Chicago


I went for a walk around Chicago the other day, it was a pleasantly non frigid day and the sun basked Chicago in its glory. As such I have included some photos so our Christchurch Zoners can get a 5.0 Mega Pixel glimpse of Millennium Park and the lake front.

Time for a letter:

Dear Madam

My name is Brett King.

Will my computer stop working at midnight New Years Eve?

Regards

Brett King

Thanks for your letter Brett. You are obviously confusing 31 Dec 2008 with 31 December 1999, the later being the fabled doomsdaydate for the Millennium Bug, or Y2K as we called it around the office.

These were the dark days of technology, disks were floppy not shiny, cookies were biscuits and fax paper was impossible to flatten out.

The concern was caused by computers only using 2 digits for the year, eg 98 instead of 1998. There was widespread panic and spending of money with geeks. You even had to send letters to your suppliers and clients letting them know if you were Y2K ready.

The end result was rather tame although there were unconfirmed reports that 150 slot machines at race tracks in Delaware stopped working.

Happy New Year

Chicago 1Chicago 6

Richard Tattershaw

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A few weeks ago Richie M wrote a blog entry, quite an lovely and eloquent one for a self styled ‘man of few written words’, about the weather in the US of A.

This fine work inspired me to create a videographonic companion piece; as such I have produced a short film called ‘Snow, Shovel and Sniff, a Chicago Winter Memoir’. This was filmed last week after a night of snow. Enjoy.

Indeed the weather has been very odd recently. Last week the temperatures got down as low as -30C / -22F. This was astonishingly cold. And then over the last couple of days it was been 15C / 60F with heavy rain. This is puzzlingly warm for this time of year.

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This brings me neatly to a letter from Brett King, one of our readers in Christchurch. Brett is a 20-something ad man with King Cobra fixations and a penchant for salted herring. He writes,

Dear Sir

My name is Brett King.

Did you have a white Christmas?

Yours truly,

Brett King

Well yes we did Brett. It snowed several more times which resulted in festively-fabulous snowy Christmas. The bar humbug rain has since it all melted away.  Thanks for your letter.

Merry Christmas

Tatts

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PS. Speaking of humbugs and in the well established tradition of Entercation did you know that Charles Dickens ‘invented’ the modern Christmas?

When the Christmas Carol was written the Industrial Revolution was leaving little time for people to celebrate Christmas. Dickens loved Christmas; he had been raised on the fun and jolliness of a rural Christmas and its subsequent slaughtering of animals for stuffing and feasting, something the new urban life had no time for.

The Christmas Carol was so popular that it rekindled the spirit of Christmas in England and the USA. He is also said to invented the term ‘Merry Christmas’.

Tatts

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The John Hancock Center is a 100-story, multi-use building, recognized around the world for its distinctive architecture, prestigious location and presence on Chicago’s skyline.  When completed in 1969, it was the tallest building in the world outside New York City.  It is the third-tallest skyscraper in Chicago and the fifth-tallest in the United States, after the Sears Tower, the Empire State Building, the Bank of America Tower and the Aon Center.  When measured to the top of its antenna masts, it stands at 1,500 feet (457 m). The building is home to offices and restaurants, as well as about 700 condominiums and contains the highest residences in the world.  The Observatory is situated on the 94th floor and offers breath-taking views of both the city of Chicago and Lake Michigan.  It is one of Chicago’s most popular attractions.

Some interesting facts

At the peak of construction, more than 2,000 people worked on the project; some five million man-hours were required to complete the development.

  • Enough steel to make 33,000 cars was used to make the frame, which took three years to complete and weighs 46,000 tons.
  • Its four corner columns weigh up to 100 tons each.
  • The building’s 1,250 miles of wiring carries enough power to supply a city of 30,000 people.
  • There’s enough aluminum in the building to cover 12 football fields.
  • Its 11,459 extra-thick, bronze windows contain enough glass to produce a single, 5ft sheet 13 miles long.
  • Because of John Hancock Center’s lakeside location, caissons had to be sunk into 10ft holes drilled 190ft into bedrock.
  • The unusual design required innovative construction methods, including the use of “creeper cranes,” previously used only in bridge construction, to hoist steel beams into place.
  • Prefabrication of the immense corner joints meant construction proceeded at a rapid pace – up to three floors a week.

In June of this year, TZO partnered with the John Hancock Observatory to rebrand and create new signage surrounding the building.  The existing signage had been in place for 15 years and was looking much the worse for wear.  Also, people would often circle the building unsure about how access the Observatory Lobby.  TZO was tasked to create new signage employing the updated Observatory brand.  This has been quite a process and has been quite a logistical challenge.  The job is now complete and the John Hancock Observatory has directional signage worthy of a building of its stature.

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Hamish McDonald

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As 35 approached in the far distance, I viewed it with apprehension and, let’s face it, horror.

I looked back at 30 and remembered actually being excited about turning 30. For me, that was a statement: ‘I’m a REAL grown-up now. You can take me seriously. I am a force to be reckoned with.’

But something happened between 30 and 35. It was mostly gravity.

I’m turning 35 next week, and suddenly I seem to be surrounded by ominous articles about how the minute you turn 35 everything starts slowing down: metabolism, energy, etc. Against my will, my eyes are drawn to the page where my fate seems to be spelled out: likely weight gain, decreased flexibility, you name it. As though my peak health already happened, somewhere in that span of time when I was too sleep deprived with a new baby to notice its passing.

I’ll admit, my upcoming birthday has me feeling a little anxious. I can already feel a difference in the way I inhabit my body now, compared to how I was at 20. My hamstrings are tighter. My hands look older. The furrows between my eyebrows have turned into real lines, there even when I’m not squinting because I forgot my sunglasses.

But also, I’m looking forward to it. At 34 I finally have a haircut that actually works for me and I’m way more cool in social situations than I was then. I feel like I’m finally at a point where I can stop trying so hard. I am smarter, more experienced, and more grounded. Albeit with mushier abs.

So bring on 35!  At least I am not catching up to those other old buggers Richie and Tatts!

What Hamish should expect to look like!

Hamish McDonald

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I have never really understood the finer points of the world’s climate. Living in Chicago has exposed me to an extreme climate I never knew existed. In the summer it gets hot 95F (35C), in the winter it gets cold -10F (-24C).

What is our climate system?

Climate is the average weather usually taken over a 30-year time period for a particular region and time period. Climate is not the same as weather, but rather, it is the average pattern of weather for a particular region. Weather describes the short-term state of the atmosphere.

Atmosphere: The atmosphere covers the Earth. It is a thin layer of mixed gases which make up the air we breathe. This thin layer also helps the Earth from becoming too hot or too cold. 

Oceans: Oceans cover about 70 percent of Earth’s surface. Their large size and thermal properties allow them to store a lot of heat.

Land: Land covers 27 percent of Earth’s surface and land topography influences weather patterns. 

Ice:  Ice is the world’s largest supply of freshwater. It covers the remaining 3 percent of Earth’s surface including most of Antarctica and Greenland. Ice plays an important role in regulating climate, because it is highly reflective.

Biosphere: The biosphere is the part of Earth’s atmosphere, land, and oceans that supports any living plant, animal, or organism. It is the place where plants and animals, including humans, live.

Yesterday I experienced the USA’s climate system first hand…after flying 3hr 30min from Miami 75F (24C), I landed in Denver and it was 10F (-12C). I then hopped on another plane from Denver to San Fran which took 2hrs 30mins to find a temp of 58F (15C). Tomorrow I fly back to Chicago and it will be 20F (-6C).

….it is very hard to pack when traveling around the USA in winter!

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Weather Map of USA Dec 10 2008

Richard Attenborough

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The crack of leather on willow is not a sound you might expect in Chicago. But on any given weekend, and with a bit of hunting, you’ll find the most English of summer pastimes played in leisurely fashion at local parks.

Our Chicago based team established the PGH Fender XI three years ago after recruiting a number of Aussies and Poms to make up the numbers – and we haven’t looked back.

In many ways the PGH Fender XI is a metaphor for the uniqueness Americans see in New Zealanders. We approach things with a fresh point of view which is attractive to many Americans, we are not from Europe, yet we are English speaking, our sports are new, our accents are unexpected and our outlook is positive; these ‘quirks’ open a lot of doors.

The Fenders cricket team has also become a useful business tool. We’ve have recruited staff through the Fenders cricket team, it is a great way to dig out any Kiwis hiding in the vast Chicago suburbs, and made many contacts with people in senior positions in Chicago business – many of them Americans who “just came down for a look�.

Our Australia players tend to have executive level positions in the city which have proven useful for growing our business network. The Fenders playing shirt is also ‘hot’ merchandising item in Chicago, at recent business function we presented the Head of Sales for ESPN with a replica cricket shirt. He loved it so much he wore it all night. In fact he might still be wearing it.

In these global times the unique culture, thinking and attitudes (and seemingly now even sports) are increasingly sought-after by American business. New Zealand is the unexpected new kid on the global block, everyone understands that Asia and ‘New Europe’ is now cemented in the business consciousness, but we were a global-googly.

As such our offering is a delight to businesses wary and weary of working with the developing world.

In our experience there’s never been a better chance for New Zealand ‘commercial creative’ companies to gain a foothold in America than now.

In the last five years large American companies have begun outsourcing creative work to smaller niche agencies like never before. This has had a profound impact on the growth of specialist smaller agencies, who are seen by many to have less vested interest, greater mobility and creativity than traditional full-service agencies.

TimeZoneOne recently successfully presented surf and snow board marketing ideas to Budweiser. Bud may be a massive company but they use a network of smaller agencies to provide them with original and nimble thinking.

The opportunity is great for New Zealand commercial creative companies.

Before setting up in Chicago we established TimeZoneOne in London. This was hard work, business by internet was new, the time zones were tough and the English found it hard to believe that Kiwi creativity was of the highest quality (this was pre Lord of the Rings). It did however prove that the business idea worked.

Several years later we opted for the US, where the company was viewed with much more interest, intrigue and respect than in the UK. I’ve never had to convince American clients as to the quality of our work – it’s just assumed because we’re Kiwis, they have a built in belief that NZ = Best.

We employ a business model that takes advantage of the difference in time zones between the US and New Zealand.

The Chicago office acts as the ‘front door’ and is primarily used for sales and client management. While the US sleeps, creative work rolls out of our Christchurch offices, ready for presentation to clients the next US day. This allows our business to become, in essence, a “24 hour� operation.

This speed of delivery is perhaps are most valued offering to market. Every business wants stuff fast, and creative and marketing is no different. Our 24 hour business model is something that our competitors can not offer. Indeed many of the large agencies are trying to set up 24 hour production facilities in the US, but are finding it impossible to get the graphic designers willing to work at 3am.

Setting up in America may seem a daunting prospect; and it is. But once you find you feet and accept that you don’t recognise anything in the supermarket, you will find that business is better in the US. The Americans love business, they appreciate sales and they want to find new and better ways.

Operationally there is little difference between sending work in electronic format 300km or 13,000km. Negotiating time zones has also provided little hindrance to business – time zones are a natural part of pan-American business, with meetings routinely structured around East Coast / West Coast time differences.

Technology is also enhancing our inter-office communications. Adopting video conferencing, teleconferencing, an ftp site to transfer large files and email has made maintaining inter-office and client relationships simple. It also makes for a very sustainable business.

This “24 hour model� is one that many other New Zealand businesses can employ, and sell, as a point of difference overseas. If they’re like TimeZoneOne, they can also talk about “fresh creative, faster and with a fairer bill�.

Americans are increasingly liking the taste of Kiwi. Last Christmas, we took this taste to the Americans literally, having a local Christchurch micro-brewery brew a batch of “Captain Cooks Spruce Beer� for clients.

Not surprisingly, they loved it. Or so they said.

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            Blog. Spelled backward, it’s gold-pretty close, anyway.  And the family name that sits pretty close to my first name is, of all things, Gold.

            The Gold family is comprised of the lovely and talented Southside Patty (32 years of watching over me, of blond-haired and blue-eyed Scandinavian heritage, nine brothers and sisters). Ben, the eldest (tattooed with characters of his favorite horror movies, lighly-pierced, married, kind, hard, hard rock drummer and barista), Amy (lovely, lovely daughter-in-law wife to Ben, artistic, born and bred in Rockport IL), Max, the second (film editor, 5-string bass player, deep, smart, wise, fine artist, blond, and curly), Mason the third (percussionist with a particular bent for Afro-Cuban hand drums, print producer, willowy, ass-shaking funny, animal loving, party loving), Joe the fourth (film student, trying to figure out where he misplaced his identity, strong as an ox, dancing fool, Vietnamerican), and Zoe the fifth (flute and piano playing, ballet dancing, singing and acting, coffee colored skin, Bat Mitzvahed in an Irish Pub Jewish Vietnamese Princess from the west side of Chicago).

            That’s my Gold family.

            All of our first names are 3 letter names.

            Lor, Pat, Ben, Max, Mason, Joe, and Zoe.

            “Hold on there, wise guy”, you’re saying.  ”What about Mason?  Mason’s not a 3 letter word”.

            Well, he was suppose to be a 3 letter name.  His name was suppose to be Sam.  If he was Sam, Gold family’s little 3 letter name joke would have been kept in tact.  But when Mason was born, much to our disappointment, he did not look like a Sam.  No matter how hard we tried, no matter how we wanted to get past this painful crossroad of life, we could not see a Sam laying there in his little swaddling cloth. 

            So we named him Mason.

            And Mason spelled backward is “no Sam”.

            And blog spelled backward is glob-which takes us nowhere.

Lor Glob – blogging out for the year and potentially forever….

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            I’m rarely without something to say.           

            But today, I am.

            Here’s what my somewhat silent day has been about.  I’ve done a story for Promo magazine about our honest-to-god, wild and uniquely positioned organization.  I was moved to put together a list of what I thought were the best of blues, r&b, rock and bawdy bar tunes starting from the 20′s and stretching all the way to the turn of this brand new century.  I did it for a possible new client who loves the art of sound as much as I do and with whom I really consider a new friend.  I was allowed to be thrilled senseless by hearing from a whole lot of people with whom I’ve lost touch-and they found me again. They found me by reading the articles that have come out about us.  And they envy me.  And they’re exceedingly interested in my connection with all of you.  I also got to talk to Brett for an hour.  More importantly, I got to really listen to Brett.  I got to talk to Richie McD about the future-which looks amazing and bright and right because Richie is amazing and bright and right.  I got to hear about the beginnings of TimeZoneSun and why it exists.  I got to look again at the work we’re about to present to Crocs and stare and shake my head yes at what fantastic thinking looks like.  I got to meet David from NZ.  He’s on his way to Indy to take pictures of a Nascar.  And I can’t wait for him to come back so I can buy him a patty melt at Mary’s Diner and talk baseball.  David is here at a supernatural time when both of Chicago’s baseball teams-The Cubs and The White Sox-are both in the playoffs for the first time since 1906.
            What I got to do is reaffirm why I’m here. At TimeZoneOne.  With all of you.

            Everyday is a crossroad.  Every morning I get to choose what I already have and what else I’d like to have.  Every afternoon, I get to wonder if where I am is the place to be-and of course it always is.  And when darkness sets in and the night takes over, I get to hope that I get to do it all over again.    

            I guess it’s not that I have nothing to say.

            It’s that I have too much to say and my mouth hasn’t caught up.

            I guess today, my head has moved down the road but my mouth is hanging out back there, somewhere.

            It’s 4:16pm.  The bottom of the 8th inning.  The score is 6 to 3, Tampa Bay. Go White Sox.

Lor Gold

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It is not only little old Timezoneone that has a New Zealand/Chicago connection.
Recently Vincent Ward’s new feature Rain Of The Children was selected for the Chicago Film Festival. 

It is not the first time that Ward has won in Chicago. In 1980 he won a Silver Hugo at Chicago for his documentary In Spring One Plants Alone. Rain of the Children uncovers the story of an elderly Maori woman who was the subject of Ward’s In Spring One Plants Alone, which he made when he was 21. It showed the life of 80-year-old Puhi who lived in remote bush country looking after her 40-year-old son Niki. Ward lived with Puhi for 18 months but never unravelled the mystery of her life. In the new film, we learn her extraordinary story.

Ward is one of New Zealand’s best known directors and has won international acclaim with a reputation for making films with a unique, deeply human vision. Since his debut feature Vigil (1984), he has directed several well known films – The Navigator: A Medieval Odyssey (1988) and Map of the Human Heart, What Dreams May Come (1993), starring Robin Williams, as well as writing the story for Alien 3.

Kim

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AirTwo weeks ago I got to enjoy all the wonders of international air exploration to meet our new team member in Chicago.It was a wonderfully exciting week, highlighted by
· My second call up for the Fenders Cricket Team
· Being run into the ground by Rich on a wee jog lakeside
· Home BBQ cooking at the loft overlooking the city
· Thai take out on the Tattershaw’s new deck overlooking the city (note to kiwi diy’ers, deck’s in Chicago are built of plastic look a like decking due to the range in temperatures, the kiwi diy culture has no chance of taking off in Metro Chicago)
· Listening to wonderfully talented lawyers finding the longest possible way of telling you maybe!
· The office local pub where you can dine outside to the back ground noise of trains and jack hammers
· Shopping for dress up’s for the girls at the Disney store and Target

Travel Tip next time you have a few hours in San Fran Airport
Jump on the BART Train, get off at the first stop and enjoy the wonders of mall shopping. You can store your bags and take a shower at the travel agency in the airport.

Andy

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