January 19, 2010
Media
–Andy Woodruff of Cartogrammar has mapped his “whole darn year“—a map of routes he travelled in the Greater Boston Area last year. He acknowledges that UrbanTick has done the same thing in the past, but the flash movie (linked above) is worth watching nonetheless.

–Stereogum has just posed a new track by David Byrne & Fatboy Slim, “Please Don’t,” featuring Santigold on vocals. The song is from Byrne’s forthcoming concept album Here Lies Love, a collaboration with Norman Cook, plus guest appearances from the likes of Tori Amos, Róisín Murphy, etc. (I never would have guessed that I would someday have a picture of Imelda Marcos on my blog, but it must be cool if David Byrne thinks its cool.) (Stereogum; previously on BV)

–Stereogum also recently brought my attention to Wieden+Kennedy’s web series “D.I.Y. America.” Say what you want about insidious corporate marketing industry appropriation of authentic art and music movements, the videos definitely benefit from high production value. Three of the four episodes focus on skateboard culture, plus an interview with NYC artist Swoon.

–Anomaly London handled Diesel’s latest cheeky ad campaign, “Be Stupid.” It’s fine for what it is, though I don’t think anything will ever top the viral ‘SFW pornography’ video by The Viral Factory for Diesel’s XXX extravaganza (video after the jump). (DB)
Diesel XXX on Youtube
–While I’m on the topic of memes, how the hell did “Pants On the Ground” (not pictured) go viral? Marketing ploy by Fox / American Idol perhaps? (NYTimes Artsbeat / again / Mashable)
Nike Sportswear on Youtube
–Nike Sportswear: Jesse Leyva Talks 2010 Footwear Technology and Torch (HB)

–Last and probably least, Peugeot’s identity re-design is rather mediocre, despite a couple of epic promotional videos. (Brand New via DB)
Filed under: Assorted Links · Tags: advertising, David Byrne, graphic design, maps, marketing, memes, mp3s, Music, Nike, street art, video
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