Interview with T-Mobile International Music Category Manager, Luke Magnuson - 0 views
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Award-winning filmmaker David Grubin, the creator of The Buddha, was supported by a diverse and talented group of visual artists, educators, and media production professionals. The show can be viewed online in HD at the PBS website.
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Record investment pours into Shanghai as the city prepares for the expected tens of millions of visitors to the Shanghai World Expo. The event starts on May 1 featuring culture, featuring art and technology from around the world.
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Award-winning filmmaker David Grubin, the creator of The Buddha, was supported by a diverse and talented group of visual artists, educators, and media production professionals in during the process of bringing the film to PBS
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Mark Woodbury, president of Universal Creative, provides a walk-through of upcoming attraction Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey. The Wizarding World of Harry Potter's opens next June 18.
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Be entertained while you dine: a London restaurant has thrown away its menus preferring customers to place their orders through an interactive ''e-table',' which they say speeds up service.
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Japanese electronics manufacturer Sony and world's governing soccer body FIFA have unveiled details of the 25 World Cup matches that they plan to broadcast in 3D.
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Tomorrow at OMA: Opening of Transcending Vision: American Impressionism 1870-1940 Works from the Bank of America Collection, with works by a diverse group of more than 75 American artists, tracing not only the development of Impressionism in America, but the emergence of a truly American style of painting.
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, including the Asia Society, The Center for Contemplative Mind in Society, Asterisk Animation, and the Sonnett Media Group. You can see a complete credits list and a list of the programs funders on the website: http://www.pbs.org/thebuddha/credits/
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T-Mobile International Music Category Manager, Luke Magnuson, explains how the company's music offering has grown, its strong relationship with Sony Ericsson, and the ground-breaking deal with Robbie Williams. Magnuson also suggest thatT-Mobile's music business may shift to a flat-rate or ad-funded model.