Audio engineer/sound designer/composer Brian Rund has joined MindSmack, a New York-based post house with services encompassing editorial, graphics, audio post, web design and multimedia development.
Rund comes to MindSmack following three years at audio post house SoundHound where he worked on numerous high profile projects for Syfy Channel (formerly known as Sci Fi Channel), History Channel, HBO, Spike, Nickelodeon, as well as numerous advertising projects.
Already at MindSmack, he has been involved in such assignments as a SyFy network rebrand, projects for Sundance Channel, and a Puma spot via agency Syrup.
Rund began his career in 1992 at Random BusPink Noise, the audio divisions of the now-defunct editorial house Dennis Hayes & Associates. It was there that he gained a passion for sound. His credits there included spots for Sony, Diet Dr Pepper, and Dockers. Rund’s work has BDA/Promax (World Gold), Tellys and Aegis awards.
Rund explained that his decision to join MindSmack was based on the company’s forward thinking business model that emphasizes a boutique studio environment, explorations into developing its own original content, and its frequent collaboration with the web development side of the company, spanning clients that include Citigroup, Doritos, American Express, Pepsi and the U.S. Marines Corps.
MindSmack was recently founded by company president Todd Feuer and his brothers Mike and Sam Feuer.
David Attenborough, The Enthused But Hushed Voice Of Nature Programs, Turns 100
The BBC is hosting a party for David Attenborough at the Royal Albert Hall. Cinemas are playing his nature films. Friends have spent weeks lavishing praise on the man and his work. But the world's most famous wildlife presenter is likely to be uncomfortable with all the attention as he celebrates his 100th birthday on Friday, said Alastair Fothergill, the producer of some of Attenborough's most well-known documentaries and the director of Silverback Films. "He's always been very clear to all of us that work with him: 'Remember, the animals are the stars, I'm not,''' Fothergill told The Associated Press. "So, yes, surprisingly for one of the most famous men on the planet, he doesn't like being famous at all." Glorious gorillas But Attenborough has had to accept the accolades this week as scientists, politicians and conservationists celebrated the man who has brought frolicking gorillas, breaching whales and tiny poisonous frogs into living rooms around the world for more than 70 years. Through BBC programs such as "Life on Earth," "The Private Life of Plants" and "The Blue Planet," Attenborough has illuminated the beauty, ferocity and sometimes downright weirdness of nature in a hushed melodic voice that conveys his own awe at what he is witnessing. Viewers who might never leave their hometowns were transported to the Himalayas, the Amazon and th unexplored forests of Papua New Guinea. But behind the stunning images was an attention to scientific accuracy that helped teach people about complex subjects like evolution, animal behavior and biodiversity. And as the evidence mounted, he began to sound the alarm about climate change, ocean plastic and other human-caused threats to the planet. That helped people understand not only how... Read More