The One Club for Creativity has enhanced diversity within its leadership with the appointments of Gail Anderson, chair of BFA Design and BFA Advertising at the School of Visual Arts, New York, and Sherina Florence, creative director at Ogilvy, New York, to its national board of directors.
Anderson and Florence were nominated by David Baldwin, head of Baldwin&, Raleigh, and Steve Sandstrom, creative director, designer and founder at Sandstrom Partners, Portland, who decided to step down from the board after each serving for nearly 20 years.
“Gail and Sherina are dynamic, respected leaders who will help us in our mission to support the global creative community,” said Kevin Swanepoel, CEO, The One Club. “Diversity makes for a better organization, and enhances the programming and support we provide to the industry. We’ll continue to take meaningful action on this front, and challenge other agencies, brands and organizations to do the same.”
More than 60% of The One Club board is made up of women and people of color.
Board responsibilities include providing input and feedback on the club’s more than two dozen annual professional development, education, inclusion & diversity and gender equality programs, connecting the club with advertising and design universities and schools, and recommending outstanding creative candidates to serve on juries for The One Show and ADC Annual Awards.
“I’m excited to work on The One Club education initiatives that can elevate our BIPOC colleagues and students worldwide, and help provide a more robust voice for all communities of color,” Anderson said.
“The One Club’s global impact on advertising is unparalleled,” said Florence. “I’m honored to be joining a long legacy of distinguished creative leaders who’ve served the board, and humbled by David Baldwin’s choice to step down after 20 years of service. Both David and Steve are icons who have once again created space for more fresh perspectives. Thanks to the entire board for the appointment, I look forward to contributing for years to come.”
“We had the luxury of a tremendous list of candidates to fill our seats but Sherina and Gail stood out from all of them,” said Baldwin, who joined the Board in 2000. “They are going to make a tremendous impact on the club’s future.”
“It’s been a tremendous honor to have served on The One Club Board,” said Sandstrom, who has been on since 2003. “I believe Gail’s and Sherina’s exceptional talent, wisdom and experience will add substantially to the club’s character and mission.”
Jeremy Strong, Sebastian Stan Go “Way Out On A Limb” For “The Apprentice”
Even in an election year, most seem to agree on one aspect about Ali Abbasi's much-debated Donald Trump film "The Apprentice": Sebastian Stan is a remarkably good Trump and Jeremy Strong is chillingly riveting as the New York power broker Roy Cohn.
One reviewer recently wrote that Strong's portrayal of Cohn is "uncanny in its accuracy." The critic? Longtime Trump adviser Roger Stone.
Since its debut at the Cannes Film Festival in May, after which the Trump campaign pledged legal action, "The Apprentice" has been hounded by controversy. Its makers have had to fight to secure a theatrical release, which, in opening Thursday, comes just weeks ahead of the election. The Trump campaign has called it "election interference by Hollywood elites."
"We're way out on a limb," Strong says.
The movie, about Cohn's mentorship of a young Trump in the greed-is-good 1980s, is a dramatic election-year provocation. It's an origin story of the Republican nominee beginning with Cohn, the ruthless attorney whose tactics of deny-deny-deny made him a sought-after fixer for the mafia, chief counsel for Sen. Joseph McCarthy's communist witch hunt and a guru to Trump when he was trying to make a name for himself in New York real estate.
"His defiance of reality, and his denial of reality, to me are the signature components of what he instilled in his star pupil," Strong says, noting that Cohn's boat was named Defiance. "It's a legacy of mendacity and lies and denialism and the aggressive pursuit of winning as the only moral measure."
"The Apprentice," directed by the Iranian-Danish filmmaker Abbasi and scripted by Gabriel Sherman, puts the Cohn-Trump relationship at its center, and in doing so, gives Strong and Stan two of the best roles of their... Read More