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Falks Insta Stories from the last days✨
(You have no idea how happy the photo of the rainbow crosswalk made me!!)
#falk maria schlegel#powerwolf#social media queen falk#i swear i know it‘s just a photo of a damn crosswalk but my little queer heart was so happy ;0;#talk valentina! ALLY!!#also love the old man selfiessssss <3
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“Visions from the Upside Down”-Stranger Things:Artbook Artists List
As we inch close to the release date of our latest and most amazing Artbook release to date, We wanted to post a list of all of the included artists in the project. I am including their Social media @nametags for Instagram (if they have an account there) so you can follow up on their amazing works outside of our new book.
Remember you can pre-order the book here:
Charles Adi @blackoutbrother
Brian Aldridge @aerosoulpro
Nick Allsop @nick_alsopp_art
Rafael Alvarez @alvarez_studio
Kwasi Amankwah @kwasi81
Stephen Andrade @stephen.andrade.7 (Facebook)
Orlando Arocena @mexifunk
Edgar Ascensao @edgar_asc
Dane Ault @monkeyminionpress
Noah Bailey @boyishdeathtribe
Giuseppe Balestra @artbygb
Mark Bell @markbellillustration
Angelina Benedetti @angelinabenedetti
Freya Betts @freyabettsart
Rick "dienzo" Blanco @dienzoart
Alejandro Blasi @alejandroblasi.art (Facebook)
Aaron Bolduc @alphaazieru
Alex Boniwell @erodingdesigns
Mark Borgions @handmade_monster
Bonnie Bozell @bbozellart
Michael Vincent Bramley @mvbramleyart
Matthew Brazier @matthew_brazier
Rio Burton @rioburton
Lin-Zy Busch @withlovelinzy
Matt Busch @matt_busch_instagram
Butcher Billy @thebutcherbilly
Sheila C @studiosheila
Carlos Cabaleiro @cabaleiroart
Chris Callahan @rgb_alpha
Josh Campbell @paybackpenguin
Daniel Campos @stalk_danielcampos
Kate Carleton @keelhaulkate
Simon Carpenter @simcarpe
Ryan Caskey @ryancaskeyillustration
Christa Cassano @christacassano
Justin Castaneda @whenuwerelittle
Victor Castro @victoroil
Lon Chan @lonchanillustrates
Alexander Cherepanov @cherepanov_inkart
Chogrin @chogrin
GMB Chomichuk @gmbchomichuk
Chris Chuckry @chrischuckry
Darren Coburn-James @asylumartz
Adam Cockerton @adamcockertonart
Joe Corroney @joecorroney
Carolyn Craggs @carriejc1983
Paul Cremin @paul_cremin_art
Ryan Crosby @rcillustration
Ronnie Crowther @ronniecrowtherart
Justin Currie @chasingartwork
Bob Dahlstrom @bobdahlstrom
Ted Dastick @teddastickjr (Twitter)
Jason Davies @jasondaviesart_
Neil Davies @neildaviesillustration1
Rich Davies @turksworks
Simon Delart @s2lart
Mike Diaz
Garrett Dix @garrett_dix_artist
Rodney Dollah @rodneydollah
Dug Nation @sketchymonsters
Matt Dunn @matthewdunnart
Roberto Duque @rad_pencils
Damian Edwardson @damianedwardsonart
Sarah Elkins @NeilaK20 (Twitter)
Don England @donaldengland_art
Nicole Falk @legendsofthefalk
Bastian Faulk @bastianfaulk
Jaimie Filer @jaimie_filer
Malcolm Fisher @mal_made
Francisco Flores @artofmetalhand
Jared Flores (Circusbear) @jaredcircusbear
Julie Fordham @juliefordham
Luke Francis @twistedabnormality
Devin Francisco @devin_francisco_art
Bryan Fyffe @bryanfyffe
Anthony Galatis @anthonygalatis
Paul Gates @pickle.vision
Bruce Gerlach @bruce_gerlach (Twitter)
Sam Gilbey @samgilbey
Donny Gillies @dirtydonnyart
Dustin Goebel @dgoebel00
Jason Goungor @jasongoungor
Art Grafunkel @artgrafunkel
Joshua Green @lvciferx
Justin Harder @clausstudioss
Paul Harrison-Davies @paulmhd
Matthew Harrower @hpmatt1984
Jordan Hart @jordyjordith
Simon Heard @sinagedesign
Tomas Hijo @tomashijo
John J Hill @johnjhill
Michelle Hiraishi @_mhiraishi
Matthew Hirons @saintworksart
Chris Hitchman @chris_hitchman
James Hobson @jamesjamesjamescreative
Tony Hodgkinson @epictonedogg
Josh Howard @josh_howard
Rian Hughes @rianhughes
Faryn Hughes @farynh
Jon Hunt @huntillustration
Ian Jepson @ian_jepson
Bernard Jezowski @berniedave
Robert Jimenez @zerostreet
JoeJr @joejrberrelleza
Adem Kaan @ademkaanillustration
Ana Kahana @kahanita
Sandra Kamenz @sandrakamenz
Chris Kay @chris_kay_art
Michael Kelleher @michaelkelleherillustrator (Facebook)
Josh Kelly @jmonsterart
Tom Kelly @tomkellyart
Jemma Klein @jemmaklein
Heather Landry @sandpaperdaisy
Doug Larocca @douglaslaroccaart
Mark Levy @marklevyart
Alice Meichi Li @alicemeichi
Matthew Lineham @mlinehamart
Chelsea Lowe @cmloweart
Jerry Ma @epicprops
Ian MacDougall @ianmacart
Mike Mahle @mikemahleart
Tomasz Majewski @tomasz.majewski
Chris Malbon @melbs74
Matthew Manlove @mattmanlove
Christopher Maul @christopher_maul
Sam Mayle @sammaylearts
Kristopher McClanahan @deeplydapper
Bill McConkey @bill_mcconkey
John McCrea (w/ Dee Cunniffe) @mccreaman1 w/ @deezoid
Scott McKay @thescottmckay
Axel Medellin @axelmedellinmachain
Kelly Migliori @heyghoulhey
Jason Miller @jasonmillerart
Peach Momoko @peachmomoko60
Akane Morinishi @akaneschibiart
Micah Mowbray @curiousartglass
Murugiah @_murugiah
Christian Nannipieri @christian.nannipieri
Matt Needle @needledesign
William O'Neill @william.oneill.792
NOS4A2 Design @nos4a2lives
Angel Onofre @angelonofre
Rey Paez @reypaezart
Luke Parker @artofparker
John Pearson @johnjpearson
Xurxo Penalta @xurxopenalta
Jerry Pesce @pesceffects
Pestmeester @thepestmeester
Lucas Peverill @lucas_peverill_art
Michelle Prebich @batinyourbelfry
Dave Pryor @davepryor72
Gary Pullin @ghoulishgary
L.Jason Queen @ljasonqueen
Aldo Requena @aldorequenavalgorth
Joey Rex @iamjoeyrex
Rodolfo Reyes @rodolforever
Aleksey Rico @alekseyrico
Julien Rico jr @julienricojr
Dylan Riley @dylandraw
Matt Riste @mattristeillustration
Rafal Rola @rolsrafal
Stephanie Rosales @rosalesart1 (Twitter)
Stephen Sampson @thedarkinker
Scott Saslow @scottsaslow
Valerie Savarie @valeriesavarie
SCAR Studios @antoinette.rydyr (Facebook)
James Schneider @boardinker
Markee Shadows @markeeshadows
Jerry Shirts @artisticaerosol
Liza Shumskaya @kino_maniac
Bill Sienkiewicz @therealthatpolishguy
Randy Siplon @randysiplon
John Sloboda @sloboart
Brian Soriano @wrathcomics
Rob Stanley @robstanleyart
Guy Stauber @guystauber
Eileen Steinbach @sg_posters
Blake Stevenson @jetpacksandrollerskates
R.H. Stewart @rhsillustratorgmailcom
Justin Stewart @justin3000stewart
Matthew Stewart @stewartillustrations
Glen Stone @glenstoneillustration
Adam Stothard @ad_illustrator
Laura Streit @laurastreit_art
Mark Stroud @markblackblue (Twitter)
Andrew Swainson @andrew_swainson
Nick Taylor @nickillustratesthings
Theoretical Part @theoreticalpart
Steve Thomas @stevethomasart
Kevin Tiernan @jurassickevin
Felix Tindall @f_tindall
Angel Trancon @angeltranconstudio
Wayne Tully @waynetully
Cody Vrosh @codyvrosh
Jonny Wellman @jonnys_pixels
Bryan West @bryanwestart
Trent Westbrook @2023comics
Chris Willdig @rebelart1984
Matthew Woods @hallowwoods
Scott Woolston @scottwool
Clinton Yeager @screamingclint
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ATX TELEVISION FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES NEXT WAVE OF PROGRAMMING
ATX Television Festival continues to announce major programming for season eight, which will take place June 6-9, 2019, in Austin, Texas.
ATX will premiere HBO's upcoming summer series "Euphoria," created, written by, and executive produced by Sam Levinson, as this opening night screening and panel on Thursday June 6th. "Euphoria” follows a group of high school students as they navigate drugs, sex, identity, trauma, social media, love and friendship. The screening will be followed by a panel conversation with creator/executive producer Sam Levinson, and cast members Zendaya, Hunter Schafer, Barbie Ferreira, and Eric Dane. Executive producers also include Drake, Future the Prince, Ravi Nandan, Kevin Turen, Hadas Mozes Lichtenstein, Ron Leshem, Daphna Levin, Tmira Yardeni, Mirit Toovi, Yoram Mokady, Gary Lennon and Jim Kleverweis. "Euphoria" is produced in partnership with A24, and based on the Israeli series of the same name from Ron Leshem and Daphna Levin.
ABC’s record-breaking medical drama “Grey’s Anatomy” will screen the season 15 episode “Silent All These Years,” written by Elisabeth R. Finch and directed by Debbie Allen, which marks one of the series’ most riveting and emotional hours yet. The screening will be followed by a Q&A conversation with showrunner & executive producer Krista Vernoff, co-executive producer & writer Elisabeth R. Finch, and stars Camilla Luddington and Kim Raver, who will discuss the impact that the episode has had on viewers, as well as their approach to tackling topics of sexual assault and consent.
Debbie Allen. Photo source www.facebook.com/TheRealDebbieAllen
This year’s festival will feature a screening of an all-new episode of Freeform’s “grown-ish,” followed by a Q&A with cast & creatives, including cast members Yara Shahidi, Trevor Jackson, Francia Raisa, Chloe Bailey, Halle Bailey, Emily Arlook and Jordan Buhat, and executive producer and writer Craig Doyle. “grown-ish” returns on Wednesday, June 5, at 8:00 p.m. ET/PT to finish out its sophomore season and joins the ATX line-up alongside the network’s freshman hit “Good Trouble,” which was previously announced.
FXX’s award-winning, long-running animated comedy “Archer” will host an advance screening of an episode from the series’ upcoming tenth season, “Archer: 1999.” This season finds Sterling Archer, Lana Kane and their crew of acid-tongued misfits onboard the M/V Seamus salvage ship as they explore deep space and try to outsmart giant aliens, intergalactic pirates and vicious bounty hunters. The screening will feature a once-in-a-lifetime, never-to-be-seen-again special version of an upcoming episode -- with an element added exclusively for the ATX audience. The screening will be followed by a conversation with the creative team behind “Archer,” including executive producer Matt Thompson, actor H. Jon Benjamin (“Sterling Archer”), producer/art director Chad Hurd, and lead storyboard artist Taylor Parrish. “Archer: 1999” premieres May 29th on FXX.
Yara Shahidi. Photo source Popsugar UK.
In addition, Stephen Falk, creator/executive producer/writer/director of FXX’s critically acclaimed comedy series “You’re the Worst,” will participate in a discussion with writers, producers, and advocates who are working to destigmatize the conversation around mental health and mental illness through story and visibility. Additional panelists will be announced at a later date.
Actor Kevin Bacon will join the festival’s previously announced presentation of the never-picked-up “Tremors” pilot from writer/executive producer Andrew Miller based on the 1990 film of the same name, featuring a selection of clips, a partial script reading, and discussion with cast and producers. Bacon, who was set to reprise his starring role as Valentine McKee, joins Andrew Miller, executive producer Jessica Rhoades, and cast members Toks Olagundoye, P.J. Byrne, Haley Tju, and Emily Tremaine for the panel.
ATX’s non-profit foundation, The Syndication Project, will host a programming track for the second year, with a focus on encouraging actionable advocacy through storytelling. "Making Criminal Justice Matter," presented by the ACLU, in which writers and producers, along with a criminal law expert from the ACLU, will discuss the importance of working together to ensure authentic representations of current issues surrounding criminal justice, and television’s impact on viewer opinions with regard to issues of police practices, racial profiling, and governmental and police abuses of authority. Confirmed panelists include co-showrunner/executive producer Sunil Nayar (“The Red Line”), showrunner/executive producer Joanna Johnson (“Good Trouble”), and showrunner/executive producer Anthony Sparks (“Queen Sugar”), with Twyla Carter, Senior Staff Attorney with the National ACLU's Criminal Law Reform Project, moderating. Additional panelists will be announced at a later date.
“Resistance, Inclusion, and Creating Authentic Muslim Narratives” presented by the Muslim Public Affairs Council’s (MPAC) Hollywood Bureau will examine the collaborative efforts among consultants at MPAC and creatives and executives in the industry to raise the quantity and quality of Muslim representation on and off-screen. Confirmed panelists include showrunner/executive producer Carina Adly MacKenzie (“Roswell, New Mexico”), actress Nikohl Boosheri (“The Bold Type”), and Sue Obeidi (Director, MPAC's Hollywood Bureau). Additional panelists will be announced at a later date.
The Television Academy joins The Syndication Project track with “Power(ful) TV,” a panel discussion with writers & producers on how series can rise above trends and token characters by weaving in storylines of gender, race, religion, aging, immigration, health care, and more — all with the belief that exposing audiences to a variety of people, experiences, and worlds they might never encounter will foster understanding, empathy, and community. The conversation will be moderated by Television Academy President and Chief Operating Officer, Maury McIntyre. Panelists will be announced at a later date.
Television Academy President and Chief Operating Officer, Maury McIntyre.
Previously announced programming includes:
● “Presidents of the Guilds” panel, featuring Gabrielle Carteris, president, SAG-AFTRA, David A. Goodman, president, WGAW, and Thomas Schlamme, president, DGA
● ABC Family series “Greek” reunion
● Hulu’s “Veronica Mars” revival
● Screening and Conversation with “One Day at a Time” Creatives & Cast
● Hulu and Blumhouse Television’s “Into the Dark: Culture Shock”
● “Letterkenny” screening and Q&A
● An interactive conversation with Beau Willimon
● “A Playwright Walks Into a Writers Room…” panel conversation with playwrights turned TV writers
● “The House that Horror Built: Inside Blumhouse Television”
● “Inside the Writers Room” panel with Starz’s critically-acclaimed series “Vida”
● Closing Night Screening of Showtime’s “City on a Hill”
● A panel exploring the “Power of Female Partnerships”
● “Cancelled Too Soon” panel with “Men In Trees”
● Freeform’s “Good Trouble”
● “Let’s Talk about Sex (Scenes),” an honest discussion about empowering both writers and actors, and improving safe “sex” practices behind the camera
● A panel presented by the Casting Society of America, featuring some of TV’s top casting directors
● A one-on-one conversation titled “Scene Partners & Roommates,” with actors Margo Martindale and Shane McRae
● “Everyone Is Doing Great” screening and Q&A
● Netflix’s series “Atypical” panel
● EPIX’s new series “Perpetual Grace, LTD” panel
● An inside look at the “Tremors” pilot
● IFC’s musical variety comedy “Sherman’s Showcase”
● Comedy Central’s new sketch series “Alternatino with Arturo Castro”
● Individual panelists Beatrice Springborn, Vice President, Content
Development, Hulu; Jessica Rhoades, EP, “Sharp Objects,” “The Affair,” and Principal, Pacesetter; ATX Advisory Board member Kyle Killen, EP/showrunner of Showtime’s upcoming “Halo” series; and Mauricio Mota and Katie Elmore Mota, EPs, “East Los High,” and Co-Presidents of Wise Entertainment.
For the latest developments and information on how to attend, visit the ATX Television Festival official site www.atxfestival.com and follow us on Facebook & Twitter.
For co-promotion, please link to @ATXFestival #ATXTVs8 on Twitter.
#Film#ATXFestival#ATXTVs8#Austin Film Festival#2019 Austin Film Festival#Debbie Allen#jessica rhoades#Kyle Killen#Halo series#Mauricio Mota#Katie Elmore Mota#East Los High#Wise Entertainment#Naomi Richard#Naomi Jean Richard#naomijrichard#RCV#Red Carpet View
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Br industrial IoT router ain Regions Associated With the Successful Spread of Ideas Identified
www.inhandnetworks.com
Psychologists report for the first time that the temporoparietal junction (TPJ) and dorsomedial prefrontal cortex (DMPFC) brain regions are associated with the successful spread of ideas, often called ‘buzz.’
UCLA scientists have identified for the first time the brain regions associated with the successful spread of ideas.
How do ideas spread? What messages will go viral on social media, and can this be predicted?
UCLA psychologists have taken a significant step toward answering these questions, identifying for the first time the brain regions associated with the successful spread of ideas, often called “buzz.”
The research has a broad range of implications, the study authors say, and could lead to more effective public health campaigns, more persuasive advertisements and better ways for teachers to communicate with students.
“Our study suggests that people are regularly attuned to how the things they’re seeing will be useful and interesting, not just to themselves but to other people,” said the study’s senior author, Matthew Lieberman, a UCLA professor of psychology and of psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences and author of the forthcoming book “Social: Why Our Brains Are Wired to Connect.” “We always seem to be on the lookout for who else will find this helpful, amusing or interesting, and our brain data are showing evidence of that. At the first encounter with information, people are already using the brain network involved in thinking about how this can be interesting to other people. We’re wired to want to share information with other people. I think that is a profound statement about the social nature of our minds.”
The study findings are published in the online edition of the journal Psychological Science, with print publication to follow later this summer.
“Befor Dual SIM M2M router e this study, we didn’t know what brain regions were associated with ideas that become contagious, and we didn’t know what regions were associated with being an effective communicator of ideas,” said lead author Emily Falk, who conducted the research as a UCLA doctoral student in Lieberman’s lab and is currently a faculty member at the University of Pennsylvania’s Annenberg School for Communication. “Now we have mapped the brain regions associated with ideas that are likely to be contagious and are associated with being a good ‘idea salesperson.’ In the future, we would like to be able to use these brain maps to forecast what ideas are likely to be successful and who is likely to be effective at spreading them.”
In the first part of the study, 19 UCLA students (average age 21), underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) brain scans at UCLA’s Ahmanson–Lovelace Brain Mapping Center as they saw and heard information about 24 potential television pilot ideas. Among the fictitious pilots — which were presented by a separate group of students — were a show about former beauty-queen mothers who want their daughters to follow in their footsteps; a Spanish soap opera about a young woman and her relationships; a reality show in which contestants travel to countries with harsh environments; a program about teenage vampires and werewolves; and a show about best friends and rivals in a crime family.
The students exposed to these TV pilot ideas were asked to envision themselves as television studio interns who would decide whether or not they would recommend each idea to their “producers.” These students made videotaped assessments of each pilot.
Another group of 79 UCLA undergraduates (average age 21) was asked to act as the “producers.” These students watched the interns’ videos assessments of the pilots and then made their own ratings about the pilot ideas based on those assessments.
Lieberman and Falk wanted to learn which brain regions were activated when the interns were first exposed to information they would later pass on to others.
“We’re constantly being exposed to information on Facebook, Twitter and so on,” said Lieberman. “Some of it we pass on, and a lot of it we don’t. Is there something that happens in the moment we first see it — maybe before we even realize we might pass it on — that is different for those things that we will pass on successfully versus those that we won’t?”
It turns ou cashless payment t, there is. The psychologists found that the interns who were especially good at persuading the producers showed significantly more activation in a brain region known as the temporoparietal junction, or TPJ, at the time they were first exposed to the pilot ideas they would later recommend. They had more activation in this region than the interns who were less persuasive and more activation than they themselves had when exposed to pilot ideas they didn’t like. The psychologists call this the “salesperson effect.”
“It was the only region in the brain that showed this effect,” Lieberman said. One might have thought brain regions associated with memory would show more activation, but that was not the case, he said.
“We wanted to explore what differentiates ideas that bomb from ideas that go viral,” Falk said. “We found that increased activity in the TPJ was associated with an increased ability to convince others to get on board with their favorite ideas. Nobody had looked before at which brain regions are associated with the successful spread of ideas. You might expect people to be most enthusiastic and opinionated about ideas that they themselves are excited about, but our research suggests that’s not the whole story. Thinking about what appeals to others may be even more important.”
The TPJ, located on the outer surface of the brain, is part of what is known as the brain’s “mentalizing network,” which is involved in thinking about what other people think and feel. The network also includes the dorsomedial prefrontal cortex, located in the middle of the brain.
“When we read fiction or watch a movie, we’re entering the minds of the characters — that’s mentalizing,” Lieberman said. “As soon as you hear a good joke, you think, ‘Who can I tell this to and who can’t I tell?’ Making this judgment will activate these two brain regions. If we’re playing poker and I’m trying to figure out if you’re bluffing, that’s going to invoke this network. And when I see someone on Capitol Hill testifying and I’m thinking whether they are lying or telling the truth, that’s going to invoke these two brain regions.
“Good ideas turn on the mentalizing system,” he said. “They make us want to tell other people.”
The interns who showed more activity in their mentalizing system when they saw the pilots they intended to recommend were then more successful in convincing the producers to also recommend those pilots, the psychologists found.
“As I’m looking at an idea, I might be thinking about what other people are likely to value, and that might make me a better idea salesperson later,” Falk said.
By further studying the neural activity in these brain regions to see what information and ideas activate these regions more, psychologists potentially could predict which advertisements are most likely to spread and go viral and which will be most effective, Lieberman and Falk said.
Such knowledge could also benefit public health campaigns aimed at everything from reducing risky behaviors among teenagers to combating cancer, smoking and obesity.
“The explosion of new communication technologies, combined with novel analytic tools, promises to dramatically expand our understanding of how ideas spread,” Falk said. “We’re laying basic science foundations to addressimportant public health questions that are difficult to answer otherwise — about what makes campaigns successful and how we can improve their impact.”
As we may like particular radio DJs who play music we enjoy, the Internet has led us to act as “information DJs” who share things that we think will be of interest to people in our networks, Lieberman said.
“What is new about our study is the finding that the mentalizing network is involved when I read something and decide who else migh cashless vending t be interested in it,” he said. “This is similar to what an advertiser has to do. It’s not enough to have a product that people should like.”
Co-authors of the study are Sylvia Morelli, a former graduate student in Lieberman’s lab who is now a postdoctoral scholar at Stanford University; Locke Welbourn, a UCLA graduate student in Lieberman’s laboratory; and Karl Dambacher, a former UCLA undergraduate research assistant.
Publication: Emily B. Falk, et al., “Creating Buzz – The Neural Correlates of Effective Message Propagation,” Psychological Science, May 30, 2013; doi: 10.1177/0956797612474670
Image: UCLA Newsroom
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