New York Design and Me on Television

Behind the Scenes on the “New York by Design” TV Show

Two things that you don’t normally see on television very often are now on television: design and yours truly. The new series “New York by Design” (which follows last summer’s “California by Design”) is five episodes of stories about all kinds of design innovation: architecture, industrial design, consumer products, electronics, software and UX, and more. As it happens, I appear on the show as a presenter and a judge (Adobe is a series partner), along with some terrific company including Debbie Millman, Stefan Sagmeister, Tucker Viemeister and many more.

The show airs Saturday evenings on CBS Channel 2 New York and the full season will stream on Amazon Prime next February. You can actually see the first two episodes embedded below. In episode one, I talk with designer David Benjamin about Mycelium bricks, an organic building material made out of what would otherwise be discarded compost material. And in the second episode I pay a visit to Zimmerman Workshop founders Adam and Sofia Zimmerman, who designed a one-of-a-kind staircase that’s part architecture and part art installation. (The behind-the-scenes photo above is taken at the top of that staircase.) For more information about the series, and to watch future episodes posted after their original air dates, visit newyorkbydesign.com.

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Movies Watched, October 2020

Movies Watched, October 2020

My wife and I had tickets to go see “Portrait of a Lady on Fire” back in March. We’d booked them several days in advance and leading up to that Friday we debated endlessly whether it was something we should even be doing. The pandemic was starting to tighten its grip around New York, and the wisdom of a subway ride and a movie theater outing was starting to seem dodgy.

Ultimately we opted not to go, which in retrospect was the right decision. But how I wish we’d been able to see this big, gorgeous, astoundingly well made arthouse film on a large screen, because it very much is a work of art. Nearly every frame of writer and director Céline Sciamma’s romance about painting is composed like an Andrew Wyeth canvas, though imbued with an otherworldly warmth that Sciamma and cinematographer Claire Mathon crank up with precise care.

At times, the pristine visual craftsmanship is almost a distraction—several shots of a a raging, preternaturally blue ocean practically shout above the acting. On the whole though, the dramatic tension more than justifies the aesthetic conceit: the movie’s characters are effectively stranded on an island with few expectations, and yet they’re able to realize immense beauty from their circumstances. This seamless joining of form and content is rare—and stunning.

Of the sixteen other movies I watched last month, it’s worth noting that the ones that debuted on streaming channels—the atrocious “Enola Holmes,” the diverting “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm,” and the flavorless “Rebecca” all support my running theory that the Netflix-age of original releases is one of underwhelming, slapdash quality. These movies are very rarely more than “fine,” and while it’s amusing to get easy, immediate access to them, the repeatedly empty calories-like sensation of disappointment is also getting really tiring. I can’t wait for this pandemic to be over.

  1. Portrait of a Lady on Fire” (2019) ★★★★½
    So astoundingly well made it’s almost distracting.
  2. Lost in America” (1985) ★★½
    Albert Brooks was ahead of his time, but not by much.
  3. Con Air” (1997) ★★
    Rewatched. Holds its audience in starkly low regard.
  4. Stop Making Sense” (1984) ★★★★
    Rewatched. Piercingly clear document of a band at a point where they finally figured out how to align their bizarre impulses with widespread accessibility.
  5. Only Angels Have Wings” (1939) ★★★★½
    Rewatched. An intoxicatingly grubby little story of people lost at the edge of the world.
  6. The Good Dinosaur” (2015) ★★½
    Technology in search of a problem.
  7. Enola Holmes” (2020) ★½
    I was totally signed up for this thriller about Sherlock Holmes’s super smart little sister, but it turned out to be not very smart at all.
  8. The Trial of the Chicago 7” (2020) ★★½
    Sorkin’s gotta Sorkin.
  9. Borat Subsequent Moviefilm” (2020) ★★★
    Not a great movie, but a pretty great time.
  10. Death on the Nile” (1978) ★★★
    Pure formula, but satisfying.
  11. A Few Good Men” (1992) ★★★½
    Rewatched. Not a masterpiece but for a movie where not a lot really happens on screen aside from some shouting, it’s remarkably entertaining.
  12. Black and Blue” (2019) ★★★
    Pretty creaky policier, but there are still some vital ideas at work here.
  13. Captain America: The Winter Soldier” (2014) ★★½
    Rewatched. For every smart narrative decision it makes, it follows up with a really dumb one.
  14. Phantom Lady” (1944) ★
    Paper-thin noir peddling psychobabble as verisimilitude.
  15. Rebecca” (2020) ★★
    Not terrible except for the fact that it invites direct comparison with Hitchcock’s classic.
  16. Hanzo the Razor: Sword of Justice” (1972) ★★
    Toxic masculinity in samurai-era Japan.
  17. E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial” (1982) ★★★
    Rewatched. Cynical in its sentimentality.

This is the latest roundup of my monthly movie consumption. You can also see what I watched in September, in August, in July, in June, in May, in April, in March, in February, in January, and a full list of everything I watched in 2019, in 2018, in 2017 and in 2016. And, if you’re really interested, you can follow along with my movie diary at letterboxd.com.

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When They Called It for Biden

A Crowd gathered under the arch at Grand Army Plaza, Brooklyn to celebrate Joe Biden’s victory over Donald Trump, Copyright 2020 by Khoi Vinh

Yesterday around midday I was at Grand Army Plaza in Brooklyn not long after the Associated Press called Pennsylvania for Joe Biden. There was a large throng of revelers there, pumped up with the adrenaline of a victory that millions have been anticipating for four long, painful years.

Traffic was knotted all around as the crowds converged on the the southern tip of the plaza, but no one seemed to mind—you could hear car horns blaring and drivers and passengers yelling out their windows, but out of jubilation, not anger. The crowd converged on the iconic Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Arch, where people danced and chanted and clapped to music. A number of folks had brought drums and percussion instruments from their homes and they were beating a powerful tattoo that rang throughout the air, seemingly for miles.

People playing drums and percussion at Grand Army Plaza, Copyright 2020 by Khoi Vinh

Nothing had been organized but everyone was in unison, and people took turns dancing at the center, directly under the arch, passing around a huge American flag and waving it to the delight of hundreds of onlookers.

A man waves an American flag at Grand Army Plaza, Brooklyn, Copyright 2020 by Khoi Vinh
A boy waves an American flag at Grand Army Plaza, Brooklyn, Copyright 2020 by Khoi Vinh

This woman danced with her infant child strapped to her back. I tried to get a closeup shot that showed the baby’s face, but I think I was too overwhelmed with the magnificence of her movements.

A woman dances at Grand Army Plaza, Brooklyn, Copyright 2020 by Khoi Vinh
A woman dancing with her child at Grand Army Plaza, Brooklyn, Copyright 2020 by Khoi Vinh

At one point this man stepped into the center. Even without the flag, he instantly drew everyone’s attention and he proceeded to lead the crowd in an exhilarating, impromptu speech about the triumph of truth. Several times he coaxed the crowd into kneeling down with him, and then together everyone jumped up with a burst of energy, shouting at their top of their lungs with joy.

A man addresses the crowd at Grand Army Plaza, Brooklyn, Copyright 2020 by Khoi Vinh
A man leads the crowd in cheering at Grand Army Plaza, Brookyn, Copyright 2020 by Khoi Vinh

When the news alert had come through earlier in the day, around 11:30a, I wasn’t even able to emotionally process the victory. My mind had been in such a despondent state since Election Night, both frustrated by the unresolved vote counts and the fact that millions of Americans saw no reason why Donald Trump’s lies, deceit and dereliction of duties should not be rewarded by another term in office. If I’m honest, it just disgusted me. But being there at Grand Army Plaza, surrounded by people of every race, color and creed, I was finally able to enjoy—at least for an afternoon—the wonder and beauty of a truly meaningful moment of progress in a much longer campaign to set the world right again.

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Movies Watched, September 2020

Movies Watched, September 2020

I’m Thinking of Ending Things” is a terrific movie title for a year in which each month that passes has taken a “hold my beer” alacrity to one-upping the awfulness that preceded it. The fact that the movie was directed by perpetually inventive misanthrope Charlie Kaufman would seem to promise at least a diverting, brain puzzle-type examination of human experience.

For a while, this movie is that, but then it gets lost in its own head (something which you’d actually expect to happen to Kaufman movies more often than it does). It starts out as a fairly compelling two-hander, with its leads bantering on an extended drive to visit family, interlaced with a surprisingly deft voiceover (voiceovers are never surprisingly deft). Eventually though it starts falling back to standard Kaufman shorthand: dream logic blocking, elliptical editing, jump scare cutaways etc.

No one else can do this stuff like Kaufman can and so few even try, so it’s somewhat forgivable that little of it rises above the amusing. But the last third, which is by turns reminiscent of a rather unenthusiastic David Lynch or Jean-Luc Godard flick, feels much less assured as it devolves into a game of semiotic Clue, leaving the viewer to match up wryly dropped hints with narrative twists. Kaufman does not want to telegraph the “meaning” of it all or do all of the expository work for the viewer, which is fair, but I’m not convinced he’s fully doing his job as a storyteller, either.

“I’m Thinking of Ending Things” is a disappointment but then again most of what we’re getting to see this year has been disappointing. I wrote in August about how subpar most of the direct-to-Netflix fare has been in general, but we’re also living through a pretty rough drought of genuinely entertaining movies that may stretch on for a long time. On the one hand, studios are holding back their most anticipated films until such a time when theater-going is a thing again. And on the other hand, the pandemic has surely paused or deferred production for a ton of what would have been entertaining to see next year, too.

Sorry, didn’t mean to be such a downer there.

In total I watched fifteen movies last month. Here’s the full list.

  1. Captain America: The First Avenger” (2011) ★★
    Rewatched. Supposedly benign but takes a lot of offensive liberties with race and history.
  2. Millions” (2004) ★★★
    Smartly directed fable of a kid’s experience dealing with the death of a loved one? I’ll take it. Corny sermonizing on the power of faith? Not so much.
  3. Monsters University” (2013) ★★★½
    I know these back catalog Pixar sequels are not supposed to be well regarded but I really liked this one.
  4. Motherless Brooklyn” (2019) ★★
    Edward Norton did his homework and he wants you to know it.
  5. I’m Thinking of Ending Things” (2020) ★★½
    Diverting for a while until it turns into a game of semantic Clue.
  6. The Shop Around the Corner” (1940) ★★★★½
    Rewatched. Warmly imagined romantic comedy about pre-War Hungary.
  7. Sleuth” (1972) ★★★★
    A delicious acting feast rolled up in a parlor room whodunit.
  8. Star Wars” (1977) ★★★½
    Rewatched. Enjoying this movie today requires not just suspension of disbelief but also summoning up a willful ignorance of all the crap sequels that have followed.
  9. The Birth of a Nation” (1915)
    Talk about complicated. A disturbingly well-made paean to hatred and bigotry.
  10. An American Pickle” (2020) ★★
    Starts off with crackle, then limps along to a whimpering finish.
  11. The Empire Strikes Back” (1980) ★★★½
    Rewatched. The best made installment of the entire series, but perhaps not essential at all.
  12. The Traitor” (2019) ★★½
    Goes deep inside the Italian mafia, reveals surprisingly little.
  13. How to Build a Girl” (2019) ★½
    Shamefully squanders a terrific premise: excavating the way British music weeklies used to build up and tear down bands.
  14. Dazed and Confused” (1993) ★★★
    A great hangout movie, sure, but in retrospect, quite toxic.
  15. The Violent Men” (1955) ★★★★
    An old western with a terrifying view of how power is amassed.

This is the latest roundup of my monthly movie consumption. You can also see what I watched in August, in July, in June, in May, in April, in March, in February, in January, and a full list of everything I watched in 2019, in 2018, in 2017 and in 2016. And, if you’re really interested, you can follow along with my movie diary at letterboxd.com.

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A New Visual Identity for Adobe XD

New Visual Identity for Adobe XD

Here’s a project that my team at Adobe has been working on for a long time. In addition to steering the design of Adobe XD, our design and prototyping tool for UX/UI designers, late last year we also took on the task of refreshing its visual identity. You can see the results on our new website at Adobe.com, but you can get a sense for the visual and motion vocabulary we created in this video reel.

If you’re interested in learning more, I wrote about the thinking that went into this work over at XD Ideas. And keep an eye out for more applications of this identity across Adobe XD and related sites and touchpoints soon.

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Movies Watched, August 2020

Still from “Bacurau” directed by Kleber Mendonça Filho and Juliano Dornelles

What’s happening with film distribution during this pandemic is pretty fascinating. There are first run movies debuting on all kinds of services and at all kinds of price points. Earlier this year I rented “The Assistant” (superb) on iTunes for US$5.99. Just a few weekends ago “Bill & Ted Face the Music” debuted for home viewing for US$19.99. And Disney is even charging a hefty US$29.99 to rent “Mulan” to customers who are already paying a monthly subscription fee for Disney+. In contrast to the pre-pandemic world where the cost of a ticket was more or less completely dissociated from the actual movie you’d be watching, the perceived value of a given film is more apparent than ever in these rental prices.

I’m not exactly sure then what to think when a movie is free, but I have to say I was very pleasantly surprised when Kleber Mendonça Filho and Juliano Dornelles’s independent film “Bacurau” debuted on The Criterion Channel last month. I’ve been an enthusiastic subscriber of that service since it launched but I’ve thought of it primarily as a terrific catalog of classic and international films, not a platform for releasing new movies that, in a pre-pandemic world, would have debuted in theaters.

I’d heard a lot of great buzz about “Bacurau” and in fact had hoped to be able to see it in a theater one day, so it was a treat to get to watch it from home at no additional cost. It’s a truly odd movie that combines elements of social documentary, science fiction, spaghetti westerns and more to tell the near-future story of a village in Brazil that, soon after burying one of its matriarchs, suddenly finds itself missing from regional maps. That description not only fails to do justice to the premise, but is only a hint of what follows, which I found to be thrilling and weird—so weird that when legendary weirdo Udo Kier shows up halfway through, I was shocked to realize that there would be even more weirdness to come. The movie is not perfect, but it’s so fearless in its willingness to mash up and subvert genres that it seems to be reinventing itself as it unfolds. If you have an appetite for disorientation, I recommend it highly.

It’s worth remembering too that “Bacurau” represents just a tiny fraction of the immense wealth of worthwhile film to be found on The Criterion Channel. Even if you subscribe for only a month or two to watch a few films, you’re coming out way ahead.

All told, I watched nineteen movies in August. Here is the full list.

  1. Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon” (2000) ★★★★½
    Rewatched. Like a TV season finale so transcendent there’s no need to watch all the episodes that preceded it.
  2. The Little Prince” (1974) ★★½
    Not without its charms, but sunk by the irritating titular performer.
  3. Big Hero 6” (2014) ★★
    Rewatched. Its reverence for tech is not holding up well.
  4. Batman” (1989) ★★
    Rewatched. Tiresome.
  5. My Brother’s Wedding” (1983) ★★★★
    Imperfect but transfixing tragedy set in South Central LA.
  6. Never Goin’ Back” (2018) ★★★★
    A morally reprehensible but briskly made triumph.
  7. Extra Ordinary” (2019) ★★★½
    Yet another Irish indie in which an unattached driving instructor speaks to the dead and battles a one-hit wonder rockstar, to largely amiable effect.
  8. The Report” (2019) ★★★★
    Setting aside the vanity of a screenwriter directing a movie about a guy writing something so important that middle-managers and executives want to water it down, this meticulous reckoning with Bush-era torture is terrific.
  9. Speed” (1994) ★★★½
    Rewatched. A good example of how a dumb movie can achieve greatness.
  10. Top Gun” (1986) ★½
    This thinly plotted recruitment film remains aesthetically undimmed, but it’s also still just as empty-headed as ever.
  11. Uncle Buck” (1989) ★½
    Disappointingly few laughs; I added a half-star out of fondness for John Candy.
  12. Revanche” (2008) ★★★★
    A taut, expertly directed subversion of the revenge thriller form.
  13. Sullivan’s Travels” (1941) ★★★
    Rewatched. A pointed declaration of ideals about comedy vs. realism that’s not particularly funny or realistic.
  14. Bacurau” (2019) ★★★★
    Bonkers B-movie set in Brazil that continually reinvents itself, thrillingly.
  15. The Truman Show” (1998) ★★★½
    Rewatched. Charming but maybe most commendable for neutralizing Jim Carrey’s insufferability.
  16. Escape from New York” (1981) ★★★★
    Rewatched. A good time was had by all.
  17. Greed” (2019) ★★
    Steve Coogan as anti-hero is so entertaining that this message movie mostly forgets to deliver its message until the end when it skirts by with lip service.
  18. Castle in the Sky” (1986) ★★½
    Rewatched. Fantastic and inert.
  19. Variety” (1983) ★★★
    Fascinating document of post-noir cinema and pre-Giuliani New York.

This is the latest roundup of my monthly movie consumption. You can also see what I watched in July, in June, in May, in April, in March, in February, in January, and a full list of everything I watched in 2019, in 2018, in 2017 and in 2016. And, if you’re really interested, you can follow along with my movie diary at letterboxd.com.

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Wireframe S3E4 and S3E5: Streaming Media and the UX of Sleep

Wireframe Season 3 Episode 4

I’ve been in a bit of denial about the end of summer so I’m having to catch up quickly here on our two latest episodes of “Wireframe.” You can listen to them below but you should also subscribe at adobe.ly/wireframe or in your favorite podcast app.

First up is this newest installment, just out this week, all about designing apps that purport to help people rest easier at night. Sleep is a multi-billion dollar industry so it’s no wonder that there are a host of apps out there that are trying to help all of us sleep more soundly—especially in this time when the world seems to be constantly on edge.

It was fascinating to hear from folks like Ian McConchie, VP of design at Headspace, about the way they think about calming people, relieving stress and improving sleep. We also talked to Lucas Guarneri, who’s working on sleep trackers at Withings, Ania Wysocka, a designer who created her own app—Rootd—to help people manage anxiety, and more.

A couple of weeks ago we also had this terrific episode (one of my favorites this season) on designing the streaming media experiences that are consuming so many hours of our quarantine living this year. We had a terrific, illuminating conversation with Thomas Williams of Ostmodern, a design shop that specializes in video streaming experiences. We also talked to Dan Rayburn, an analyst and journalist who knows the world of streaming media—and streaming apps—inside and out. And we talked to writer Suzanne Scacca about tracking the Netflix user experience and how it impacts what we choose to watch.

For that episode, the “Wireframe” producers and I also did a trial run of a service called Scener, a free Chrome extension that makes it easy for remote groups of people to co-watch content on services like Netflix, Disney+, Hulu, Prime Video etc. This way of consuming video has become more popular lately for obvious reasons, and in fact I had a more in-depth experience with Scener just last weekend when we used it to host a remote movie-watching birthday party for my daughter. She and eight or so of her friends used Scener to video and text chat while the app also kept a stream of “Spider-Man: Into the Spiderverse” in sync. It was a bit janky at first, especially as I was scrutinizing it for all of its UX and design imperfections. But ultimately it worked really well, and you could absolutely imagine this becoming a much more common way of friends spending time together, pandemic or no.

You can find Wireframe at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, PocketCasts, Castro or wherever you download your favorite shows, and you can listen to previous episodes and find out much more at adobe.ly/wireframe. And in two weeks: we have a terrific episode about voting.

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Movies Watched, July 2020

Still from “Da 5 Bloods” by Spike Lee

Netflix is the multiplex now, and it feels like a bit of a gift every time the service rolls out a new original movie direct to our living rooms. In July I was enthusiastic about getting to see “The Old Guard” and “Da 5 Bloods” in their “first runs.” Both were made exclusively for Netflix, and both feature pedigrees I’m inclined to favor: Charlize Theron giving, again, everything she has in an action thriller; and Spike Lee diving into the legacy of the Vietnam War with an unhinged, transfixing performance by Delroy Lindo. But both left me unimpressed and worse, with this nagging feeling that the filmmakers just didn’t think it mattered that much whether they delivered the best possible movies they could. In fact, looking back over the past few years of Netflix’s original films, with the clear exception of Alfonso Cuarón’s “Roma,” they almost all fit this description: flashy, star-studded productions that just didn’t feel fully committed to their own success. Forget it Jake, it’s Netflix.

To be fair maybe this isn’t just Netflix; maybe it’s just another kind of “new normal” we must all accept in this time where everything is up for revision. Take Tom Hanks in “Greyhound” (the first thing I’ve ever watched on Apple TV+). It’s a taut, efficient little wartime thriller and a fun ride, but at its edges—the perfunctory love story, the rough CG effects, the scant running time—it still felt lower stakes and less ambitious than a “true” feature film release. As a genre, direct-to-streaming is higher profile and frequently higher-budget than direct-to-video, but I’m not sure it’s proven yet that it can be higher quality.

I watched seventeen total movies in July. Here’s the full list.

  1. The Adventures of Tintin” (2011) ★★★
    Rewatched. Better and less distractingly uncanny valley-esque than I remembered.
  2. Missing Link” (2019) ★★
    Amusing but insubstantial, and quixotically stop-motion-animated by Laika Studio.
  3. Blood on the Moon” (1948) ★★★★
    A very manly Robert Mitchum-led western, gorgeously shot and begging for a proper film restoration.
  4. Greyhound” (2020) ★★★½
    Totally acceptable, sturdy, dad-optimized battleship thriller.
  5. Station West” (1948) ★★
    Noir-ish western with a completely implausible badass for a protagonist.
  6. The Old Guard” (2020) ★½
    Charlize Theron gives us so much, yet this overly serious movie serves her so poorly.
  7. Emma.” (2020) ★★★★
    Rewatched. Tried to figure out what annoyed some people about this movie, but I had too good of a time to bother.
  8. Captain Blood” (1935) ★★★★
    Bracingly entertaining, old fashioned pirate highjinks that my kids hated.
  9. Mad Max 2” (1981) ★★★★
    Rewatched. It would’ve been depressing if it wasn’t so excellent.
  10. Akeelah and the Bee” (2006) ★★★
    By the numbers but made with feeling.
  11. One Hundred and One Dalmatians” (1961) ★★★★
    Aesthetically gorgeous; I’m not sure CG animation has equaled it.
  12. Mission: Impossible – Fallout” (2018) ★★★★½
    Rewatched. Possibly the high water mark for action sequels.
  13. Da 5 Bloods” (2020) ★★
    So much talent and so much effort, and yet so many shortcuts taken.
  14. Duplicity” (2009) ★★★★
    Rewatched. Crackerjack little corporate adventure film from a time when they used to make movies for grown ups.
  15. 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days” (2007) ★★★★½
    Harrowingly authentic story of a young woman helping her friend seek an illegal abortion.
  16. The Secret World of Arrietty” (2010) ★★★
    Less ambitious—and highfalutin—than other Ghibli productions, for the better.
  17. Destroy All Monsters” (1968) ★★½
    A true cheese-fest featuring Godzilla, Mothra, Rodan and more kaiju in what amounts to an episode of “Star Trek.”

This is the latest roundup of my monthly movie consumption. You can also see what I watched in June, in May, in April, in March, in February, in January, and a full list of everything I watched in 2019, in 2018, in 2017 and in 2016. And, if you’re really interested, you can follow along with my movie diary at letterboxd.com.

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Wireframe S3E3: Designing for Giving

Wireframe S3E3—Designing for Giving

We’re halfway through our third season of “Wireframe” already! You can listen to the third episode embedded below or in your favorite podcast player, and of course you should subscribe at adobe.ly/wireframe.

This installment tries to unpack the role of user experience design in crowdfunding and charitable giving. Of course it’s a particularly relevant question now with so many people under so much duress from COVID-19 and the volatile economy that has accompanied it. From the episode notes:

As the pandemic created health and employment crises, a lot of people found themselves in urgent need of financial help. As a result, crowdfunding platforms are proving more popular than ever—creating personal connections between those of us asking for help, and those of us with money to give. We look at how platforms like GoFundMe, Kickstarter, Patreon and Chuffed deploy different strategies in their UX design to encourage us to give, and give more.

We managed to get some really great voices to help us explore this story, including designer Charles Adler, one of the co-founders of Kickstarter; Ursula Sage, director of product at Patreon; and Prashan Paramanathan, founder of giving site Chuffed. We’ve also got designer Shay Walnut, who has a very personal story on how crowdfunding made a difference for him in this pandemic.

You can find Wireframe at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, PocketCasts, Castro or wherever you download your favorite shows, and you can listen to previous episodes and find out much more at adobe.ly/wireframe. And come back in two weeks for the start of our second half of the season; we’ve got a terrific episode on the design of those streaming video services that are enabling all your binging marathons through this pandemic.

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