Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Jim Windolf"


5 mentions found


The Chevy Malibu Was So Uncool It Was Cool
  + stars: | 2024-05-09 | by ( Jim Windolf | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
If you asked a child to draw a car, the result would probably be something that looked like the Chevrolet Malibu. For decades, this dependable midsize vehicle was a stalwart of the American road. Because that kind of thing is no longer in demand, it came as no surprise when General Motors announced on Wednesday that it would discontinue the model as it shifts its focus to sport utility vehicles and electric cars. The Malibu never had the back-alley glamour of the Chevrolet Camaro or the brute force of the Chevrolet Impala. It was the ultimate normcore-mobile, made for a time when Americans were content to drive simple, gas-powered sedans, rather than rugged S.U.V.s, high-riding pickup trucks or electric vehicles that cruise along in near silence.
Organizations: Chevrolet, General Motors, Malibu Locations: Chevrolet Malibu
The threat to their peaceful existence arrives in the form of an army on the horizon. “The Garden of Time” is a fitting but ironic choice as a theme for the year’s most lavish celebration. The sympathies of “The Garden of Time” seem to lie with the count and countess. And yet the author slips in hints that their lovely existence may be empty. When Count Axel puts his arm around his wife’s waist, he realizes that “he had not embraced her for several years.”
Persons: Count Axel, , Ballard, Thom Browne,
Gen Z-ers and Millennials React to ‘L.A. Law’
  + stars: | 2023-11-23 | by ( The Styles Desk | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Until the streaming relaunch, the show was hard to find, existing in DVDs at junk shops and in the depths of Amazon Prime Video. In recent days the Styles journalists Melissa Guerrero, Sadiba Hasan, Callie Holtermann and Louis Lucero — all members of the Millennial or Gen Z generations who had never seen “L.A. Law” — watched the first three episodes on Hulu. They shared their observations with the editors Minju Pak and Jim Windolf, who were fans of the show in its heyday. It was the subject of workplace conversation and countless think pieces, and it won 15 Emmys before the final gavel in 1994.
Persons: “ L.A, , Seinfeld, Melissa Guerrero, Sadiba Hasan, Callie Holtermann, Louis Lucero —, ” —, Pak, Jim Windolf, Steven Bochco, Terry Louise Fisher, Harry Hamlin, Michael Kuzak, Corbin Bernsen, Arnie Becker, Jill Eikenberry, Ann Kelsey, Jimmy Smits, Victor Sifuentes, Susan Dey, Grace Van Owen, L.A, Law ” Organizations: NBC, Hulu, Amazon Prime
Sandra Bullock and the Rise of Tech
  + stars: | 2023-09-15 | by ( Jim Windolf | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
At some point in the future, the sentient beings running the planet may want to study how the humans dealt with the technological revolution of the late 20th and early 21st centuries. After they have ingested the pertinent scholarly essays and news reports, they will have a pretty good idea of how we managed the shift to a world increasingly driven by machines. But why stop at enough when they might deepen their understanding by looking into something that might seem irrelevant at first glance: the films of Sandra Bullock, one of the biggest stars of the transitional period. Ms. Bullock had the good or bad fortune to have been born in 1964, meaning she was young enough to adapt to tech culture when it came along but old enough to mourn the passing of the environment that had shaped her. Her movies are time capsules that preserve the look and feel of discrete moments in tech, some of them all but forgotten.
Persons: Sandra Bullock, Bullock, Hugh Grant
Tony Bennett, Always a Class Act
  + stars: | 2023-07-21 | by ( Jim Windolf | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Like his singing voice, Tony Bennett’s personal style was supple, straightforward and sure of itself. He resisted the temptation to change his approach to music when rock overtook the pop charts, and he largely stayed away from many sartorial trends that came and went during his seven decades in show business, wisely sticking with tuxedos and smartly tailored suits, many of them from the Italian fashion brand Brioni. For more casual moments, he went with slacks and a blazer, sometimes with a handsome dark turtleneck in place of a button-down shirt and tie. Paradoxically enough, by sticking with the style that allowed him to feel most himself when it came to both music and fashion, Mr. Bennett managed to avoid the trap of becoming associated too strongly with any one era. In recent decades, when men’s fashion magazines celebrated the ring-a-ding-ding style of the 1950s and early 1960s in backward-looking fashion spreads, they tended to focus on Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin and other dyed-in-the-wool members of the Rat Pack.
Persons: Tony Bennett’s, Bennett, Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin Organizations: slacks
Total: 5