FPMNP Presents… Outlook 2010
Welcome to our initial offering in the blogosphere on behalf of French Press for the year 2010! Rules of attraction is next.After a little bit restructuring, mnpg.net has been welcomed to serve independent media around the globe. This is exciting for us on two fronts, we are reaching a greater audience and we are beginning to achieve “profitable” status throughout our network.Not only has our reach been extended- we are proud to announce a new business model (patent pending) for consumers and producers. If you are interested in partnering with us on this project, please visit our contact page, or simply shoot us an email to info@mnpg.net for more information.The year 2010 will be a landmark year both for those in politics as well as for the changes that continue and persist in these great times. mnpg.net will be publishing its first Almanac courtesy of French Press in early Winter 2010.Apart from living up to our Instrumental Design brand the MNP family has a lot to be thankful for and will sure to be ready when big things start happening in the upcoming months.And now back to the present, French Press has built a brief summary of what is going on across the network:
On myninjaplease.com Crumbles looks at the influx of language traffic and reaches out to the artist community at large. Don’t forget you can trek through an area in the SW called Bisti or the badlands, which is the focus of the MNP feature, Walk the Earf. AMNP reviews The Function of Form, a book by Farshid Moussavi and ACTAR who have released the first follow-up to 2006’s hugely popular The Function of Ornament, a must read by any account.GreenMNP reports on three vignettes from Copenhagen which show that personal responses to the conference might be the greatest cultural happenings around. This is part two of a GOOD mini-series by the Canary Project’s Ed Morris on the cultural happenings surrounding COP15.Music MNP brings back the gabba gabba reference from Halloween and brings in a Biz Mark national TV spot.And finally the Robot Ninja questions the virtue of military droids in combat.
Stay tuned my ninjas.

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