You’re not alone. Nostalgia is a universal human experience, deeply rooted in our psyche and emotions. Recently, there has been a noticeable surge in nostalgic trends on social media platforms ...
But what if you have limited space? [Fred Emmott] had about 30 inches behind his desk to work with, and shares what it took to make a green screen work reliably in a limited space. Even (and ...
If you know anything about how films are made then you have probably heard about the “green screen” before. The technique is also known as chroma key compositing, and it’s generally used to ...
New books examine the emotion’s long history and the politically diverse movements it has served.
In the wrong hands, nostalgia is the cheapest of emotional appeals. But when it comes from a real, wistful place, it can result in a masterpiece. Here are 20 films that do nostalgia right.
It also holds the ability to evoke powerful nostalgia that can trigger a cascade of memories, emotions and meaningful associations, often linked to specific periods in our lives. Here are three ...
Maureen Corrigan, book critic for NPR's Fresh Air, is The Nicky and Jamie Grant Distinguished Professor of the Practice in Literary Criticism at Georgetown University. She is an associate editor ...
The reinvention, created by the PepsiCo design and innovation team, will allow fans to connect with the brand’s long history, adding in that nostalgia factor that everyone can’t get enough of.
Los Angeles Times art critic Christopher Knight won the 2020 Pulitzer Prize for criticism (he was a finalist for the prize in 1991, 2001 and 2007). In 2020, he also received the Lifetime ...
As the Nobel Committee gets ready to admit a new writer into the pantheon, our critic asks ... its unstable alloy of futurism and nostalgia, its mix of patriarchal swagger and gestural feminism ...
Fans say they offer comfort during a chaotic time. By Alexandra Alter Our critic A.O. Scott walks you through a poem that speaks to his mood right now. It’s called “Party Politics,” but it ...
Widely used in the early days of mainframes and minicomputers, as well as in the days of DOS, the character-based green screen gave way to the graphics-based interfaces of Windows and Mac.