From R&T Crew: Meet the Designer of Hundreds of Eye-Popping Movie Cars
Here s how Fireball Tim Lawrence went from sketching in art school to designing the Batmobile.and tons of other cool movie rides. Fireball Tim
Fireball Tim Lawrence is an amazing artist who has designed cars, boats, planes, and spaceships for about 400 movies, including
Batman,
Jurassic Park, and
Avengers. The team at R&T Crew got him to take quick break from the drawing board to answer a few questions.
This story originally appeared in R&T Crew, Road & Track s magazine for kids. For more information, click here.
OFFICIAL PRESS RELEASE World Star PR
M. Ward Leon is a former advertising creative director who started his career at Doyle Dane Bernbach, New York, during the Madmen era. While at DDB his writing on the Volkswagen Rabbit campaign won him inclusion into the Smithsonian Institution Advertising Archives. Recently his writing has earned him two Emmy Awards for Public Service advertising.
He is a graduate of California State University Los Angeles and an alumnus of Art Center College of Design.
He has two books released through Beacon Publishing Group, “Blood of the Beast,” and “The Strange and Curious Cases of Roscoe Brown Detective, NYPD.”
Aston Martin SUV Render Imagines A Much More Daring Approach To The DBX carscoops.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from carscoops.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
April 16, 2021
Kimberly Potter, the 26-year police veteran who fatally shot Daunte Wright during a traffic stop in Minnesota on April 11, has been charged with second-degree manslaughter. Prosecutors will be tasked to prove to the courts that she was negligent in drawing and firing her Glock pistol instead of her Taser stun gun when subduing the 20-year old.
A widely scrutinized body-cam video shows Potter yelling “Taser! Taser! Taser!
“ before firing a bullet into Wright’s chest which killed him on the scene. Beneath what appears to be another appalling accidental shooting actually belies a complex, systemic issue at the core of America’s problematic, hyper-aggressive policing philosophy. This ethos is ultimately reflected in the design of standard tools law enforcement officers carry and how they use them. It’s bigger than an industrial design problem, but it’s certainly part of the issue.