26 min listen
Fashion, Fear, and Freedom: Mel Ottenberg Unplugged
Fashion, Fear, and Freedom: Mel Ottenberg Unplugged
ratings:
Length:
30 minutes
Released:
Dec 4, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
Editor-in-chief of Interview magazine, Mel Ottenberg, wants to maintain a sense of fun in an atmosphere rife with fear. Previously creative director at 032c, he’s collaborated with an impressive roster of stars, high-profile clients, and photographers. In this episode, he shares his take on where we are in this cultural moment and how fashion, beauty, and style can be powerful vehicles for communication and social transformation. He highlights some of the influences that have shaped his aesthetic—MTV, The Cock, the downtown scene, and Vogue—and the icons who fueled him as an aspiring creative in the 90s, such as Madonna and Arianne Phillips. Teeming with energy and ideas, he found ways to connect his work in the indie and pop celebrity spaces, and with Interview, he found the perfect platform for his diverse experiences and an outlet for cheeky, unfiltered output. What’s contemporary now? “Fear and loathing is truly the most contemporary thing now. It’s totally gross. It’s totally real, and I think confidence and an open spirit of change is the only way past that.”
Episode Highlights:
Fashion forward: Mel sees clothes and style as vehicles to channel people, cultural sensibilities, and change.
Formative influences: Mel was shaped by the 80s and its dress codes, Madonna, MTV, Vogue, and the downtown NY club and arts scenes.
Finding inspiration in the multidimensional visual artist Arianne Phillips.
Fusing styles: Working in both indie and mainstream celebrity spaces.
At the intersection: Becoming editor-in-chief of Interview magazine aligns everything in Mel’s eclectic career.
Status check: Publishing has evolved since Mel’s formative years and has been reshaped by the emergence of digital media and new approaches to branding.
Embracing opposites: Playfulness, camp, and a general sense of high-low fun emblematic of Mel’s style and sensibility—in the pages of Interview and beyond.
Blending voices: Why Mel deliberately infuses Interview—initially conceived by young rule breakers—with a youthful energy that sharpens his own Gen X lens.
Embracing messiness: Interview’s independent format protects artistic freedom and content that isn’t perfectly polished or orchestrated. Risk-taking is part of the mandate.
Daring to be unfiltered: With the current political and social climate, Mel speaks authentically despite pressures to be packaged and guarded.
Cancel culture: The cultural pendulum swings between self-censorship, nihilism, optimism, intrigue, and despair.
Hyper-veneer and hyper-raw: What feels like reality (versus the algorithm) in the diversity of style, beauty, fashion, and identity narratives that coexist today.
What’s contemporary now? Fear, the 80s, and younger generations calling out and challenging fear and repression.
Episode Highlights:
Fashion forward: Mel sees clothes and style as vehicles to channel people, cultural sensibilities, and change.
Formative influences: Mel was shaped by the 80s and its dress codes, Madonna, MTV, Vogue, and the downtown NY club and arts scenes.
Finding inspiration in the multidimensional visual artist Arianne Phillips.
Fusing styles: Working in both indie and mainstream celebrity spaces.
At the intersection: Becoming editor-in-chief of Interview magazine aligns everything in Mel’s eclectic career.
Status check: Publishing has evolved since Mel’s formative years and has been reshaped by the emergence of digital media and new approaches to branding.
Embracing opposites: Playfulness, camp, and a general sense of high-low fun emblematic of Mel’s style and sensibility—in the pages of Interview and beyond.
Blending voices: Why Mel deliberately infuses Interview—initially conceived by young rule breakers—with a youthful energy that sharpens his own Gen X lens.
Embracing messiness: Interview’s independent format protects artistic freedom and content that isn’t perfectly polished or orchestrated. Risk-taking is part of the mandate.
Daring to be unfiltered: With the current political and social climate, Mel speaks authentically despite pressures to be packaged and guarded.
Cancel culture: The cultural pendulum swings between self-censorship, nihilism, optimism, intrigue, and despair.
Hyper-veneer and hyper-raw: What feels like reality (versus the algorithm) in the diversity of style, beauty, fashion, and identity narratives that coexist today.
What’s contemporary now? Fear, the 80s, and younger generations calling out and challenging fear and repression.
Released:
Dec 4, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (47)
Glen Luchford on the Future of the Fashion Photographer: <p>In this episode, Christopher Michael speaks to Glen Luchford, legendary fashion photographer and filmmaker whose images are often referred to as iconic and cinematic. The conversation flows from discussing the future role of a photographer and the emerging marketplace of the metaverse to new technologies, how Glen has adapted to them, and broaching his failures, and what he has learned from them along the way.</p><p>Episode Highlights</p><ul> <li>“We are only just out of the pandemic, but obviously it's expedited a great deal of change that otherwise seemed as though would have taken years.”—Christopher</li> <li>“Post-Covid the industry definitely has changed.” says Glen. His personal central focus is essentially metaverse and how that's going to change all of our lives in a dramatic way. He actually spends most of his time educating himself in Web 3.0, anticipating all of the changes that are coming.</li> <li>Glen was w by What's Contemporary Now?