HindSight

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

TRIBECA FLASHPOINT ACADEMY CEO HOWARD A. TULLMAN SELECTS WINNERS FOR FIRST ANNUAL STUDENT ART SHOW



Katie Sarhage



Emilee Kieffer



Sean Moran



SPECIAL THANKS TO BEN S AND LINDSAY D FOR ALL THEIR HELP IN MAKING THIS HAPPEN AND TO ALL OF THE STUDENTS WHO SUBMITTED ARTWORK FOR THE PROJECT. 

Saturday, May 19, 2012

CREATIVE CULTURE : Oxymoron or Feed Me, Seymour?

Barry's Blog

CREATIVE CULTURE : Oxymoron or Feed Me, Seymour?


"Humanism" by Leonardo Nierman

Corporate creativity doesn’t just happen. You can’t simply hire it or legislate it. Building a culture of innovation is more akin to building a rose garden than an office or a factory. It needs to be thoughtfully planted, nourished and given lots of love.

Just walk in to the headquarters of Progressive Insurance and you will see Andy Warhol’s infamous Mao Tse Tung portraits. Progress through the building and you will be aroused (consciously or subconsciously) by one of the most provocative art collections in the world. Insurance is a left-brain actuarial science. What does art have to do with selling boring old insurance? “Everything — if you intend to reinvent the way people buy insurance” said visionary Progressive CEO, Glenn Renwick. I remember Glenn saying to me “If McDonald’s can teach people to bus their own tables, we should be able to teach people the benefits of buying insurance direct from someone who does all the homework for them. Or a claims agent who shows up at the scene of an accident before the cops do, cutting a check on the spot.” This kind of product innovation doesn’t come out of a purely left-brain culture. Intellectual curiosity. A collision of art and science. A creative culture that changed the way Americans buy insurance. Not so boring, huh?

Why would entrepreneurial star, Howard Tullman, fill a college (Tribeca Flashpoint Academy) with one of America’s most stunning collections of modern art? Does he just like expensive décor or is it a very purposeful strategic move to stimulate the imaginations of the next generation of digital storytellers? I can say with first hand knowledge, it’s the latter.

What about Frank Gehry’s “Binoculars” building for Chiat/Day? Or Steve Jobs essentially art directing the town of Cupertino? It’s all about feeding a culture of creativity, nurturing a garden of innovation.

In the first ever course on Corporate Creativity at Harvard, Dorothy Barton Leonard and John Kao proclaimed that the world’s most innovative organizations are imbued with artfully stimulating signs of play. These serve as right brain creative stimulation to shake, or even shock, people from their left-brain logical neat and tidy tendencies bringing more creative curiosity to everything they do. Or to quote Hal Riney, “so they act more like human beings.”

I’d love to hear what you think of our new, Leonardo Nierman sculpture. It’s called “Humanism” from the Zygman Voss Gallery and it represents a collision of humanity and technology. Just like our company. Just like our world today. Feed me, Seymour.

Barrykrause@suite-partners.com

Letting People Make the World a Better Place



Robert Grosshandler
Founder of iGive.com


Letting People Make the World a Better Place
Posted: 05/18/2012 11:00 am


When I founded iGive.com in 1997, I could only hope that it would grow into 350,000 socially-conscious consumers shopping at over 1,000 socially-responsible stores, and making every purchase mean a donation for over 50,000 mostly small charities. The best part? It's never cost the consumers or the charities a single penny, it's the terrific merchants who care about helping their valued customers' favorite causes who make it all possible. iGive has allowed me to put into practice "have fun, do good, make money". For me, it's a three-legged stool of a philosophy, without all three legs it just doesn't work. Getting to know the participants of each individual charity big and small, almost always volunteers, who are working hard to make the world a better place.

Making the world a better place is a funny concept, very much subject to personal interpretation. Some of the groups listed at iGive work passionately to save an animal breed, others work equally hard to shelter the homeless. For some, it's kids, for others, the aged. I love having created a "big tent", where no matter your passion, no matter how you see the world, you can help improve this world we share.

The breadth of the work these volunteers do is rather mind-boggling. There's the newspaper called Streetwise that works to give the homeless the skills necessary to fend for themselves. They make it possible for the homeless to start selling Streetwise on street corners around Chicagoland, earning money, and learning life skills. Part of that means making sure the newspaper vendors get a decent meal before heading out. So one of their super volunteers goes around to restaurants and grocery stores, picking up food that's about to go out of date. He stuffs into his 10-year-old SUV, brings it home to a used refrigerator, and then delivers it. His car overflows with frozen vegetables, meat, and sometimes complete Thanksgiving dinners. Oh yes, he'll cook a meal for hundreds of people. And if there are left overs, he personally takes the excess to the Salvation Army. In his day job his passion is the Roller Derby.

Or take Marisol and Moreton Binn, who sold his business years ago and now should be retired. Instead, they rescue the widest variety of animals I've ever seen. Most animal rescues specialize (dogs, cats, German Shepherds, Arabian Horses). Not the Binns. They have over 100 farm animals at their rescue. No conversation with Moreton ever ends without his showing pictures of the kids, and the animals. Not necessarily in that order. His extended animal family can be found at www.binnanimalrescue.org.

Sometimes the effort to make the world a better place is driven by the need to sell stuff, sometimes pretty mundane stuff -- like deodorant, for example. Check out http://www.facebook.com/meanstinks. Proctor & Gamble basically wants to sell Secret, but they take great pleasure at helping girls along the way.

Making the world a better place is hard, but not necessarily thankless. In my economically and ethnically diverse home town of about 80,000, a group of volunteers get together yearly to produce a musical, casting 160 juniors and seniors in a "no-cut" opportunity to learn about theatre, working together, and what being in the limelight feels like. It's called Brillianteen. If I had to wrangle that many teenagers, I'd need shock therapy afterwards. These volunteers are addicted. The respect they get from the kids, the admiration of their peers, and the feeling of community mean that some of them have been doing this for over twenty years.

Occasionally, I get to see the kids themselves do really interesting work on behalf of causes. This year, I was fortunate to be a judge at a contest sponsored by Tribeca Flashpoint Academy. Five teams of students produced a complete campaign to help one of five causes. Not only was the work they did pretty exceptional, these kids themselves grew during the process. In this case, there was almost a "triple bottom line". Flashpoint made money helping to educate these students. Five causes raised money and awareness. And the 75 students really honed their chops, becoming employable, and helping at the same time.

Thursday, May 17, 2012

TULLMAN FIGURATIVE ART COLLECTION WILL BE THE FIRST MAJOR PRIVATE COLLECTION ADDED TO THE GOOGLE ART PROJECT


CHECK IT OUT HERE: http://www.googleartproject.com/  

NOTE: USE CHROME OR ANY MAJOR BROWSER OTHER THAN INTERNET EXPLORER

TRIBECA FLASHPOINT ACADEMY CEO HOWARD TULLMAN TREP LIFE EPISODE PREMIERES ON INC MAGAZINE WEBSITE



WATCH THE FULL VIDEO HERE:

http://www.inc.com/scotty-cadenhead-and-malachi-leopold/serial-entrepreneur-howard-tullman-tribeca-flashpoint-academy.html

TRIBECA FLASHPOINT ACADEMY WELCOMES "BERNIE" DIRECTOR RICHARD LINKLATER FOR SCREENING AND STUDENT Q&A























WATCH THE VIDEO:





Director Richard Linklater takes journalistic approach to 'Bernie'



May 16, 2012|By Christopher Borrelli, Tribune Newspapers

Richard Linklater at 51 looks almost exactly like the Richard Linklater we met at 30, the young Austin filmmaker who, with his 1991 breakthrough, "Slacker," defined a sensibility (indie, navel-gazing, interlocking narratives) and a lifestyle.
Indeed, at first glance he appears to have never shaken that lifestyle: In Chicago the other day to shoot an episode of an upcoming travel series for Hulu, Linklater looked every inch the aging slacker. His hair hung in style-free curtains. A slight gut pushed at buttons of his untucked work shirt. His still-boyish face held a bemused expression more familiar on surf bums than acclaimed directors.
Add the Texas twang and he seemed like, well, all right all right all right, Matthew McConaughey's brother from another mother. Which isn't some random association: His follow-up to "Slacker" became McConaughey's laid-back 1993 breakthrough, "Dazed and Confused." They were simpatico. But then, the undercooked "Newton Boys" (1998) aside, the pair didn't shoot a film together for 14 years.
McConaughey went A-list. And Linklater went all over the place, making masterpieces ("Before Sunrise," "Before Sunset"), blockbusters ("School of Rock"), experiments ("Waking Life"), bombs ("The Bad News Bears" remake), investigative docudramas ("Fast Food Nation"). They didn't shoot another film together until just recently.
"Bernie," which opens today, is your typical Linklater film — meaning, it's unlike any other Linklater film. It's an adaptation of a 1998 Texas Monthly article by writer Skip Hollandsworth about a beloved, gentle East Texas mortician (played by Jack Black) who befriends a rich, mean antiquarian (Shirley MacLaine).
It would be unfair to reveal much more than this:"Bernie"becomes a crime story, Linklater ingeniously weaves together a Greek chorus of actual East Texas locals, and McConaughey — in a small role — plays a zealous prosecutor.
We spoke to Linklater in a conference room at the Tribeca Flashpoint Media Arts Academy.


 LEARN MORE: http://www.tfa.edu/blog/single/richard-linklaters-road-to-tfa
Q: Did you want to be a journalist? You have very journalistic streak as a filmmaker.
A: I suppose I do go through my life somewhere between journalist and documentary filmmaker. Like a lot of those people, I have endless files on all kinds of subjects I'm interested in.
It's all over the place, subjectwise. I'm always looking. I read a lot of nonfiction. I like investigative journalism.
I was on my high school newspaper staff, and I always wanted to be writer and thought the only way I could make any money at being a writer was by being a journalist. But remember, this was in the 1970s. I was trying to be practical.
Q: You definitely seem to have a general-assignment reporter's sense of curiosity.
A: That everything is a potential story? That's so true. My threshold for what is interesting is so low (laughs).
Three times a day I think to myself, "That could be a movie." I keep actual file cabinets in my office organized by subjects. At any time I'm probably reading research materials related to 10 potential films.
Q: So why not make "Bernie" as a documentary?
A: Nah. Because it's not the way my brain works, ultimately. But I approach things the way a journalist might. Though there is a journalistic quality in the interviews in the film, those are scripted, rehearsed.
I hate the word "mockumentary." The closest thing is maybe the way Warren Beatty used interviews in "Reds."
Q: Your dialogue is journalistic too. Rescripted quotes from your actors, right?
A: Yeah, I've been doing that for 20 years. I think I'm most creative when I let people write their own lines, when I have to think about the script as they see it. Ethan (Hawke) and Julie (Delpy), in "Before Sunrise" and "Before Sunset," sat in a room for three weeks and rewrote their entire scripts. I want to hear actual voices.
Q: How much of "Bernie" is your reporting?
A: The trial at the end, certainly. I attended it. I wanted to know exactly what was said, the feel for the courthouse. They didn't have enough food in the small town where the trial was set, so people sold food out on the street. I bought a pimento cheese sandwich.
You want to gather details. But so much more of it came straight from Skip's reporting, his interviews and the way he was able to piece his own work on it together.
Q: You still live and work out of Austin. Has that decision affected your career?
A: Sure. It's made it harder. But it was never a big decision. It was life unfolding. You get attached to a place, and now I am an "industry outsider."
If I lived in Los Angeles and could play golf with people, it would help. But I never wanted to be the guy who people came to because I was the last director they met. The thing is, even when a film, like "School of Rock," comes my way, I work fine within Hollywood. I make exactly what I want to make.
They don't want to take your film away from you, which means more work.
Q: Why has it taken you so long to work with Matthew McConaughey again? You seem so perfect for each other. He actually seems like you in a way. Or maybe you seem like him in a way.
A: I know. it's really true. We met 20 years ago this summer. We have done three films together. Our dads played on the same college football team at University of Houston in the early '50s.There is a link there, but, you know, you don't want to abuse a friendship just for a movie, and Matthew doesn't owe me a damn thing.
For a while we talked about a (presidential brother) Billy Carter film. But it's not the kind of film that Hollywood likes to make now.
Q: Actually, 20 years ago, this movie, "Bernie," would have been a wide release.
A: Oh, 12 years ago! Ten years ago! Around the time we first had a script, years ago, I thought it would be like a small studio film.
"Dazed and Confused," I made for a studio for only $6 million. "Bernie," I thought, might be like $12 or $15 million. But in the early 2000s, studios quit making films like this, so by the time I got around time to actually shooting, I had 22 days to do it and absolutely no interest from the industry.

Q: Does that disappoint you? You grew up in the 1970s when filmmaking for adults was the standard. Then, by the time you came into your own, smart movies for grown-ups kind of fell off.
A: I see it the other way, that I got a good run, that I was born at the right time. This is my 16th film. I caught the wave in the early '90s. And I heard the death rattle (laughs).
I am still making movies, but I guess we're just redefining what it means to make, and to watch, movies for adults these days. I remember around the time when I was making "A Scanner Darkly," a reality set in — "People will mostly see this at home."

Q: I still picture people reading this story in a newspaper.
A: Which is a healthy delusion. Creative people need to be unrealistic. By nature, they have to be.

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