. Or maybe Katie instead of Lacey. Of the fellows? Well, I didn’t even mention Todrick Hall, so probably him. He sang something that Simon declared “Broadway.” Great, Simon. You watch this kid drag himself OUT of the musical theater and you keep him on the show this far and this long only to tell him, “Hey, why aren’t you in the theater?” Blergh. Other than Todrick… I dunno, dawg. Maybe the sad, Texas-evening teenager. Sigh. That poor kid. He makes me feel a little like this:

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American Idol: It’s Reigning Men [American Idol]