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1 Views
22:35:17 01/24/12
Apples Test Hundreds of Product Packages in Secret Unboxing Room
[LESS INFO] 1 VIEWS | ADDED 22:35:17 01/24/12
Apples Test Hundreds of Product Packages in Secret Unboxing Room
Apple's unique iPackage designs are kept as secret as the products they contain. Writer Adam Lashinsky reveals some of the mystery behind Apple's packaging design and testing in his new book, "Inside Apple." From: mashable Views: 307 9 ratings Time: 01:13 More in News & Politics
0 Views
22:35:17 01/24/12
Apples Test Hundreds of Product Packages in Secret Unboxing Room
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 22:35:17 01/24/12
Apples Test Hundreds of Product Packages in Secret Unboxing Room
Apple's unique iPackage designs are kept as secret as the products they contain. Writer Adam Lashinsky reveals some of the mystery behind Apple's packaging design and testing in his new book, "Inside Apple." From: mashable Views: 307 9 ratings Time: 01:13 More in News & Politics
0 Views
19:05:27 01/23/12
Jeff Who Lives At Home - Official Trailer [HD]
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 19:05:27 01/23/12
Jeff Who Lives At Home - Official Trailer [HD]
Subscribe ow.ly | Facebook ow.ly | Twitter ow.ly Release Date: 16 March 2012 Genre: Comedy Cast: Jason Segel, Ed Helms, Judy Greer Directors: Jay Duplass, Mark Duplass Writers: Jay Duplass, Mark Duplass MPAA: R Studio: Paramount Pictures Plot: Dispatched from his basement room on an errand for his mother, slacker Jeff might discover his destiny (finally) when he spends the day with his brother as he tracks his possibly adulterous wife. From: trailers Views: 149713 1352 ratings Time: 02:30 More in Entertainment
2 Views
19:05:27 01/23/12
Jeff Who Lives At Home - Official Trailer [HD]
[LESS INFO] 2 VIEWS | ADDED 19:05:27 01/23/12
Jeff Who Lives At Home - Official Trailer [HD]
Subscribe ow.ly | Facebook ow.ly | Twitter ow.ly Release Date: 16 March 2012 Genre: Comedy Cast: Jason Segel, Ed Helms, Judy Greer Directors: Jay Duplass, Mark Duplass Writers: Jay Duplass, Mark Duplass MPAA: R Studio: Paramount Pictures Plot: Dispatched from his basement room on an errand for his mother, slacker Jeff might discover his destiny (finally) when he spends the day with his brother as he tracks his possibly adulterous wife. From: trailers Views: 149713 1352 ratings Time: 02:30 More in Entertainment
0 Views
18:43:55 01/23/12
Man on a Ledge - Room Service
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 18:43:55 01/23/12
Man on a Ledge - Room Service
Subscribe ow.ly | Facebook ow.ly | Twitter ow.ly Release Date: 13 January 2012 Genre: Thriller Cast: Elizabeth Banks, Sam Worthington, Jamie Bell Directors: Asger Leth Writer: Pablo F. Fenjves Studio: Summit Plot: An ex-cop and now wanted fugitive (Sam Worthington) stands on the ledge of a high-rise building while a hard-living New York Police Department negotiator (Elizabeth Banks)tries to talk him down. The longer they are on the ledge, the more she realizes that he might have an ulterior objective. From: trailers Views: 14191 71 ratings Time: 00:59 More in Entertainment
0 Views
18:43:55 01/23/12
Man on a Ledge - Room Service
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 18:43:55 01/23/12
Man on a Ledge - Room Service
Subscribe ow.ly | Facebook ow.ly | Twitter ow.ly Release Date: 13 January 2012 Genre: Thriller Cast: Elizabeth Banks, Sam Worthington, Jamie Bell Directors: Asger Leth Writer: Pablo F. Fenjves Studio: Summit Plot: An ex-cop and now wanted fugitive (Sam Worthington) stands on the ledge of a high-rise building while a hard-living New York Police Department negotiator (Elizabeth Banks)tries to talk him down. The longer they are on the ledge, the more she realizes that he might have an ulterior objective. From: trailers Views: 14191 71 ratings Time: 00:59 More in Entertainment
5 Views
20:00:00 12/19/11
Havel the Dissident: A Legacy Worth Claiming
[LESS INFO] 5 VIEWS | ADDED 20:00:00 12/19/11
Former President Havel addresses a European cultural congress on the economics of culture
On a warm evening in 1991, a colleague and I found an out-of-the-way café in the old part of Prague. Two men with blank expressions stood outside. The interior was dim and close, with room for only eight or nine tables. The place was almost empty. Just a sleepy waitress, a bartender polishing glasses, and a single patron who sat alone drinking wine and chain-smoking cigarettes.
The President of Czechoslovakia wasn't reviewing official papers. He was reading a book, a startlingly un-Presidential act to our American eyes. My companion, a neoconservative State Department official, already admired him for defying and defeating a Communist state. He'd impressed me by bringing a writer's sensibility and an affinity for true underground culture to his role as head of state.
Václav Havel even tried to appoint Frank Zappa as his Minister of Culture. "We're not rock musicians," Zappa told a reporter back in the sixties. "We're electronic social workers." The State Department wouldn't let Zappa assume the post, but Havel had made his point to the Czech public by offering this apparatchik's position to the composer of songs like "What's the Ugliest Part of Your Body?" ("Some say your nose, some say your toes, but I think it's your mind .")
We never spoke to Havel that night. It didn't seem polite to offer anything more than the curt nod of acknowledgement any café patron gives another at that hour. But Havel spoke to us, to all of us. And on the occasion of his death, the real lessons of his life's work are in danger of being lost.
Today we're told that the Occupy movement is too idealistic, too naïve. Naïve? Try Havel's words if you want naïve: "May truth and love triumph over lies and hatred."
Think of that as the Velvet Revolution's "one demand."
Portrait of the President as a Young Freak
As millions of people know, the underground playwright Havel first made his political mark in Charter 77. That group was formed to defend the Plastic People of the Universe, a banned and imprisoned rock band working in the Zappa mold of musical dissonance and cultural dissidence.
The Occupy movement is not on the cultural fringe, despite what its detractors say. But Havel's movement began as a Yippie-like creature of the underworld. Charter 77 rarely had more than a thousand members. It was a strange blend of political idealism and the hippie subculture where people proudly labeled themselves "freaks" to the conventional world. Despite its later alignment with economically conservative forces, it was more Allen Ginsburg than Alan Greenspan.
And it was created to defend the Plastic People of the Universe, whose grating music makes Occupy's drum circles seem like a children's choir serenading the bored residents of a home for aging veterans.
Words
Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité - what wonderful words! And how terrifying their meaning can be! Freedom in the shirt unbuttoned before execution. Equality in the constant speed of the guillotine's fall on different necks. Fraternity in some dubious paradise ...
Havel addressed the liberal democratic West on words in the 1970s, noting that the suppression of speech can give language enormous power: >
I ... live in a country where a writers' congress speech is capable of shaking the system ... a manifesto served as one of the pretexts for the invasion of our country one night by five foreign armies ... a system in which words are capable of shaking the entire structure of government, where words can prove mightier than ten military divisions.
When a system has become inflexible and is in danger of collapsing, what it fears most is words. Think about that the next time you see a phalanx of cops tear down a tent city on television.
Havel had been burned by language, too: >
The same word can at one moment radiate great hope, at another it can emit lethal rays ... true at one moment and false the next, at one moment illuminating, at another, deceptive. On one occasion it can open up glorious horizons, on another, it can lay down the tracks to an entire archipelago of concentration camps.
And as we approach an election year that will be filled with the rhetoric of freedom, this observation still resonates: >
The same word can at one time be the cornerstone of peace, while at another time machine-gun fire resounds in its every syllable.
Control
In 1975 Havel had the presumption to write directly to Czechoslovakian head of state Gustáv Husák with a few suggestions. There's more than a passing resemblance between the fear-driven Communist society Havel condemned in that letter and the financial anxiety many Americans endure today: >
The technique of existential pressure is ... universal. There is no one in our country who is not, in a broad sense, existentially vulnerable. Everyone has something to lose and so everyone has reason to be afraid. The range of things one can lose is broad, extending from the manifold privileges of the ruling caste... down to the mere possibility of living in that limited degree of legal certainty available to other citizens.
Today, one out of two Americans lives in financial insecurity. Even many upper-middle-class citizens live from month to month, just one layoff notice away from medical bankruptcy or home foreclosure.
"Everyone has something to lose," observed Havel.
Havel's description of his 20th Century Communist society echoes our own: >
The more completely one abandons any hope of general reform, any interest in suprapersonal goals and values, or any chance of exercising influence in an 'outward' direction, the more one's energy is diverted in the direction of least resistance, that is, 'inwards.'"
People today are preoccupied far more with themselves ... They fill their homes with all kinds of appliances and pretty things, they try to improve their accommodations, they try to make life pleasant for themselves, building cottages, looking after their cars, taking more interest in food and clothing and domestic comfort ...They turn their main attention to the material aspects of their private lives.
Havel concluded that "Despair leads to apathy, apathy to conformity, and conformity to routine (political) performance - which is then quoted as evidence of 'mass political involvement.'"
Ambition
Havel understood the psychology of greed and power, too. From his letter to Husák: >
If it is fear which lies behind people's defensive attempts to preserve what they have, it becomes increasingly apparent that the chief impulses for their aggressive efforts to win what they do not yet possess are selfishness and careerism.
It is not surprising that so many public and influential positions are occupied more than ever before by notorious careerists, opportunists, charlatans, and men of dubious record.
From Prague to Washington, from Moscow to lower Manhattan, the opportunities change. But human nature never does: >
Seldom in recent times has a social system offered scope so openly and so brazenly to people willing to support anything as long as it brings them some advantage; to unprincipled and spineless men, prepared to do anything in their craving for power and personal gain; to born lackeys, ready for any humiliation and willing at all times to sacrifice their neighbors' and their own honor for a chance to ingratiate themselves with those in power.
Technocracy
It's a historical irony that those who claim they'll govern with the most efficiency usually wind up governing with the least effectiveness. Today corporate-funded politicians from both parties argue that the country should be led by "technocrats' who'll govern without messy "ideologies."
That's a false premise Havel knew well. He called it the "process by which power becomes anonymous and depersonalized, reduced to a mere technology of rule and manipulation."
Washington's technocratic "bipartisans" dream of a world where, in Havel's words, the "professional ruler is (seen as) the 'innocent' tool of an 'innocent' anonymous power ... legitimized by science, cybernetics, ideology, law, abstraction, and objectivity - that is, by everything except personal responsibility to human beings as persons and neighbors." Havel's Prague is our Beltway: >
States grow ever more machinelike; people are transformed into statistical choruses of voters, producers, consumers, patients, tourists, or soldiers, (where) in politics good and evil, categories of the natural world and therefore obsolete remnants of the past, lose all absolute meaning (and where) the sole method of politics is quantifiable success.
Havel condemned a system of state-orchestrated political theater, and the self-perpetuating failures of imagination which mistook the indifferent and pro forma participation of its citizens for genuine democracy. And he saw its universal nature: >
(It) has a thousand masks, variants, and expressions. Essentially, though, it is the same universal trend ... the essential trait of all modern civilization, growing directly from its spiritual structure, rooted in it by a thousand tangled tendrils and inseparable even in thought from its technological nature, its mass characteristics, and its consumer orientation.
"The contemporary concept of 'normal' behavior is," Havel wrote, "deeply pessimistic."
Responsibility
"I favor 'antipolitical politics,'" said Havel, "politics not as the technology of power and manipulation, of cybernetic rule over humans or as the art of the utilitarian, but politics as one of the ways of seeking and achieving meaningful lives, of protecting them and serving them." >
I favor politics as practical morality, as service to the truth, as essentially human and humanly measured care for our fellow humans.
None of us--as an individual--can save the world as a whole, but . . . each of us must behave as though it were in his power to do so.
Decades later he said this to the leaders of Western countries: >
Today, more than ever before in the history of mankind, everything is interrelated ... Because of this, the future of the United States or the European Union is being decided in suffering Sarajevo or Mostar, in the plundered Brazilian rain forests, in the wretched poverty of Bangladesh or Somalia.
Havel had glaring faults. American neocons offered him small favors during his final rise to power. He reciprocated, consciously or unconsciously, by aiding their destructive military ventures and adopting their foolish economic policies. He succumbed to the politics of personality, both his own and those of the leaders who courted him. But it would be a shame if that's all the world remembered.
Havel seemed unhappy in the role of leader. It's possible than he lost sight of his deepest insights, his truest gifts. It was the outsider Havel, the dreamer of the impossible, the surrealist and absurdist, we should remember. That's the Havel who can and should inspire dissidents everywhere.
"Is the human word truly powerful enough to change the world and influence history?" he once asked. With his life and his words, Václav Havel gave us his answer. He showed us the power in each individual and the responsibility that accompanies that power.
At his best, and above all else, Havel was a dissident outsider who realized his power and used it. Now it's our turn.
0 Views
07:43:17 12/01/11
DSK gives his version of the "truth"
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 07:43:17 12/01/11
DSK gives his version of the "truth"
www.euronews.net A book out this week quotes the former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn saying his sexual encounter with a New York hotel maid was "consensual but stupid". The biography written by French writer Michel Taubmann also contains conspiracy theories including the suggestion the maid was in his room to steal Strauss-Kahn's mobile phone. From: Euronews Views: 175 3 ratings Time: 00:53 More in News & Politics
15 Views
10:31:36 10/18/11
The Trap Door - Interview of Tiny Lister
[LESS INFO] 15 VIEWS | ADDED 10:31:36 10/18/11
Brought to you by www.icplaces.com
Steve Samblis’ Blog @ The Mevio Men Blog: http://meviomen.mevio.com
Check out other IC Places shows...
The Instant Movie Review: http://moviereviews.mevio.com
1st Look: http://1stLook.Mevio.com
icTrailers: http://Trailers.Mevio.com
IC Places Sports: http://icSports.Mevio.com
icMusic: http://icMusic.Mevio.com
Weekly IcNews Wrap: http://icNews.Mevio.com
Cooking For Bachelors: http://CookingForBachelors.Mevio.com
The Home Entertainment Review: http://dvdReview.Mevio.com
The Two Min Investor: http://investing.Mevio.com
It all begins with a text message. An anonymous message sent to the cell phones of a dozen young men and women. The message is an invitation to attend one killer of a party. Just who sent the message no one knows, but it turns out to be an invitation no one can refuse, but which everyone will regret. Inside the doors of a dilapidated mansion, they gather, eat, drink, party, and have the time of their lives - that is, until it's time to go. The front door doesn't open; the back door doesn't open. Doors that once led to familiar rooms now lead to new ones; some doors open to yet other doors, and some go straight to dead ends. Only one thing remains constant: every door is a trap, leaving only one way out.
Filmmakers: Kennedy Goldsby - Director / Writer , Paul Goldsby - Producer , Edgar Arellano - Cinematographer , John Barnes - Composer , Paul Bianchi - Production Designer , Eric Chase - Editor more » Cast STARmeter™ Tommy 'Tiny' Lister ... Jomo 4,188 Felix Ryan ... Rick 8,400 Obba Babatundé ... Mesmer 8,649 Andrew Ramaglia ... Dean 14,905 Chico Benymon ... Bruce 24,773 Andrew Cappelletti ... Master of Ceremonies 46,146 Danielle Lilley ... Suzanne 55,766 Michael Bernardi ... Marc 89,908 Maria Ines ... Alexis 120,056 Sarah Wagenvoord ... Robin 169,123 Francis Hamilton ... Gary 211,931 Molly Johnson ... Kendra 315,231 Evelyn Badillo ... Elena 374,638
Directed by
Kennedy Goldsby
Writers
Kennedy Goldsby
Producers
Paul Goldsby ... producer
The Good Herb ... executive producer
Frank Pinnock ... co-producer
Original Music
John Barnes
Cinematographers
Edgar Arellano
Editors
Eric Chase
Production Designers
Paul Bianchi
Art Directors
James Bianca
Costume Designers
Hillari James
Make Up Department
Melanie Deforrest ... special makeup effects artist
Lisa Marie DeRoma ... head make-up artist
Production Managers
Nancy McLeod ... production manager
Second Unit Directors or Assistant Directors
Matthew Bolton ... first assistant director
Joshua Lou Friedman ... first assistant director
Frank Pinnock ... second unit director
Tim Steinmetz ... second assistant director
Art Department
Savanna Parra ... art pa
Savanna Parra ... set dresser
Sound Department
Kilyoung Baek ... sound editor
Bill Baker ... boom operator
Lionel Ball ... sound mixer
Eric Chase ... sound re-recording mixer
Jesse Stubblefield ¹ ... sound mixer
Visual Effects Department
Jason Cavitt ... visual effects
Victor Ianiu ... visual effects artist
Ajoy Paul ... visual effects artist
David Scandlyn ... visual effects producer
Camera and Electrical Department
Sena Amengok ... second assistant camera
Nathaniel Bell ... swing
Michael L. Canale ... second assistant camera
Foster V. Corder ... gaffer
Javier Costa ... steadicam operator: daily
Grant Culwell ... steadicam operator: daily
Miko Dannels ... steadicam operator: daily
Brigman Foster-Owens ... key grip
Robert Mithumia ... first assistant camera
Adam Ocepek ... best boy electric
Ari Robbins ... steadicam operator: daily
Brian Smith ... grip
Damone West ... electrician
Costume and Wardrobe Department
DeeDee Hopkins ... set costumer
Hillari James ... key costumer
Editorial Department
Eric Chase ... colorist
Production Companies
Goodness Films
7 Views
10:31:36 10/18/11
The Trap Door - Interview of Tiny Lister
[LESS INFO] 7 VIEWS | ADDED 10:31:36 10/18/11
Brought to you by www.icplaces.com
Steve Samblis’ Blog @ The Mevio Men Blog: http://meviomen.mevio.com
Check out other IC Places shows...
The Instant Movie Review: http://moviereviews.mevio.com
1st Look: http://1stLook.Mevio.com
icTrailers: http://Trailers.Mevio.com
IC Places Sports: http://icSports.Mevio.com
icMusic: http://icMusic.Mevio.com
Weekly IcNews Wrap: http://icNews.Mevio.com
Cooking For Bachelors: http://CookingForBachelors.Mevio.com
The Home Entertainment Review: http://dvdReview.Mevio.com
The Two Min Investor: http://investing.Mevio.com
It all begins with a text message. An anonymous message sent to the cell phones of a dozen young men and women. The message is an invitation to attend one killer of a party. Just who sent the message no one knows, but it turns out to be an invitation no one can refuse, but which everyone will regret. Inside the doors of a dilapidated mansion, they gather, eat, drink, party, and have the time of their lives - that is, until it's time to go. The front door doesn't open; the back door doesn't open. Doors that once led to familiar rooms now lead to new ones; some doors open to yet other doors, and some go straight to dead ends. Only one thing remains constant: every door is a trap, leaving only one way out.
Filmmakers: Kennedy Goldsby - Director / Writer , Paul Goldsby - Producer , Edgar Arellano - Cinematographer , John Barnes - Composer , Paul Bianchi - Production Designer , Eric Chase - Editor more » Cast STARmeter™ Tommy 'Tiny' Lister ... Jomo 4,188 Felix Ryan ... Rick 8,400 Obba Babatundé ... Mesmer 8,649 Andrew Ramaglia ... Dean 14,905 Chico Benymon ... Bruce 24,773 Andrew Cappelletti ... Master of Ceremonies 46,146 Danielle Lilley ... Suzanne 55,766 Michael Bernardi ... Marc 89,908 Maria Ines ... Alexis 120,056 Sarah Wagenvoord ... Robin 169,123 Francis Hamilton ... Gary 211,931 Molly Johnson ... Kendra 315,231 Evelyn Badillo ... Elena 374,638
Directed by
Kennedy Goldsby
Writers
Kennedy Goldsby
Producers
Paul Goldsby ... producer
The Good Herb ... executive producer
Frank Pinnock ... co-producer
Original Music
John Barnes
Cinematographers
Edgar Arellano
Editors
Eric Chase
Production Designers
Paul Bianchi
Art Directors
James Bianca
Costume Designers
Hillari James
Make Up Department
Melanie Deforrest ... special makeup effects artist
Lisa Marie DeRoma ... head make-up artist
Production Managers
Nancy McLeod ... production manager
Second Unit Directors or Assistant Directors
Matthew Bolton ... first assistant director
Joshua Lou Friedman ... first assistant director
Frank Pinnock ... second unit director
Tim Steinmetz ... second assistant director
Art Department
Savanna Parra ... art pa
Savanna Parra ... set dresser
Sound Department
Kilyoung Baek ... sound editor
Bill Baker ... boom operator
Lionel Ball ... sound mixer
Eric Chase ... sound re-recording mixer
Jesse Stubblefield ¹ ... sound mixer
Visual Effects Department
Jason Cavitt ... visual effects
Victor Ianiu ... visual effects artist
Ajoy Paul ... visual effects artist
David Scandlyn ... visual effects producer
Camera and Electrical Department
Sena Amengok ... second assistant camera
Nathaniel Bell ... swing
Michael L. Canale ... second assistant camera
Foster V. Corder ... gaffer
Javier Costa ... steadicam operator: daily
Grant Culwell ... steadicam operator: daily
Miko Dannels ... steadicam operator: daily
Brigman Foster-Owens ... key grip
Robert Mithumia ... first assistant camera
Adam Ocepek ... best boy electric
Ari Robbins ... steadicam operator: daily
Brian Smith ... grip
Damone West ... electrician
Costume and Wardrobe Department
DeeDee Hopkins ... set costumer
Hillari James ... key costumer
Editorial Department
Eric Chase ... colorist
Production Companies
Goodness Films
19 Views
11:17:06 10/13/11
The Trap Door
[LESS INFO] 19 VIEWS | ADDED 11:17:06 10/13/11
Brought to you by www.icplaces.com
Steve Samblis’ Blog @ The Mevio Men Blog: http://meviomen.mevio.com
Check out other IC Places shows...
The Instant Movie Review: http://moviereviews.mevio.com
1st Look: http://1stLook.Mevio.com
icTrailers: http://Trailers.Mevio.com
IC Places Sports: http://icSports.Mevio.com
icMusic: http://icMusic.Mevio.com
Weekly IcNews Wrap: http://icNews.Mevio.com
Cooking For Bachelors: http://CookingForBachelors.Mevio.com
The Home Entertainment Review: http://dvdReview.Mevio.com
The Two Min Investor: http://investing.Mevio.com
It all begins with a text message. An anonymous message sent to the cell phones of a dozen young men and women. The message is an invitation to attend one killer of a party. Just who sent the message no one knows, but it turns out to be an invitation no one can refuse, but which everyone will regret. Inside the doors of a dilapidated mansion, they gather, eat, drink, party, and have the time of their lives - that is, until it's time to go. The front door doesn't open; the back door doesn't open. Doors that once led to familiar rooms now lead to new ones; some doors open to yet other doors, and some go straight to dead ends. Only one thing remains constant: every door is a trap, leaving only one way out.
Filmmakers: Kennedy Goldsby - Director / Writer , Paul Goldsby - Producer , Edgar Arellano - Cinematographer , John Barnes - Composer , Paul Bianchi - Production Designer , Eric Chase - Editor more »
Cast STARmeter™
Tommy 'Tiny' Lister ... Jomo 4,147
Felix Ryan ... Rick 8,810
Obba Babatundé ... Mesmer 9,417
Andrew Ramaglia ... Dean 13,363
Chico Benymon ... Bruce 24,231
Andrew Cappelletti ... Master of Ceremonies 40,826
Danielle Lilley ... Suzanne 71,616
Michael Bernardi ... Marc 112,545
Maria Ines ... Alexis 130,443 Sarah Wagenvoord ... Robin 289,064 Molly Johnson ... Kendra 2,367,175 Evelyn Badillo ... Elena 3,334,908 Francis Hamilton ... Gary 4,292,121 Directed by
Kennedy Goldsby
Writers
Kennedy Goldsby Producers
Paul Goldsby ... producer
The Good Herb ... executive producer
Frank Pinnock ... co-producer
Original Music
John Barnes
Cinematographers
Edgar Arellano
Editors
Eric Chase
Production Designers
Paul Bianchi
Art Directors
James Bianca
Costume Designers
Hillari James
Make Up Department
Melanie Deforrest ... special makeup effects artist
Lisa Marie DeRoma ... head make-up artist
Production Managers
Nancy McLeod ... production manager
Second Unit Directors or Assistant Directors
Matthew Bolton ... first assistant director
Joshua Lou Friedman ... first assistant director
Frank Pinnock ... second unit director
Tim Steinmetz ... second assistant director
Art Department
Savanna Parra ... art pa
Savanna Parra ... set dresser
Sound Department
Kilyoung Baek ... sound editor
Bill Baker ... boom operator
Lionel Ball ... sound mixer
Eric Chase ... sound re-recording mixer
Jesse Stubblefield ¹ ... sound mixer
Visual Effects Department
Jason Cavitt ... visual effects
Victor Ianiu ... visual effects artist
Ajoy Paul ... visual effects artist
David Scandlyn ... visual effects producer
Camera and Electrical Department
Sena Amengok ... second assistant camera
Nathaniel Bell ... swing
Michael L. Canale ... second assistant camera
Foster V. Corder ... gaffer
Javier Costa ... steadicam operator: daily
Grant Culwell ... steadicam operator: daily
Miko Dannels ... steadicam operator: daily
Brigman Foster-Owens ... key grip
Robert Mithumia ... first assistant camera
Adam Ocepek ... best boy electric
Ari Robbins ... steadicam operator: daily
Brian Smith ... grip
Damone West ... electrician
Costume and Wardrobe Department
DeeDee Hopkins ... set costumer
Hillari James ... key costumer
Editorial Department
Eric Chase ... colorist
Production Companies
Goodness Films
6 Views
11:17:06 10/13/11
The Trap Door
[LESS INFO] 6 VIEWS | ADDED 11:17:06 10/13/11
Brought to you by www.icplaces.com
Steve Samblis’ Blog @ The Mevio Men Blog: http://meviomen.mevio.com
Check out other IC Places shows...
The Instant Movie Review: http://moviereviews.mevio.com
1st Look: http://1stLook.Mevio.com
icTrailers: http://Trailers.Mevio.com
IC Places Sports: http://icSports.Mevio.com
icMusic: http://icMusic.Mevio.com
Weekly IcNews Wrap: http://icNews.Mevio.com
Cooking For Bachelors: http://CookingForBachelors.Mevio.com
The Home Entertainment Review: http://dvdReview.Mevio.com
The Two Min Investor: http://investing.Mevio.com
It all begins with a text message. An anonymous message sent to the cell phones of a dozen young men and women. The message is an invitation to attend one killer of a party. Just who sent the message no one knows, but it turns out to be an invitation no one can refuse, but which everyone will regret. Inside the doors of a dilapidated mansion, they gather, eat, drink, party, and have the time of their lives - that is, until it's time to go. The front door doesn't open; the back door doesn't open. Doors that once led to familiar rooms now lead to new ones; some doors open to yet other doors, and some go straight to dead ends. Only one thing remains constant: every door is a trap, leaving only one way out.
Filmmakers: Kennedy Goldsby - Director / Writer , Paul Goldsby - Producer , Edgar Arellano - Cinematographer , John Barnes - Composer , Paul Bianchi - Production Designer , Eric Chase - Editor more »
Cast STARmeter™
Tommy 'Tiny' Lister ... Jomo 4,147
Felix Ryan ... Rick 8,810
Obba Babatundé ... Mesmer 9,417
Andrew Ramaglia ... Dean 13,363
Chico Benymon ... Bruce 24,231
Andrew Cappelletti ... Master of Ceremonies 40,826
Danielle Lilley ... Suzanne 71,616
Michael Bernardi ... Marc 112,545
Maria Ines ... Alexis 130,443 Sarah Wagenvoord ... Robin 289,064 Molly Johnson ... Kendra 2,367,175 Evelyn Badillo ... Elena 3,334,908 Francis Hamilton ... Gary 4,292,121 Directed by
Kennedy Goldsby
Writers
Kennedy Goldsby Producers
Paul Goldsby ... producer
The Good Herb ... executive producer
Frank Pinnock ... co-producer
Original Music
John Barnes
Cinematographers
Edgar Arellano
Editors
Eric Chase
Production Designers
Paul Bianchi
Art Directors
James Bianca
Costume Designers
Hillari James
Make Up Department
Melanie Deforrest ... special makeup effects artist
Lisa Marie DeRoma ... head make-up artist
Production Managers
Nancy McLeod ... production manager
Second Unit Directors or Assistant Directors
Matthew Bolton ... first assistant director
Joshua Lou Friedman ... first assistant director
Frank Pinnock ... second unit director
Tim Steinmetz ... second assistant director
Art Department
Savanna Parra ... art pa
Savanna Parra ... set dresser
Sound Department
Kilyoung Baek ... sound editor
Bill Baker ... boom operator
Lionel Ball ... sound mixer
Eric Chase ... sound re-recording mixer
Jesse Stubblefield ¹ ... sound mixer
Visual Effects Department
Jason Cavitt ... visual effects
Victor Ianiu ... visual effects artist
Ajoy Paul ... visual effects artist
David Scandlyn ... visual effects producer
Camera and Electrical Department
Sena Amengok ... second assistant camera
Nathaniel Bell ... swing
Michael L. Canale ... second assistant camera
Foster V. Corder ... gaffer
Javier Costa ... steadicam operator: daily
Grant Culwell ... steadicam operator: daily
Miko Dannels ... steadicam operator: daily
Brigman Foster-Owens ... key grip
Robert Mithumia ... first assistant camera
Adam Ocepek ... best boy electric
Ari Robbins ... steadicam operator: daily
Brian Smith ... grip
Damone West ... electrician
Costume and Wardrobe Department
DeeDee Hopkins ... set costumer
Hillari James ... key costumer
Editorial Department
Eric Chase ... colorist
Production Companies
Goodness Films
6 Views
16:44:28 10/05/11
Graham Hill: Less stuff, more happiness
[LESS INFO] 6 VIEWS | ADDED 16:44:28 10/05/11
Graham Hill: Less stuff, more happiness
www.ted.com Writer and designer Graham Hill asks Can having less stuff, in less room, lead to more happiness? He makes the case for taking up less space, and lays out three rules for editing your life.TEDTalks is a daily video podcast of the best talks and performances from the TED Conference, where the world's leading thinkers and doers give the talk of their lives in 18 minutes. Featured speakers have included Al Gore on climate change, Philippe Starck on design, Jill Bolte Taylor on observing her own stroke, Nicholas Negroponte on One Laptop per Child, Jane Goodall on chimpanzees, Bill Gates on malaria and mosquitoes, Pattie Maes on the "Sixth Sense" wearable tech, and "Lost" producer JJ Abrams on the allure of mystery. TED stands for Technology, Entertainment, Design, and TEDTalks cover these topics as well as science, business, development and the arts. Closed captions and translated subtitles in a variety of languages are now available on TED.com, at www.ted.com From: TEDtalksDirector Views: 47784 1356 ratings Time: 05:50 More in People & Blogs
0 Views
16:44:28 10/05/11
Graham Hill: Less stuff, more happiness
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 16:44:28 10/05/11
Graham Hill: Less stuff, more happiness
www.ted.com Writer and designer Graham Hill asks Can having less stuff, in less room, lead to more happiness? He makes the case for taking up less space, and lays out three rules for editing your life.TEDTalks is a daily video podcast of the best talks and performances from the TED Conference, where the world's leading thinkers and doers give the talk of their lives in 18 minutes. Featured speakers have included Al Gore on climate change, Philippe Starck on design, Jill Bolte Taylor on observing her own stroke, Nicholas Negroponte on One Laptop per Child, Jane Goodall on chimpanzees, Bill Gates on malaria and mosquitoes, Pattie Maes on the "Sixth Sense" wearable tech, and "Lost" producer JJ Abrams on the allure of mystery. TED stands for Technology, Entertainment, Design, and TEDTalks cover these topics as well as science, business, development and the arts. Closed captions and translated subtitles in a variety of languages are now available on TED.com, at www.ted.com From: TEDtalksDirector Views: 57415 1463 ratings Time: 05:50 More in People & Blogs
0 Views
16:44:28 10/05/11
Graham Hill: Less stuff, more happiness
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 16:44:28 10/05/11
Graham Hill: Less stuff, more happiness
www.ted.com Writer and designer Graham Hill asks Can having less stuff, in less room, lead to more happiness? He makes the case for taking up less space, and lays out three rules for editing your life.TEDTalks is a daily video podcast of the best talks and performances from the TED Conference, where the world's leading thinkers and doers give the talk of their lives in 18 minutes. Featured speakers have included Al Gore on climate change, Philippe Starck on design, Jill Bolte Taylor on observing her own stroke, Nicholas Negroponte on One Laptop per Child, Jane Goodall on chimpanzees, Bill Gates on malaria and mosquitoes, Pattie Maes on the "Sixth Sense" wearable tech, and "Lost" producer JJ Abrams on the allure of mystery. TED stands for Technology, Entertainment, Design, and TEDTalks cover these topics as well as science, business, development and the arts. Closed captions and translated subtitles in a variety of languages are now available on TED.com, at www.ted.com From: TEDtalksDirector Views: 57599 1465 ratings Time: 05:50 More in People & Blogs
147 Views
15:08:50 10/05/11
TED: Graham Hill: Less stuff, more happiness - Graham Hill (2011)
[LESS INFO] 147 VIEWS | ADDED 15:08:50 10/05/11
Writer and designer Graham Hill asks: Can having less stuff, in less room, lead to more happiness? He makes the case for taking up less space, and lays out three rules for editing your life.

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