American artist
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In this episode, I had an engaging conversation with Sarah Hoover, an author and former art director, about her personal journey through motherhood and the challenges of postpartum depression, as detailed in her book "Motherload." We explored the misconceptions surrounding the instant bond between mother and child, as Sarah candidly shared her own struggles with disconnection and depression after giving birth. Her relationship with her husband, artist Tom Sachs, added another layer to our discussion, as he encouraged her to be brutally honest in her writing, even if it meant portraying him negatively. Sarah's insights were both relatable and thought-provoking, making this episode a powerful exploration of the realities many women face in their journey through motherhood. Timestamps: 00:00:00 - Introduction to Sarah Hoover 00:00:26 - Motherload and Postpartum Experience 00:06:55 - Expectations vs. Reality of Motherhood 00:30:46 - Joining RHONY? And Friendship with Jenna Lyons 00:35:02 - Final Thoughts on Motherhood Get Tickets To Our Virtual Live Podcast show May 1st at 7pm EDT. Here's the link for tickets: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/david-yontef-sarah-fraser-virtual-live-show-ask-us-anything-51-7pm-tickets-1276780297239?aff=erelexpmlt MY Go Big Podcasting Courses Are Here! Purchase Go Big Podcasting and learn to start, monetize, and grow your own podcast. USE CODE: TIKTOK20 for 20% OFF (code expires April 30th, 2025) **SHOP my Amazon Marketplace - especially if you're looking to get geared-up to start your own Podcast!!!** https://www.amazon.com/shop/thesarahfrasershow Show is sponsored by: Horizonfibroids.com get rid of those nasty fibroids LittleSaints.com use code TSFS for 20% off your first order, these are my FAV non-alcoholic cocktails, enjoy better sleep, less stress, and more! Nutrafol.com use code TSFS for FREE shipping and $10 off your subscription Prolonlife.com/tsfs 15% off sitewide plus a $40 bonus gift when you subscribe to their 5-Day Nutrition Program! ● Try their detox that has REAL FOOD and WORKS! Rula.com/tsfs to get started today. That's R-U-L-A dot com slash tsfs for convenient therapy that's covered by insurance. Quince.com/tsfs for FREE shipping on your order and 365 day returns Warbyparker.com/tsfs make an appointment at one of their 270 store locations and head to the website to try on endless pairs of glasses virtually and buy your perfect pair Follow me on Instagram/Tiktok: @thesarahfrasershow ***Visit our Sub-Reddit: reddit.com/r/thesarahfrasershow for ALL things The Sarah Fraser Show!!!*** Advertise on The Sarah Fraser Show: thesarahfrasershow@gmail.com Got a juicy gossip TIP from your favorite TLC or Bravo show? Email: thesarahfrasershow@gmail.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
There's no doubt that sneaker reselling has cooled off from its peak in the early part of the 2020s. But has the bubble totally popped? Answering that question in this episode is Puneet Singh, aka Sole Supreme, a collector and reseller who owns the store Legacy in New Jersey. Singh talks about the death of the Panda Dunks, the rampant Travis Scott Air Jordan fake market, and the truth about who's spending money in sneaker stores. Also on this episode, co-hosts Joe La Puma, Brendan Dunne, and Matt Welty talk about the heavy Air Jordan presence during All-Star Weekend, the return of the Tom Sachs x Nike Mars Yards, and the billion-dollar potential of Nikeskims. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
We're early into 2025, but there are already a handful of important sneaker release dates to look forward to. The “Galaxy” Nike Air Foamposite Ones are coming back in February. The legendary Undefeated x Air Jordan 4 is getting a legit retail release. Tom Sachs and Nike are back working together. Which will be the biggest sneakers this year? And will some of these highly anticipated pairs—like the “Banned” Air Jordan 1—not live up to expectations? Co-hosts Joe La Puma, Brendan Dunne, and Matt Welty discuss those topics on their first episode back in the new year. Also, Brendan live cops sneakers, Joe swings by JD Sports to do some buying of his own, and more. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode we talk about James Whitner not getting charged by feds and apparently signing with adidas and speculate if his relationship with Nike and Jordan will continue. We also talk about the Nike CEO John Donahoe stepping down and who's really to blame for Nike's decline in these last 5 years. Some other topics, we talk about StockX sneakers available at Walmart, TwoJsKicks apparently out at Urban Necessities, customizers selling fakes, and Tom Sachs back at Nike. A lot of topics! If I had more time, I woulda made a shorter podcast. Timestamps 00:00 - Cold Open: Let the Blessings Come In 00:18 - Intro 02:10 - On Feet 02:30 - Pickups 05:26 - Skips 12:05 - EQL Feedback 15:31 - Influencer Era 20:18 - StockX Sneakers Available at Walmart 23:51 - TwoJsKicks Apparently Out At Urban Necessities 27:46 - JSM Customs Accused of Selling Fake Customs 39:03 - Tom Sachs Back at Nike 46:01 - James Whitner Gives Up Claim to $1.2 Mil 50:33 - Complex Interview 57:16 - Potential Adidas Deal 1:00:03 - Working With Multiple Brands 01:02:10 - Nike Relationship Over? 01:07:14 - Prosper Closing 01:08:27 - MJ and James Whitner 01:10:08 - Nike CEO Out 01:17:21 - Outro
In this week's episode of The Sneaker Dads Podcast, Teko and McFlei recap the excitement from the Black Footwear Forum in Detroit, which took place over the weekend. From empowering discussions with Black female leaders representing brands like Nike, Adidas, Reebok, and Puma, to insightful gems dropped by entrepreneurs in the sneaker space, the forum was a celebration of culture, innovation, and progress in the industry.The conversation continues with the latest sneaker news, including A Ma Maniere's Jordan 4, Trae Young potentially shopping for a new sneaker deal as his Adidas contract comes to an end, and the Air Max 1 Poly drop. They also highlight how Foamposites have been flowing strong throughout the year, and the return of Tom Sachs into the sneaker conversation.Lastly, Teko and McFlei dive into Dr. D'Wayne Edwards' new "Unos by Sz" sneaker, designed to grow with both children and adults, bringing innovation and style together in a unique way.Catch all this and much more on this week's Sneaker Dads Podcast!
Henny, Elaina & Janelle coming together to give you their personal thoughts and perspectives on how they've navigated the sneaker community, industry and culture. We are back again on the couch and it was a busy week in sneaker news ‼️
In this episode, we weigh in on the online debate surrounding Nike's new sneaker, the C1ty, and its resemblance to the Tom Sachs General Purpose Shoe. Is it a case of inspiration or outright imitation? We also discuss Fear of God Athletics going on sale and why the NFL should allow players to wear custom cleats. ============================= Make sure to subscribe to shoepodcast on YouTube: https://bit.ly/shoepodcastyoutube
Ian Ginoza has worked in sneakers for decades, playing a part in collaborative projects with the likes of Drake, Tom Sachs, Beyonce, Ye, Frank Ocean, and more. He started the Honolulu sneaker store Kicks HI, then did stints at Converse, Nike and Adidas. Now, he's the global vice president and creative director of pinnacle product at Vans. Ginoza has mostly worked in the background, opting to let his work speak for itself. Here, he tells the story of his life in the industry and how he ended up at Vans. Also, cohosts Joe La Puma, Brendan Dunne, and Matt Welty discuss Bode x Nike Astro Grabbers and try not to discuss the Air Max Dn. The episode is a monumental one, the 200th overall episode of the Complex Sneakers Show in all its forms. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Tremaine Emory is a designer and creative director famous for mixing fashion, art, visual storytelling, and social issues in his designs. Emory is the founder of the collective “No Vacancy Inn,” as well as the clothing label “Denim Tears,” which blends streetwear with high fashion. He's collaborated with brands like Ugg, Stüssy, Champion, Converse, ASICS, and Dior, bringing themes of activism and social justice into his work. Along with brands, Emory has collaborated with some of the most influential figures in art, music, and fashion, including André 3000, Frank Ocean, Kanye West, Virgil Abloh, and Tom Sachs. ------ Thank you to the sponsors that fuel our podcast and our team: LMNT Electrolytes https://drinklmnt.com/tetra ------ Squarespace https://squarespace.com/tetra ------ House of Macadamias https://www.houseofmacadamias.com/tetra
Tom Sachs is an esteemed New York artist that makes handcrafted mixed media sculptures that are provocative and whimsical. His Chanel chainsaw, oversized painting of Krusty The Clown, and elaborate recreations of NASA spacecraft are mesmerizing. You can find his work in the permanent collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Guggenheim and in venerable galleries across the globe. This week, we sit down to discuss the bizarre politics of the art world, his philosophy on dedication and successes, and ponder why it's so difficult to get quality ding repair for a surfboard. Have any comments, feedback or suggestions for upcoming guests? We'd love to hear from you. Email us at: theplugpodcast.jj@gmail.com https://www.theplugwithjustinjay.com/ https://justinjay.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
My conversation with Ellen ranges from Heavy Metal Knitting to Conceptual Art and Tom Sachs. Ellen is always ready to learn the next thing, from spinning steel wool to forging and welding, to complete the next project ans share what she learns to help new makers. Check out Ellen on Instagram and Youtube. Photo credit Mark Adams.
Everybody is so creative, but not everybody is so nice. Tom Sachs is an artworld darling with his own production studio, deals with Nike, and lots of servants who work for him in order to be close to the creative fire that burns bright within his darling-artworld-mind. Oh wait, not servants but staff. No, not staff, employees. Whatever you call them it doesn't matter because they don't matter. At least that's the story that comes out of studio. Tom Sachs is accused of underpaying and undervaluing his employees while at the same time being the poster-boy for liberal values and wokeness. The gossip that Tom isn't so nice hurt his deal with Nike (can anyone say Kanye?) and Tom decided he'd better speak up and address the criticism by way of offering a public apology. Tom's a creative genius, can he apologize his way back into the Met Gala?
This is Eric Golden and my guest today is Jessica Neer McDonald, an attorney focused on intellectual property rights and the head of global trademark services at Midjourney. The rise of NFTs and AI generated artwork has opened up all sorts of interesting questions about IP and ownership. Jess is my go-to knowledge base for this topic. In this episode, Jess takes us through the nuances of IP law and how it might apply in Web3. We discuss major NFT lawsuits like Yuga Labs, Hermes, and Nike, and the precedent they set in this transition from physical to digital property rights. Finally, we talk about AI art and its opportunities and unique challenges. Please enjoy my conversation with Jessica Neer. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here. ----- This episode is brought to you by OKX. You may have seen OKX on McLaren's Formula 1 race car or Manchester City's football kit. But what is OKX? OKX has over 730 spot trading pairs, 280 derivatives markets, and 1000 options markets. It processes 400,000 requests per second with 99.95% uptime. That's why over 20 million traders and institutions choose OKX when they want to trade. Visit okx.com to learn more. ----- Web3 Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Web3 Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @Web3Breakdowns | @ericgoldenx | @patrick_oshag Show Notes (00:01:44) - (First question) - How her transition from the traditional world to the digital one has shifted her thinking on IP and protections (00:03:21) - Overview of the MetaBirkins lawsuit during the peak of the NFT surge (00:06:14) - The Tom Sachs rockets and where the legal line is drawn for them versus MetaBirkins (00:09:01) - Differences between copyright and trademark law (00:09:37) - How using logos is fair use and not teetering on a lawsuit like Tom Sachs' rockets (00:13:21) - Overview on the Yuga Labs and Ryder Ripps trademark dispute (00:17:03) - Analyzing the nature of the court case and the precedent it set (00:20:45) - Whether or not it'd be possible to sue someone for making a brand out of your Bored Ape or a similar NFT (00:23:47) - The pros and cons of the different licensing options a project could choose (00:28:41) - Matt Furie's Pepe the Frog being memed and when he could take legal action (00:30:27) - The seventy years after death protection and IP becoming public domain (00:32:38) - Defense, patents, and being on to something when Nike tries to sue you (00:36:00) - Being the head of global trademark services for MidJourney and Tarantino's dream project that never took off (00:40:41) - AI generated art and the complex legal models behind them (00:43:28) - What she's excited to see unfold over the next six months and six years
In this episode, the boys talk about one of the best businesses in the world... INSURANCE and how you can buy kidnapping insurance? Also, did you know that Nike owns an animation studio? Neither did I! And much more! Enjoy! Watch the podcast on YOUTUBE! https://youtu.be/U4-xSRUql9o Follow us here! Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tmsproducti... TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@tmsproductions_ --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/tmspod/message
Anders Holm liked every sneaker you like now 20 years ago. The Workaholics co-creator talks here about his long footwear history—from getting an early pair of Air Jordan 6s as a kid to watching the Three Stripes Posse in high school to getting free Reeboks during his time in college. Holm waxes poetic on sneaker trends that have come and gone, and how he was there for it all. Sambas, Salomons, New Balances, Holm had them all. He even met Virgil Abloh in college, between getting caught up in an NCAA sneaker scandal. Elsewhere in the episode, the cohosts react to the Tom Sachs x Nike Mars Yard 3.0 rumor and the Nike SB Instagram account taking a shot at Private Selection. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Die wichtigsten Sneaker & Streetwear News und Releases der aktuellen Woche, alle First Looks, Leaks und Gerüchte, und ein Rückblick auf die Highlights der letzten 7 Tage - das bietet OH, NEWS!, der wöchentliche News-Podcast von OH, SCHUHEN!, Deutschlands erstem Sneaker- & Streetwear-Podcast! Powered by Stockx. Mehr Infos auf: https://linktr.ee/ohschuhenpodcast Diese Folge OH, NEWS! wird in freundlicher Zusammenarbeit präsentiert von: StockX
You read the title we gonna play ball in zoot suits and slippery earls. Shad sleepy and talking WILD and Davon don't know what to do. We talked about Khaled making an ass of himself, Adidas not knowing what to do with Yeezys, Tom Sachs being the ultimate nasty man, and more. We need some listener questions.
In this episode, I talk about Tom Sachs running an art gitmo, Jerry Lorenzo and adidas, and tell the story about how I got the scoop on the reseller who got 38 pairs of fake Jordan 1s from StockX and gave a deposition in the Nike vs StockX court case. Plus a lot more! Timestamps 00:00 - Action Bronson Cold Open 00:11 - Intro 01:05 - Limited Socks Restock 02:12 - On Feet 03:03 - Pickups 06:38 - Skips 09:30 - Misses 11:54 - StockX 38 Pairs Scoop 21:16 - Mac Attacks 23:10 - Joe Grondin Leaves New Balance 24:18 - adidas and Beyonce Split 24:46 - Kanye Watches 21 Jump Street 26:44 - Jerry Lorenzo is a Delicate Genius 31:34 - Tom Sachs is a Delicate Genius https://linktr.ee/sockjig
In this Conversation MIDWAY - between epis. 340 and 341 - I talk about the bonus episode for Patreons, featuring Blum-Weinberg-Keinholz-Rottweiler, as well as talk about the art services industry via the Worst Job Posting Ever Created, the Nan Goldin documentary, and Tom Sachs, among other related topics. If you would like to access Episode 340A, which features four great stories from Art Can Kill, you can support The Conversation on Patreon here: The Conversation Art Podcast | creating a podcast that goes behind the scenes of the art worlds | Patreon
Noah Becker speaks with Sivan Amar - a former employee of Tom Sachs, to find out more details on the controversy surrounding conditions at Sachs' studio. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/noah-becker4/support
The Complex Sneakers Podcast is co-hosted by Joe La Puma, Brendan Dunne, and Matt Welty. This week, the trio catches up on sneaker news around the Nike SB x Air Jordan 4 release, Tom Sachs' trouble and how it relates to Nike, and the latest on a batch of fake shoes from Nike's lawsuit against StockX. Also, the cohosts anticipate the upcoming Supreme x Rammellzee Dunks, reflect on Nike's release policies, and get into some glizzy talk. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Guess who back and in a bad mood! We rage about collab fatigue, laugh at Tom Sachs nasty boy ways, side eye the savages ripping their Sb 4s, and shit on Kicks Finder for being trashy.
JORDAN 4 SB, TOM SACHS, COMPLEX NOT PAYING, SNEAKER PICKUPS, UNBOXINGS, AND RELEASES. Thesneakdiss.comIG:@thesneakdissTwitter:@the_sneakdiss All pics are from GOAT, Stadium Goods, NBA Store, Undefeated, Bleacher report, sports grid, sports logos and sports Audio Player
Die wichtigsten Sneaker & Streetwear News und Releases der aktuellen Woche, alle First Looks, Leaks und Gerüchte, und ein Rückblick auf die letzten 7 Tage - das bietet OH, NEWS!, der wöchentliche News-Podcast von OH, SCHUHEN!, Deutschlands erstem Sneaker- & Streetwear-Podcast! Mehr Infos auf: https://linktr.ee/ohschuhenpodcast
Sabemos que nos extrañaron, pero ya estamos de vuelta. Esta semana les traemos muchos chismecitos; lo que pasó en el Super Bowl, la reta que se echaron Jorge Campos y Tom Sachs, Tony Delfino y su colab con las tres franjas y algunos otros. Y como ya es costumbre, también tenemos los lanzamientos destacados de la semana, así que… ¡No se lo pierdan! Recuerden que también nos pueden ver en YouTube: www.youtube.com/losdelostenis Siganos en nuestras redes sociales: Instagram: instagram.com/losdelostenis Facebook: Facebook.com/losdelostenis Twitch: www.twitch.com/losdelostenis Únete a la conversación en nuestra comunidad en DISCORD: https://discord.gg/9ctDBP4pbu #losdelostenis #losdelostenispodcast #Hablemosdetenis #SneakerPodcast #SneakerCulture #SneakerNews
As the year finally comes to an end, it's time for us to do the ultimate retrospective and look back on all of the notable sneaker releases. Instead of doing a singular “Top 10” list, we broke this out into a few different categories to declare the best and worst sneakers of 2022. In this episode, the four sub-categories we cover are: most over hyped, most slept on, most innovative, and best collaboration.Make sure to follow us on Instagram @shoepodcast and check us out online at shoepodcast.com. Subscribe to the show wherever you listen to podcasts.Music by JohnnyBgood.
"I met the founders Alan and Joshua who started NeueHouse in 2013. They are lovely gentlemen, and they called me aside and said, 'We'd love to get you involved in our coworking space that we are doing.' And we really curated an interesting community of people. And have had a lot of interesting people do talks, from Paul Smith to Salman Rushdie to Wu-Tang Clan, Tom Sachs, and Ariana Huffington. And I've hosted Prince William and Princess Kate. We've had some incredible people here and I love talking to people, and I love hosting these conversations. I did one last night with my dear friend Carlos Alomar, who was the musical director and long-time collaborator with David Bowie for 30 years. And I just love people's stories. So for me, it's inspirational. The one thing I like to do is to inspire people -not me - but if I can show them someone's life, it's a way for people to learn."Oberon Sinclair is the CEO and founder of the creative and branding agency, My Young Auntie. Since she founded the company in 1997, Oberon has collaborated with and managed an array of notable clients from the high luxury, art, fashion, food and lifestyle sectors, including Hermès, Vivienne Westwood, Fabergé, the Richemont Group, Jack Spade, ArtForum, Selfridges, Rizzoli Books, Island Records, David Lee Roth, among others. Oberon is known as the Queen of Kale for reviving an interest in the superfood across the world. She's a Founding Member of NeueHouse where she moderates talks.https://myyoungauntie.comwww.instagram.com/myyoungauntieprwww.neuehouse.comwww.creativeprocess.infowww.oneplanetpodcast.orgInstagram @creativeprocesspodcastPhoto: Oberon in conversation with artist and fashion designer Jason Wu at NeueHouse
Oberon Sinclair is the CEO and founder of the creative and branding agency, My Young Auntie. Since she founded the company in 1997, Oberon has collaborated with and managed an array of notable clients from the high luxury, art, fashion, food and lifestyle sectors, including Hermès, Vivienne Westwood, Fabergé, the Richemont Group, Jack Spade, ArtForum, Selfridges, Rizzoli Books, Island Records, David Lee Roth, among others. Oberon is known as the Queen of Kale for reviving an interest in the superfood across the world. She's a Founding Member of NeueHouse where she moderates talks."I met the founders Alan and Joshua who started NeueHouse in 2013. They are lovely gentlemen, and they called me aside and said, 'We'd love to get you involved in our coworking space that we are doing.' And we really curated an interesting community of people. And have had a lot of interesting people do talks, from Paul Smith to Salman Rushdie to Wu-Tang Clan, Tom Sachs, and Ariana Huffington. And I've hosted Prince William and Princess Kate. We've had some incredible people here and I love talking to people, and I love hosting these conversations. I did one last night with my dear friend Carlos Alomar, who was the musical director and long-time collaborator with David Bowie for 30 years. And I just love people's stories. So for me, it's inspirational. The one thing I like to do is to inspire people -not me - but if I can show them someone's life, it's a way for people to learn."https://myyoungauntie.comwww.instagram.com/myyoungauntieprwww.neuehouse.comwww.creativeprocess.infowww.oneplanetpodcast.orgInstagram @creativeprocesspodcast
Oberon Sinclair is the CEO and founder of the creative and branding agency, My Young Auntie. Since she founded the company in 1997, Oberon has collaborated with and managed an array of notable clients from the high luxury, art, fashion, food and lifestyle sectors, including Hermès, Vivienne Westwood, Fabergé, the Richemont Group, Jack Spade, ArtForum, Selfridges, Rizzoli Books, Island Records, David Lee Roth, among others. Oberon is known as the Queen of Kale for reviving an interest in the superfood across the world. She's a Founding Member of NeueHouse where she moderates talks."I met the founders Alan and Joshua who started NeueHouse in 2013. They are lovely gentlemen, and they called me aside and said, 'We'd love to get you involved in our coworking space that we are doing.' And we really curated an interesting community of people. And have had a lot of interesting people do talks, from Paul Smith to Salman Rushdie to Wu-Tang Clan, Tom Sachs, and Ariana Huffington. And I've hosted Prince William and Princess Kate. We've had some incredible people here and I love talking to people, and I love hosting these conversations. I did one last night with my dear friend Carlos Alomar, who was the musical director and long-time collaborator with David Bowie for 30 years. And I just love people's stories. So for me, it's inspirational. The one thing I like to do is to inspire people -not me - but if I can show them someone's life, it's a way for people to learn."https://myyoungauntie.comwww.instagram.com/myyoungauntieprwww.neuehouse.comwww.creativeprocess.infowww.oneplanetpodcast.orgInstagram @creativeprocesspodcast
"I met the founders Alan and Joshua who started NeueHouse in 2013. They are lovely gentlemen, and they called me aside and said, 'We'd love to get you involved in our coworking space that we are doing.' And we really curated an interesting community of people. And have had a lot of interesting people do talks, from Paul Smith to Salman Rushdie to Wu-Tang Clan, Tom Sachs, and Ariana Huffington. And I've hosted Prince William and Princess Kate. We've had some incredible people here and I love talking to people, and I love hosting these conversations. I did one last night with my dear friend Carlos Alomar, who was the musical director and long-time collaborator with David Bowie for 30 years. And I just love people's stories. So for me, it's inspirational. The one thing I like to do is to inspire people -not me - but if I can show them someone's life, it's a way for people to learn."Oberon Sinclair is the CEO and founder of the creative and branding agency, My Young Auntie. Since she founded the company in 1997, Oberon has collaborated with and managed an array of notable clients from the high luxury, art, fashion, food and lifestyle sectors, including Hermès, Vivienne Westwood, Fabergé, the Richemont Group, Jack Spade, ArtForum, Selfridges, Rizzoli Books, Island Records, David Lee Roth, among others. Oberon is known as the Queen of Kale for reviving an interest in the superfood across the world. She's a Founding Member of NeueHouse where she moderates talks.https://myyoungauntie.comwww.instagram.com/myyoungauntieprwww.neuehouse.comwww.creativeprocess.infowww.oneplanetpodcast.orgInstagram @creativeprocesspodcastPhoto: Oberon hosting friends Duran Duran at NeueHouse for their press day in 2021
The Complex Sneakers Podcast is co-hosted by Joe La Puma, Brendan Dunne, and Matt Welty. This week, they break down the release of the Tom Sachs x Nike GPS at Kohl's, whether or not the Nike Air Max Bliss looks like a New Balance 992, the closing of NikeLab 21 Mercer, and the StockX coupon code leak that people tried to abuse over the weekend. Also, Joe gets back from his Kith trip, Welty talks about signing with a brand, and Brendan talks about selling ukuleles.Looking for the Complex Sneakers Podcast Dad Hats? Shop on Complex Shop now!https://shop.complex.com/products/the-complex-sneakers-podcast-dad-hat-whitehttps://shop.complex.com/products/the-complex-sneakers-podcast-dad-hat-black Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
TOM SACHS KOHLS, SNKRS BREAKS RECORDS, JORDAN HOLIDAY LINEUP, JOE FRESHGOODS 993, KANYE WEST, NFL WEEK 5, PICKUPS AND RELEASES. IN STUDIO GUESTS – Ricco Machado-TorresIG:@Riccomachadotorres Thesneakdiss.comIG:@thesneakdissTwitter:@the_sneakdiss All pics are from GOAT, Stadium Goods, NBA Store, Undefeated, Bleacher report, sports grid, sports logos and sports
My guest this week is Pat Towersey, founder of Western Hydrodynamic Research. A California-based project fueled by a desire to merge surfing, functionality, and environmental responsibility.Pat and I discuss the brand's origins, his life growing up surfing, getting sponsored at age 12, the golden era of skate and surf culture, being the guy who does things, and how the artist Tom Sachs helped him get WHR off the ground.WHR**Sponsored by Standard & Strange – Get the facts on loopwheel
@Isellsneakersnotdreams & @tosneakerheads talk HBCU Dunks, Tom Sachs in Kohls stores, Hurricane Ian, Mc Donald's Adult Happy Meals, Celtics Scandal, AND MORE!
Esta semana salieron las Bad Bunny blue tint y el 66% del elenco de Demasia Grasa las tiene. Sin embargo, no todos los artistas están ganando. Anuel tiró sus Reebok y están muertas de la risa en las paredes de tu tienda favorita. Hablamos de los tenis aburridos de Tom Sachs y debatimos si los tenis nuevos de Travis Scott se merecen el hype. Grabado en GW Cinco Studio. Entra al Maceta Shop aquí Demasia' Grasa es un podcast compuesto por Exnier Benique, Giulianna Abreu y Fernando Vargas donde hablamos sobre lo último en el mundo de las tenis. Síguenos en las redes sociales: Demasia Grasa Giu Exnier Fernando
Back in a few weeks with a live recording, but still important to look back on some key topics and conversations from recent Props & Drops episodes including Mila Kunis, Mike Shinoda, Kevin Rose, Steve Aoki, Tom Sachs and Dillon Rosenblatt's approach to the NFT and collectible space and the origin of Kalish's “Mayor of France”. ---- “Draft Kings” by Fresco Trey - Listen to the full song here: https://frescotrey.lnk.to/draftkings ---- Follow Props & Drops on Twitter: https://twitter.com/PropsAndDrops Follow Matt: https://www.instagram.com/kalish/ Follow Gary: https://www.instagram.com/garyvee Check Out Reignmakers: https://marketplace.draftkings.com/
Carli y Pulpo hablan sobre los Supreme x Nike Shox Ride 2, la fecha nueva de release de los Bad Bunny x Adidas Forum "Blue Tint", Patta x Nike Air Max 1, dulces de Puerto Rico, los Tom Sachs x Nike General Purpose Shoe, Joe Freshgoods x Vans, review de Obi-Wan Kenobi, y más.
This week, Fabs and Josh take a look at some of the biggest stories to break over the past two weeks. This includes adidas suing Nike for trademark infringement, Kanye dragging adidas' CEO on Instagram because of the company's new adilette 22 slides, the Chicago 1 Remastered images that leaked, Salomon's new GORE-TEX-equipped XT-6, and much more. Listen to the episode and leave your thoughts and a review if you feel like it. Follow The Kickback on Instagram: https://instagram.com/kickback.pod Follow Fabs on Instagram: https://instagram.com/maisaipak Follow Josh on Instagram: https://instagram.com/jdkicks6
In this episode, I talk about recent releases, my thoughts on some upcoming drops, StockX defending their authentication program, Adidas suing Nike over patents, and bot instances issue. For the main topic I give an update on Zadeh Kicks and some analysis on why it was a Ponzi scheme (allegedly), why it collapsed, the effect it's had on resell, winners and losers, and finally some cold hard lessons learned from all this. Oh there's also socks. Fun show, thanks for listening! Timestamps 00:00 - Dr. Umar dunks in the cold open 00:14 - Intro 04:28 - Mr. Brightside Socks 07:08 - Sneaker Guy of the Week 08:28 - On Feet / Pickups / Skips / Misses 17:16 - Tom Sachs General Purpose Shoe 23:37 - Upcoming Releases 32:27 - News: StockX, Adidas Sues Nike, Bot Instances 40:18 - Zadeh Kicks update 61:46 - Outro
Carli y Pulpo hablan sobre los Salehe Bembury x Crocs Pollex, los Bad Bunny x Adidas Forum nuevos vistos en un juego de los Cangrejeros, artistas nuevos de Puerto Rico, los Kasina x Nike Air Max 1, los Tom Sachs x Nike GPS, Obi-Wan Kenobi, y más.
Gas up this week's incredible sponsors by heading to the following links: FAST GROWING TREES - www.fastgrowingtrees.com/clubcool (15% off entire order) RITUAL - www.ritual.com/clubcool (10% off your first three months) VIZZY HARD SELTZER - www.vizzyhardseltzer.com/washed From Washed Media and the Sunday Scaries podcast, Will DeFries joins me on the episode for a great conversation. We cover the following main topics, plus a whole lot more: - Aimé Leon Dore just opened a gorgeous new store in London. We talk about the shop's aesthetic and then revisit our experiences in ALD's other locations. - Kourtney Kardashian and Travis Barker get married. When you get married in your 40s, you're allowed to have a themed wedding. What would our themes be? - Tom Sachs x NikeCraft "General Purpose Shoe" releases next week. How do we feel about the marketing? What about the fact that the shoe is being made to seem democratic but will inevitably resale for thousands? Support the podcast directly by following us on Instagram at www.instagram.com/clubcoolpod and joining our Patreon at www.patreon.com/clubcool.
The Complex Sneakers Podcast is co-hosted by Joe La Puma, Brendan Dunne, and Matt Welty. This week, the three unpack the saga of Zadeh Kicks, the Oregon-based sneaker reseller who's been accused of scamming customers out of millions after shutting his business down. They also discuss the upcoming Tom Sachs x NikeCraft General Purpose Shoe, the Louis Vuitton x Nike Air Force 1 collection, and a long-awaited dinner that finally came to fruition. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Tom Sachs and the Trans-Dimensional Rocket Factory
Van's channel has been my favorite thing on YouTube ever since its launch, which my friends can attest to as I've forced all of them to watch his content. Bert Kreisher is quoted as saying there's no one like Van in the world, and compared his level of genius to the likes of Dave Chapelle. It's hard to put Van Neistat in a box. He is what happens when poetry, philosophy, filmmaking, and craftsmanship intersect. Given the choice between a fully pimped out MacBook pro and a typewriter, he chooses the typewriter every time. He's a “repair it” instead of “replace it” sorta guy, and his hand made approach to life leaks into everything he does. He and his brother, Casey, wrote, directed, and starred in the HBO show, The Neistat Brothers. They started vlogging before vlogging was a thing. After their tv show, Casey and Van took separate paths. Casey went on to pioneer vlogging as we know it today YouTube, and Van continued to build his filmmaking career working on projects with the illustrious contemporary artist Tom Sachs. He also directed a feature film, and has worked on many other notable projects. One year ago, Van pulled back the curtain on his otherwise mostly private life, and launched his own YouTube channel, The Spirited Man. Casey introduced Van as his favorite YouTuber as Van does not watch YouTube, making his work one of a kind and original. Van has since gained millions of views, and coined a filmmaking style he calls the industrial essay film. His videos feel custom, explore a wide variety of profound life lessons, and have a way of unlocking the spiritedness most of us lose when we grow up.
What you'll learn in this episode: The difference between art jewelry and jewelry by artists Why more collectors and jewelry enthusiasts are starting to appreciate artist jewelry How Elisabetta helps visual artists bring their first pieces of jewelry to life Why artist jewelry is a smart investment About Elisabetta Cipriani Elisabetta Cipriani invites world leading contemporary artists to create aesthetically innovative and socially relevant wearable art projects. Since the opening of her namesake gallery in 2009, Elisabetta's pioneering vision has redefined the boundaries between jewelry and fine art, capturing the imaginations of artists and collectors across the globe. The gallery has collaborated with over 50 critically acclaimed painters and sculptors, including Ai Weiwei, Chiharu Shiota, Giulio Paolini, Ilya & Emilia Kabakov, Carlos Cruz-Diez, Enrico Castellani, Erwin Wurm, Giorgio Vigna, Jannis Kounellis, Rebecca Horn, and Pedro Cabrita Reis, to name a few. The gallery's projects can be found in museums and private collections across the globe, including Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Paris; Museum of Art and Design, New York; World Jewelry Museum, Seoul; and The State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg. A number of Elisabetta Cipriani's jewelry collaborations are featured in From Picasso to Koons: The Artist as Jeweler, the international touring exhibition of artist jewelry curated by Diane Venet. Elisabetta Cipriani participates in leading art and design fairs, including Design Miami and Design Basel, TEFAF Maastricht, Artissima Turin, MiArt Milan, PAD London, and PAD Monaco. Additional Resources: Instagram Website Photos: Available on TheJewelryJourney.com Transcript: For a long time, jewelry created by visual artists was considered lesser than artwork made in the medium the artist was known for (compare the price of Man Ray jewelry to the price of Man Ray photographs, for example). But in recent years, both jewelry and art collectors have realized the significance of artist jewelry, due in no small part to Elisabetta Cipriani. Through her gallery, Elisabetta Cipriani Wearable Art, Elisabetta collaborates with leading visual artists to create limited edition artist-made jewels. She joined the Jewelry Journey Podcast to talk about what inspired her to combine fine art and jewelry; the process she uses to work with artists; and why jewels by artists should be a part of any jewelry lover's collection. Read the episode transcript here. Sharon: Hello, everyone. Welcome to the Jewelry Journey Podcast. Here at the Jewelry Journey, we're about all things jewelry. With that in mind, I wanted to let you know about an upcoming jewelry conference, which is “Beyond Boundaries: Jewelry of the Americas.” It's sponsored by the Association for the Study of Jewelry and Related Arts, or, as it's otherwise known, ASJRA. The conference takes place virtually on Saturday and Sunday May 21 and May 22, which is around the corner. For details on the program and the speakers, go to www.jewelryconference.com. Non-members are welcome. I have to say that I attended this conference in person for several years, and it's one of my favorite conferences. It's a real treat to be able to sit in your pajamas or in comfies in your living room and listen to some extraordinary speakers. So, check it out. Register at www.jewelryconference.com. See you there. This is a two-part Jewelry Journey podcast. Please make sure you subscribe so you can hear part two as soon as it comes out later this week. Today, my guest is Elisabetta Cipriani, founder and owner of the gallery Elisabetta Cipriani Wearable Art, a gallery of limited-edition jewels created by artists. The gallery has collaborated with more than 50 well-known painters and sculptors since its opening in 2009. We'll hear more about Elisabetta's jewelry journey today. Elisabetta, welcome to the program. Elisabetta: Hello, Sharon. Thank you for having me. Sharon: So glad to have you. Tell us about your jewelry journey. Did you study jewelry as a young girl? Did you like glittery things? Tell us about that. Elisabetta: Basically, I didn't study jewelry when I was in university. I never studied jewelry; I only had a big passion for traditional jewelry. I'm Italian. I come from Rome, and there is this Italian tradition of having beautiful jewelry. Especially in the 80s, women were going out with parures, with the necklaces and bracelets. They were taken out from the safe for special occasions. I have memories of me as a young girl on my mother's bed with her jewelry on the bed, dressing up for various events and weddings. I was touching them and looking at them from the back and the front, and I was trying them on and asking her all the time, “Please, can I have this when I'm older?” I was playing with them while she was selecting the right piece for the right event. For me, when she went out, it was the best moment. It wasn't like playing with a doll. It was like, “Oh my god, beautiful jewelry. I can have a look at them again.” I've always had this passion. I have a background in jewelry in terms of how to make a jewel. I didn't study the history of jewelry. Of course, now I know about it because I read and studied a little bit. I'm not an expert; I know what I'm talking about, but I never had the occasion to study in depth in university, for example. When I finished school, I wanted to study jewelry, to create jewelry, and my father said, “There's no way you can do that. You need to do a proper degree.” I took a gap year, and I remember that I did an evening course on pearls and diamonds. It was really advanced, and I didn't understand much of it, but I ended up doing history of arts, which is now all connected. After university, I worked in a museum of contemporary art in Rome called MACRO. It's a state museum for contemporary art in Rome. I worked there for three years as co-curator. I had the best experience of my life because I met the most important artists the museum was inviting to have their exhibitions there. How old was I? I was 23 years old, and for me, it was natural to talk to a famous visual artist like Tom Wesselmann, who passed away, or Cecily Brown, Vik Muniz, Tony Cragg. For me, it was natural to have a conversation with them and go to their artists' studio with the director of the museum to select the artworks for the exhibition. I learned how to move in the world of art with the artists. I was really comfortable being with them, but deep in my heart, I always had this love for jewelry. I was wearing jewelry from my mother and grandmother that they were giving to me as gifts. I always kept it as a passion. I moved to London in 2005, and I worked for an art gallery. I left Rome because I wanted to grow and be independent and learn the art market, how you sell an art piece, rather than being a curator. Then I learned about jewelry by Picasso and Man Ray, and I thought it was an interesting topic to follow and learn about. Then there was Louisa Guinness. I used to work for the husband of Louisa Guinness, Ben Brown. At that time, I think it was two years since she had started her business, and she had one kid after another. She asked me to bring the cabinet of jewelry to the art fairs, so I was bringing this cabinet with Picasso jewelry and Kapoor jewelry. It was 17 years ago. I remember there was an interest in artist jewelry, but not as much as today. I was selling the pieces. People were seeing them more as jewelry back then, sculptures by artists. It's weird how things have changed. The perception is that what you are buying or owning is not a jewel, but it's an art piece you can wear by a visual artist. I worked for Ben Brown for three years, and then I got married. When I was pregnant, I said, “That's it. I'm not going to continue working for the gallery. I want to work independently. I'm going to open my own business.” I started an artist jewelry gallery. I invited the artists I met at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Rome and asked them to work with me. At the beginning, they were very supportive. Most of them said yes. One didn't say yes, but I'm still in touch and asking him if he would like to do a project with me. I've been waiting 12 years and he hasn't come back to me yet. He didn't say no. They say they are busy with their art works, with their museum shows. An artist needs to be free mentally and needs the time to sit down and work small. You might think it's straightforward for an artist to do a wearable art piece, but it's not something they typically do. My first collaboration was with Tatsuo Miyajima, a Japanese artist. He works with LED. He's a very established sculptor from Japan. Sharon: What is his name? I'm not familiar with him. Elisabetta: Tatsuo Miyajima. If you want, I can send you his email. Sharon: That would be great. So, he's very established. What was his reaction when you talked with him? Elisabetta: This was in 2009. He was surprised at the time that someone would propose something so unusual. He had never done a jewel, so it was also a challenge for him, and he agreed. He sent me an LED from Japan. Basically, it's a digit with numbers that count from one to nine or nine to one. I have it here. It represents the continuation of life in Buddhism. It's never zero. This LED has been mounted inside a ring with three colors: rose gold, white gold and yellow gold. It's a very complicated ring to put together. When you close the ring, the ring turns on and you see this LED that counts from one to nine. Whoever buys the ring can choose the counting speed, from one second to five minutes, because you decide how long you want your life to move on. Actually, a museum purchased this piece for the museum collection. The museum is called the Slager Museum in Hertogenbosch. They did a beautiful exhibit called “Private Passion” many, many years ago, and they bought the Miyajima ring and a few other pieces. It was my first museum purchase. Sharon: How exciting. Elisabetta: It was very exciting. My first project was with Tatsuo Miyajima, then Atelier Van Lieshout, then Tom Sachs. I only had three pieces, and the museum contacted me to go to Holland and bring this jewelry, these small pieces to show them. I was very pleased with it. Sharon: Wow! You're just starting your own business. Elisabetta: When I look back to how I started and with the resources I had, it's incredible what I've done in the past 12 years. I should say to myself more often that I should be proud of myself. Normally I don't say those things. I always move forward, and I never stop and say, “Well done, Elisabetta.” Sometimes I need to stop and say it. I'm inside my husband's gallery, Sprovieri. We are in Mayfair. When I started in 2009, my husband only had a piece of the gallery. Ten years ago, he expanded and got another space which is linked to this one. When I started, he gave me a shelf from his library. So, I had this shelf and then he said, “O.K., you can take this space.” It was a shelf like this. I think it was light blue or grey blue; I don't remember which color. I put my three little jewels on it. So, I had this shelf with these three jewels, and I remember Diane Venet, the most important artist jewelry collector in the world, coming to visit me to see my new projects. I was young; everything was new. She bought the Miyajima ring and the Atelier Van Lieshout piece. That's how I started from my little shelf. Then I took a small space from the gallery. In 2019, when I celebrated the 10-year anniversary of my business, I took this space here, which is very nice. It's always inside my husband's gallery, where he sells art. It's very nice, because when people come to see the exhibition of an artist, then they come here and discover the most intimate aspect of an artist, which is a jewel. Sharon: How did Diane Venet know that you even existed there? Were you advertising? How did she find out about you if you only had three pieces? Elisabetta: When I was working from Ben Brown and bringing this jewelry to the fairs, I spoke to her a few times. I went to see her exhibitions because I was starting to become passionate about artist jewelry. That's how I learned about artist jewelry. So, I went to her. I think her first exhibition was in—I don't remember the city in France where she first showed her collection, but she brought this exhibition to the MAD in New York. I kept in touch with her, and she came to visit me. After a few years, when she opened her exhibition at the Museum of Arts and Design in New York, she invited me to talk with her and Didier and Marc Vendome in this huge stadium about my projects. In any case, I continued inviting artists to work exclusively for me worldwide. I had a very successful project with Giuseppe Pennone; he's an artist from the arte povera movement. He created this beautiful necklace called “Feuille,” which means leaf, made in bronze and pure gold. The necklace is basically bronze where it's rolled into a leaf, and the artist's hand is imprinted on the leaf because his work is about the connection between nature and the person and the human. It was a very successful piece, and I brought it to my first fair in Paris. The fair was in 2011 or 2012. It was my first fair. At the fairs, there's always a prize for the best piece in the fair or the best designer. At that fair, there was a prize for the best piece. I was not even thinking about the prize. For me, I was like, “Oh my god, it's my first fair. How do I do this?” I was panicking. Then all of a sudden, the director of the fair came to my booth and said, “Congratulations, you've won the prize.” I'm like, “Which prize?” I won the prize for the best piece in the fair with the Feuille necklace. The prize was basically that the Museum of Decorative Arts in Paris would purchase the best object of the fair and put it in the collection of the museum. Sharon: That's a high bar to pass. You surpassed it. Elisabetta: Exactly. There were dealers there who had 40 years of experience. I had just arrived in their world. That piece sold out in less than six months, which is quite unusual for an artist jewel, especially back then. Now, things are quicker. I remember when I started, I had an inquiry once a month. Now, I've got 10 inquiries a day for prices from people all around the world. I don't know how they know about me because I'm so niche in field. I think this is the power of the virtual world, that people browse online and discover. Maybe it's actually thanks to Diane Venet, because she's bringing her collection around the world and people are even more knowledgeable about the subject matter. They might see pieces that come from me, so maybe it's because they've seen it in Diane's exhibition.
The artist's Rocket Factory project, which lets users build and own their own virtual spacecraft, is changing how we think about reality.
Van Neistat is an artist, a filmmaker, a writer and now a YouTube Creator. Van's artistic career started when he began working with NYC contemporary artist, Tom Sachs. He and his brother Casey both worked for Sachs and soon after started creating films together that went viral before the term Viral even existed. They then developed a series of short films that they turned into a TV show that ended up getting picked up by HBO. When HBO didn't renew the series, Casey and Van split up, Casey turned to YouTube to start uploading videos and Van wanted to continue down the path of being a traditional filmmaker. Years later, Van has now turned to YouTube to distribute his work and launched a kickstarter which raised over $120,000 and helped bring his series, The Spirited Man, to life.
The Complex Sneakers Podcast is co-hosted by Joe La Puma, Brendan Dunne, and Matt Welty. This week, they reminisce on viral sneaker moments, trends, and memes from "What Are Those?" to the Chef Currys and Air Monarchs. The co-hosts break down moments like the "Damn Daniel" Vine video and John Geiger's infamous 'Red October' Nike Air Yeezy 2 stunt, feeling out how they've aged years later. Also, Brendan is forced to pick between Tom Sachs and Tinker Hatfield, and Welty (kinda) gets a shoutout from Jack Harlow. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This week, we're taking Props & Drops to the road, recording from a Yacht docked in Miami Beach, FL during Art Basel. Tom Sachs joins the show - talking about the connection between physical and digital art, launching rockets, and what Tom looks for in art projects. Gary, Herm and Kalish debate the best hot dog toppings and Kalish claims his place as the mayor of France. This is an ALL TIME episode. ---- JOIN THE FREE TO PLAY LISTENER CONTEST: https://dkng.co/PropsAndDrops ---- Follow Matt: https://www.instagram.com/kalish/ Follow Gary: https://www.instagram.com/garyvee
On this episode of Next with Novo, I sit down with Tom Sachs, native New Yorker, artist, & NFT newbie. For those not familiar, Tom is on a mission to revolutionize the art industry by creating his version of “outer space” and challenging our perception of reality. His “Space Program” exhibition first reimagined the moon landing at the Gagosian Gallery in LA, then took on colonization of Mars at the Park Avenue Armory in NYC. Tom also has an ongoing partnership with Nike, where he designed high-performing, space-themed equipment. In this episode, Tom tells us all about his next project – his first entry into the NFT space – called Rocket Factory, which will consist of 3,000 unique, digital rocket components that can be combined to form 1,000 completed rockets. If desired, those with completed rockets can choose to have a physical rocket created and actually launched towards the atmosphere. As an out-of-the-box thinker, Tom explains how he's taking his creative expertise into NFTs, as well as growing & developing the NFT space in the process. This is definitely an episode you won't want to miss – be sure to tune in to learn more. Make sure to subscribe to my YouTube and Apple Podcasts channels so you don't miss out on future episodes, and follow me: Twitter: https://twitter.com/novogratz YouTube: www.youtube.com/c/mikenovo/ Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3sdPneD Next with Novo is the go-to resource for what's new and what's next. In this series, Mike Novogratz, influential investor, Wall Street Veteran, and CEO at Galaxy Digital, invites viewers to learn with him from the brightest minds behind disruptive businesses, prolific social movements, and technologies powering permissionless innovation. This podcast was recorded on July 20, 2021. The Next with Novo podcast is for informational purposes only. Nothing in this podcast constitutes an offer to buy or sell, or a solicitation of an offer to buy or sell, any securities. The information in the podcast does not constitute investment, legal, or tax advice. The host is an affiliate of Galaxy Digital (host and Galaxy Digital together, the “Parties”), and the podcast represents the opinions of the host and/or guest and not necessarily that of Galaxy Digital. The Parties do not make any representation or warranty, express or implied, as to the accuracy or completeness of any of the information therein. Each of the Parties expressly disclaims any and all liability relating to or resulting from the use of this information. Certain information in the podcast may have been obtained from published and non-published sources and has not been independently verified. The Parties may buy, sell or hold investments in some of the companies, digital assets or protocols discussed in this podcast. Except where otherwise indicated, the information in this video is based on matters as they exist as of the date of preparation and will not be updated.