Showing posts with label fashion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fashion. Show all posts

Saturday 11 April 2015

The Imitation Game

     Alan Turing (1912-1954) was a British computer scientist, mathematician, logician and cryptanalyst. He is also widely credited as the father of the modern computer and of theoretical computer science. During the Second World War he worked at Bletchley Park and helped Britain and its allies decipher German coded messages of the Enigma machine by devising a code-breaking machine thus greatly contributing to successful operations. Turing, for his contributions, was made an officer of the Order of the British Empire. After the War he went on to design and develop computers and became a pioneer of artificial intelligence, developing the Turing Test.  He was elected a fellow of the Royal Society but was subsequently prosecuted in 1952 for his homosexuality.
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/609739/Alan-Turing#toc214876
 
     "The Imitation Game" is a film released in 2014, starring Benedict Cumberbatch and Keira Knightley. I have actually recently seen at an HMV store that it has just been released on DVD, Blu-Ray, and I have yet to watch the movie. It is based on the book "Alan Turing: The Enigma" a biography of the computer scientist written by Andrew Hodges. It also stars Charles Dance, the English actor probably best known for his famous/infamous role as Tywin Lannister in HBO's "Game of Thrones". The movie has 8 Academy Award nominations including Best Picture. You can find the official movie site here:
     I have decided to write a little more about it later on in a separate post after having watched it. The New York Times called it "kind of perfect, and also kind of stale", explaining that though "an Alan Turing biopic is, all in all, a very welcome thing", the subject matter was nonetheless "a lot for a single movie to take in."
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/28/movies/the-imitation-game-stars-benedict-cumberbatch.html?_r=0
Roger Ebert said that though the film is "one of the more rousingly entertaining crowd-pleasers (...) (it) also happens to be one of the most devastatingly sad."
http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/the-imitation-game-2014


Keira Knightley with Sergey Brin and Mark Zuckerberg at
The Imitation Game Screening credit: Business Insider 
The New York Times also said that "Hut 8 at Bletchley Park serves as a prototype for the corporate campuses of Apple, Google and Facebook". Speaking of which, there was a special screening of the film in Silicon Valley where Keira Knightley met tech titans like Google founder Sergey Brin and Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg.
One of these tech moguls even invited her to have a look at some spaceships. Keira asked them when hovercrafts like those seen in "Back to the Future" would become real traveling vehicles but did not get a serious response and she apparently also freaked out when she saw the co-founder of Google wearing crocs.
You can find the amusing Knightley interview with Jimmy Kimmel here:

I wonder if Alan Turing would have worn crocs back in the day? I have a feeling probably as geniuses are more famous for their eccentricities than their sense of fashion. On the other hand, this is not entirely true of the co-founder of Google as Sergey Brin can, in fact, be very stylish if he so chooses. 
Sergey Brin at New York Fashion Week (photo credit : Getty)
With intelligence like his I can see that he is quite comfortable in his hoodies, jeans and crocs (which also make him look rather cool) and cares little about what the world thinks (he does not have to, after all) but at the New York Fashion Week and show of the Spring 2013 collection of Diane von Furstenberg, who also helped Google with the marketing campaign for Google Glass, we can see that Sergey Brin was all class as an elegant highlight of the party. Little surprise he has become quite the lady's man (even, according to rumours, leaving his wife for one of his employees at Google Glass called Amanda Rosenberg).
For a full account of the story, you can read the following article on the official website of Vanity Fair or the original can be found in the April 2014 issue of Vanity Fair magazine:
At any rate, one thing is certain, I believe that 2013 fashion show of Furstenberg and Google Glass gave a prime example of one of the first significant collaborations between technology and fashion, two topics that have always had my interest. With wearable technology and the internet of things on the rise, we will, in all probability, be seeing more and more of the futuristic fashion shows many used only to dream of several years ago. I suppose we can but wait to see what the future has in store for the new generations that will grow up on all things digital.
Well, that's a wrap for this episode of Alan Turing, which ended in a veritable gossip-house of fashion, rumours and scandals that had little to do with Turing himself and all the more with Mr. Sergey Brin and Google. Stay tuned for part 2! 

Tuesday 19 November 2013

The Suit and Tie Conundrum

I have just read a very good article featured in the Daily Beast by Alizah Salario entitled "Daily Woes for Women in Tech" http://www.thedailybeast.com/witw/articles/2013/11/19/dating-in-the-stem-fields-can-women-in-science-be-sexy-and-successful.html
Women in the STEM fields (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) are faced with what Eileen Pollack  http://nytimes.com/2013/10/06/magazine/why-are-there-still-so-few-women-in-science.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0 calls the "double whammy", the sort of damned if you do, damned if you don't situation when being too feminine, attractive and good-looking will stigmatize women (of course not only those working in STEM fields) with the preconceived and stereotypical image of them not being serious or of them most probably being simply dumb and when being dressed in a labcoat or looking dorky enough will make women seem not worth dating. So is there a solution to these contradictions?
Pollack says she doesn't think "most of us challenge these paradigms" and that "we simply absorb them" and she is right.
I certainly think that the stereotypical images of women should be challenged but I also believe that those of men should be examined and changed as well. In some of my future posts I would like to take a look at men and fashion and how I think the "suit and tie conundrum" leaves us with men giving us the delusion that only they can always look smart. Intelligent in nerdy attire and smart, classy and sexy when all dressed up. A few questions I pose; must men look so boringly repetitive when it comes to fashion? Why does the suit and tie solve the problem for men of what to wear for dinner, meetings, job interviews, dates, etc. etc. but not for women? Should women have such an all-purpose uniform or should men be allowed to start wearing new types of attire even for formal occasions? I would opt for the latter so that the male vs. female image could be redefined and gender equality would be able to gain more ground.