17 Students Create New Yorker-Inspired Covers That Perfectly Picture Post-Pandemic Life boredpanda.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from boredpanda.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Soon, bearded men emerge from their apartments, people quickly log off Zoom and couples are able to meet up in parks without the need for masks or social distancing.
Of course, in the end, it is still a commercial for gum. However, the promise of life returned to normal has likely helped the advert reach viral heights.
Viewers have also made this known by commenting on the video, with one saying, this is perhaps the best reopening commercial I ve seen . Another commenter added: This ad made my day.
Other post-pandemic posts that have gone viral
Last month, a social media post from illustrator and cartoonist Tomer Hanuka, who lives in New York, was retweeted more than 35,000 times. He shared a thread in which he asked his third-year university illustration students to imagine life after the pandemic in the style of a
Run towards opportunity, rather than away from problems.
Writing is thinking, and the base unit of writing is the idea.
Never start a land war in Asia…and…
There was a recent object example on the abundance of talent in a viral Twitter thread of the efforts of the students in Tomer Hanuka’s third-year illustration class at New York’s School of Visual Arts. Professor Haunka asked the students to create works that illustrate life beyond the pandemic in the style of covers for
The New Yorker magazine.
They are amazing. They are, in fact, so convincing that the magazine title on the illustrations had to be changed from “The New Yorker” to “The New World” so they wouldn’t be mistaken for the genuine item.
TORONTO Tomer Hanuka, who has been an artist for more than 20 years, gave his third-year illustration students at New York’s School of Visual Arts a project prior to their summer break – to imagine life after the COVID-19 pandemic, in the style of a New Yorker magazine cover. “I really wanted to send them off to the summer feeling good in a positive headspace…they had a tough year like everybody else and I was trying to kind of spin that a bit,” Hanuka said in a telephone interview with CTVNews.ca Thursday. Each cover illustrated by the students imagines what they think life will be like after the pandemic and explores themes of reconnection, loss and nature – while incorporating the heavily stylized illustration themes the New Yorker magazine covers are famous for.