Aly & Fila's 3rd artist album is OUT NOW! Download on iTunes: http://bit.ly/AF-TOS_iT Buy CD at the ArmadaShop: http://bit.ly/1oGOW4Y Listen on Spotify: http://bit.ly/AF-TOS_SP ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Youtube: http://bit.ly/AlyandFilaTube Instagram: http://bit.ly/AlyandFilaIG FB: http://bit.ly/AlyandFilaFB Spotify: http://bit.ly/AlyandFilaSpotify Follow @AlyandFila
7. “Take Everything” by Greg Laswell
Laswell took the next step in the “reverse technique” in 2010 with his “Take Everything” video, which is a reversed shot of a house party. What really gives this video its extra novelty, though, is the fact that Laswell sang the song backward while filming so it would appear normal when everything else was played in reverse.
Taylor Swift, OK Go and more who did it in one take
Gisele Bündchen isn’t just a supermodel.
She’s also a mother, wife, philanthropist, athlete and role model. And her latest gig, as the face of Under Armour’s “I Will What I Want” campaign, reinforces the last two roles more than ever before.
You’ve never seen her like this | Follow micdotcom
Malaysia Airlines jet crashes in Ukraine: http://usat.ly/1mYSh1b
Oh my god, where are you??? :(
The Whimsically Macabre Scenes of @__remmidemmi
To see more of Sandro’s explorations of “bodies with no regret,” follow @__remmidemmi on Instagram.
In his macabre, tragicomic photo series, Italian photographer Sandro Giordoan (@__remmidemmi) explores the willingness of people to put the safety of material objects before their own well-being.
When conceiving the project, _IN EXTREMIS (bodies with no regret), Sandro drew from personal experience. “Last summer I had a small but tough bicycle accident,” he explains. “I lost 30% of my right hand’s functions because I never let go of the object I was holding as I fell.”
When, shortly after, a friend broke his leg to prevent his smartphone from falling in water, Sandro became concerned. “We live in a time where we risk material things becoming more important than our own lives, and this is really worrying.”
Sandro channeled his concern into crafting meticulous and whimsical photos. “I immediately felt the urgency to capture the moment of impact. I wanted to talk about obsessions, neurosis and frailties of our times through my personal experience.” The resulting photos are at once humorous and haunting.
Many think that the wildly contorted bodies in Sandro’s photos are dolls or dummies. Not so, says Sandro. “I work exclusively with professional actors who are able to position themselves in anatomically impossible poses because they are trained to use their bodies to communicate.”


