Archive for Interview

The Center Magazine Interviews J. Cole [Video]

Posted in Events, Interviews, Music, Videos with tags , , , , on August 27, 2010 by The Goodie Bag

The Center Magazine catches up for an interview with Don Juan and J. Cole at J. Cole’s listening party in Washington, D.C.

LA Leakers Interview Fat Joe [Video]

Posted in Interviews, Music, Videos with tags , , , , on August 15, 2010 by Legend

Fat Joe and the LA Leakers [Interview], posted with vodpod

 

CurT@!n$ x KarmaloopTV Interview

Posted in Interviews, Music with tags , , , , on July 28, 2010 by coreykamenoff

CurT@!n$ takes time to chill out with KarmaloopTV to discuss design, fashion, and collaborative projects.  Click here to watch the video now.  Enjoy!

Gilbere Forte’ x KarmaloopTV [Video]

Posted in Interviews, Music, Videos with tags , , , , , on July 20, 2010 by The Goodie Bag

Up-and-coming Philly MC Gilbere Forte’ sits down with KarmaloopTV to talk about working with the music video genius Chris Robinson, what his goals are for the future, and his new mixtape 87 Dreams, which dropped today.  Download it here.

G-Shock x Dee & Ricky Interview [Video]

Posted in Fashion, Interviews, Uncategorized, Videos with tags , , , , , on June 28, 2010 by The Goodie Bag

G-Shock interview Dee & Ricky about their recently collaborative watch release.  Enjoy!

INTERVIEW: Shoichi Amemiya (Sabit NYC)

Posted in Fashion, Interviews with tags , , , , , , on June 22, 2010 by The Goodie Bag

Recently, we took a trip to the Big Apple, better known as New York City.  So, while we were enjoying everything that NYC has to offer we were able to catch up with Shoichi Amemiya the owner of Sabit NYC.

When did you start your fashion label?

5 years ago.

How did you establish your relationship with Swizz Beatz and have him come aboard being the face of Sabit?

We have a mutual friend who thought it would be a great idea for us to meet and since then we have supported each other and have had much respect for one another.

It is a fact that you have a huge Japanese following, is there a difference with Sabit in Japan and NYC?  Are they the same entity?

Yes.  Sabit NYC is international however we are the same brand.  No difference.

What are your influences for the recent collection you have released for Summer 2010?

My influence I would have to say would be the “beach feel” being free and fashionable at the beach.

Seeing that your brand has made a major impact on the hip-hop community, what other genres of music has it impacted?

We have a huge following in the house music genre.  Many followers like and support our brand.

What does the word Sabit mean?

The word Sabit means “the hook” or the best part of the song.

What is your favourite current film that has been released?

Scarface.

Overall, what type of experience do you want the person who wears Sabit to walk away and experience at the end of the day?

TANOSHINDE…Which means enjoy.  That’s our message and something that the entire Sabit family lives by.  Every Sabit garment has this word placed inside.  We want every piece of our brand and collection to represent who we are and what we stand for and believe.

Tell us about your plans for Sabit in the near future.

To be one of the classic brands in this ever changing industry.  My dream is to continue the branding of Sabit by creating great fashion with a message ultimately helping to positively help change the world one person at a time.

Wiz Khalifa – SUPERINTERNATIONAL Interview [Video]

Posted in Interviews, Music, Videos with tags , , , , on June 22, 2010 by The Goodie Bag

SUPERINTERNATIONAL sat down with Wiz Khalifa to talk about everything from his debut album to his aspirations.

FUTURE iMag Interviews DeadStock Ric [Video]

Posted in Interviews, Videos with tags , , , , , on May 19, 2010 by The Goodie Bag

The homie DeadStock Ric was interviewed a couple weeks back by FUTURE iMag.  He gave them some valuable insight into what he does and what he plans on doing in the future.

INTERVIEW: Jay Smith (BKRW)

Posted in Fashion, Interviews, Magazines with tags , , , , , on May 18, 2010 by The Goodie Bag

A while back we caught up with Jay Smith, whose ½ of BKRW.  We chatted in-depth about BKRW, his favourite brands, where his inspirations come from, and about life in Paris.  Check out the interview below.

Please introduce yourself.

 

What’s up?  My name is Jay Smith and I’m the founder of BKRW.

 

What’s life like up in Paris, as far as music, fashion, nightlife, and popular culture?

 

Paris is an exciting city to live in.  Many new projects and shops have opened in the past few months.  You can feel the excitement in the streets, in the air.  Paris is less and less becoming the boring city of haters that it once was.  People are less selfish and less trash talking in the business and more creative.  I really do like how Paris is these days.  Clubs have gotten smaller and smaller, the atmosphere is more hot and confidential.  Paris is electric!

 

Tell us a little bit about BKRW and the people involved.

BKRW is one of the first digital (online) magazines that is street culture oriented in France by also internationally.  We are not a blog.  We are not a forum.  We are a digital magazine!  Since we started BKRW as the digital magazine we have now expanded as a creative agency based in Paris, creative space / art gallery, textile label, and have a brick-and-mortar and online store.  The creative space / art gallery is called Les Archives and the textile and stores are Black Rainbow.  We are a small team with 2 partners: My partner Greg and I.  We also have 3 people staffed at the store and online shop, and that’s pretty much it.  If we are working on bigger projects then we will hire on some freelance people for the duration of the project.

Where did you get the idea to start an online magazine?  How did you start?

I was the editor-in-chief / founder of Ware Magazine and working for WAD Magazine for more than 5 years.  I love print magazines, and am very much into streetwear, sportswear, and technical sport gear.  I found myself on the web more and more daily.  I was feeling that whole blog revolution, that whole street culture reborn.  I use to travel a lot with Greg…Me for my work and him for his own.  He was really convinced that we should do a digital magazine.  That’s how it started.  That’s how we blindly and wildly went into this crazy adventure.  Starting BKRW with just our passion for street culture and our wish to create a different media.  Try to apply journalistic methods to online culture.  Today, it’s kind of easy to think that creating an online magazine is not that crazy, but in the past it was a huge step.  But the fact is that coming from a print magazine helped me to not think about BKRW as a blog, but as a full-fledged and real magazine, with creative content of our own, not necessarily some news that other people / blogs are posting.  It was good times…I really do miss those times (Not that far back if I really think about it), the whole atmosphere was really different…Nostalgia. 

Since starting the online magazine, you’ve really branched out and have become a full-service creative agency, clothing brand, and a store.  Was that a goal of yours or did it just happen organically?

It just happened organically and by chance.  The minute we started to work as an online magazine that was oriented on street culture, people started contacting us to help them and give them advice.  It was perfect timing.  We did launch our company with the Medicom x Chanel consulting.  Doing the first 1000% Bearbrick for a high-fashion brand.  The creative agency actually helped us get the shop.  People from the department store Citadium were searching for some kind of streetwear consulting.  When we met them we did understand that the consulting that they were searching for was far easier to do through our own pop-up shop.  That’s how the Black Rainbow shop was born.

What clients have you worked with in the past?

We started with our biggest thus far: Chanel.  We proposed to them to do the 1000% Bearbrick with Medicom and they accepted; more than that they featured them in all of the Chanel window displays worldwide.  We’ve also worked with Nike, Adidas, Lacoste, Casio G-Shock, and Footlocker.

What brands does Black Rainbow carry?

Black Rainbow carries Staple Design, Hellz Bellz, Supra, Nike, New Balance, HUF, Lafayette, BePrive, Only NY, Sugarcraft, Crooks & Castles, and our own in-house label to name a few.

 

What are some of your favourite brands at the moment?

I don’t want to sound cocky or arrogant but Black Rainbow is probably one of my favourite brands and what I am wearing most right now.  We created the label because we can’t always find pieces that truly stand out to us from other brands.  I like the small street twist we are putting in the classical silhouette that we are choosing.  Greg does an amazing job on our Black Rainbow clothes.  I also have a special crush for Isaora (New snowboarding brand) and Nike ACG.

What are some of your inspirations?

Inspirations are hard to get.  The digital magazine and internet takes up most of our time.  There’s no real time to go and check out art exhibitions or to see good movies at the theatre.  I’m still a huge fan of printed magazines such as Wallpaper, Monocle, and Sneaker Freaker.  I’m a huge fan of Steven Meisel, JR, KR, Marylin Minter…Street looks websites (Sartorialist, Lookbook.nu, What’s One Wearing) are becoming more and more inspirational.  Music is certainly my inspiration: Hip-Hop, soul, R&B, samba, etc.  I’m always listening to music.  Another cheesy drop, but streets are still my biggest inspiration, on the train, on basketball court; going to see friends in the suburbs ghetto…It gives you a total new way to see your job. 

The fashion and music worlds are often tied together…What music artists out right now are really grabbing your attention?

That’s an interesting question.  I’ve always been attracted to old school music (Soul, funk, R&B) and always been kinda followers / early adopters to new hot singles.  Regarding the vibes I’m rediscovering the interesting work of incredible musician, Shaggie Otis.  Regarding new school, my favourite artists are J. Cole, Saigon, Wale, and Young Money. 

What new upcoming events, projects, or releases are you currently working on?

We have many projects in the works: The new Les Archives gallery exhibition, our Summer 2010 Black Rainbow collection, more creative content and exclusive interviews on BKRW.  Many projects with cool brands as consultants or for special pop-up shops in our Black Rainbow store.   

 

What would you say are the most difficult aspects of your line of work?

As you can see BKRW is 3 different entities.  So it’s 3 companies to manage at the same time.  Sometimes it gets really hard to handle and manage everything properly, especially if you look at our small crew.

Thanks for taking the time to speak with us Jay.  Do you have any shout-outs or anything else you’d like to say?

If Canadian brand Sorel wants to work with us for a special collaboration project or work on new designs, hit me!  I love Sorel boots!  I’m always happy when Winter is coming and I can wear my big Caribou x Sorel shoes, even if all of my staff insult me for wearing such huge shoes in Paris.  Tabernacle!

Inquiring Mind Interviews Ibn Jasper

Posted in Interviews with tags , , , , , on May 8, 2010 by The Goodie Bag

Inquiring Mind profile Ibn Jasper in their latest editorial.  A well-known affiliate to Kanye West, the barber and style consultant speaks about his past growing up in Chicago, his transition into becoming a well-known barber and above all else, the process of a solid haircut.

SOURCE: Inquiring Mind

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 30 other followers