King Marketing

AJ Kandy
Creative Director

AJ brings over 17 years' experience to KMA+C.

Previously in charge of Branding, Interactive and Creative at telecom software maker Interstar Technologies, AJ also served as Art Director at magazine publisher EMG Media. He's also worked on projects for Power Corporation, Air Canada, Merck Frosst and BCE Teleglobe.

AJ is a graduate of Concordia University's Communication Studies program.

Other KMA+C Blogs

Ken King, President

June 2005

Designed Objects: The Next-Generation Game Consoles

A game console is a portal to a dreamlike state of play. In designing game hardware and peripherals, manufacturers have a unique opportunity to create evocative mass-market objects. The design must suggest potential, power, control, wonder, escape. How well do the three new consoles introduced at E3 measure up, on that scale?

Continue reading “Designed Objects: The Next-Generation Game Consoles”

June 19, 2005 in Design

Book smart vs. earth smart

James Howard Kunstler, author, architectural critic and Peak Oil gadfly, is on tour to promote his latest book, The Long Emergency.

On one stop of the tour, he was asked to give a talk at Google headquarters in Mountain View, CA. I'll let you read that for yourself.

Now, Google generally hires really smart people - but as in all industries everyone sees things through their own particular lens - to a man with a hammer, everything is a nail, etc - and while their knowledge may be deep it is not necessarily broad. And the number of Ph.Ds on your team means nothing if they subscribe to a fundamentally flawed view of economics and reality. You can choose not to believe in geology, but it's going to affect you anyway, and geology trumps technology pretty much every time.

We, in reality, have at most a 20 to 30 year window to transition to a low-energy economy.
And yet we're building suburbs and highway infrastructure as if we have a 100-year supply of oil.

Why hasn't anyone asked the Government why we're still pursuing a dream of endless growth if the energy simply isn't there?

June 14, 2005 in Environment | 3

The Value of Timelessness In Design

My latest piece is up at TheCreativeForum.com. An excerpt:

We seem trapped in a world of trendy 'anti-design' that feeds only on itself -- T-shirts inspired by stencil graffiti inspired by Flash animation inspired by yet more T-shirt silkscreens inspired by old childhood TV staples and B-movies -- and of course, the entire look is efficiently aped and cleaned up for mainstream culture as corporate identity graphics.

Today, trends sweep through the design field, propagated with viral marketing at Internet speed. We get memetic outbreaks every 6 months like "airline safety card style" or "shaky hand-drawn sketch" or "2-color flat art silhouettes." Since HP debuted their latest brand campaign, plus-signs have sprouted like dandelions on a suburban lawn.

The question for art directors is not what can we do, but what should we do?"

There's also a discussion thread over there, and registration is free. Check out the interview with Push Pin Studios graphic design god Milton Glaser, too.

June 13, 2005 in Published Articles | 3

Le Montréal est une ville Québecois

(Avis: français pas nécessairement correct suivra. Envoyez vos plaintes à ajkandy1 at mac dot com...)

Pas pour ouvrir un boîte des vers encore (!) mais je veux répondre au billet de miss.sushi, qui demande:

00h29 - Sur les 30 billets apparaissants sur YULblog, 27 sont rédigés en anglais.

Je me pose soudainement de sérieuses questions.

[...]

Telles que: Est-ce que Montréal est toujours une ville du Québec? Le Québec est-il toujours une province francophone? Où sont les carnets francophones.

Plein de questions du genre. Rien de négatif en tant que tel, mais ça m’intrigue.


Avant qu'il y a même l'idée de "Québec," ce territoire appartient aux premiers nations...n'est-ce pas? Alors, non, ce n'était pas toujours un province francophone. Anglo ou franco, ne sommes-nous et serons-nous pas toujours immigrant(e)s içi? :) Un autre question sérieuse...

J'affirme: le Montréal est toujours une ville de Québec.

De mon point de vue personnelle, je serai -- même avec des origines très mixtes, même si l'anglais c'est ma première langue -- dans ma tête toujours Montréalais et Québecois, parce que j'était né ici...elevé ici...etc. Je ne me prends jamais pour un ontarien ou albertain...

Certainment je ne serais jamais un "kébekwa" dans le sens populaire des anciens purs et durs laines de souche etc. etc. Mais je contestera tous qui dira que je ne suis pas un 'vrai' quebecois! "This land is my land....this land is your land...la la la..." :)

Est-ce qu'on veut vraiement definir "Quebec" comme synonyme pour seulement le plus nombreux des plusieurs tribus qui habitent ici? Ou comme un nation moderne dans le sens d'un état composés de plusieurs individus ou communautés culturels qui partagent en commun d'histoire ici, des institutions, droits, une langue etc?

Les anglais, ecossais et irlandais qui ont vecu ici, construit des edifices, des communautés, des villages, des institutions....pour des centaines d'années.... leurs descendants sont quebecois aussis...n'est-ce pas?

D'après moi, le Montréal répresent le futur du Quebec; dynamique, vivace, et surtout pas un musée...

Pour le manque des carnetiers francophones -- je ne sais pas pourquoi. Peut-etre que tout simplement ils ne sont pas connectés aux yulblog.com ; peut-etre que, parce que les logiciels populaires ont des interfaces unilingue anglophones, les carnets s'attire moins des quebecois unilingues francophones?

Lecteurs, avez-vous des idées?

June 11, 2005 in Montreal | 6

© 2004, 2005 King Marketing, Advertising & Communications, Inc.