POPULARITY
Hattie Collins is the Owner and Creative Lead of Hattie Sparks Interiors. Hattie, after graduating with a degree in Art History and a minor in Business and then going on to complete her masters at Tulane University, soon realized that it was going to be harder to find a job in her niche than she thought. She quickly decided to join the world of retail, making connections and building lifelong relationships along the way; later diving into her first business endeavor – Hattie Sparks Boutiques. In 2019 she switched gears yet again and created a name for herself in the Interior Design circuit.Learn more about Hattie Sparks Interiors: Website: https://www.hattiesparks.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/hattiesparks/Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/hattiesparks/This Podcast is Proudly Produced by Propel Production StudioWebsite: https://www.propelyourstory.com/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PropelYourStory/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/propelyourstory/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/propel-your-storySpecial Thanks to our Title Sponsor b1BANK for Helping Us Share These StoriesWebsite: https://www.b1bank.com/BioThe NXT Entrepreneur Podcast shares the stories of an entrepreneur's journey and the lessons learned from the successes as well as the failures. We want to share all of the stories from the rejections to the huge wins, the long hours, and the ultimate payoff. The journey is many times dramatic, sometimes unbelievable but always fascinating. It's all about the stories; pull up a chair and listen.Website: https://www.thenxtentrepreneur.com/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheNXTEntrepreneurInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/thenxtentrepreneur/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-nxt-entrepreneurDon't Forget to Like, Comment, and Subscribe!#TheNXTEntrepreneur #Podcast #HattieCollins #HattieSparks #HattieSparksInteriors
In episode 131 UNP founder and curator Grant Scott is in his shed considering technology and photography, marking the passing of Frank Horvat, and reflecting on the portrait photograph as a historical document. Plus this week photographer Olivia Rose takes on the challenge of supplying Grant with an audio file no longer than 5 minutes in length in which she answer's the question ‘What Does Photography Mean to You?' Olivia Rose graduated in 2008 from the fashion photography course at the London College of Fashion. She was one of 100 photographers selected for the British Journal of Photography's ‘Portrait of Britain' award in 2017 and was the WBW Awards photographer of the year 2016. Olivia balances freelance picture editing for major mainstream press, with her personal projects and commissions for magazines such as i-D and Vogue with a portfolio of portraits including Mary J Blige, Drake and Jorja Smith. In 2016 her extensive documentation of the UK's grime scene developed into and award-nominated book This is Grime created together with journalist Hattie Collins. Her clients include Nike, McQ, Timberland, The Kooples, Dazed and Confused, and The Fader amongst many others. www.oliviarosephotography.co.uk Grant Scott is the founder/curator of United Nations of Photography, a Senior Lecturer and Subject Co-ordinator: Photography at Oxford Brookes University, Oxford, a working photographer, and the author of Professional Photography: The New Global Landscape Explained (Routledge 2014), The Essential Student Guide to Professional Photography (Taylor Francis 2015), New Ways of Seeing: The Democratic Language of Photography (Taylor Francis 2019). His next book What Does Photography Mean to You? will be published in late 2020. © Grant Scott 2020
In this episode of How I Hustle, host Emma-Louise Boynton speaks to fabulous author and journalist, Hattie Collins. Hattie has held a multitude of enviable job titles, including editor of ASOS magazine and music editor, features editor and commissioning editor at i-D, and she’s written for a litany of brilliant publications such as The Sunday Times Culture, The Guardian, GQ and Conde Nast Traveller. She is perhaps best known for her unrivaled knowledge of London’s grime scene, the growth of which she’s documented since its inception at the turn of the millennium, and which she delves into in expert detail in what is regarded as the definitive guide to the sub-culture - This is Grime’, published in 2016. Suffice it to say, few know the grime scene like Hattie. Then, last but not least, she has recently started hosting ‘PROUD’ on Beats 1, a radio show exploring LGBTQ+ music and history. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Writer and journalist Hattie Collins is the documenter-in-chief of the Grime generation. For fifteen years she had a ringside seat as the young emcees and producers of East London created a culture in their own image — and she remains locked in tight to the music’s evolution. In 2016 she published Grime’s first and definitive oral history. This Is Grime told the story of the most dynamic subculture since Punk from the inside out. As the scene goes global, Don Letts sits down with Hattie to reason with the rise and mutation of UK music’s most powerful force. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Hattie Collins is the Music Editor of i-D Magazine, and the author of This is Grime - an oral history of a music that has seen a lot of changes since it began less than 20 years ago. She discusses the origins of grime music and its place in UK culture. The post 34. Hattie Collins – This is Grime appeared first on MTF Labs.
In this episode, we discuss sexuality and how it affects your identity as an artist when you 'come out'. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Praise be, episode 5 of the BIMM : Inside the Music Industry podcast is upon us. Grime is huge, I think we can agree on that. Stormzy, Skepta, Wiley, Dizzee et al have dominated the UK music scene for years, so this week we are talking to Hattie Collins, who was there from (nearly) the start and has documented the inexorable rise of Grime. Hattie is Contributing Editor at ID Magazine, wrote the book 'This Is Grime' and has long been a key figure in the UK Hip-Hop scene. In todays chat Jen and Hattie cover everything from music, race, class, gender, appropriation, privilege and Duran Duran (obviously). Really interesting, really informative. get your ears on it. Enjoy! BIMM’s Inside the Music Industry pulls back the curtain on the music business, giving an up close, intimate look into the numerous roles, positions and career paths possible within this ever-changing field. Our very own Dr. Jennifer Otter Bickerdike, best-selling author and industry veteran, will be interviewing experts from across the music community, to find out their individual paths, what their ‘average’ day looks like and advice for finding your own niche while embarking on a successful and fulfilling career. BIMM is the largest and leading provider of music education in Europe. For over 35 years, we’ve taken raw talents and turned them into industry professionals, earning a living doing what they love. Website: www.bimm.co.uk Twitter: @BIMM_Institute Facebook: BIMMInstitute Instagram: bimm_stagram
Writer and journalist Hattie Collins is the documenter-in-chief of the Grime generation. For fifteen years she had a ringside seat as the young emcees and producers of the genre's first wave created a culture in their own image - and she remains locked in tight to the music's evolution. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Armando Iannucci, writer of The Thick of It, discusses his new film satire The Death of Stalin and his love of classical music as explored in his book, Hear Me Out.Kwame Kwei-Armah has been running the Center Stage Theater in Baltimore and in February will take over the Young Vic in London. Meanwhile he's directing The Lady From the Sea, in a new version by Elinor Cook that transports Ibsen's Scandi drama of a woman's tussle for her independence to the Caribbean. John Wilson finds out why, and what Kwei-Armah has up his sleeve for his new job.Form 696 is a risk assessment form which the Metropolitan Police requests promoters and licensees of events complete and submit 14 days in advance of hosting some music events. When the form was first introduced in 2005 it proved controversial as it asked for details of audience ethnicity and, although this wasamended later, critics still say the form is discriminatory because grime and urban music artists are disproportionately affected. As London Mayor Sadiq Khan asks the Met to review the form, and a new report on the state of grime music in the UK is published, we discuss Form 696 and its impact on the grassroots music scene with the Director for the Black Music Research Unit at the University of Westminster, Mykaell Riley and music journalist Hattie Collins.And we remember the actor and comedian Sean Hughes whose death was announced on Monday. Presenter : John Wilson Producer : Dymphna Flynn.
Hattie Collins is a journalist and pioneer in her field, she has documented some of the most pivotal moments in Grime music and played a huge role from the genre's foundations right through to where it is today. Her career sees her tell the stories of artists, movements and happenings in the culture - in this episode we turn the tables on Hattie to tell the story of her own journey. We talk about her early days writing for American magazine Hip Hop Connection, signing on, understanding journalism and codes, her introduction to Grime, favourite articles, how important RWD magazine was, journalistic misrepresentation plus a whole lot more.