Year: 2023

 At Exceptional Minds, autistic artists turn creativity into careers

March 31, 2023

FEATURE

At Exceptional Minds, autistic artists turn creativity into careers

With support from Apple, the Los Angeles-based nonprofit and academy is preparing a new generation of animators, VFX artists, and motion graphics designers

Growing up in Burbank, California, Angela Ibarra always knew she wanted to be an artist.

“My mind has always been popping out really creative stuff — endlessly,” Ibarra explains. “I thought, ‘I need to put this on paper and let it come to life.’ I draw stuff and it becomes what it wants.”

Ibarra pulls up an illustration of a Renaissance-era figure interpreted through an anime aesthetic. She’s been using Procreate with Apple Pencil on iPad for years to hone her craft, with a dream of someday working as an animator or visual effects artist in Hollywood.

Ibarra is in her first year at Exceptional Minds, a Los Angeles-based nonprofit academy and studio founded in 2011, where she and her fellow students can often be found working in the lab, taking figure drawing classes, and learning how to render motion graphics. Using products and technology provided in part by Apple’s community grants program, the school trains neurodivergent artists for employability in entertainment through a blend of technical training, hands-on experience, and career-path planning.

“Exceptional Minds is so unique in the way it works with students on the autism spectrum,” says Tim Dailey, the school’s academic dean and director of academic programs. “We want to create a world where a student on the spectrum is recognized for their talents and not the challenges they face.”

In just a few short years, alumni have gone on to land jobs at industry powerhouses like Marvel, Nickelodeon, and Cartoon Network, and these successes are a testament to the school’s approach. At Exceptional Minds, students have the freedom and flexibility they need to go at their own pace, while still being accountable to the rigors of a three-year program — a methodology that sets it apart from the more traditional schools students might have attended growing up. Feedback is plentiful, designed to help artists set reasonable expectations for themselves and their work.

The school’s instructors confide that they learn just as much from their students. “There’s a saying that we like to say: ‘If you know one person with autism, you know one person with autism,’” explains Jessica “Jess” Jerome, a professional animator who has taught at Exceptional Minds for almost a decade. “I’ve learned from my students that not all of them learn the same way. So I have to find different ways to make sure that whatever I’m trying to get across gets across.”

At the school, students learn specific technical tools and skills that will help them be successful as animation, motion graphics, visual effects, and 3D artists once they graduate and enter the competitive Hollywood job hunt.

This means both career readiness courses and training on current, industry-standard hardware and software. Students are introduced to the Adobe Creative Suite of apps on Mac — including Photoshop, After Effects, Premiere, and Animate — in their first year, and for many, the Procreate app on iPad allows them the freedom to create beyond the classroom. Students also stay on top of daily tasks with productivity apps like Finch and Zinnia, available on iPhone, and can improve focus using Apple’s built-in cognitive accessibility features like Background Sounds or Guided Access.

Students particularly enjoy the combination of iPad and Apple Pencil for their creative process. “It bridges the gap between physical drawing and digital art,” says Matthew Rohde, a second-year aiming for a career in visual effects or motion design. “That’s what makes it so great. I’ve tried using other styluses, and there’s sort of that disconnect.”

“Apple Pencil has pressure sensitivity,” adds Matthew Rada, a third-year student at Exceptional Minds. “When you lean the pencil this way, it’ll act like an actual pencil and do certain shading in the way a regular pencil does.”

Adjacent to their technical training, students complete three years of vocational training, including a Career Realities track that builds on their skills in resume writing, portfolio building, career planning, interviewing, and other life skills to help them succeed in future roles in the industry. Through mentorship and internship programs, students begin to develop relationships with employers, and those employers begin to learn about their needs or working styles.

“Our artists learn how to hone their voice so they have better opportunities and better networking,” Jerome adds. “We’re not changing their stories; we’re just making it possible for people to see their stories.”

For students like Ibarra, Rohde, and Rada, that means that by the time they leave Exceptional Minds, goals like pitching comic books to DC or working as a motion designer for a major studio aren’t just dreams — they’re well within reach.

Press Contacts

Will Butler

Apple

willbutler@apple.com

Apple Media Helpline

media.help@apple.com

 Behind the Scenes of MLS Season Pass

April 4, 2023

FEATURE

Behind the :br(s):scenes of MLS Season Pass: Celebrating the sights and sounds of Matchday

On a brisk Sunday afternoon in March, the freshly watered pitch at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles glistens, a fresh coat of paint marking its boundaries. As a crew of dozens of producers, broadcasters, and technical staff ready for kickoff at the match between defending MLS champions Los Angeles Football Club (LAFC) and the New England Revolution, a drumbeat is rumbling over on Christmas Tree Lane just outside the stadium.

From the pregame tailgate to the final whistle, the 3252 Independent Supporters Union of LAFC sea of black and gold were on their feet, chanting for LAFC throughout the club’s 90-minute-plus run to a 4-0 victory.

“We’re passionate, not only about the team’s success on the field, but the club culture and community,” says Eddie Amuwa, a member of the Black Army 1850 supporter group within the 3252. “Whether we’re winning or losing, we’re always loud. We always give our energy and our passion. We’re all just fans that have decided to give extra of ourselves because this club represents us. What you see in the 3252 is what you see in Los Angeles: different cultures, different ideals, and different ways of life.”

From coast to coast, this is what MLS fandom looks like. Whether it’s Atlanta FC and its Faction supporter group joining a crowd of 32,000 fans to watch as a 6-foot-tall golden spike is hammered through a makeshift railroad platform just before kickoff, or the Timbers Army cheering as Timber Joey slices his chainsaw through a log after every home goal, or the resurgence of a soccer city with the St. Louis City SC christening the newly minted CITYPARK stadium, a rapidly growing legion of fans across North America are putting their club — and community — pride on display.

“That really has been the story of Major League Soccer — the incredible growth in all areas, including fan culture,” says Seth Bacon, MLS’s executive vice president of media. “One of the things that we’re proudest of is providing the opportunity for a passionate soccer fan culture that has helped us become a soccer nation.”

This season, with the introduction of MLS Season Pass on the Apple TV app, fans can now feel that same stadium energy at home every week as they follow the league’s 29 clubs right from their couch. And for the first time in MLS history, each club has their own platform to produce deep, rich pre- and postgame programming in dedicated club rooms on MLS Season Pass.

“Like many sports, soccer is tribal, and people are devoutly passionate about their local club or the club where they grew up,” Bacon continues. “And in the past, there wasn’t really ever this type of platform or partner where compelling feature content and highlights would be available in this type of way. So there are a lot of really smart people behind the scenes who’ve been given the opportunity to create amazing content that’s specific to each of their clubs.”

Gone are the days of broadcast blackouts and unpredictable start times and match days. MLS Season Pass was created by Apple and MLS to help create a consistent experience for fans to watch their favorite clubs. The new service brings high-quality 1080p video, camera angles that place viewers right in the middle of the action, pre- and postgame coverage for every match, and the MLS 360 whip-around show bringing the best highlights from match day across the league to fans every week.

“We have a team of people who genuinely love soccer and are passionate about growing the game globally,” says Kaylyn Kyle, cohost of MLS 360. “There has never been a whip-around show like MLS 360; you can literally tune into 14 games at a time and get all the goals and all the action. And the fans have been the best part: They’re sharing their feedback and helping us improve the show every week. It’s quick and informative — less ‘talk show’ and more ‘let’s get to the action’ — which makes it a lot of fun for the fans and for us.”

Viewers can also opt to listen to their home team radio for broadcast audio, and toggle between English-, Spanish-, and — for Canadian matches — French-language broadcasts all within MLS Season Pass on the Apple TV app.

“The presentation is just so different than what we’ve seen in the past,” adds Bacon. “It’s an amazing step in the right direction of replicating the look and feel of what you see in a stadium, and we’ve got the best-in-class people focused on making this a great experience for our fans.”

Broadcasters Max Bretos and Brian Dunseth have been calling MLS matches for decades, and the pair are excited to see how MLS Season Pass moves the league forward on a global level, especially in the lead-up to the 2026 World Cup, which will be hosted jointly by the U.S., Mexico, and Canada.

“We’ve always had to fight for relevancy,” says Dunseth. “We had to fight the narrative of ‘Hey, it’s just soccer.’ It feels like now we’re almost in the space where we’re operating on our own level — where people are starting to pay attention, and it’s not just the quality of feeling like you’re on the field; it’s the overarching quality of the whole experience.”

From the seasoned broadcasters up in the booth, to the camera operators and technical crew working their magic on and off the field, Apple went behind the scenes with the MLS Season Pass production team as LAFC faced off against the New England Revolution at home.

After a nonstop, heart-pumping 96 minutes that saw LAFC land a fourth goal, the clubs said farewell as LAFC celebrated and the stadium roars continued. For fans in attendance as well as those at home, the stadium’s energy was electrifying. And on MLS Season Pass, viewers were rewarded with one final postgame ritual: LAFC midfielder Timothy Tillman riling up the 3252 in a call-and-response chant to signal their victory. For the producers broadcasting the match, that’s what it’s all about: creating an experience that elicits a response.

Press Contacts

Bernadette Simpao

Apple

bsimpao@apple.com

Sam Citron

Apple

citron@apple.com

Apple Media Helpline

media.help@apple.com

Apple TV+ reveals trailer for ‘Jane,’ a new series inspired by the work of Jane Goodall

Apple TV+ today revealed the trailer for “Jane,” a new 10-episode mission-driven series for kids and families inspired by the work of world-renowned ethologist and conservationist, Dr. Jane Goodall, DBE, Founder of the Jane Goodall Institute and a United Nations Messenger of Peace. From Emmy Award winner J.J. Johnson (“Dino Dana,” “Endlings,” “Ghostwriter”), Sinking Ship Entertainment and the Jane Goodall Institute, “Jane” premieres globally on Friday, April 14 on Apple TV+.

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How to Hide Recently used apps in Stage Manager on an iPad

The iPad is a great computer. But sometimes, you need all of the screen that is available for one reason or another.

When using Stage Manager on an iPad, it'll show the recently used apps on the right side of the screen for easy access.  But what if you don't need that?

Here's how to disable it:

  1. Open Settings.
  2. Select Home Screen & Multitasking.
  3. Select Stage Manager.
  4. Uncheck the box for Recent Apps to hide the display of apps on the left side of Stage Manager.
  5. That's it. 

The changes take effect immediately.

 

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