Showing posts with label real-estate contract provision. Show all posts
Showing posts with label real-estate contract provision. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 4, 2016

Solange what?

   "The polar and happy opposite to the Friday night news dump—in which sensitive or potentially controversial stories are released right before the weekend—is the Sunday night video drop, in which your favorite artists unleash new visuals in the evening, perhaps even close enough to the time some of us (hello, this gal right here) are about to go to dang bed. The former is a sneak attack; the latter is a surprise party.
So thank you, Solange Knowles, because I didn’t want to go to bed before 11 anyway! After we’ve all spent an entire weekend contemplating her beautiful and deep third full-length album A Seat at the Table, now she has bestowed us with gorgeous videos for “Cranes in the Sky” and “Don’t Touch My Hair.”
In “Cranes” (above), a first-person song ostensibly about the things she did (or attempted) to alleviate the weight on her psyche, she poses and performs lyrical contemporary dance among mountains and in what look like art museums and greenhouses and half-built structures, all while wearing the most beautiful and delicate ensembles. In some shots, a crew of black women dance with her, and they lean on each other too, invoking the togetherness and lightness of this generous song. The visual mirrors the kind of freedom that “Cranes” invokes— the wind in her hair, the lift in her voice. In “Don’t Touch My Hair,” a clip with some of the women in “Cranes” and a phalanx more friends (including Sampha, who’s on the song), she links the visuals to the objective of the song—articulating the politics and pride ingrained in discussions of black women’s hair and the offense when non-black people touch it, and at the same time using hair as a stand-in for the way black culture is so often appropriated and denigrated. (THIS ALBUM IS DEEP! RECOMMENDED.)
Both videos were directed by Solange as well as her husband, music video director Alan Ferguson, which is truly just so lovely. A Seat at the Table is out now, and great."

#Solange
#hits
#musical
#director
#entertainment

Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Real-estate Greatness

Compass, the real-estate startup trying to use tech to shake up the industry, has raised $75 million in fresh funding, bringing its total to $210 million.
The round, which was led by Wellington Management Company LLP, values the company at over $1 billion, according to a person familiar with the raise. A report last month from The Real Deal said Compass was seeking a valuation of between $1.2 billion and $1.3 billion.
While Compass functions like a traditional broker, the company's promise is using technology to reduce the time and friction of buying and selling a house or apartment.
Pushing toward this, last month Compass released an app designed to replace "stale" quarterly market reports with more dynamic information. In the app, buyers and sellers can search by standard things like neighborhood, number of bedrooms, price range, and so on. But they can also look at more advanced metrics, like year-over-year analysis of median price per square foot, days on the market, and negotiability.
This app complements Compass' established agent-only app, which is what first impressed Todd Chaffee, a general partner at Institutional Venture Partners, about the company, he told Business Insider last year when discussing his firm's investment in Compass. IVP also participated in the current round of funding.Compass has expanded rapidly since it branched out of New York in September. It now has a presence in Washington, DC; Miami; Boston; the Hamptons; Cambridge, Massachusetts; Beverly Hills, California; Malibu, California; Pasadena, California; Santa Barbara, California; and Aspen, Colorado.
It represents about $7 billion in annual sales, according to the company.
But doubts have lingered in the industry about how much Compass is actually using tech to elevate itself beyond a traditional broker, according to The Real Deal. However, sources in that report speculated that Compass would have trouble raising $50 million, when in fact the startup was able to snag $75 million and up its valuation.
"‪I like the founders, and I'm impressed with their progress," Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff, a Compass investor, told The Real Deal last month.
Compass has over 900 agents and almost 300 employees."