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berlin she & him noam chomsky phil yamada khristian mendoza noraa oyagi paola velazquez 500 days of summer invisible children K Kingdom Cult - Mag Nº 10 Nov-Dic ´09
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berlinshe & him

noam chomskyphil yamada

khristian mendozanoraa oyagi

paola velazquez500 days of summer

invisible children

KKingdom Cult - MagNº 10Nov-Dic ´09

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SUMARIO04 flash13 graphik32 the king38 metropolis49 wishlist64 push play68 pop corn70 vanity 90 reality

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PRÓLOGO

Los paraísos artificialesExisten máscaras en nosotros, en nuestro modo de vida. Comemos máscaras, nos dormimos con la máscara siempre a mano y nos besamos y amamos sin quitarnos nuestras máscaras. A veces llegamos a ser conscientes de esta farsa, nuestro total desequilibrio y nos entra un vértigo incontenible que sólo se contiene mediante la inmensión en el ruido de las ciudades, la música, las voces de los otros. Caminamos sobre un mundo construído, un sistema económico del que dependemos y que no es real, un núcleo social que nos invita a camuflarnos y que no es real. Ya no hay un alma que no sienta que hay algo dentro que no le pertenece y ya comenzamos a no ser capaces de distinguir entre quienes somos y lo que siempre hemos deseado ser. Somos piezas, partes, millones de unidades de otros. Llevar máscaras nos adormece, llevar máscaras nos impide responder con nuestra verdarera voz y permanecer en un continuo simulacro. Existe una vida más allá de la máscara pero para alcanzarla es imprescindible luchar contra las imágenes y las certezas que no son certezas, las verdades que no son verdades, las cosas que damos por sentadas y las cosas que siempre hemos negado. Es necesario luchar contra el miedo. Eso que eres ahora no es nadie. Lo que somos en realidad ya se ha construído en el centro de tu infancia.

Por primera vez no he sido yo quien ha diseñado el número actual. Daniel Castrejón, un excelente creativo desde el otro lado del charco, es el responsable de este magnífico trabajo.Puedes saber más sobre el en www.dnks.org.

Daniel VázquezNoviembre de 2009

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flash

PaolaVelasquez

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SU PUBLICIDAD AQUÍ

Kwww.kimag.net

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graphik

NORAA·OYAGIKHRISTIAN·MENDOZAPHIL·YAMADASU PUBLICIDAD AQUÍ

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www.philyamada.comPHIL YAMADA

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www.cargocollective.com/khristianmendozaKHRISTIAN MENDOZA

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Khristian is currently 21 and proudly resides in theWestern suburbs of Melbourne. Khristian graduated from his degree in Communication Design from 2008 and

is currently completing his honours at Swinburne University. He is also contrib-

uting at the faculties in-house studio, Design Centre, as apart of his studies.

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www.noraaoyagi.comNORAA OYAGI

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 In my world there are many strange creatures. There are shy wolves lurking in deep dark forests and vicious girls clutching kitchen knives.  There are spooky silhouettes of watchful owls and cautious rabbits.  Creeping foxes peek from behind crooked trees and strange ladies emerging from little houses.  I bring these characters to life in my illustrations, rendering them in ink and paint. I live in an old Gingerbread Victorian house in Berkeley, California. This is also where I have my studio. Most of

my recent work has been done in acrylic gouache, a nice bright flat paint. I mainly use this medium for smaller, high detail works on paper or illustration board. A lot of my work uses silhou-ettes which have recently introduced me to screen-printing as a new favorite medium. I find these two mediums most conducive to my style of illustration, how-ever, I will occasionally paint in oils or draw with graphite every now and then.As a child I was always making things. My parents

always made sure my sis-ter and I were exposed to arts and crafts, whether it was taking us to museums in nearby San Francisco or screen-printing posters for our elementary school flea market. I was always encour-aged to paint and draw and try out many crafts, from making glass beads to sew-ing clothes for my stuffed animals. In this way I learned the importance of art and the satisfaction of making things yourself. Books were also really im-portant in my household.

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My mom was a book fanatic and would buy paper-bagfuls of books at the local library sales. These books were all old and some of them were children’s books, including many that she herself had grown up with during the 1940’s and 50’s. Among these, my favorite books were the collections of folk and fairytales because of their timeless stories. I would read them over and over again. There was always something comforting and satisfying in the consistency and repetition of themes that

appeared in these stories. I loved the wicked stepmoth-ers, mischievous wolves, slighted fairies, victorious princes, and magical wishes that always came in threes. Even as an adult I’ve contin-ued to be inspired by these stories, evidenced by many of the classic folk and fai-rytale imagery in my art-work. Many of the images I use are directly taken from these stories: candy houses, witches, Goldilocks, Little Red Riding Hood, and Baba Yaga (a Russian witch char-acter). Other images are less

obvious in their reference to popular folk and fairytales: wishbones, bears, keys, crows, geese, rabbits, and crowns. I use these images to build recognizable narratives within my work. Sometimes they are explicit, and other times only suggested. Usually these are personal narratives made anonymous by the use of familiar symbols, only oc-casionally intended merely to amuse the viewer. Although many of the motifs I use appear decorative, they are never without intention.

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NoamChomskyprofesor desde el año 1955 del Massachussets Institute of

Tecnology (MIT) de Boston es, según el New York Times, el

más importante de los pensadores contemporáneos

un rebelde sin pausa

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the king

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Enemigo del sistema y figura idolatrada de los anti. Crítico e inconformista con el poder establecido. Revolucionario para algunos y radical para otros, todos, los unos y los otros, escuchan atentamente lo que dice. Calificado por el New York Times como el “intelectual vivo más importante del mundo”, a pesar de que para él los medios de comunicación son un instrumento más del sistema, y octavo personaje más citado por la Arts and Humanities Citation Index, por detrás de Marx, Platón o Aristóteles, es por decisión popular, una de las voces más autorizadas del planeta. Desde su despacho del Massachussets Institute of Technology (MIT), donde daba clases de lingüística, observa el mundo Noam Chomsky, con la eterna esperanza de una “sociedad más civilizada”. Avram Noam Chomsky, nació el 7

de diciembre de 1928 en Filadelfia, hijo de inmigrantes judio-ucranianos, Chomsky heredó la vocación por la enseñanza de su madre, profesora de hebreo y la pasión por la gramática de su padre, uno de los mayores expertos hebreos en la materia. Cursó filosofía, matemática y lingüística en la Universidad de Pensilvania, con una tesis doctoral que se convertiría en la base de su pensamiento lingüístico, Estructuras Sintácticas. Tan sólo era el principio de una carrera vertiginosa, desarrollada casi en su totalidad en el MIT, donde fue profesor desde 1955, emérito desde 1972 y oficialmente jubilado –de la gramática- desde principios del 2000, aunque sigue acudiendo con asiduidad a su despacho.

Es el responsable de transformar la gramática en una ciencia respetada, digna de estudio y por ende una de las

mayores personalidades en la materia, pero casi nadie le conoce por esto. Noam Chomsky es filósofo, lingüista y sobre todo un opinólogo de carrera, crítico con el poder establecido, enemigo del capitalismo y de su creador. Una herejía en el país de los patriotas, que le ha valido el desprecio público de los grandes medios de comunicación, que ignoran su trabajo, tal y como el propio Chomsky describiera junto con Edward S. Herman en Los Guardianes de la Libertad, un retrato sobre las técnicas que utiliza la macromedia norteamericana para silenciar opiniones contraproducentes. Según Chomsky continúa sucediendo hoy, por ejemplo, con la crisis, la verdadera, “la mayor, donde mil millones de personas están al borde de la muerte por inanición. Curiosamente, no lo he leído en un periódico norteamericano, sino en

“LOS DERECHOS NO SE CONCEDEN, SE CONQUISTAN”

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uno de Bangladesh”. El panorama informativo es por lo tanto, funesto y la llegada de internet, aunque “da más variedad de opiniones”, no revierte el problema del monopolio informativo que ejercen los medios de comunicación tradicionales y que provoca que hoy, la opinión, “sea más homogénea que nunca”. Esto, según Chomsky, contribuyó a la idealización de EE.UU como país garante y exportador de la democracia, justificando así sus planes imperialistas, “al menos desde Reagen”, con una estrategia que el propio Chomsky bautizó como Devoción por la democracia, “que copia la técnica que los nazis utilizaban en los países conquistados”.

Sus ataques hacia EE.UU son el eje de su pensamiento crítico y protagonista en toda su obra. En el 2001, con el best seller 11/09/2001, Chomsky calificó

los atentados del World Trade Center y el Pentágono como “tan despreciables como su respuesta” y dos años después en Poder y Torrer, partiendo de los acontecimientos sucedidos en Vietnam, América Central u Oriente Medio, acusó a EE.UU de ser “el terrorista de estado más activo del mundo”.

Lejos de contagiarse por el entusiasmo planetario, Chomsky, al que los nuevos políticos ya no le merecen el beneficio de la duda, no ha rebajado el tono en el análisis tras la coronación de Barack Obama, al que ha criticado por su silencio en la masacre de Cisjordania o su actitud ante la crisis, “limitada a rodearse de gente que contribuyó a esta crisis y encontrar una fórmula para rescatar un sistema que ellos dominan y controlan”.

A sus 81 años son pocas las luces que consiguen deslumbrarle y además

la capacidad analítica parece una característica intrínseca a su persona desde bien pronto.

Como el mismo recuerda, su bis crítica comenzó a aflorar a la edad de 10 años, cuando escribe su primer artículo acerca de la caída de Barcelona en 1939. Sería la primera vez que el joven Avram tomara contacto con la realidad social y política de España, a la que no le ha quitado ojo desde entonces. Decepcionado con el movimiento bolchevique, encontró en la España de la guerra civil un modelo de revolución libertaria cuyo atractivo nació “entre el temor que los brotes fascistas terminaran por oscurecer Europa y el rayo de esperanza que ofrecía una revolución singular”. Influenciado por el Homenaje a Cataluña de George Orwell, donde el autor de 1984 relata en primera

“LA LIBERTAD SIN OPORTUNIDADES ES UN REGALO ENDEMONIADOY NEGARSE A DAR ESASOPORTUNIDADES ES

CRIMINAL”

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persona su experiencia como combatiente en la guerra civil, Chomsky comienza su particular idilio con el socialismo a raíz de lo acontecido en Cataluña durante el año 36, donde imperaba una sociedad sin privilegios de clase, controlada por los obreros y con las tierras divididas en comunas agrarias. Un modelo además, fuertemente contrario al stalinismo del que tanto había renegado años atrás.

Avanzando en el tiempo, con la muerte de Franco y la consolidación de la democracia en España, Chomsky ha vuelto a centrar sus críticas en nuestro país, a propósito de la participación en la guerra de Irak y el papel crucial de José María Aznar, al que llegó a calificar como un “limpiabotas de EE.UU y Reino Unido que decidió implicarse en la guerra a pesar de que el 80% de la población estuviera en contra”. Volviendo a dejar claro su activismo político mucho más allá de la pura teoría, Chomsky, junto con Julio Anguita, el filósofo Javier Sábada y otro buen puñado de personalidades de la vida pública, se adhirió a la plataforma Juicio a Aznar, que todavía hoy intenta llevar al ex presidente del Gobierno ante los tribunales por su participación en la guerra.

El conflicto vasco también ha merecido de su crítica incansable, mostrando su preocupación por el modelo de actuación en la lucha contra el terrorismo, que

según Chomsky pretende justificar la “criminalización de las ideas y el cierre de medios de comunicación”.

Aunque algunos puedan pensar lo contrario, Noam Chomsky no se considera un teórico de la política. Es más bien un ciudadano común, que se ha dedicado a observar el mundo, quizás con mayor atención que el resto. Pese a su pensamiento anarcosindicalista, no se muestra totalmente reacio a los procesos políticos democráticos, aunque desde una perspectiva que deja claro su desconfianza en el sistema. En los lugares de EE.UU donde los republicanos están más afianzados, pide el apoyo para los demócratas a modo de contra-voto, mientras que allá donde la balanza es claramente favorable a los demócratas, se posiciona a favor de colectivos abiertamente de izquierdas, como el Partido Verde.

Últimamente se ha mostrado partidario al proceso revolucionario en latinoamérica, donde según Chomsky, “se están comenzando a revertir los patrones de dependencia de potencias extranjeras, que vienen desde la conquista española”. En septiembre de 2006 Hugo Chávez mostró durante una intervención en la ONU, el libro de Chomsky Hegemonía y Supervivencia: la estrategia imperialista de Estados Unidos, que hasta entonces había pasado desapercibido y que inmediatamente después se convirtió en un E

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éxito de ventas aupado a los primeros puestos de la listas de éxito de Amazon. El pasado agosto, Chomsky tendría la ocasión de agradecérselo en persona, cuando fue recibido en Caracas por el mandatario venezolano, al que no dudó en calificar “como el hombre que ha inspirado la idea de que otro mundo es posible”.

Pero el mayor compromiso de Chomsky, por encima incluso del político, siempre ha estado con la libertad de expresión. Ha sufrido la censura en todas sus formas, desde la ya citada ignorancia norteamericana, hasta la prohibición sin paliativos de supuestos regímenes democráticos, como el de Corea del Sur, que incluyó dos ensayos de intelectual norteamericano entre la lista negra de publicaciones a las que no podía tener acceso el ejército. Noam Chomsky escribió: “si no creemos en la libertad de expresión para aquellas personas que despreciamos, entonces no creemos en ella para nada” y ha mantenido la postura hasta en situaciones que afectaban a su propia condición, como sucede al defender la libertad de expresión para aquellos que niegan la veracidad del holocausto nazi, criticando abiertamente las leyes que así lo penalizan. A los 81 años, este fascinante personaje, algo quijotesco “aunque mis molinos no son de viento”, sigue pasándonos revista con la misma intensidad que lo hacía allá por sus inicios, durante la guerra de Vietnam. Incansable en su lucha por una sociedad justa y más libre, el “rebelde sin pausa”, como lo calificó el cantante Bono, promete seguir presentando batalla, para regocijo de millones de personas que le han convertido en el principal icono de una manera diferente de mirar el mundo.

Pablo Maza

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metropolis

Fotos: Adrian Boliston www.flickr.com/photos/boliston

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BERLIN

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zinesSU PUBLICIDAD AQUÍ

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zinesSU PUBLICIDAD AQUÍ

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Abe´s Penny www.abespenny.com/oneseven.html

Five years after conceiving the idea of Abe’s Penny, we launched the “micro” publication in March of 2009. We saw a challenge in adding more art and writing to an overstimulated and harried world, so we knew we want-ed to keep our publication short and accessible. A post-card offers what is essentially a boiled down magazine: image and text. We like that it’s so fast and that our read-ers can finish a card in the time it takes to walk from their mailbox to their front door.

Then, there’s the, “neither rain, nor sleet, nor gloom of night,” history of mail delivery: the Post Office, the mail-man, your mailbox. We wrote lots of letters as kids, but after email it seemed like no one was writing letters any more. When we started Abe’s Penny, we found that mail has a huge support system, almost a cult following. We’re happy to be a part of it.

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Un sedicesimowww.unsedicesimo.corraini.com

Un Sedicesimo is a typographical measure: a sixteen-pages-bind-ing, but is also a magazine!

Seventeen centimetres width for twentyfour height.But it’s not a traditional magazine, it hasn’t got an editorial office nor a subject nor a fixed design.

Each issue has a different author, whose job is to create a sixteen-pages-long project.Un Sedicesimo will be a magazine different at each time, from the headline to the colophon.

It will become a sort of gallery on paper, which proposes a new personal exhibition every two months, six times a year.In short, it’s not about speaking of graphics, but making it.Un Sedicesimo starts with many authors ready to go: Steven Guarnaccia, Moreno Gentili, Martí Guixé, Leonardo Sonnoli, Francesco Dondina, Federico Maggioni, Daniel Eatock, Paul Cox, Italo Lupi, Massimo Pitis, Gianluigi Toccafondo, Giulio Iacchetti, Gianluigi Colin and other artists, graphic designers, illustrators, students (why not?), writers and cooks too.

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No. Zinewww.nozine.com

No.Zine is an independent arts zine, released in series, the first collection; 1 to 3 features a variety of young art-ists, designers, writers, photographers and illustrators. Each issue is conceptually centred around it’s issue num-ber.Curation, illustration, design and art-direction by Patrick Fry with the help of many great contributors. For contacts for all the contributors, see the links.

For more of Patrick’s work visit:www.patrickfry.co.ukNo.Zine can be found in many small bookshops and art spaces around London.

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Little white lieswww.littlewhitelies.co.uk

LWLies is a bi-monthly, independent movie magazine that features cutting edge writing, illustration and pho-tography to get under the skin of cinema.

Because movies don’t exist in a vacuum, we venture beyond the boundaries of the big screen, exploring the worlds of music, art, politics and pop culture to inform and illuminate the medium we love.

Bold, beautiful and unique, LWLies is a magazine on a mission – to reshape the debate across the movie land-scape.

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She & Him made their debut record as a love letter to the musicians who inspired it. Volume One (Merge Records) introduces a boy and girl choir hell-bent on making music the old-fashioned way: by hand - and with as few machines as humanly possible.The She & Him story begins when in 2006 , renowned one man band M. Ward, recorded a duet with a girl named Zooey Deschanel. A delightful recording session, the experience lead to a dialogue between the two about collaborating further. This, in turn, led to Deschanel

admitting to secretly making dozens and dozens of home demos and hoarding them like acorns for the winter. Sick and tired of being stingy and secretive about music, Deschanel realized that if songs were acorns then this was indeed her wintertime: she sent the recordings to Ward and these demos became the basis for their first record, entitled Volume One.Ward’s unique arrangements and virtuostic guitar playing paired with Deschanel’s affinity for vocal harmony give Volume One its characteristic sound .

pushplay

SheHim&

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Ward and Deschanel share a mutual affection for the songs they grew up hearing on Los Angeles radio stations - and keep in their hearts the records that most DJ’s aren’t playing anymore: Les Paul and Mary Ford, The Ronettes, Nina Simone, Chet Atkins, Linda Ronstadt, the Carter Family and about a hundred others. Aiming to achieve the warmth and charm of pop and country records from the early and mid part of the twentieth century, Ward, who also produced the record, and Deschanel, who wrote most of the music, called upon the help of a number of extraordinary musicians including: Rachel Blumberg, Adam Selzer, Mike Coykendall, Tom Hagerman, Peter Broderick, Mike Mogis, and Paul Brainerd. Without whom this record would just be two people with no drums, bass, strings or pedal steel.

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California-raised and Portland-based, M. Ward has released 4 records with Merge, his latest was “Post-War” (2006). He has collaborated with the likes of Neko Case, Conor Oberst, Jim James, Nels Cline, and Jenny Lewis. California based Deschanel spent much of her early life singing in choirs, which is probably why she likes harmonies so much. She also enjoys reading, dancing and playing the piano. She & Him have performed together on occasion over the last year and enjoyed it very much.

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www.scribblekite.com

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popcorn

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www.500daysofsummer.foxsearchlight.com500 DAYS OF SUMMERAfter it looks as if she’s left his life for good this time, Tom Hansen reflects back on the just over one year that he knew Summer Finn. Despite being physically average in almost every respect, Summer had always attracted the attention of men, Tom included. For Tom, it was love at first sight when she walked into the greeting card company where he worked, she the new administrative assistant. Soon, Tom knew that Summer was the woman with whom he wanted to spend the rest of his life. Although Summer did not believe in relationships or boyfriends - in her assertion, real life will always ultimately get in the way - Tom and Summer became more than just friends. Through the trials and tribulations of Tom and Summer’s so-called relationship, Tom could always count on the advice of his two best friends, McKenzie and Paul. However, it is Tom’s adolescent sister, Rachel, who is his voice of reason. After all is said and done, Tom is the one who ultimately has to make the choice to listen or not. Written by Huggo

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vanity

Fotografía: Inma Alvario & Anna Biosca

www.westudio.es

Modelos: Jordi Mestre, Annick [Francina Models)Maquillaje y peluquería: Gloria Rico CastroEstilismo: Cristina PlanellesArte: Marta Cirac

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EllaVestido punto, H&MPantalón cuero, Etxart & PannoCinturón piel gris, Armand Basi Cazadora estampado tigre, H&MZapatos piel anaconda, LodiDiadema tu, H&MÉlJersey cuello turtle, H&MJeans, CircaBotas, Sendra

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EllaVestido punto, H&MPantalón cuero, Etxart & PannoCinturón piel gris, Armand Basi Cazadora estampado tigre, H&MZapatos piel anaconda, LodiDiadema tu, H&MÉlJersey cuello turtle, H&MJeans, CircaBotas, Sendra

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EllaVestido y collar madera, Gemma DegaraCinturón Ante, Armand BAsiVestido lencero, Odd MollyLencería, H&MÉlCamisa cuadros, LRGJeans negros, H&MBotas, Sendra

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EllaLencería, H&M

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EllaBlusa satén con pechera, Armand Basi

Falda piel azul, H&MBotines piel azul, LodiCinturón, Armand Basi

ÉlCamiseta, LGR

Chaleco Terciopelo, Armand BasiJeans desgastados, Protest

Bambas terciopelo azul, Victoria

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EllaVestido, GEMMA DEGARA

Collar piedras, H & M

ÉlCamisa cuadros, LRG

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EllaVestido negro, Gemma DegaraCollar piedras, H&MSombrero copa, La EstilistaLencería, H&M

ÉlCamisa cuadros gris, H&MPantalón verde pitillo, Circa

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EllaVestido lencero, Odd Molly

Lencería, H&MZapatos espiga, H&M

ÉlJeans desgastados, CircaBorsalino, Goorin Bros.

Camiseta rasgada, H&MBotas, Sendra

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EllaVestido, Gemma DegaraZapato abotinado, Fly LondonPajarita, Armand BAsiSombrero copa, La Estilista

ÉlCardigan de color, Marithé François GirbaudCamiseta rasgada, H&M

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EllaVestido estampado, GEMMA DEGARACinturón de piel gris, ARMAND BASITorera punto plata, H & MBoina Tweed, GOORIN BROS.

Botas mosquetera serraje gris, LODI

ÉlCamiseta estampada, LRGJeans desgastados, PROTESTCazadora piel arrugada, H&MBotas, SENDRA

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reality

HOW IT STARTEDIn the spring of 2003, three young filmmakers traveled to Africa in search of a story. What started out as a filmmaking adventure transformed into much more when these boys from Southern California discovered a tragedy that disgusted and inspired them, a tragedy where children are both the weapons and the victims.After returning to the States, they created the documentary “Invisible Children: Rough Cut,” a film that exposes the tragic realities of northern Uganda.s night commuters and child soldiers.The film was originally shown to friends and family, but has now been seen by millions of people. The overwhelming response has been, “How can I help?” To answer this question, the non-profit Invisible Children, Inc. was created, giving compassionate individuals an effective way to respond to the situation.

WHO WE AREWe are storytellers. We are visionaries, humanitarians, artists, and entrepreneurs. We are individuals part of a generation eager for change and willing to pursue it.As a non-profit we work to transform apathy into activism. By documenting the lives of those living in regions of conflict and injustice, we hope to educate and inspire individuals in the Western world to use their unique voice for change. Our media creates an opportunity for people to become part of a grassroots movement that intelligently responds to what.s happening in the world.But our work extends beyond our borders. In war-affected regions we focus on long-term development, working directly with individuals and institutions that are eager to realize their full potential. Through education and innovative economic opportunities, we partner with affected communities and strive to improve the quality of life for individuals living in conflict and post-conflict regions.

Invisible Children

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HOW WE MAKE A DIFFERENCEOur approach to humanitarian work is founded in the strength and intelligence of the Ugandan community. We learned early on it was not only important but essential to heed the wisdom of people that had not only lived in the war, but were surviving it. People who would know better than anyone what the greatest needs were and the best ways to meet them. What we came to find is that while there have been many efforts to address the issues that stem from living and fighting in such a long-lasting war, the people of Uganda are asking for a future beyond the conflict.

Their pleas have become our development strategy.

All of our programming is a partnership between those of us at Invisible Children and those in the Ugandan community. We focus on long-term goals that enable children to take responsibility for their future and the future of their country. Our programs are carefully researched and developed initiatives that address the need for quality education, mentorships, the redevelopment of schools, resettlement from the camps, and financial stability.

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92 Kingdom magazine

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94 Kingdom magazine

SU PUBLICIDAD AQUÍ

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