Nancy Duarte breaks down Marin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream Speech,” showing why it worked that day and still remains powerful today.
Martin Luther King Jr.’s speech analyzed by Nancy Duarte from Duarte Design on Vimeo.
Popular culture, culture that seems to spread beyond more than three people
Nancy Duarte breaks down Marin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream Speech,” showing why it worked that day and still remains powerful today.
Martin Luther King Jr.’s speech analyzed by Nancy Duarte from Duarte Design on Vimeo.
Below is the track listing for my 2010 songs. By no means is it exhaustive, but I focused on the songs and albums I listened to. I also left out quite a bit of music I did listen to, notably Arcade Fire, Band of Horses and Sufjan. The ordering is only a track listing and not a ranking. Also, each track is linked to an accompanying video, preferably a live version. Without further ado:
A mother made a homemade variation of Angry Birds with the birds made out of various household items. Angry Birds Live, she calls it.
I used a tennis ball for the red bird, a ping-pong ball for the blue bird, modeling clay for the yellow bird, an Easter egg for the chicken, and a black dodge ball for the bomb bird. I had an old set of cardboard blocks that they never really used, and they were perfect. I printed out pictures of the pigs on labels and stuck them on paper bags.
In a great example of divergent thinking, Kottke collects a series of tweets by Tim Carmody comparing Brett Favre’s career to that of the Internet.
In 1995, Favre wins the MVP, the Packers get to the NFC Championships, and Windows 95 brings the internet & graphic interface to the masses.
You Tube’s recommended videos a little, meh? Tosh.0’s videos too random or mean-spirited?
Devour is the site to cure your web video ills. Clean design that focuses on the videos. Good videos. Every now and then one will be no longer available. So, have a night with the friends and watch awesome You Tube videos.
At concerts, the pop of a camera flash is constant. You see it on TV at the Super Bowl or some other event. At a Robbie Williams concert, for a Nikon ad, he called upon the crowd to raise their cameras and take a picture. The result: