Patrick Pittman
Patrick is a Toronto-based writer, editor, and strategist who has spent his career asking questions and building communities for pages, stages, screens, and microphones across the world. He was editor for The Alpine Review’s third print issue. He now co-edits and writes Buckslip, and as a partner at No Media Company, helps a small global roster of clients with human understanding and research-driven strategic sensemaking. He has been a correspondent for Monocle in Australia, the South Pacific, and Canada, and previously edited Dumbo Feather.
LINKGreatest Hits
Patrick Pittman (PP), co-editor of The Alpine Review, sat down with the pair to talk about the benefits of a criminal mind, unconventional modes of understanding, and design and materiality.
Greatest Hits
Noam Chomsky on the things that never change, the things that do, and the role of the individual in a mad, chaotic world.
Greatest Hits
We visit the Pacific Pinball Museum and find a unique amalgam of design, visual art, software, mechanical interaction, and old-fashioned cabinet making.
Greatest Hits
We keep the grand monuments and the recognizable symbols as warnings. But there’s a lost story in the stuff that gets thrown out.
Greatest Hits
We visited with Barry Lopez, one of the great environmental writers of our time, in the wilds of Oregon to reflect on ethics, hope, death, and the importance of good people in times that are not.
Greatest Hits
The archives of the Soviet Union’s only true advertising agency are stuffed with psychedelic paradoxes and unearthly, sometimes unappetizing delights.
Greatest Hits
Put your weapons down. The gaming industry has been turned on its head by the de-mocratization of development and distribution tools, paving the way for games as a form of deeply personal art. A new wave of standouts signals the way forward for a mature creative medium.
Greatest Hits
Ahem. We say, every time, that The Alpine Review will return. And it remains true! (See, it’s in your hands! It only took two and a bit years.) we even say it again on the next page, in case you doubt us.
Greatest Hits
Patrick Pittman, co-editor on Issue 3 of The Alpine Review, sat down with the pair to chat about digital transformation, making organizations more agile, and creative risk.