The Embassy Gardens’ sky pool is made of aquarium glass to look like an overpass of water that stretches between two towers.
Infinity pools are lame. Sky pools that stretch between buildings like transparent overpasses of water? Infinitely cooler.
The Embassy Gardens’ sky pool is made of aquarium glass to look like an overpass of water that stretches between two towers.
Infinity pools are lame. Sky pools that stretch between buildings like transparent overpasses of water? Infinitely cooler.
Every moment of too-hot, late-making, subway frustration is actually a love connection waiting to happen in this sweet, surreal video.
The New York subway is a magical steel caterpillar that takes riders anywhere they want to go in the city. Except when it doesn’t, which is gallingly often. (Or maybe it just seems that way in Co.Create’s memory. Hard to remember every instance it runs perfectly.) Adrift in the immediacy that is the city’s stock in trade, New Yorkers have a tendency to laser-focus on the frustration of the moment—to the exclusion of all else. A whimsical new video suggests that by doing so we may be just missing our soulmates on every commute.
Apple Music pitches personality, Foot Locker gets awkward for NFL season, the Manning brothers regulate Gatorade sales.
Back in 2006, Xbox dropped a big ol’ emo ad bomb on the gaming world with the launch of Gears of War. Instead of the usual, testosterone-soaked soundtrack, the music backdropping scenes from the sci-fi shooter game was Gary Jules and Michael Andrews’ cover of Tears for Fears’ “Mad World.” It was considered a milestone in video game marketing and ushered in the now-familiar trend of pairing game action with music that tugs the heartstrings over the trigger finger.
The comedian talks about her path to the playful, glib, and ultimately life-affirming HBO special everyone will be talking about.
“I’m just a person,” comedian Tig Notaro says multiple times during her new HBO special. It’s both a deflection of incoming applause and a direct rebuke to peers who clearly relish soaking up those standing-Os. But here’s the thing: Tig Notaro is more than just a person. She’s both a living legend and someone advanced enough to hate that designation and seek to explode it.
Created for the London Design Festival, the Curiosity Cloud is made up of 250 hand-fabricated insects that fly around in glass bulbs when visitors approach.
The Austrian designers mischer’traxler are masters at marrying craft and technology in enchanting ways, as we’ve seen with their self-weaving, attention-craving basket and machine-weaved furniture that records the passing time. Now, the duo has hand made 250 tiny fabric insects and equipped them with motors and sensors for Curiosity Cloud, a new installation for London’s Design Festival.
This makes The Expendables look likeThe English Patient.
This time last year, Kevin Hart and Dave Franco illustrated the full power of their gaming rivalry to launch EA Sports’ Madden 15 with a wacky musical number that included flagrant vehicular vandalism, a bit of physical violence, some light stalking, and an epic party that ended with Franco’s house on fire. Now, after a couple of 15-second teasers for Madden 16, the brand turns the batsh*t crazy up to 11 with an action movie trailer that makes The Expendables look like The English Patient.
As food and labor costs rise in the restaurant industry, some businesses are looking for technological solutions to the annoying problem of expensive humans.
A $15-per-hour minimum wage might not lead to armies of content, sufficiently compensated fast food workers. It may instead lead to fewer employees, as bottom-line-obsessed companies move more quickly to replace “expensive” labor with tireless robots. And rising labor costs aren’t the only things getting more expensive for restaurants—wholesale food and real estate prices are also shooting up, says the Washington Post.
If the Earth’s resources were on a balance sheet, we’d already be in the red.
There’s still four and a half months to go in 2015, yet we’ve already used up our ecological budget for the year. Earth Overshoot Day—the point at which human demand exceeds the limits of what the planet can regenerate—fell on August 13.
John Lewis does it again, and it’s not even Christmas.
By now we’re used to being impressed, and sometimes weepy, by the advertising of U.K. retailer John Lewis, thanks to ad classics like Monty the Penguin and “The Bear & The Hare.”
Who has time to record and review?
Think of how your brain makes memories. You can recall certain moments with crystal clarity: when your child was born, when you first sampled VR, that epic burrito you had at Chipotle. And other moments—like your commute—are so mundane that you forget them instantly. Graava, a new wearable camera, wants to change the way we record our memories by highlighting only the best ones.