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Drew Barrymore: 'Drug addiction at age 10, alcoholism after divorce'
Hollywood actor Drew Barrymore shared how he overcame alcoholism after a divorce.
On the 27th (local time), Barrymore introduced his divorce from ex-husband Will Kopelman and his struggle with alcoholism in an interview with People, an American entertainment media.
In 2016, Barrymore, who divorced Will Kopelman, the son of former CEO Ari Kopelman of Chanel after three years of marriage, said, "The divorce was a feeling that was finally and irreversible. It was incredibly hard and broke me down. Strong people in the meantime. Watching this break, 'Why did it happen like that?' I wanted to, but I became that kind of person."
In the end, he turned to alcohol to escape the pain of divorce. "I think it was more difficult than when I was young. It felt more realistic because I wasn't alone. What I cherish most is my children. Like walking through fire, I tried again for my children in excruciating pain. I'm back," he confessed. Barrymore had one son and one daughter during her marriage to Kopelman.
Barrymore was also cool about Kopelman's new wife, Vogue director Alexandra Michaeler, saying, "He's someone I like. I love it when we're all together."
Meanwhile, Drew Barrymore is a veteran actor with 40 years of experience. In 1982, at the age of 7, he made a splendid debut with the movie 'E.T.' built up
Wandering with his early debut, Barrymore, who tried drugs at the age of 10, overcame the dark period and succeeded in making a comeback, and is still active today.
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GIMME 5
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CUT / DJ Goldie
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RAPID PROTOTYPING by AFFIX WORKS
Installation at Dover Street Market London
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Star, January 25
You can now buy a copy of this issue for your very own at my eBay store: https://www.ebay.com/str/bradentonbooks
Cover: Meghan Markle’s life is a lie
Page 1: Emma Stone’s baby joy -- after months of speculation thrilled mom-to-be Emma debuts her baby bump during a hike with a pal
Page 2: Contents, Sutton Foster and Nico Tortorella and Debi Mazar filmed a scene for Younger’s final season
Page 4: Candace Cameron Bure came out swinging again against commenters on a holiday pic she posted on Instagram of her and her husband Valeri Bure and kids Natasha and Lev and Maksim and she got a load of snark for the heavily retouched pic
Page 5: Karlie Kloss usually steers clear of dishing on her sister- and brother-in-law Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner but on January 6 Karlie broke her silence after Ivanka tweeted and quickly deleted a post calling a pro-Trump mob storming the U.S. Capitol building American patriots and Karlie begged to differ tweeting that accepting the results of a legitimate democratic election is patriotic and when one Twitter user urged her to tell her brother-in-law and sister-in-law she lamented I’ve tried
* Olivia Jade Giannulli posted a clip of herself dancing maskless at a beach-house party and the New Year’s Day Insta came days after her mom Lori Loughlin was sprung from prison and the clip which featured her toasting with a glass of vino came less than a month after she aired her regrets in an interview -- the party girl feels she’s suffered too from the scandal and she was just letting off steam
* Rege-Jean Page has sent pulses racing with his groundbreaking role as the rakish Duke of Hastings in Bridgerton but it was his reference to James Bond’s legendary martini preference in a tweet that had fans speculating he’s in line to take over from Daniel Craig as the next 007 -- the biracial actor has been vocal about the importance of inclusive casting
Page 6: Jessica Simpson whose own father once bragged about her double Ds is enjoying a very particular benefit of her recent 100-lb slimdown which is she’s gone down two cup sizes and she says she feels more athletic and her body is more in proportion -- in addition to easing back pain she feels a different sort of weight has lifted because all that talk about her breasts made her feel they overshadowed her as a person
* Drew Barrymore is nursing a private pain as her ex-husband Will Kopelman went public with his new love Vogue staffer Alexandra Michler and the two are serious while Drew is still single and she is alone and feeling like the odd man out -- there are times when Drew absolutely regrets divorcing Will especially now that he’s dating again and Drew was holding out hope for a reunion but when she discovered Will was seeing someone new she knew there was a good chance it may not happen and even worse her own attempts at finding romance have fallen flat as she’s tried online dating a few times but had no luck
* Star Spots the Stars -- Jimmy Fallon and wife Nancy Juvonen, Jennifer Lopez, Eva Longoria, Ryan Seacrest, Jenna Dewan, Aubrey Plaza, JD Martinez
Page 8: Star Shots -- John Legend gave his son Miles a zip around the water on a jet ski during a vacation in St. Barths, Ellen DeGeneres on a bike after lunch with friends in Santa Barbara, Brooke Burke dressed in wintry workout gear sipped a hot drink
Page 10: Leslie Jones on Celebrity Wheel of Fortune, Christina Aguilera playing video games with her son Max
Page 12: Kit Harington takes his dog for a walk in London, Sean “Diddy” Combs passed out gift cards and gift bags to those in need in Miami, Mindy Kaling online shopping
Page 13: Gabrielle Union and her husband Dwyane Wade on a hike, Jenny McCarthy maneuvered her trash bins to the curb in Chicago
Page 14: Coach Tom Jones on The Voice UK, EJ Johnson at the beach in Miami, Margaret Qualley and boyfriend Shia LaBeouf on a hike in L.A., Dua Lipa eating during a getaway in Tulum, Mexico
Page 16: Normal or Not? Tori Spelling out in Los Angeles with her dogs and husband Dean McDermott -- normal, Nicole Kidman and an alpaca -- not normal
Page 17: Jennifer Garner playing the drinking game from The Crown in which participants who can’t repeat a phrase correctly must smudge their faces -- not normal, Kate Bosworth celebrated her birthday with husband Michael Polish and some bubbly in Beverly Hills -- normal
Page 18: Fashion -- stars stun in Pantone colors of the year Illuminating Yellow and Ultimate Gray -- Mindy Kaling, Thandie Newton, Jorja Smith
Page 19: Ariana Grande, Zoey Deutch
Page 24: Olivia Wilde made news stepping out as Harry Styles’ plus-one to his agent’s wedding in Montecito and he introduced her as his girlfriend as the two mingled and held hands -- the next day Harry and Olivia who hit it off on the set of her upcoming psychological thriller Don’t Worry Darling in which he stars were spotted heading into his L.A. home -- wedding guests weren’t the only ones surprised by the new couple as Olivia’s ex Jason Sudeikis dad to her kids Otis and Daisy has been nurturing hope of a reunion since their split in late 2020 and he was surprised she’d go for one of the actors in her movie -- now Olivia is conflicted because she’s having fun with Harry but there’s no denying her feelings for Jason continue to linger and some are betting her romance with Harry will flame out in no time and no one would be surprised if Olivia and Jason ended up getting back together
Page 25: Florence Pugh and Zach Braff had Hollywood abuzz after a pal wished her a happy birthday on social media and cryptically referred to her as FPB -- that extra B caused many to surmise that Florence has quietly exchanged vows with Zach and taken his last name and Florence hasn’t done much to shut down speculation by strategically hiding her ring finger in photos shared on Instagram
* Zoe Kravitz filed for divorce from Karl Glusman after 18 months of marriage because she was fed up with having an MIA husband -- things between the two hit a breaking point after Karl failed to check in with his wife while filming Please Baby Please in Butte, Montana -- Zoe couldn’t take being ignored and when she and Karl finally spoke they had a big fight and she pulled the plug shortly afterwards
* They called it quits in October after two years together but Bethenny Frankel and Paul Bernon are now giving their relationship another shot -- they split up because their long-distance romance proved too difficult but Bethenny really missed him and it turns out Paul missed her too and it seems second time’s a charm because a loved-up Bethenny and Paul indulged in PDA at a Miami studio as they watched her daughter paint with the artist
Page 26: Cover Story -- Meghan Markle exposed -- Meghan’s older half-sister is dishing some major dirt about the former actress’ rise to royalty in her new bombshell book
Page 30: Inside Kim Kardashian’s escape -- Kim reached her breaking point with Kanye West months ago but took many steps before she finally left him
Page 32: It Ain’t Over Till It’s Over -- these celebs more than made up after breaking up and they made it all the way down the aisle -- Justin Timberlake and Jessica Biel, Kelly Ripa and Mark Consuelos, Adam Levine and Behati Prinsloo
Page 33: Kristen Bell and Dax Shepard, Chrissy Teigen and John Legend, Prince William and Kate Middleton
Page 36: Beauty -- sweet dreams -- get better ZZZs and wake up looking gorgeous with products that nourish
Page 38: Entertainment
Page 48: Parting Shot -- Splashing out on a romantic getaway in Tulum, Mexico Bella Thorne and boyfriend Benjamin Mascolo made time to keep it tight on the sand
#tabloid#grain of salt#tabloid toc#tabloidtoc#meghan markle#samantha markle#prince harry#emma stone#kim kardashian#kanye west#candace cameron bure#karlie kloss#olivia jade giannulli#rege-jean page#james bond#jessica simpson#drew barrymore#olivia wilde#harry styles#jason sudeikis#florence pugh#zach braff#zoe kravitz#karl glusman#bethenny frankel#paul bernon#john legend#ellen degeneres#brooke burke#leslie jones
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DIDDLY SQUAT from Frank Lebon on Vimeo.
A film about home.
"In this hyperkinetic short drama, a young couple in need of shelter breaks into a rundown South London carpentry studio only to find themselves in an escalating faceoff with the building’s owner… Told from the perspective of both the squatter and the squatted, Diddly Squat pulls off an electrifying style combining live action, still photos and animation." Le Cinéma Club
CREDITS
Writer, Director & Editor - Frank Lebon Producers - Nat Baring & Jill Ferraro Executive Producer - Anastasia Ehrich Director of Photography - Molly Manning Walker Composers - Mount Kimbie & Cedie Janson Production Designer - Jabez Bartlett Sound Designer - Will Berger Casting Director - Georgia Topley Casting Director (Supporting Artists) - Sarah Small Costume Designer - Edie Ashley Colourist - Joseph Bicknell 1st AD - Joseph Jones Gaffer - Owain Morgan
Archy - Charley Palmer Rothwell Rachel - Rebecca Stone Kenny - Mark Monero Hak - Hak Baker Simon - Jack Rolf Santi - Raf Shah Phylis - Sonya Baring Busker - Marla Mbemba Police Officer - Deborah Oyelade Heavy - Tayla Clarke Heavy - Haroun Bangura Heavy - TJ Silon Preacher - Carlton Sweeper - Eyasu Developer - Tyrone Lebon Estate Agent - Sonia Krishna Brother May - Brother May
SQAUTERS Cosima Von Moreau, Jake Hurley, Momin Mukhtar, Alistair Kleboe, Lola Gentry PARTY PEOPLE Seyi Adelekun, Hector Henderson, Charlie Farley, Agathe DeLussy, Genc Kuci, Ruby Lake, Sorcha Bacon, Emil Torrens, Finbar Lenahan, Gilbert Bannerman, Tancred Campbell, Daniel Simpson, Bryant Mclaughlin Vanlow, Carmen Rosy Hall, Natty Wylah
1st Assistant Camera - Rhys Warren 1st Assistant Camera - Benjy Kirkman 2nd Assistant Camera - Rory McLean Steadi Cam Operator - Rick Woolard B-roll Operator - Joel Kerr Spark - Rory Cole Spark - Sam Donvito Spark - Max Conran Grip - George Nock Make Up Artist - Bagy Winwood Make Up Artist - Phoebe Llewellyn Hair Stylist - Takuya Uchiyama 2nd AD - Sidney Arthur 3rd AD - Nana Quartey Production Coordinator - TJ Silon Production Coordinator - Celeste Doig Production Assistant - Maria Grierson Production Assistant - Joshua Collings Production Assistant - Lachlan Monroe Production Assistant - Luca Ward Catering - Adam Davies Art Assistant - Ellen Wilson Art Assistant - Phoebe Shakespeare Art Assistant - Harry Beedle Sound Mixer - Will Berger Boom Op - Gus Collins Animal Wrangler - Trevor Costume Assistant - Charlie McCoskers Colour Producer - Alexandra Lubrano Grade Facility - Company 3 Assistant Editor/VFX - Rory McLean Music Supervisor - Alex Grey Script Editors - David Young & Karim Khan Second Poster Design - Frankie Browne
Special Thanks To Michael Kopelman, Gimme 5, Panavision, DoBeDo Represents, Judith & Danny Kleinman, Roi Cydulkin, Carmen Hall, Mark Lebon, Camilla Arthur, Mica Levi, Paddy Gibson, Marta Cruanas, Tyrone Lebon
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REINO UNIDO NO EXTRADITARÁ A JULIAN ASSANGE A EE.UU.
Artículo tomado de Contagio Radio.
Jueves 7 de enero del 2020 - En medio del proceso que se adelanta en contra del fundador de Wikileaks, Julian Assange, este 4 de enero se conoció sobre el rechazo de la petición d extradición de Estados Unidos que habría supuesto para Assange el inicio de un proceso penal en el que podría ser condenado hasta a 175 años de cárcel y un duro golpe para la libertad de prensa en el mundo.
Julian Assange, quien se encuentra detenido en la prisión de máxima seguridad de Belmarsh, al sureste de Londres tras ser arrestado en abril de 2019 en la embajada de Ecuador, donde permanecía refugiado desde 2012; es acusado de 18 cargos, incluyendo el hackeo a bases de datos del ejército de Estados Unidos, lo que puso al descubierto 700.000 documentos sobre crímenes de guerra cometidos por las Fuerzas Militares en Irak y Afganistán, detenciones extrajudiciales en la prisión de Guantánamo y cables diplomáticos que revelaron abusos de derechos humanos en todo el mundo.
Aunque se dictaminó que Assange tendría un «juicio justo» en caso de extradición, una jueza británica rechazó la solicitud de Estados Unidos para extraditar al fundador de WikiLeaks, Julian Assange, y dictaminó que tal medida sería «opresiva» debido a su salud mental.
Salud mental de Julian Assange está en riesgo
A través del dictamen, la corte penal de Old Bailey consideró que el hombre de 49 años podría quitarse la vida, advirtiendo que dichas probabilidades aumentarían de ser procesado en Estados Unidos, donde sería retenido en condiciones de confinamiento. «La impresión general es de un hombre deprimido y algunas veces desesperado, que teme de su futuro», alertó la Corte.
«Al enfrentar condiciones de aislamiento casi total sin los factores de protección que limitaron sus riesgos en HMP Belmarsh, estoy convencida que los procedimientos descritos por EE.UU. no evitarán que el señor Assange encuentre una manera de suicidarse y por esa razón he decidido que la extradición sería opresiva por causa de daño mental», determinó la la jueza Vanessa Baraitser.
«Encuentro que la condición mental del Sr. Assange es tal que sería opresivo extraditarlo a Estados Unidos»
Para septiembre de 2020, el experto en psiquiatría Michael Kopelman explicó que había detectado «depresión severa» y «síntomas psicóticos» en Assange, incluidas alucinaciones auditivas en su celda. A su vez, Nils Melzer, relator especial de la ONU sobre tortura ha agregado que Assange fue víctima de tortura psicológica al ser aislado e intimidado, concluyendo que esto ha significado «un ataque contra el periodismo y contra el poder de los ciudadanos».
Aunque la Fiscalía británica, que representa en este caso a la justicia estadounidense apelara el fallo en un plazo de 14 días, la jueza de primera instancia deberá decidir si deja a Assange en prisión preventiva o si el director de Wikileaks es puesto en libertad.
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In the brief history of street culture, Hitomi Yokoyama is one of its most prominent hidden figures. If Hiroshi Fujiwara is considered the de facto “godfather of Japanese streetwear,” Yokoyama is most definitely its godmother. A contemporary of UNDERCOVER founder Jun Takahashi and Tomoaki “NIGO” Nagao — who would go on to establish A Bathing Ape and Human Made — Yokoyama was at the forefront of Tokyo’s Ura-Harajuku movement that gave rise to Japan’s cadre of covetable brands like WTAPS, Neighborhood, Bounty Hunter, and countless others.
As a teenager growing up in Tokyo’s Yotsuya neighborhood, Yokoyama became fixated with the British punk bands she saw on TV and heard on the radio. “I was listening to The Clash, Adam & The Ants, and The Sex Pistols,” she says. “The first thing in fashion I got really excited about was Malcolm McLaren and Vivienne Westwood’s clothing I saw Johnny Rotten wearing.”
It was through seminal Japanese magazines like Takarajima that she got put onto McLaren and Westwood’s Seditionaries clothing line and SEX shop in World’s End. She also discovered “Last Orgy,” an influential Takarajima column started by Hiroshi Fujiwara. It was basically a cheat sheet of what brands, bands, and trends were about to blow up.
But Yokoyama didn’t just read about what was cool — she lived it, too, exploring Tokyo’s underground nightlife at clubs like Picasso and Nabaron, which played everything from ska, rockabilly, and reggae to the hottest bands in London at the time. The scene got her close to Jun Takahashi and future Bounty Hunter founder Hikaru Iwanaga, who played in a tribute band called the Tokyo Sex Pistols, and NIGO, who sometimes stepped in as their drummer. Yokoyama remembers how the now-icons dressed at the time, recalling Takahashi as a would-be Johnny Rotten and Iwanaga as a stand-in for Sid Vicious.
“This kind of place was more like a culture school than just a club,” she says. It’s where she learned how to dress and met like-minded people who shared the same passions, like Vivienne Westwood and punk. “It was a real life social network in the days before the internet.”
NIGO and Takahashi had met at Tokyo’s prestigious Bunka Fashion College, the same institution that produced Yohji Yamamoto and Junya Watanabe. Yokoyama worked at a hair school in the neighborhood called Ciao Bambina, which doubled as a community hub for area youth, since their parents weren’t allowed in. NIGO got his hair cut there, and Yokoyama admits she used to steal a product called Rock Gel, a hard hair gel ideal for Takahashi’s avant-garde punk hairstyles.
At the same time, Takahashi and NIGO were becoming a dynamic duo in their own right. They had taken the reins of Fujiwara’s “Last Orgy” column and brought it to Popeye magazine (the newer, younger answer to Takarajima) under the moniker “Last Orgy 2.” It was clear they had the juice now, so under Fujiwara’s mentorship they turned their platform into a first-of-its-kind retail concept: NOWHERE.
Before that store opened, Yokoyama remembers the small network of streets as a neighborhood with hidden gems interspersed throughout. There was Hitomi Okawa’s MILK, Nobuhiko Kitamura’s Hysteric Glamour, and punk boutique A Store Robot, which Yokoyama frequented. But NOWHERE began the evolution of Harajuku’s backstreets into an in-the-know shopping destination. The shop launched both Takahashi’s UNDERCOVER and NIGO’s A Bathing Ape.
“Jun started making clothes on a domestic sewing machine, making one-off items. He was a genius at an early age,” remembers Yokoyama. “Then you had NIGO, who was a massive expert on vintage clothing and had great style.”
The Ura-Harajuku scene and the brands to emerge from it would expand from a small underground community to a huge global movement, and Yokoyama would play a crucial part in that transition when she moved to London in 1993.
“My plan was to study English and go to make up school,” she explains. “One day, I was walking down the street and I met a guy called Barnzley. He recognized my Seditionaries clothes and was very curious about my UNDERCOVER clothes.”
Fate made it so that one of the first people Yokoyama met in London was one of its most well-connected people. Simon “Barnzley” Armitage is a fixture of London’s club scene and its underground subculture. As a shop guy for Vivienne Westwood and Malcolm McLaren, he took advantage of the store’s screen printer to make bootleg Chanel T-shirts before getting into deconstructing clothes. He’s donned many hats and worked on numerous projects throughout the years, including co-founding the label A Child of the Jago with Joe Corre — Westwood and McLaren’s punk progeny.
Yokoyama’s Seditionaries fit caught his eye immediately, and they connected over a shared love of clothes, music, and punk culture. Yokoyama was still looking for a room, and Barnzley actually had an opening at his flat, recently vacated by Spanish artist Luciana Martinez de la Rosa.
“I think Hitomi was quite happy to move into a flat full of cool clothes, art, and records,” recalls Barnzley. “Maybe not so happy I kept her up all night with loud music, girls, insane pop stars, and messy graffiti artists.”
Yokoyama admits she didn’t get much sleep thanks to the loud music, but describes the London she found as “like Disneyland.” With Barnzley as her cultural sherpa, she rubbed shoulders with Joe Corre, Nellee Hooper of The Wild Bunch, Paul Cook of The Sex Pistols, Primal Scream’s Bobby Gillespie, and Paul Simonon of The Clash. Many of the figures she previously only read about, that seemed worlds away in the translated pages of Japanese glossies, now became face-to-face acquaintances.
“Everybody seemed to be a pop star, artist or model,” she says. “It was nonstop ’til 4 a.m. most nights.”
In addition to putting Yokoyama on to London’s hippest clubs and clothing stores, Barnzley also introduced her to Cuts, an underground hair salon that was pretty much the city’s answer to Tokyo’s Ciao Bambina. Founded by the late James Lebon, younger brother of fashion photographer Mark Lebon, he created a template for a new breed of alternative hairdressers. Inspired by the DIY ethos of punk, Cuts was the first in a new type of independent hairdressers whose multi-ethnic aesthetic chimed with that of Ray Petri’s wabi-sabi Buffalo style.
“It was a hub for street fashion as there were shoots for i-D and The Face. It was also where you’d find out information on clubs, clothes, and all that culture,” Yokoyama says. “Working there was more like a very fashionable club than a hairdresser. It was my introduction to fashionable London.”
International Stüssy Tribe member Michael Kopelman was also a Cuts regular. In 1989, he founded Gimme 5 as a distribution company, spreading the gospel of Japanese streetwear by introducing brands like Neighborhood, UNDERCOVER, visvim, BAPE, and Hiroshi Fujiwara’s GOODENOUGH into ahead-of-the-game boutiques like Hit and Run (later renamed The Hideout). By 1995, Kopelman and Yokoyama’s mutual appreciation had grown to the point where he felt comfortable enough offering her a job. “We were both into similar things from Japan. Nobody else in London was,” he says succinctly.
With no previous background in art (and never even having worked on a computer before), Yokoyama’s strong sensibilities informed what would become Gimme 5’s aesthetic. Inspired by everything from Eames chairs, old record sleeves, and comic books, she taught herself to use programs like Illustrator, eventually designing a Gimme 5 clothing logo cribbed from Jack Kirby’s Fantastic Four comics. Her work went on to impress her friends back in Japan, leading to graphic work for UNDERCOVER, A Bathing Ape, Real Mad Hectic, and Let It Ride as well as New York brands like aNYthing.
By the mid-2000s, Yokoyama received a major profile boost when she designed a purple and maroon Air Stab for Nike’s sought-after 2006 Air-U-Breathe pack. She was inspired by the lightness of the sneaker, as well as images of rabbits and cats jumping around in her head, leading to the striking graphic on the heel she describes as “paws with eyes.” She followed it up in 2008 with a mostly gray Air Max 90 Current created under Nike’s Co-Lab program for the Beijing Olympics.
Despite her impressive pedigree, Hitomi Yokoyama’s work seems largely swept under the rug in the story of streetwear. Perhaps that’s because she’s always gone under the pseudonym “HIT.” It was a conscious decision on her part, creating an air of mystery around this cryptic, Japanese designer in the vein of a SK8THING or SKOLOCT.
“I started working with all these men’s brands and they wanted to the put the designer’s name on the shirts,” she says. “There weren’t many females around at the time, and I was worried that people from that scene would not take me seriously if they knew I was female. So with the alias HIT, I would not be discriminated against; it’s genderless.”
Yokoyama’s most prolific collabs aren’t just with products, but people. Through her friendships in Tokyo and London, she helped foster long-lasting relationships, like linking Mo Wax impresario James Lavelle and NYC graffiti writer Stash with NIGO. She also became especially close with the late, legendary stylist Judy Blame, who was the inspiration for Dior’s Fall/Winter 2020 men’s collection. Yokoyama is in the final stages of her own Judy Blame tribute, a brand called Available Nowhere that uses Blame’s archive on a series of T-shirts, jackets, shirts, and scarves.
Whatever she’s doing, Hitomi Yokoyama is eternally grateful for the chances London gave her as a wide-eyed young woman from Tokyo. She admits that if things hadn’t worked out abroad, she’d have probably moved back to Tokyo and worked at a Shinjuku sushi restaurant. Now she wants to pay that kindness forward to the next generation.
“I hope to work with artists, designers, and interesting people who might be not well-known,” she says. “I want to help young people with lots of energy learn from old people with experience.”
Words: Andy Thomas
#undercover#james lavelle#nigo#a bathing ape#bathing ape#Hitomi Yokoyama#streetwear designers#women in streetwear#stash#aNYthing#real mad hectic#urbanwear blog
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. 【NEXUSVII.】 Recommended ・MARILYN MYTH SHIRT ¥26,400(税込) NEXUSVII.20周年記念プロジェクトとしてGIMME5が提案してくれたアーティスト Dick Jewel。 彼のコラージュ作品『Marilyn Myth』を使用し、今回はレーヨン生地でショートスリーブのアロハシャツを製作致しました。 作品全体の雰囲気を損なわぬ様、入念にパターンと柄出しのチェックを重ねました。 今回はSEPIAとNAVYの2色展開になります。 7月30日(土)より発売いたします。 ※渋谷PARCO NEXUSVII.、オンラインストア共に11:00より販売開始いたします。 ・Gimme Five Michael Kopelmanによって1989年に設立されたギミー・ファイブは、私たちが選んだそれぞれのブランドの周りに物語を作り、機能と美しさを見出してきました。 過去の栄光にとらわれることなく、「今、ここ」を大切にし、常に進化し続ける最高のプラットフォームを構築・維持することを目指しています。 私たちは独自の道を歩んでいます。 私たちは、繋がり、表現、発信、展示し、デザインします。私たちは、本物を大切にし、製品に語らせます。 ・Dick Jewell Dick Jewellは、アーティスト/フィルムメーカーであり、ファッション業界と音楽業界の両方でカメラマンとして活躍。また、「Found Photos」(1991年)、「Hysteric Glamour」(2001年)、「Four Thousand Threads」(2015年)の3冊の写真集を出版。1980年にカーディフのチャプター・アーツ・センターで初の個展を開催し、その後、アムステルダムのステデリック・ミュージアムとロンドンのサーペンタイン・ギャラリーでグループ展を開催。80年代には、ロンドンでPRE.というレコードレーベルを運営。Gregory Isaacsや Prince Far Iなどの作品をリリースし、デザインも手がける。また、Neneh CherryやMassive Attackなどのプロモーションにも携わる。 ディックの作品は、イギリスのレインダンス映画祭やコモンウェルス映画祭で上映されているほか、近年ではヴェネチア・ビエンナーレ、テート・リバプール、MOMAシドニー、ICA、V&Aミュージアムなどのアートギャラリーでも上映されている。主なパブリックコレクションには、Victoria & Albert Museum、The Open University、Stedelijk Museum、Froebel Institute、Newport Museum、Whitworth Art Gallery、Leeds City Art Gallery、Camden Libraries、Dudley Museum、Arts Council of G.B.、The Hayward Galleryなどに所蔵されている。 ○ NEXUSVII.渋谷パルコ店 東京都渋谷区宇田川町15-1 3F 11:00~20:00 TEL:03-5422-3637 ○NEXUSVII. WEB STORE nexusvii.jp #nexusvii #nexus7 #ネクサスセブン #GIMME5 #GIMMEFIVE #dickjewell — view on Instagram https://ift.tt/QyG0Fjv
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Branchez - Dreamer (feat. Santell) from Ezra Ewen on Vimeo.
Shot on Kodak 16mm Motion Picture Film
Director - Ezra Ewen (ezraewen.com) Starring - Arnav "Sonic" Shah (sonicskates.nyc) & Zoe Kestan Stylist - Emily Schubert Title Design - Michael Doyle Olson (mdo.me) Executive Producer - Sam Kopelman (branchez.com) Post Services - Metropolis Post (metpostny.com) Special Thanks - Michael Piderit, Jack Mintz, Doug Durant, Kelly Jeffrey and many more.
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HF & MICHAEL
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RT @richimedhurst: Claire Dobbin argues that Michael Kopelman's psychiatric evaluation relied heavily on the "self-reporting of Assange".
— LocalLeaks.org (@LocalLeaks2013) Aug 11, 2021
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Branchez - Dreamer (feat. Santell) from Ezra Ewen on Vimeo.
Shot on Kodak 16mm Motion Picture Film
Director - Ezra Ewen (ezraewen.com) Starring - Arnav "Sonic" Shah (sonicskates.nyc) & Zoe Kestan Stylist - Emily Schubert Title Design - Michael Doyle Olson (mdo.me) Executive Producer - Sam Kopelman (branchez.com) Post Services - Metropolis Post (metpostny.com) Special Thanks - Michael Piderit, Jack Mintz, Doug Durant, Kelly Jeffrey and many more.
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