#id magazine 2001
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studio-p · 7 months ago
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i-D Magazine n. 207, THE RENAISSANCE ISSUE, March 2001
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zegalba · 2 years ago
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The Sisterhood for i-D Magazine (2001) Photography: Anette Aurell
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teenagedirtstache · 14 days ago
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d10r · 1 year ago
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Corinne Day for i-D Magazine
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booksinantwerp · 10 months ago
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Viktor&Rolf by Viktor Horsting & Rolf Snoeren for i-D Magazine march 2001 with Stella Tennant as model photographed by Richard Burbridge & styled by Edward Enninful follow on Instagram for more
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aaliyahunleashed · 1 year ago
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Aaliyah on the cover of ID Magazine \\ The Bedroom Issue No. 213 \\ September 2001
Photo content from Aaliyah.PL
Photography by @mattjonesphotography_
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k00320502 · 23 days ago
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Zine Making Workshop - layer 1
14/10 I attended day 1 of the Zine Making Workshop. I hadn't used this space a lot since we started in september but I was super interested in all the different Machines!
We used the Risograph machine to print our images onto the paper. All the ink used is oil based so we had to be careful to let everything dry before folding into zines.
We worked in layers using tracing paper - layer 1 was printed in this dark blue colour and layer 2 in a bright pink
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I was really drawn to the idea of making more of a collage rather than a drawing - I hadn't really looked yet at magazines or books as a source but was excited to do so.
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Here was the initial idea for the first layer. Again I focused more on collage rather than drawing. I sort of wanted to highlight different things that go on in a public bathroom - Gossip, Sex, Drugs, Relaxation. I didn't want to go too over the top with this because I'm not sure how comfortable I feel tackling these ideas yet.
The panel on the right here might be my favourite. Although it didn't show up very well after being printed the originally collage I think can be read in many ways. To me the phrase "Don't come after me..." could have either an innocent or sinister meaning - is this woman looking forward to a peaceful evening in the bath? Or is she afraid entering the bathroom will harm her?
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Here I practiced ideas for the 2nd layer by doodling onto a copy of the 1st. I developed these a bit further the next day.
The text used for the zine comes from an article in ID Magazine, from the 2001 "The Bathroom" issue.
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littlemuoi · 1 year ago
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Every Important Tags I Use (to keep things organised and give my goldfish brain a break)
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The Earl and Countess of Wessex, hand in hand, attend the 2001 Easter Service 📸 by David Hartley / Shutterstock
#royal otp - Cute moments of Prince Edward and Sophie
#royal foreword - Archives on royal forewords written by Prince Edward and Sophie
#royal article - Archives on royal magazine articles (mostly Ed & Soph's)
+ #hello! magazine series
#hello! article: 2023
#hello! article: 2022
#hello! article: 2021
#hello! article: 2020
#hello! article: 2019
#hello! article: 1999
+ #the lady magazine series
+ #nz woman's weekly series
#royal anecdote - Archives on royal anecdotes from books or news articles (mostly Ed & Soph's)
#royal photograph - Archives on royal photos
#royal painting - Archives on royal paintings
#funky ties series - Where I store my tie-ID posts
#my royal fashion id series - Where I store my fashion-ID posts
#my edinburgh instagram archive: 2023 - Archives on The Royal Family's IG stories that related to Prince Edward and Sophie in 2023
#my royal archive list - Archives on other things related to Prince Edward and Sophie
#the edinburghs cut - Prince Edward and Sophie's appearances in documentaries, etc.
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darkskintaeheckard · 2 years ago
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ID magazine Aaliyah 2001
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studio-p · 3 months ago
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i-D Magazine n. 206, THE INSPIRATION ISSUE, February 2001
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zegalba · 1 year ago
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Miu Miu for i-D Magazine (2001)
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teenagedirtstache · 14 days ago
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mygirlhatesmyheroin · 2 years ago
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tagged by @guywiththeroses thx these r so fun<3^_^
Star sign?
- Taurus (my bday is exactly one month from today :3)
Last thing you listened to?
- thing? my cat meowing because he can't catch a fly
How tall are you?
- I'm 5'5". I was thinking earlier about how annoyed I am by the fact that my ID says I'm 5'3" when I'm two inches taller lol
Piercings?
- When I was a child I got my ears pierced but they got infected a week later and I never got them re-pierced, or anything else pierced for that matter. But I wanted to get my ears re-pierced & my nose pierced for my birthday
Tattoos?
- I don't have any & I want some but at the same time I'm scared that I'll end up regretting it & then be stuck with a tattoo I don't like
Glasses?
- I do have glasses but I wear contacts (most of the time I wear neither though and just walk around blindly)
Last drink?
- Water
Last thing you ate?
- a turkey sandwich lol
Pets?
- I have three cats (two boys & one girl)
Do you have a crush on anyone?
- No
Fave fictional characters?
- Alfred Nyssen from the TV series Babylon Berlin. I have never related to a character sooo much. He acts identical to the way that I do but just a wealthier version lol... I wish he was a real person b/c I would marry him irl. Another character in Babylon Berlin that is my fave is Greta Overbeck, I really relate to her too, especially her loneliness. I love Christopher Moltisanti from The Sopranos too.
A movie you think everyone should watch?
- I can't just choose ONE.... my picks are Nosferatu (1922), The Hands of Orlac (1924), Black Orpheus (1959), The Panic in Needle Park (1971), The Tenant (1976), Christiane F. (1981), Kids (1995), Gia (1998), and Bully (2001).
A book you think everyone should read?
- The Panic in Needle Park by James Mills, 1966. The film of the same name is based on this book, and I love the film but feel like the book is better in some aspects, despite the fact that it's written in a journalistic tone (it was originally an article published in LIFE Magazine in February 1965)
I tag anyone else who wants to do this 🤭
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booksinantwerp · 1 year ago
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Tom Ford by Terry Richardson, 2001 follow on Instagram for more
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wespeakglobal · 2 years ago
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(via Paula Zahn | Investigative Journalist | Celebrity TV Host)
A 30-year news veteran, journalist Paula Zahn is executive producer and host of Discovery ID`s On the Case with Paula Zahn. Paula is also the co-host of Sunday Arts, a weekly television magazine for news covering the arts in New York City.
She also hosted the highly acclaimed two hour documentary for PBS called The Retirement Revolution, taking a look at the consequences of mass retirement by Baby Boomers, which premiered in the Spring of 2008.
Before joining Discovery, she spent six years at CNN where she anchored American Morning and Paula Zahn Now. Zahn joined the network in September 2001. On her first day with CNN, Zahn began continuous on-scene coverage of the September 11th terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center towers in New York.
In the course of that reporting, she interviewed rescue workers, survivors, dignitaries and officials, including Jordanian President King Abdullah, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, Secretary of State Colin Powell and N.Y. Gov. George Pataki, just to name a few.
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frontproofmedia · 1 month ago
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20 Years Ago - Felix Trinidad vs. Ricardo Mayorga: Trinidad's Grand Finale
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By Hector Franco
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Published: October 02, 2024
"Jim, I've never known an athlete who admitted as plainly as Tito that he absolutely loved the cheers of the crowd."  -- Larry Merchant
The sound of congas in rhythm grew louder as it permeated throughout Madison Square Garden. Slowly, the congas were joined by a trumpet, a trombone, a piano, and finally a voice. As Puerto Rico's Felix "Tito" Trinidad made his way through the tunnel of the world's most famous arena, with each step, the music began to drown to the sound of a crowd. A crowd of over 17,000 fans awaited the return of their hero. When he finally stepped on the arena's floor, the legendary fighter looked up at the crowd surrounding him, and a smile grew across his face. Trinidad basked at the roar of the Madison Square Garden audience, a majority of which were fans from his island nation, Puerto Rico. The cheers invigorated him as he pounded his chest toward the ring, ready to go to war. He had finally returned to what he loved. And the fans loved him back—the quintessential relationship between warrior and fanatic. 
After two years and 143 days since his last battle inside the ring, three-division world champion Felix Trinidad ended his retirement against former welterweight champion Ricardo "El Matador" Mayorga. He would return on October 02, 2004, at Madison Square Garden in New York City in what turned out to be his swan song, his last great showing. A reminder of what would eventually induct him into the Boxing Hall of Fame. His Grand Finale. 
BACKGROUND AND EARLY RETIREMENT
What led to Trinidad's retirement took place three years earlier, in September 2001. In the finals of Don King's middleweight tournament, Trinidad suffered the first loss of his career at the hands of longtime middleweight champion Bernard Hopkins. At the time of the fight, Trinidad was rated as one of the best fighters in the world pound-for-pound and entered as the favorite with recent stoppage victories over Fernando Vargas and William Joppy. During the press tour for the fight against Hopkins, the stakes were raised for Trinidad when his opponent, in the ultimate sign of disrespect, grabbed the Puerto Rican flag out of his hands and threw it on the ground.
The mental dynamics changed from merely being a boxing match to a must-win situation for Trinidad. Dealing with the skill of Hopkins' was already a mountain to climb, but adding on the mental warfare of his opponent, the rescheduling of the fight due to the events of September 11 was a hurdle a veteran like Trinidad couldn't overcome. Even so, Hopkins fought a perfect fight, executing a masterful game plan from beginning to end, stopping Trinidad in the 12th round. 
"All that was riding Trinidad's back was too much pressure for one man," Hopkins recalled to Ring Magazine. "To have to fight for his country, to fight for his family, to fight for what I've done to his flag, and then 9/11. It takes a special person…it takes a special performance to be able to execute like The Executioner did. That was a perfect, perfect fight."
Following the loss to Hopkins, Trinidad fought in his native Puerto Rico in May 2002, stopping Frenchman Hacine Cherifi in four rounds. A few months later, Trinidad decided to retire at the age of 29. The decision was due to frustration from an inability to secure rematches with Hopkins and former rival Oscar De La Hoya. The three-division champion viewed fights with De La Hoya and Hopkins as the only ones that could add to his legacy. Trinidad wasn't interested in pursuing other fights when they didn't come together.
"After carefully evaluating all present factors and listening to the recommendation of his father, manager, and trainer, he has decided to retire as a professional boxer," said Trinidad's then-lawyer Nicolas Medina to the Los Angeles Times. The only fights remaining would not add anything to his career but would cause great risk to his health."
The announcement stunned fans especially those in Puerto Rico. Despite the loss to Hopkins and already amassing enough credentials to be considered one of the island's greatest fighters, Trinidad was still relatively close to his peak. He retired as the longest reigning welterweight champion in history with 15 title defenses, a former unified champion at welterweight and junior middleweight, and a former middleweight titleholder, all before the age of 30. 
In spite of Trinidad's insistence that his retirement be permanent, the itch grew too strong for him to resist. After missing all of 2003, in the summer of 2004, Trinidad announced his return against the braggadocious former WBC welterweight champion Ricardo Mayorga.
Breaking onto the world boxing scene in 2003, Mayorga scored huge multiple upsets over Vernon Forrest, stopping him in three rounds and winning a decision in a rematch. Mayorga was known for his brazen attitude, his blatant disregard for his opponents, his smoking cigarettes, his unorthodox style, and most importantly, his punching power. When Mayorga took an opponent seriously, he was a dangerous opponent for any fighter but had the tendency to underestimate some of his foes. In December 2003, in a unification welterweight bout with Cory Spinks, he lost a majority decision, almost derailing the momentum he had garnered with wins over Forrest. After fighting Eric Mitchell in a catchweight junior middleweight bout, Mayorga was set to face Trinidad at middleweight. 
PROMOTION
The promotion for Trinidad-Mayorga became the blueprint the Nicaraguan would follow for his PPV fights in the future. Mayorga predicted a knockout of Trinidad in various rounds and vowed to put the returning champion permanently into retirement. He wasn't quite as disrespectful with Trinidad as he later would be against Oscar De La Hoya or Fernando Vargas, but Mayorga did his best to get under Trinidad's skin. Mayorga even stated that he would test Trinidad's power and stick out his chin to be hit, similar to what he did against Forrest. 
"If he puts his chin there and I can hit it, let's see if he really can resist my punches," Trinidad said during the press tour to Ring Magazine. "I bring big power in my hands, and I will be ready to take him out."
The fight was shown on HBO Pay-Per-View, and the fight's primary promoter, Don King, expressed his unhappiness in dealing with the network. The legendary promoter felt the promotion for Trinidad-Mayorga was rushed and not given the same amount of priority as other recent PPVs, such as Oscar De La Hoya's bout with Bernard Hopkins, which occurred a few weeks earlier. 
"They gave Bob Arum six months to promote Oscar De La Hoya vs. Bernard Hopkins, and they gave me six days to promote Trinidad vs. Mayorga—the fight of the year," stated Don King. "HBO Pay-Per-View was short-sighted in giving De La Hoya vs. Hopkins the big push and subsequently short-changed their subscribers by not adequately promoting Trinidad vs. Mayorga. I think they took this action because I was involved in the fight.  I feel like a homeless promoter."
Regardless of King's issues with the promotion, Trinidad's fifth fight at Madison Square Garden brought 4.65 million at the live gate- the third largest gate in Madison Square Garden history at the time - garnered over 400,000 PPV buys and brought in over 17,000 fans to the arena. 
"If the question is did absence make the hearts of boxing fans grow fonder, the answer is a noisily resounding yes!"  -- Jim Lampley
THE FIGHT
Trinidad's (41-1, 34 KOs) decision to return to the sweet science was largely predicated on him missing the cheers from the crowd. There was no feeling that could match it or replace it. To this day, the pure mania Trinidad's fights attracted at Madison Square Garden have remained unmatched, with few coming close as competition. 
"When it comes to the view of the fans in the island of Puerto Rico, Tito Trinidad was certainly their hero," recalled longtime veteran boxing writer and founder of Latin Box Sports Damon Gonzalez. "I remember being a young writer, being ringside covering a few of Tito's fights and there was such a high level of passion. Every time Tito stepped in the ring, the passion showed in him, his dad, their team, the crowd, There was just a different level."
From Trinidad's entrance, the faceoff in the center of the ring, the moments right before the sound of the first round, the MSG crowd was in hysteria. The crowd was euphoric at seeing Trinidad back in the ring. The arena was at a fervor pitch when the bell rang to start the fight. 
Mayorga (26-4-1, 22 KOs) mostly dominated the first round. There were moments when the Puerto Rican superstar looked old in the opening stanza as Mayorga's volume looked overwhelming. That was until Mayorga allowed Trinidad to punch him with his left hook in the form of bravado. After this moment, which briefly put the arena in a state of madness, Trinidad awoke and was done warming up. He took over from that point forward. 
Looking back, Mayorga was the perfect stylistic opponent for Trinidad. So much so numerous fighters would fight Mayorga in similar situations whenever making a comeback of sorts. But it's up to the fighter to deliver when an opportunity arises. And against Mayorga, Trinidad looked as sharp as ever, landing deadly power shots with extraordinary accuracy.
However, in the face of being pummelled, Mayorga wasn't giving up. He scored a knockdown in the third round when landing a punch behind Trinidad's ear, leading to the Puerto RIcan's glove touching the canvas. The knockdown held no weight on the fight's outcome other than letting Trinidad know Mayorga was still dangerous. 
The fifth round was particularly brutal for Mayorga as Trinidad reigned a barrage of blows on him in the final minute. The two 31-year-olds would exchange blows in many rounds to the delight of the crowd. Mayorga lasted until the eighth round, when a body shot finally sent him down. Trinidad scored two more knockdowns, forcing referee Steve Smoger to end the contest. At the time of the stoppage, Trinidad led on all three judges' scorecards. 
The CompuBox numbers told the story of Trinidad's astonishing accuracy. In overall punches, the Puerto Rican star landed 290 of his 460 punches at 63 percent and 218 out of 329 power punches at 66 percent. Trinidad landed over 50 percent of his punches in every round and landed over 60 percent in five rounds. In terms of power punches, he landed over 60 percent in six rounds. In the eighth and final round, Trinidad landed 39 out of 47 power punches at a shocking 83 percent. 
FINAL THOUGHTS
The aftermath of the Mayorga fight would see two more fights and two retirements from Trinidad. After fighting Mayorga, Trinidad fought Ronald "Winky" Wright in the worst performance of his career, losing a wide unanimous decision. Another retirement followed. Trinidad redeemed himself years later against Roy Jones Jr. in another loss but a much better showing. The Jones fight was Trinidad's last fight at Madison Square Garden and of his career. But by 2008, when the fight took place, the torch of Puerto Rico's premier boxer had been passed to Miguel Cotto. The enthusiasm for the Jones fight was nowhere near the Mayorga bout. 
The Mayorga fight was a moment in time. It was a time capsule of a moment in boxing history when Trinidad was at his peak, a remembrance of his greatness. The crowd. The arena. The passion. It's a fight that encapsulates the world of boxing in the early 2000s. Trinidad's relationship with the Puerto Rican fanbase was unique and only recently duplicated by fighters like Ricky Hatton and Manny Pacquiao. Almost two decades later, there hasn't been a fighter from Puerto Rico who has gained the same level of admiration as Trinidad.
"There's not going to be another Trinidad," said current WBO light flyweight champion Jonathan Gonzalez. They want to make another Trinidad. But you're not going to get another Trinidad. That will not exist in 20 or 30 years." 
Only time will tell whether boxing fans and those from Puerto Rico will witness another phenomenon like Trinidad again. But, his return against Mayorga only highlights how special he was and what he meant to those who viewed him as their hero.
(Featured Photo: Getty Images)
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