—Inspiration comes in all shapes and sizes. In this case, it comes from East Los Angeles from 9-year old arcade owner, Caine.
We’ve all seen the quote, trust your struggle. The beauty of that quote regarding Caine’s story is, he’s still innocent enough not to perceive his Arcade (which resides inside his father’s auto-parts shop), as one.
Every weekend, he patiently waits for customers to patron and experience the Arcade he built out of cardboard. With only one customer, Nirvan Mullick (also the director of this short film), the experience and the "fun-pass" deal of a lifetime moved Mullick to inform the world about Caine’s man-made arcade. With an empowering father and some social media application, Caine’s worldview has surely changed for the better.
In the Tumblr era, street photography prominently features smiling stares from those who are fashionably posing. But as the new documentary entitled Everybody Street suggests, the originators were looking for beauty that isn’t just skin deep.
Have you ever thought to yourself how complex the human body is? Me neither, but this experimental video, entitled Choros by Michael Langan indirectly begs us to ask the question, just how complex is movement of the human body?
The Inoue Brothers was founded in 2004 by two brothers, Satoru and Kiyoshi Inoue and their motive is to create awareness of responsible production methods through quality and design.
The ingenuity of the human race is one of the reason we're still around after hundreds of thousands of years, but our resourcefulness hasn't always been limited to acceptable practices. A prime example is Steve Ludwin's habitual self venomizing.
I'm down with any work of art whose countless days of toiling for hours on end shine through the final product. Such is the case with this music video "Katachi" by Shugo.