My expertise is giving brands ideas that span to places they'd never think possible.
Brand Experience:
3M, Advil, Aetna, AKA, Allianz, Ally Bank, ANGA, AOL, Apple, Aptera, Aquafresh, BeProud, BlueTree, Botox, Bowflex, Campbell's, Canon, Captain Morgan, Cartoon Network, CB2, DirecTV, Don Julio, Egg, Etrade, Fed Ex, Francesca's, Harter, Home Depot, IBM, Ketel One, Lays, Lending Tree, Lincoln Mercury, Men's Wearhouse, Microsoft, Motorola, MTV, Nike, NFL, Oreo, Paige Denim, Panasonic, Pantene, Pepsi, Playtex, Polident, Pringles, Red Lobster, Reebok, Sargento, Snickers, Sprint, Symantec, Think Finance, TJ Maxx, US ARMY, Viking, Visa, Wendy's
Artist Creates Incredibly Lifelike Carvings Out Of Wood via http://bit.ly/13ClyS2 | src http://bit.ly/115BksL
Artist Creates Incredibly Lifelike Carvings Out Of Wood via http://bit.ly/13ClykV | src http://bit.ly/115BksL
All sizes | hobbit | Flickr - Photo Sharing! via http://bit.ly/ZWBe1D | src http://bit.ly/11AdkPK
Field Trip to the ICA - Warby Parker Class Trip via http://bit.ly/15uD3uq | src http://bit.ly/ZMf81H
npr:
8 Successful Entrepreneurs Give Their Younger Selves Lessons They Wish They’d Known Then
Tim Westergren, the founder and Chief Strategy Officer at Pandora:
“Be sure to ‘notice’ ideas when you have them. Stop. Take the time to consider them seriously. And if your gut tells you they’re compelling, be fearless in their pursuit,” Westergren said. Nothing is more haunting than thinking, ‘I wish I had…’”
Read the rest here.
Related: NPR’s Susan Stamberg shared her advice to her younger self a couple of weeks ago as part of our “Changing Lives of Women” series. — tanya b.
hello clayton
yet again, i see something in you that inspires. as a kid, i wanted to go to art school, i wanted to create. i had a good eye for color, and i enjoyed putting visual elements together. it calmed me. my mother did not nourish this creativity, and absolutely shunned the idea of me ever going to art school with the intention of making things. to my mother, and to many people in general, art was a hobby. art was not something people did to make a living, and she was poor enough as it was. she worked hard, lived with a man who i did see make much effort to help, and seemed unhappy. i thought about escaping a lot. but the belief was ingrained in my head, that i would never be able to make art, go to art school, etc.
the fact that you went so far as to have the motivation, the encouragement, to enter an art competition [and win!] as a kid is really cool. and having the determination to still create beautiful things, despite not having money to go to art school, is inspiring. i wish i’d had the strength and foresight to do likewise.
i’m making small steps. thank you for inspiring.This is for the poor kids. The misfits. The neglected dreamers.
You sit in the back of the class because you’re ashamed of your hand-me-downs. You can’t afford glasses so you can’t see the board. You don’t have enough money for your own art supplies, and your school doesn’t supply them because all that money goes to the jocks, so you guiltily shoplift them. The entire machine you’re being pushed through is engineered to ignore you in favor of the elites. The athletes. The rich kids.
Alamo Drafthouse: The Evil Dead | Flickr - Photo Sharing! via http://bit.ly/10nSOve | src http://bit.ly/15o7Ad8