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Boy Crisis’ Fountain of Youth by Jordan Fish

Boy Crisis’ Fountain of Youth by Jordan Fish

David Knight - 18th Sept 2009

It was shot at the abandoned open-air swimming pool in Brooklyn's McCarren Park - opened in the 1930s with a 3000-person capacity. and soon to be demolished.

It was shot at the abandoned open-air swimming pool in Brooklyn's McCarren Park - opened in the 1930s with a 3000-person capacity. and soon to be demolished. "I think we could have been the last to shoot there," says Atlantic's Claire Stubbs, who commissioned the video. "It was supposed to be brought back to life as a lido but the recession has knocked that on the head." The video's probably summed up what things will be like after a few more years of Crunch. And according to Jordan, only the jellyfish will survive. "The small jellyfish at the beginning of the video is a Turritopsis Nutricula, a species of jellyfish that can live forever!"

"I think we could have been the last to shoot there," says Atlantic's Claire Stubbs, who commissioned the video. "It was supposed to be brought back to life as a lido but the recession has knocked that on the head."

It was shot at the abandoned open-air swimming pool in Brooklyn's McCarren Park - opened in the 1930s with a 3000-person capacity. and soon to be demolished. "I think we could have been the last to shoot there," says Atlantic's Claire Stubbs, who commissioned the video. "It was supposed to be brought back to life as a lido but the recession has knocked that on the head." The video's probably summed up what things will be like after a few more years of Crunch. And according to Jordan, only the jellyfish will survive. "The small jellyfish at the beginning of the video is a Turritopsis Nutricula, a species of jellyfish that can live forever!"

The video's probably summed up what things will be like after a few more years of Crunch. And according to Jordan, only the jellyfish will survive. "The small jellyfish at the beginning of the video is a Turritopsis Nutricula, a species of jellyfish that can live forever!"

It was shot at the abandoned open-air swimming pool in Brooklyn's McCarren Park - opened in the 1930s with a 3000-person capacity. and soon to be demolished. "I think we could have been the last to shoot there," says Atlantic's Claire Stubbs, who commissioned the video. "It was supposed to be brought back to life as a lido but the recession has knocked that on the head." The video's probably summed up what things will be like after a few more years of Crunch. And according to Jordan, only the jellyfish will survive. "The small jellyfish at the beginning of the video is a Turritopsis Nutricula, a species of jellyfish that can live forever!"

Watch 'Boy Crisis’ Fountain of Youth by Jordan Fish' here

David Knight - 18th Sept 2009

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Credits

Production/Creative

Director
Jordan Fish
Production Company
Greencard Pictures
Executive Producer
Max Knies

Camera

Director of Photography
Doug Emmett

Art

Art Director
Paul Korzan

Wardrobe

Stylist
Stephanie Yarger

Choreography

Choreographer
Lydia Bell

Editorial

Editor
Jordan Fish

Grading

Colourist
Jordan Fish

Commission

Commissioner
Claire Stubbs

David Knight - 18th Sept 2009

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