Muschi Kreuzberg – Hoodlum Hills

Our favorite don’t give a fuck apparel brand Muschi Kreuzberg is back with their own version of prodigy’s Smack My Bitch Up highlighting their launch of their newest Hoodlum Hills Collection. It’s smart as hell, with it’s freeze frame highlighting of the newest pieces and brings us back to 1997 with a bit of nostalgia. It looks like our star ends up at packed house Prince Charles in Kreuzberg, Berlin for a night of debauchery which we love to see.

muschikreuzberg.de

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Casey Neistat

Words and interview by Casey Anderson

Casey Neistat doesn’t make videos, he makes movies. More specifically, he makes YouTube movies. He takes moving documentations of his real life, cuts them down into a few short minutes and puts them on the internet for the whole world to judge. It’s a brave thing to do, especially when your YouTube channel has passed 27 million views.

So what makes this guy’s movies so special? Well, I’m pretty sure it has something to do with their simplicity and the fact that they’re made with the integrity so many other YouTube movie makers seemed to have forgotten. They’re well scripted, easy to follow and cover topics I get. Sure, he’s a badass editor, chooses great music, and likes to stick it to the man every once in awhile, but it’s the unpretentious, intellectual storytelling that draws me to Casey’s work.

All of Casey’s movies tell stories. Stories which are totally subjective and unapologetic. Yet, Casey isn’t pushing an agenda, he’s pointing shit out; shit most of us take for granted. He makes movies about bike lane hypocrisy, Instagram etiquette or other random events an ordinary person would never think to capture because, lets face it, most of us don’t have our video cameras running all day. He manages to show us what we miss.

He’s almost always the protagonist. So whether it’s a self-imposed PSA he made “for the fuck of it” or a well funded branding campaign he made to pay the bills, his face and his voice are always there. It’s his style, something he’s developed over time that connects us to his personality and the way he sees the world. Somehow this fine balance between blatantly egoistic and refreshingly modest makes his creations relatable and addicting to watch. He’s able to give instruction without condescending and get personal without alienating.

It could have been his background in the art world- or his tendency to challenge authority- that gave him the balls to install a rowdy living room exhibition in the midst of the Pulse Miami art fair, but somehow it seems obvious that banging hip-hop and grilled cheese service would keep people around to watch some good movies… it’s just the way Casey does it.

Casey Neistat answered some questions for Witness This about his work, creative drive and what it means to share.

How would you describe your style of storytelling?

I try to tell stories at a 5th grade reading level. Explaining things simply is a way to show that the complexity of the idea is understood.

You’re a self- proclaimed trouble-maker. How much trouble are willing to get into to make a movie?

Trouble maker is a funny thing. I’ve never set out to cause trouble, not now and not when I was getting detention in 7th grade, I just always believe in doing things the right way. Sometimes the right way, my way, is not universally accepted and some view it as the wrong way… hence detention. I’ve never subscribed to doing things a certain way because others have determined that’s the way it should be.

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What are some of the biggest changes you’ve noticed in your productions since you first started making movies?

Malcolm Gladwell says it takes 10,000 hours of doing any one thing before you become good at it. I think I’m close to 10,000 hours of making movies in my tenure and with that comes confidence in what I’m doing. The biggest change is not feeling like I’m shooting in darkness. I almost sort of feel like I nearly know what I’m doing almost.

Your installation at Pulse Miami caused quite a stir. What reaction did you expect? What surprised you most about presenting there?

I used to work a lot more in the fine art world. It’s a fun place to be because, in theory anyway, you can do whatever you want. Art fairs can be a little uptight so I wanted to create a fun space to show my movies. That’s all.

How is your creative approach different when you work on commissioned projects?

When I am working for someone else my goal is to give them something that exceeds their expectations, something that represents what they wanted even more so than they could’ve imagined when hiring me. When it’s one of my movies, one I make just for the fuck of it, it’s just about making something I believe in. There are no expectations.

Did you know that people in Germany can’t watch your movie, “The Weekend in California”, on YouTube because of copyrights to the music in the video? In fact, we can’t watch a lot of stuff on YouTube because of the big copyright protection agency here. What are your thoughts on those kinds of restrictions?

I don’t understand the intricacies of GEMA, but what I do understand seems really fucking dumb. I use a lot of music that is not mine and in doing so I forego a lot of the ownership and control of the work (YouTube can put adverts over my movies for example) this seems fair. YouTube should exploit my work on behalf of the artist who’s music I used. But to block it
altogether is to punish me, the artist who created the music, and the viewer. It’s a lose lose lose situation.

People love sharing their lives through social media, yet we’ve all second guessed the stuff we put out there. You tend to share a lot of private/personal moments in your movies, do you ever feel like you’ve shared too much?

I try to look forward.

What are your do’s and don’ts for distributing content on the internet?

No rules. The internet is a meritocracy. Put whatever shit you want out there, but if it is just shit don’t expect anyone to notice it. Adversely if you have something great don’t covet it, the internet is a great place to share with an audience that covers most of the planet.

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Check out Casey’s movies:
caseyneistat.com or vimeo.com/caseyneistat (if you’re in a country with ridiculous copyright policies)

Words and interview by Casey Anderson
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The Eagleman Stag

I used to get this weird feeling as I would watch hours tick by that my life was disappearing too quickly and worry that I didn’t have enough to show for it. This idea can either be inspiring or frustrating for a creative. When it comes to stop motion, especially when you make every single piece of your characters or set, I can imagine another perspective on time is seen. It’s returning to childhood in a way, with the ability to create and build with your hands and your imagination where time seems to last forever. However, when Mikey Please filmaker/creator is faced with a thesis deadline, a very adult theme, it must seem that time races by with barely enough to finish each scene.

You can see that this film has me thinking a great deal and has impacted me beyond words can describe. Please take some time to watch The Eagleman Stag, the 2011 BAFTA award winning Royal College of Art thesis film by director/writer Mikey Please. The making of is completely astounding as well, so make time for that.

THE EAGLEMAN STAG from Mikey Please on Vimeo.

Making The Eagleman Stag from Mikey Please on Vimeo.


Ricky Whitlock: L-1, T-12

Ricky Whitlock is one of Carlsbad, California’s best known professional surfers. Aside from natural talent, what has gotten him to his present level are a strong work ethic and relentless drive.  Ricky Whitlock: L-1, T-12 is a mini-documentary by Tim Ryan and Type G Studios that shows how Whitlock used his personal drive to recover from a debilitating and life-threatening injury.

This past January, Ricky Whitlock was surfing Pipeline on the North Shore of Oahu as a warm-up for the Volcom Pipeline Pro. On a fairly standard 8-foot wave Whitlock was crushed by the wave’s lip and sent headfirst into the shallow bottom.  Narrowly escaping paralysis but with two fractured L-1 and T-12 vertebrae, Whitlock was left  with many uncertainties in life and his professional career.  This documentary film follows Ricky as he faces the challenge of mounting a comeback for himself and inspiring others along the way.

Creative Agency: Type G
Director: Timothy A. Ryan
Supervising Producer: Mike Nelson
Cinematographers: Matt Pappas, Scott LeDuc
Narrator: Sal Masekela
Music Clearance: Chad Davis, Triple 9 Music