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Business Featured Technology

Mixer founders Anis Bennaceur, Cody Simons & Alex Carapetis on their popular app & more

The founders of Mixer
The founders of Mixer

Simply put, Mixer is a global private network for individuals working in art, fashion, film, music and other creative industries. Members must be invited to join the app-based social network, and in turn, they are able to showcase past and current projects while making one-to-one connections. Some of its current members include Rose McGowan, André Saraiva, Adrian Grenier, Lindsay Lohan, Cédric Hervet, Luke Pritchard, Adam Green, Zafar Rushdie and musicians from Major Lazor, St. Lucia, and Leon Bridges’ band.

The founders of Mixer come from very different backgrounds. Cody Simons graduated from Harvard with a degree in Statistics. Anis Bennaceur earned a Masters in Business from ESCP Europe, having worked in marketing at Tinder in France. Alex Carapetis is a drummer for both Wolfmother and Julian Casablancas + The Voidz; he has also toured with the likes of Ke$ha, Nine Inch Nails and Phoenix. Downtown had the pleasure of catching up with Cody, Anis and Alex for some Q&A about Mixer’s past, present and future.

More on Mixer can be found at www.joinmixer.com, while Mixer can also be followed via Instagram and Facebook.

Andrew in action at a live Mixer event
Alex in action at a live Mixer event

How did you three first meet?

Alex Carapetis: Anis and I met two years ago over a pre-show steak frites lunch while I was on tour in France with Julian Casablancas + The Voidz. Anis booked me for an after show DJ gig at Le Baron in Paris. He told me about how him and his business partner Cody Simons were at the beginnings of creating a platform / app. They expressed interest in bringing me in as the chief creative. It was actually quite a serendipitous moment as the three of us were all looking to create an app for creatives kind of like LinkedIn meets Soho HouseOver those next few months we integrated our visions and began to shape the scope of Mixer.

Did any of you work together on a project prior to launching the app?

Anis Bennaceur: No. Although, Alex DJed at a party I threw in Paris. Does that count?

Sure. How did the decision come to make your social network app-based rather than a website?

Cody Simons: Since we were focused on artists connecting with other artists, we wanted something that would be quick and easy to connect rather than something heavy-handed. We are also working on a website.

Cody Simons
Cody Simons

What is it that you look for in new members? Is there criteria for someone to get an invite?

AB: I’m looking for interesting art, alternative music from whatever you can listen to on the radios these days. Mostly, I think, before approving someone on the network, “How would this person be a good addition to all this userbase that we already have?”

CS: We are generally looking for people who have devoted their career to their trade — not hobbyists.

AC: Creatives — people in fashion, film, music, art, influencers, movers and shakers

Are there any projects that have come about as a result of your app that you are especially proud of?

AB: We are seeing extensive daily use and interaction on Mixer. All internal collaborations and projects are generally confidential unless they’re announced on other social media.

Is there a region where most of your users are? Or are they truly all over the place?

CS: Right now, Mixer’s membership is mostly concentrated in Los Angeles, New York, and Paris. We are working on growing our membership in London, Berlin, and some of the other creative markets in the U.S. — Nashville, Austin, Atlanta, Seattle, etc.

Anis Bennaceur
Anis Bennaceur

What’s coming up for Mixer in the near-future?

AC: We’ve just introduced our jobs section, which is growing daily and features some brilliant workplace opportunities for creatives. A beautifully-practical way to post jobs and look for paying jobs in the creative and arts industry.

CS: We are focused on growing the membership and getting more jobs on the platform. We have some major updates we’ve been working on coming out in the next month — stay tuned.

When not busy with Mixer, how do you like to spend your free time?

AB: Reading, I’m a bookworm, and I love biographies. I’m currently reading Claude Grudet’s. It’s fascinating.

AC: Music + Travel + Love.

Do you have a favorite restaurant in New York?

AB: Epistrophy in Nolita, I always go for the hanger steak. And Blue Ribbon Sushi on Sullivan [Street], I go there every week — their popcorn shrimp tempura is a killer.

CS: We work in Nolita so we often go to Lovely Day and Tartinery for lunch

AC: La Esquina, Pepe Rosso, Vanessa’s [Dumplings], Sushi Seki.

Alex Carapetis
Alex Carapetis

Any upcoming concerts or events you have tickets to?

AC: I play drums with Wolfmother and I’m currently in Australia opening up for Guns N’ Roses. Pretty sweet tickets.

AB: I just go to smaller and more intimate concerts. I missed Splashh’s concert last week because of the snowstorm. So I’ll definitely see them at the Mercury Lounge at the end of next month

CS: Lemon Twigs Feb. 21 at Bowery Ballroom — they’ve got a cool sound.

Finally, any last words for the kids?

AB: Don’t ever, ever, ever worry about what other people think of you.

AC: Have fun, stay safe, live with love, put time into following your ultimate desires daily. Follow your dreams. Be good to your mother.

Categories
Dining Living Miami

Fridababy CEO Chelsea Hirschhorn’s restaurant picks for Downtown Magazine

Fridababy's Chelsea Hirschhorn
Fridababy’s Chelsea Hirschhorn

Focused on innovation, Fridababy aims to provide parents with the tools to simply and efficiently care for their babies. Since CEO Chelsea Hirschhorn joined Fridababy in 2014, the company has expanded into a 15,000 square foot facility. That growth has led to Fridababy’s geographic presence expanding from 5,000 doors to over 25,000 doors across North America. In turn, accolades have come from NBC’s Today (“Stuff We Love”), BuzzFeed (“47 Parenting Products That’ll Make Your Life Easier”), and Vogue (“The Ultimate Baby Registry Master List”) alike.

Prior to taking over Fridababy, Chelsea was a New York City-based bankruptcy attorney at Weil Gotshal & Manges, in addition to a role as Director of Ancillary Revenue for the Miami Marlins. Her J.D. was earned from the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law. In turn, Downtown asked “the Baby-Gadget Guru” — a mother of two — for some New York restaurant recommendations.

Fridababy can be visited at www.fridababy.com, while Chelsea and the brand can both be followed on Twitter, Instagram, Pinterest, and Facebook.

Fridababy Family-Products_2016

1) Babbo:

For the pasta tasting menu with a seat at the high top tables in the front, catching up with friends.

2) Chelsea Market:

After a session with the boys at the Chelsea Piers driving range or carousel, we walk over for lunch then stroll the Highline with our dessert in-hand.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DAglHsJGrBE

3) La Esquina:

For very sentimental reasons — it was where my husband and I went on our very first date. It was pouring rain and the taxi pulled up to the corner and I looked at him like, “Are we really eating tacos in the window?” I’ve since learned to trust him implicitly!

La Esquina
La Esquina

4) Via Quadronno:

On the corner of 73rd & Madison, where I spent a lot of time escaping the downtown grind during law school; my parents were on 73rd between Park and Lex. Truly a more perfect cappuccino does not exist.

5) Bemelmans Bar at The Carlyle:

A classic New York City vibe, and somewhere we always stop for a drink and music session pre or post-dinner.

Categories
Uncategorized

Smith & Cult founder Dineh Mohajer talks new fall products, New York and more

Dineh Mohajer of Smith & Cult
Dineh Mohajer of Smith & Cult

Created by beauty veteran Dineh Mohajer, Smith & Cult is a popular brand known for its nail lacquer products. Prior to founding Smith & Cult, Dineh had reached prominence with the brand Hard Candy, which she had started as a hobby while completing her senior year as a pre-med biochemistry student at the University of Southern California. Hard Candy had seemingly taken off overnight after Alicia Silverstone had worn the brand’s baby blue nail polish on a Late Show With David Letterman appearance in 1995.

Smith & Cult recently expanded beyond nail polish, moving into the eye makeup realm. Its new eye collection — which includes four eyeshadow quads, three liquid liners and one mascara — is called the Book Of Eyes. Long-time fans of Smith & Cult’s nail polishes, however, will be delighted to know that Fall 2016 also brings two new shades of lacquers (Darjeeling Darling and 1972).

Downtown caught up with Dineh to learn more about Smith & Cult’s recent expansion and also what keeps her going as an entrepreneuer. She can be followed directly on Twitter, while Smith & Cult — which Dineh runs with partner Jeanne Chavez — is online at www.smithandcult.com.

When Downtown interviewed you a little over a year ago, you said that the then-very-new Smith & Cult was inspired by your “addiction to beauty.” Was there a specific person that inspired your passion for the field?

Dineh Mohajer: My earliest childhood memories all center around me playing with my mom’s massive collection of makeup and being completely enamored by the colors, cremes, compacts and magic of it all. I guess my mom is the one who inspired my lifelong addiction to beauty.

You created your previous brand Hard Candy while in college. Where did your entrepreneurial spirit first come from?

DM: I would pin the birth of my entrepreneurial spirit on starvation for a creative outlet for my love of all things beauty. When I first created Hard Candy, it was purely a survival mechanism and way to escape the stressful reality of my pre-med curriculum. Since I wasn’t actually trying to create a business, I was free to transcend traditional beauty constraints. What began as a fun little passion project gave me the freedom to concoct never-seen-before products and express myself.

Having had such early success with Hard Candy, was there any hesitation in trying to create another brand?

DM: I never thought that my random urge to mix shades to match my nails would result in a baby blue nail lacquer that essentially launched my career and drastically changed the course of my life and the beauty industry. I’ve accumulated infinitely more experiences in the past 20 years in this industry. I think that the unexpected success of Hard Candy only fueled my love for the work I do. Without hesitation I jumped into creating my new brand Smith & Cult, it is a reflection of my experiences past and present.

How did you and your partner Jeanne Chavez first meet? What was it that really brought you two together?

DM: Jeanne and I initially met during the Hard Candy era and were introduced by a cosmetic buyer who thought we were like-minded. At the time, I was overworked and overwhelmed by my new business. At our first meeting we struck a handshake deal and that along with our mutual passion — bordering on obsession — for the beauty world has remained the same throughout the course of our 20-year partnership. Jeanne is the yin to my yang. We could not be more different, but I think that’s why our collaboration is effective. I bring “mad scientist” and creativity to the table, while she brings her business sense and ability to execute our vision.

Flatte Top Coat

How would you describe Smith & Cult to someone that hasn’t yet tried the products?

DM: I am driven by creating things I would want to use myself. I would say our products are ultra-luxurious, made from the finest ingredients. Our formulas are elevating the levels of environmental consciousness for beauty brands; the nail lacquer is 8-free and the current standard for most luxury beauty brands is 5-free. Also, our lip lacquer formulas are vegan, gluten, paraben-free.

Do you have a favorite Smith & Cult product?

DM: My favorite Smith & Cult products are constantly in flux. However, today I am loving Book Of Eyes, our new eye quad palette. Soft Shock, which is amazing for achieving a super sexy not-trying-too-hard- smoked-eye.

What is the source of inspiration for the brand’s name?

DM: In a late-night brainstorming session, I had with myself in bed, it became clear to me that the name of this collection had to embody the complexity and duality that we each carry. Smith represents the timeless, refined side whereas Cult stands for the dirtier, more subversive side. This clashing, existential polarity is woven through every fiber of the brand.

Are you a fan of The Smiths? Or the band The Cult?

DM: I do like listening to The Smiths when I am feeling nostalgic or hormonal.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OGbvUegVjQA

How did Smith & Cult wind up with its products sold at Saks stores so early on?

DM: My partner, Jeanne Chavez, knew and worked with Steve Bock, the Executive VP of Saks, back in her La Prairie days — pre-Hard Candy. Steve has been wonderful to us over the years and has been a fan/supporter of our brands. He also brought us to Sephora when it launched in the U.S.

What’s coming up for Smith & Cult in the near-future?

DM: I’m super-excited to share our new eye collection launching this year as well as two new nailed lacquer shades; a rose gold foil called “1972” and a new matte top coat called Flatte that will transform any shade in your current collection.

When not busy with Smith & Cult, how do you like to spend your free time?

DM: Free time? I have no idea what that means, but it sounds magical. I wish I was better at creating more of a balance, but I don’t really know how to work any other way, but it’s something I am working on — that sounds counterintuitive.

Do you have a favorite restaurant in New York?

DM: My favorite spots in New York City are Sant Ambroeus, Buddakan, Nobu, La Esquina, Spice Market, Margaux, Westville and Rao’s.

Finally, Dineh, any last words for the kids?

DM: Live authentically, express yourself with reckless abandon, and be kind — especially to yourself.

Book of Eyes - Interlewd (Plum)

Categories
Culture Events Health

Jillian Michaels To Appear At The PlayStation Theater On Dec. 13, Talks To Downtown

Jillian Michaels / Photo by Don Flood
Jillian Michaels / Photo by Don Flood

Over the past decade, Jillian Michaels has become the most popular fitness celebrity out there. Jillian first rose to prominence as a trainer on NBC’s The Biggest Loser, which led to a spin-off show, Losing It With Jillian. Since then, she has released several New York Times Best Sellers, has expanded into fashion with the launch of her own activewear line at KMART, and was even the star of her own reality show on E!, Just Jillian.

Beyond her acclaimed fitness programs, Jillian has also proven to be innovative in being the star of multiple workout-oriented video games. She also manages to find time to active with a multitude of charities, including the NFL’s Play 60, the Clinton Foundation’s Alliance For A Healthier Generation, Stand Up To Cancer, Hope For Haiti, and Working Wardrobes. Jillian is also the host of the top-rated fitness podcast, The Jillian Michaels Show, following years as a weekly broadcaster on Los Angeles station KFI. And all of this is done while being the committed mother of two children with partner Heidi Rhoades.

On Dec. 13, she will be participating in An Evening With Jillian Michaels at the PlayStation Theater. In advance of this live appearance, Jillian spoke to Downtown about her many projects, past and present.

Jillian Michaels can be followed on Twitter — on which she has well over one million followers — and Instagram via @JillianMichaels. For more information on her Dec. 13 appearance, visit www.jillianmichaels.com or PlayStation Theater.

Jillian Michaels / Photo by Don Flood
Jillian Michaels / Photo by Don Flood

For someone thinking of coming to see you at the PlayStation Theater, what should be expected?

Jillian Michaels: Obviously the evening will be fun, funny and entertaining, but the real goal is to give each and every audience member an “AHA!” moment and a break-through. I want them to leave feelings awakened, empowered and ready to tackle any and all obstacles keeping them from their goals and dreams.

Your work is related to health and fitness, but is there a specific exercise or kind of activity that you can’t get enough of and actually do for fun?

JM: I have been skateboarding again for the first time in years because of my kids and I must admit I do love it.

For you, what was your wake-up call when it came to getting in shape?

JM: For me personally, I have been very lucky in my life to have great mentors and great teachers that provided me with the exact type of break-through I had mentioned earlier. When it came to my health as a kid, my martial arts instructor laid down the law with me about how I was disrespecting myself and my martial arts practice, by not respecting my body. Then he gave me the tools to turn things around, which is critical. You can tell someone “Hey, just do it,” but you have to give them the tools so they know HOW.

For someone reading this that wants to get into better shape, what do you think is the first step? Is it finding an eating plan that works? Is it exercising a certain number of days per week?

JM: First, I tell people to establish their “why.” You will find that change in life is usually obvious and simple — but never easy. For example: lose weight equals eat less, move more; use common sense with your food choices. Simple, but not at all easy. So anything worth having does require work and sacrifice. Having a “why” gives the work purpose and subsequently becomes passion. However, work without a “why” or an intrinsic purpose just becomes punishing.

Jillian Michaels / Photo by Don Flood
Jillian Michaels / Photo by Don Flood

Where do you stand on the idea of someone having a “cheat day” from their diet?

JM: I don’t do cheat days. I don’t like the “all or nothing” binge mentality. I tell people practice the 80/20 rule. Make 20 percent of your daily calories treat foods. This way you have balance and never feel deprived.

Do you have a restaurant in New York City that you can recommend for being both delicious and healthy?

JM: (laughs) When I’m in New York, I am rarely thinking about eating healthy. I’m thinking about pizza, bagels, cupcakes…because it’s all so damn good there. That said, I do have my usual haunts. I always grab dinner at Neta for sushi. I love the ambience and at La Esquina — it never gets old for me.

Do your parents still like their custom golf cart?

JM: Ah, that was Heidi’s parents and I am told it’s the hit of their retirement community.

What’s ahead for you once this tour has wrapped?

JM: I have a new book coming out this fall for mommies to be called Yeah Baby! to help them master their maternity, optimize all facets of their child’s development and bounce back better than ever. We are re-launching my app on iTunes in January so I can personally train you! Pretty excited about that one. I am also very focused on a fitness network we have been growing called Fitfusion. It’s a premier fitness streaming platform with all the biggest names in fitness and all the hottest workouts for only nine bucks a month.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z9dfVsNsUcc

Is there anything you haven’t yet accomplished but still hope to?

JM: So much, I wouldn’t know where to begin on this one. Life is short and there is so much to do. I’d like to make greater strides in my charity work. I’d like to become more of a business woman and be behind the scenes growing other brands.

When not busy with your career, how do you like to spend your free time?

JM: I don’t have a ton of it, but I like to do stuff with my kids. Horseback riding, skateboarding, bodyboarding, etc.

Finally, Jillian, any last words for the kids?

JM: I’d say always follow your heart. You are here for a reason and your passion is your purpose. In life you will find the more security you seek living the life you think you should, the less security you will have. Whereas, conversely, when we live the life we want the more affluence and abundance flow our way.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I-g_wZ9WRk4