office x Ganni Dinner Party

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The tournament is about unity, opportunity, and hope. On the surface its football, but at the core it is a powerful advocacy for change. It diverts the attention that spectacle events demand of the public eye, taking a moment to shine the spotlight on issues that deserve the same urgent attention. At the same time, it facilitates cultural exchange. Sports, though competitive, are a means of unification; collaboration in the face of division. Like sports, greater political issues can employ a tug-of-war between playfulness and seriousness.
In the last bracket, Mexico and Kenya competed for the girls' final while it was Brazil against Palestine for boys. Mexico's girls team and Brazil's boys team took home the gold, but the real award came from turning visibility into action. Representatives for the World Cup's organization included Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum and Gabriela Cuevas. A celebratory close to the tournament was preformed by Paul Russell with his hit song, Lil Boo Thang.

“It’s what’s on the inside that counts.” Back Market centralizes this conviction as they fill the walls of Silence Please, a multi-hyphenate speakeasy where you can, on a normal day, browse records, drink handcrafted teas, and sit among a sea of silver laptops when coworking is of personal importance. On this particular night, the lounge is filled with a selection of young people who have worlds of creativity existing inside them. Surrounded by fiction writers, fashion designers, and visual artists, the notion is abundantly true. That which is on the inside seems to instantly beautify that which is on the outside.
The night is full of sounds by Nation, DJ Thank You, velvette blue, and rockie rode. The thematic choice of Silence Please alongside such exceptional soundmakers is to cut through the noise, putting a pause on the cycle of routinely tossing old items for new ones. The party drew a narrative space for The Ugly Computer, riddled in residual sticker marks and abundant in cosmetic issues. Imperfections that add character without compromising the functionality and integrity of the technology. In this way, Back Market leads us in a reclamation of the word “ugly,” and teaches us to repurpose this language into a term of endearment, a term of empowerment.