![]() Lee Williamson: My name's Lee Williamson, and I am a School of Motion alumni. Right after we hear from one of our amazing alumni. ![]() Joey Korenman: We are going to talk to Mark now right after. It's got nostalgia, interesting historical trivia about our industry, some celebrity cameos, and tons of practical tips for doing compositing in After Effects. We talk about his experience working on huge feature films and other assorted projects, and we talk about what he dives into in VFX for Motion. In this episode, we go back in time to talk about Mark's experience comping shots for Rebel Assault II, one of my favorite PC games ever. Joey Korenman: He's also brilliant and hilarious, which you are about to learn. He has also worked at Industrial Light & Magic, LucasArts, the legendary studio, The Orphanage. He wrote the book, After Effects Studio Techniques. Mark Christiansen has quite literally written the book on doing compositing in After Effects. We did not skimp on the instructor either. We pulled out all the stops on this, producing a pretty large scale shoot to get elements for you to work with, bringing on designers like Nidia Dias, David Brodeur, Matt Naboshek, and Ariel Costa to provide designs and elements. VFX for Motion will be open for registration starting with the upcoming winter session. Joey Korenman: This is The School of Motion Podcast. The Transcript from Mark Christiansen's Interview with Joey Korenman of SOM Adobe After Effects CC Visual Effects and Compositing Techniques.The Adventures of Sharkboy and Lavagirl.Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace.Star Wars Rebel Assault II: The Hidden Empire.The fallout has been severe, with numerous lawsuits, governmental inquiries, a #DeleteFacebook user boycott campaign, and a sharp drop in share price that’s erased nearly $50 billion of the company’s market cap.Show Notes from Episode 79 of the School of Motion Podcast, Featuring Mark Christiansen ![]() This data, which was sold to Cambridge Analytica against Facebook’s terms of service, reportedly informed the firm’s election ad targeting toolset used by the campaign of President Donald Trump and others. Not until his televised broadcast interview with CNN did Zuckerberg verbalize an apology, and only after days of deafening silence from Facebook’s top leadership on the subject since the Cambridge Analytica revelations came to light a little over one week ago.Īs we understand it now, the data mining and analytics company, based out of London, gained access to data on as many as 50 million Facebook profiles thanks to generous data-sharing policies Facebook app developers enjoyed back in 2014. Notably, Zuckerberg’s initial Facebook post addressing the situation last Wednesday did not say he or the company was sorry. In the US, the ads appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, and The Wall Street Journal. ![]() According to CNN, the ads appeared in the Sunday editions of the UK newspapers The Observer, The Sunday Times, Mail on Sunday, Sunday Mirror, Sunday Express and Sunday Telegraph. “I promise to do better for you.” This new, more definitive apology comes just days after the chief executive’s flurry of interviews with American media organizations, including CNN, Wired, The New York Times, and Recode. “This was a breach of trust and I’m sorry we didn’t do more at the time,” writes Zuckerberg. Facebook took out full page ads in the NYT, WSJ, WashPost, and 6 UK papers today /CUEYwyWuTT- Brian Stelter March 25, 2018
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