Earlier this week, some people in the Seattle, Washington area began spotting a strange little creature scuttling about. Was it a new cryptid? A new mysterious creature like Bigfoot or Nessie? Nope. Instead, what people were spotting was a raccoon with a deformed spine that locals have started referring to as Jimothy. And unlike those other cryptids, he’s real and cool.
On July 14, as documented by MyBallard, Kiana Hall spotted Jimothy near a local Goodwill. She pulled out her phone and captured a video of the rotund raccoon and posted it to Instagram, where it quickly went viral. As of July 17, it has over 6 million views. As for the critter’s name, MyBallard reports that Hall simply thought he looked like a Jimothy. I agree.
“I hope he stays safe wherever he is,” Hall told the site.
This video of Jimothy spread across the Seattle subreddit, where people began sharing stories and more videos of the short little raccoon online. Someone else posted a video of Jimothy sneaking on their porch. And another resident shared a clip of Jimothy on their back patio “living the good life.” People also began sharing fan art of the raccoon, who has quickly become quite popular and built up a sizable fanbase.
Interestingly, before he went viral earlier this week, Jimothy had seemingly been spotted around that area before. Someone on Reddit shared a sketch from 2023 showing what looks like a crude drawing of Jimothy. Another person on Reddit shared a video that showed a similar-looking raccoon in that same area in 2023, possibly a younger Jimothy hanging out with some other raccoons.
“Nice to think there’s some evidence he’s doing OK and other raccoons treat him normally,” posted one user on Reddit.
MyBallard received an image from one of its readers, Amanda, claiming that she and her family had seen Jimothy back in 2023 as a little baby, and they called him Nubby. She shared a supposed photo of the baby Jimothy. “He’s very sweet and harmless,” Amanda told the site.
I love Jimothy. And not just because he’s adorable and cool. What I love about him is that he is proof that many cryptids people supposedly spot out in the woods or desert aren’t mythical monsters or weird aliens or demons. Instead, nature can produce some really wild-looking creatures all on its own, and I think that’s rad.
Some are worried that all this attention on Jimothy might lead to someone trying to capture him. So let’s make it clear: You can take photos of this cute raccoon with a short spine all day. But don’t feed it. Don’t try to capture it. And please, don’t kill it. Otherwise, a large chunk of Seattle might track you down and throw you into a dumpster.
Cruz Beckham and Brooklyn Beckham are back in the spotlight as fresh claims shine a light on the brothers’ very different career paths.
Cruz, 21, has landed slots at both Reading and Leeds Festival this summer with his band, Cruz Beckham & The Breakers. It marks a major step for the youngest Beckham son.
He will perform on the stage previously known as the BBC Introducing stage. That gives him a big platform at two of the UK’s biggest music festivals.
Friends close to the Beckhams say Cruz has earned the chance. They say he has stayed focused on music while Brooklyn faces more questions about his next move.
Cruz Beckham and Brooklyn Beckham chatter grows as festival gigs land
A Beckham pal allegedly told The Sun: “Cruz’s gigs are going really well at the moment. He’s always in the studio practising, looking for the next best opportunity and he really does have a passion for music.”
The insider added: “He might not end up a global star but he’s going to go really far.”
Those comments have sparked even more Cruz Beckham Brooklyn Beckham talk. Pals say Cruz has picked a lane and stuck with it.
The same source drew a sharp contrast with Brooklyn, 27. He has tried several ventures over the years.
Cruz has a busy summer ahead (Credit: SplashNews.com)
Most recently, Brooklyn focused on social media and his hot sauce brand, Cloud23, which launched in 2024.
The source said: “Cruz is set on pursuing his music and has no intention of flitting between career paths and treating them as hobbies unlike some. While they’re both nepo-babies Cruz is putting Brooklyn to shame as he coasts by – at least Cruz is actually grafting.”
Why this summer could be a turning point for Cruz
Cruz has also started building towards a bigger launch. Earlier this year, he announced an EP called Wear & Tear, which is due for release on August 21.
His Brit-pop and indie rock band has already released singles including Optics and Waste Your Pain. The steady rollout suggests he wants to build a proper music career.
One gig at a time, he appears to be laying the groundwork.
Brooklyn, meanwhile, faced criticism in recent weeks over a DoorDash advert. In the campaign, he looked into the camera and said: “You’re probably wondering why I’m watching the FIFA World Cup 2026 from home…”
Then, smirking, he added: “It’s a long story.”
The Beckham brothers now seem to be on very different tracks
For now, the brothers appear to be heading in different directions. Cruz has the festival gigs, the band and the EP on the way.
Brooklyn still has Cloud23 and his social media profile, but the scrutiny around his career choices has not gone away.
Read more: Victoria Beckham ‘to miss’ Mel C’s wedding as Spice Girl set to marry model Chris Dingwell ‘this weekend’
What do you think of this story? Let us know by leaving a comment on our Facebook page @EntertainmentDailyFix.
Emily loves to write about the latest trending news, whether it’s reality TV chaos or royal drama. She also has a passion for translating editorial content into share-worthy social media posts.
Christopher Nolan’s “The Odyssey” finally hit cinemas on Friday, and its first reactions have ranged from glowing praise to fierce criticism online.
The film, which had already sparked the ire of some fans over its casting choices, was tipped to drive the MAGA faithful “completely insane.”
Nolan had already dismissed the pre-release backlash in an interview, calling such conversations “irrelevant” and saying he had learned not to be bothered by them after his experience with “Batman.”
Christopher Nolan’s highly anticipated adaptation of Homer’s Greek epic “The Odyssey” landed in cinemas on Friday, July 17. However, the initial reactions have not been entirely rosy, with some viewers taking issue with what they believe are alterations to the plot, as well as the ship and armor designs.
The $250 million epic was always likely to dive headlong into cultural and political crosswinds, mainly because of its casting. However, some viewers also highlighted several alleged “historical inaccuracies.”
Some Greeks even accused the filmmaker and Hollywood of being the “real racists and enemies of the West,” pointing to the film opening “by showing an African rapper [Travis Scott] with rasta in the role of a Greek poet.”
“We Greeks are forced to watch our Greek history and culture being disgraced and mocked across the entire world. What is Nolan’s real role in doing something like this, rather than casting a Greek person who speaks Greek? What’s the purpose of casting someone with rasta in the Greek world?” an X user wrote.
Nolan’s Casting Of Lupita Nyong’o Fueled Heated Debate
4CAN/Capital Pictures / MEGA
Nolan’s decision to cast Lupita Nyong’o as Helen of Troy and Clytemnestra remained a major point of contention among critics who focused on Helen’s description as the most beautiful woman in Greek mythology and “the face that launched a thousand ships.”
As one critic put it, “Black Helen is a flagrant assault on European beauty—and every white person instinctively knows this.”
Others slammed the movie as a “humiliation ritual,” while some argued that the use of American English and modern dialogue weakened the ancient setting.
Major Critics Celebrate Nolan’s Bold Adaptation
4MEGA
Meanwhile, Nolan received considerable praise for other elements of the film, with viewers applauding its “beautiful cinematography” and the “superb” performances from Matt Damon, Anne Hathaway, Robert Pattinson, and their co-stars.
Fans also praised Elliot Page’s appearance as Sinon, saying his character “serves as a brutal lesson for Odysseus, and it is one he carries throughout the remainder of the movie.”
The Guardian’s Peter Bradshaw gave the film a perfect rating, describing it as a production “with thrilling ambition, boldness, seriousness, generosity and flair. There are some broad-brush moments in the dialogue, yes, but even these are applied with a muscular flourish.”
New York Times critic Manohla Dargis highlighted Nolan’s passion for cinema, calling it “one of the most Nolan of Nolan spectacles in its thematic concerns, formal playfulness, kinetic thrills and unabashed showmanship.”
Christopher Nolan’s Epic Expected To Rattle The Right
4MEGA
The film was tipped to drive the right “completely insane,” particularly because of its changes to several ancient themes, according to Vanity Fair.
For months, conservatives such as Elon Musk lambasted the project on social media, with the founder of SpaceX claiming Nolan had “desecrated the Odyssey so that he would be eligible for an Academy Award.”
The right was also said to be in a “transphobic tizzy” over Page’s casting as Sinon, the Greek soldier responsible for convincing the Trojans to bring the giant wooden horse inside their city.
Other talking points focused on comparisons between the Spartans’ fear that unspecified “people from the sea” were invading their country and destroying their way of life and the real-world “conspiratorial anxieties” voiced by figures such as Musk.
Criticism that the film was not “historically accurate” was also dismissed as “ridiculous,” given that it tells a story involving “gods and monsters, and gorgeous women who hatched out of eggs.”
Christopher Nolan Dismisses Backlash As ‘Irrelevant’
4MEGA
Meanwhile, Nolan has since fired back at Musk and other critics over their pre-release attacks, calling them “irrelevant.”
“Comes with the territory,” he said, per The Telegraph. “But look, these conversations that happen before people see the film — they’re always irrelevant, because no one having them knows what the film actually is yet.”
Nolan also acknowledged that adapting such a famous epic in the current cultural climate was bound to draw strong reactions, but said he had learned not to let the criticism bother him.
“Remember, I spent ten years of my life dealing with Batman. When I came on ‘Begins,’ writers and artists had been working on this beloved character for almost 65 years, and a lot of freighted thoughts were out there about what he represents,” he explained.
“And what I learned over my time on that trilogy is you can’t worry about any of that at all. What you have to do is honor the original text by interpreting it in the strongest way you personally can,” he added.
Three men have been jailed in the UK for a £4 million cryptocurrency fraud in which they impersonated police officers to trick eight victims into handing over their holdings.
The gang built convincing fake police websites and laundered the stolen crypto through a complex network, spending it on cars, Rolexes and luxury holidays, the Metropolitan Police said.
Police have recovered about £1 million linked to victims and are still tracing assets.
Three men have been jailed in the UK for a £4 million ($5.3 million) cryptocurrency fraud in which they posed as police officers to convince victims to hand over their coins—then spent the proceeds on Rolexes, designer shopping and luxury holidays.
The trio phoned eight victims claiming to be officers, warned them their crypto was at risk, and talked them into sharing account details or moving funds to what they believed were secure police accounts, the Metropolitan Police said in a statement. The group had built convincing fake police websites, and the coins were immediately stolen and funneled through a complex laundering network.
At Southwark Crown Court on Thursday, Anthony Ikenwe, 29, and Kevin Nwamma, 25, were each sentenced to six years for conspiracy to commit fraud and five years for money laundering, to run concurrently. Hamza Bashir, 23, was handed three years and nine months for fraud and three years for laundering, also concurrent.
Rolexes, a Dubai cash stash and the Maldives
Detectives found the men living far beyond their means. One had a recorded income of just £444 a year, yet the group bought a car worth almost £60,000 with crypto, kept around £500,000 in cash in a safety deposit box in Dubai, and holidayed in Thailand, Japan, Paris, Mykonos, the Maldives and the Seychelles.
They shopped at Harrods, Hermès and Louis Vuitton and routinely converted crypto into prepaid payment cards, according to the Met. Officers linked more than £1 million in crypto to wallets controlled by Ikenwe, and traced stolen funds flowing into bank accounts tied to Nwamma’s luxury chauffeur business. Luxury goods recovered in the searches were valued at more than £26,000.
The case began when victims came forward in January 2025. The Met’s Cryptocurrency Team said it used a data-driven approach—piecing together blockchain transactions, exchange records, communications, financial records and internet service provider data—to link what first looked like separate crimes into a single organized network operating across multiple platforms and jurisdictions.
“This was a highly complex investigation into a group of calculated manipulators who exploited victims’ trust by pretending to be police officers,” said Detective Inspector Geoff Donoghue of the force’s Cryptocurrency Team, adding that, “Criminals should be under no illusion—policing is evolving alongside technology.”
In November, officers raided seven addresses across London and Essex, arresting the three men and seizing luxury goods, cryptocurrency and 40 mobile phones. They recovered around £1 million tied to victims. Ikenwe and Nwamma pleaded guilty in April, while Bashir denied involvement and stood trial, changing his plea on the eighth day after being shown extensive evidence.
Posing as the authorities
Impersonating police has become a recurring thread in crypto crime. The closest parallel to the Met case came last year, when a scammer posing as UK police stole $2.8 million in Bitcoin from a victim’s hardware wallet. In the US, fraudsters posing as Denver police convinced a woman she had missed jury duty, then had her feed cash into a Bitcoin ATM to clear a bogus warrant—one of a wave of impersonation scams the FBI says has hit older Americans hardest.
Sometimes the fake officers turn up in person. In France, robbers dressed as police held a couple at knifepoint in a $1 million Bitcoin robbery, while in Ukraine, men posing as cops were arrested for extorting $250,000 in Tether from an entrepreneur.
The Met said it is still working with UK and international partners to identify others linked to the conspiracy and to claw back assets for the victims.
Daily Debrief Newsletter
Start every day with the top news stories right now, plus original features, a podcast, videos and more.
Launching a token, DAO, or NFT collection is faster than you can imagine. Once you’re finished learning everything online, you can start minting, and — before you know it — you’ll need a logo to serve as your PFP, favicon, and Twitter/X avatar.
You may think of hiring a professional designer for this job. However, for many early-stage crypto projects, this path may not be the best option since it’s time-consuming and expensive. That’s where AI logo generators come in. They’re faster, cheaper, and you can use them on your own.
In this article, we tested five AI logo generators using the same fictional brief, “Collectible Nexus” (an NFT marketplace and DAO hybrid built around digital collectibles), to see which platforms actually produce a clean, icon-style mark perfect for your Web3 projects.
The List
1. Design.com
Design.com’s AI logo maker can generate thousands of logo concepts in just a second from a single text prompt with your business name and keywords. Typing “Create a logo for Collectible Nexus, an NFT marketplace and DAO hybrid built around digital collectibles” returned icon-style marks featuring collectible cards, which also work well for avatars.
Here are some of the samples:
You can customize your chosen logo on the user-friendly drag-and-drop editor or the AI chat interface. The platform enables you to edit the text, fonts, colors, icons, and layout. The logos can be exported in vector (SVG, EPS, PDF), raster (PNG, JPG), and animated (GIF, MP4) formats. There are also transparent-background and icon-only options, which are perfect for a mint page banner, a favicon, and a PFP frame.
Paid plans start at $3/month, but you can still use the free version of Design.com to create a complete logo using free templates and download it in all file formats.
2. BrandCrowd
BrandCrowd combines AI and its library of 380,000+ exclusive, professionally designed templates. All you have to do is enter your business name and some keywords, and the AI logo generator puts together a range of logos relevant to your industry. That’s what we did with Collectible Nexus, and here are some of the results:
All BrandCrowd logos are customizable using the platform’s easy-to-use drag-and-drop editor and AI like Design.com. They’re also available in vector (SVG/EPS/PDF) and raster (PNG/JPG) formats, including transparent-background and icon-only options. Plans also start at $3/month, but all file formats are available even in the free version.
3. Canva
Canva’s AI tool, Dream Lab, can generate logos from a text prompt just like with Design.com. However, it can only provide four logo concepts per request. Using the same prompt, here are two of Canva’s AI-generated logos for Collectible Nexus:
They’re also customizable using the platform’s well-known drag-and-drop editor. However, you’ll need to subscribe to Canva Pro for $12.99 to download the logo in SVG.
4. Wixel (formerly Wix Logo Maker)
Wixel lets you create a logo using its AI assistant, Aria. We just provided the business name, Collectible Nexus, and told Aria that it’s an “NFT marketplace and DAO hybrid built around digital collectibles.” It generated four customizable logos; here are two of them:
However, Wixel runs on AI credits — only 120/month under the free version. Paid plans start at $90/year and give you 350 AI credits/month. Aside from logo generation and AI editing, you’ll need credits to vectorize your final design so you can download it in SVG.
5. Vistaprint AI Logomaker
Vistaprint’s AI Logomaker generates logos purely from AI, using AI credits (64 credits/month). We just entered the business name, told the platform what it’s about, chose logo styles (sleek and modern, geometric, lettermark, and typographic), and described our desired logo. Here’s what we got:
Unfortunately, while the logos are customizable, they can only be edited using AI prompts. Still, you can download the final version in SVG, PDF, and PNG (plus the transparent backgrounds) for free.
Final Verdict
Design.com was the strongest fit in this comparison. It generates logos from a single prompt, allows full customization, and provides a full range of file formats, including the vital vector formats — SVG, EPS, and PDF. What sets it apart is that it lets you access vector files even with the free version as long as you use free templates to create your logo.
Bradley Walsh fans have not held back after ITV’s brand new spin-off The Chase Around the World made its debut, with some branding it an “excuse for a free holiday”.
Bradley, 61, and the Chasers swapped the familiar quiz studio for the streets of Rome on Thursday night.
However, instead of winning over fans, the new travel themed format sparked some criticism online.
Bradley Walsh and The Chasers have gone global with The Chase Around the World (Credit: ITV)
Six teams raced around the Italian capital while answering questions and completing puzzles before the last placed pair faced Anne Hegerty and Mark Labbett.
The series now heads to Barcelona for its second episode.
But many viewers felt the new show looked more like a paid trip abroad than a fresh take on the ITV favourite. Others could not ignore the similarities with BBC rival Race Across the World.
Bradley Walsh’s new Chase spin off: Verdicts are in
Viewers took to X in their numbers after the first episode, with several questioning whether the spin off offered enough to justify taking The Chase overseas.
One wrote: “Is this #chasearoundtheworld another excuse for Bradley Walsh to have a free holiday?”
Another added: “Basically a holiday for the Chasers.”
A third penned: “Who signed off on this? Didn’t anybody watch it back and think, ‘this is boring?’”
Others compared it to the popular BBC show, Race Across the World.
“The Chase meets Race Across the World. It’s a no from me. Stick to the original format,” someone said.
One viewer even admitted: “This may sound hasty, but I’m not really warming to this new programme tbh. I’ll just stick to watching #TheChase, RaceAcrossTheWorld, and Coach Trip as separate programmes.”
Race Across the World airs on rival channel BBC One (Credit: BBC)
When is The Chase Around the World on next?
Despite the criticism, the race is far from over. And some viewers are looking forward to the next leg.
One happy customer said once the credits rolled: “It was different, fun and still nail biting! Really enjoyed that!!”
No teams left the competition in the opening episode. Father and daughter duo Ashwin and Nikita crossed the finish line last in Rome before taking on Anne Hegerty and Mark Labbett in the Final Chase.
Ashwin and Nikita answered 10 questions correctly in 42 seconds. Anne and Mark managed six before their time ran out, allowing the pair to stay in the competition.
Episode two of The Chase Around the World airs on Thursday July 23, 2026, at 9pm on ITV1 for one hour.
Will you be watching?
Read more: Real life Traveller Trewley-Precious lands C4 reality show The Secret Lives of Gypsy Wives and it looks wild
The Chase Around the World continues at 9pm on ITV1 on Thursday July 23, 2026
A court in Rotterdam has declared Dutch cryptocurrency platform Knaken bankrupt, after prosecutors said roughly €7 million ($8.1 million) in customer funds could not be accounted for.
The ruling, issued Thursday, followed a bankruptcy petition filed by the Dutch Public Prosecution Service (OM) in late June, acting on warnings from the Dutch Authority for the Financial Markets (AFM) about what it called a “very concerning situation” at the platform.
Dutch cryptocurrency platform Knaken’s bankruptcy has significant implications for the EU’s crypto licensing regime, highlighting regulatory gaps
The collapse of Knaken, affecting 30,000 customers, underscores the need for stricter oversight of digital-asset firms under the MiCA framework
The case marks a notable failure in the Netherlands’ crypto industry, sparking a criminal investigation and raising questions about consumer protection
According to the NL Times report, the court did not soften its assessment. “Knaken has many customers, and there is a significant deficit in funds at Knaken, of which customers have not been informed,” it said. “Consequently, a large amount of customer money has disappeared without it being clear how this could have happened.” Declaring the company bankrupt, the court found, was in the public interest.
The ruling also placed Stichting Knaken Payments — the foundation set up to safeguard customer deposits — into bankruptcy alongside the trading company, Knaken Cryptohandel B.V.
A Failed Safeguard
The foundation existed specifically to hold and protect customer funds separately from the operating business, a structure meant to ensure users could recover their money if the company failed.
Its collapse into the same proceedings undercuts the very protection it was designed to provide. With both entities insolvent, the segregation that should have shielded customer deposits appears not to have held.
30,000 Customers Locked Out
Prosecutors estimate around 30,000 customers have been affected, according to figures reported by broadcaster NOS, though that number is the OM’s own estimate rather than an audited count. On the platform, users could convert euros into cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin and Ethereum, trade them, and store digital assets.
Access vanished abruptly. Knaken’s website and mobile app went dark in early June, leaving customers unable to view balances or withdraw funds. In the weeks since, users have had no route back to their holdings and no clarity on what remains.
Knaken proposed distributing whatever funds were still available among its customers and argued that bankruptcy was not the best way to wind down the business, contending that customers’ interests were already protected by criminal-law measures, including assets seized by investigators. The court rejected the proposal, finding that Knaken held too little capital to repay customers in full.
MiCA Was the Trigger
The collapse traces back to Europe’s crypto licensing regime. Knaken went offline after failing to secure a MiCAR license from the AFM, the authorization that has been mandatory for firms serving EU crypto customers since the Markets in Crypto-Assets framework’s transition period expired on July 1, 2025.
Without that license, Knaken could not legally continue operating. Rather than resolving the compliance gap, the platform ceased functioning entirely, freezing customer accounts in the process. The case is among the more significant Dutch crypto failures in recent years, and it arrives as European regulators tighten oversight of digital-asset firms under MiCA.
The company had operated for close to a decade and, in a 2024 report, had itself acknowledged financial vulnerabilities — an admission that reads differently in hindsight.
The Criminal Investigation
Running parallel to the bankruptcy is a criminal investigation led by the Fiscal Information and Investigation Service (FIOD), the Netherlands’ financial-crime unit, opened after the AFM raised concerns and filed a complaint.
On June 29, the day before prosecutors filed the bankruptcy petition, FIOD investigators raided Knaken’s premises, seizing computers, phones, and a portion of the company’s assets. No arrests have been made. Prosecutors have stressed that the civil bankruptcy and criminal probe are handled by separate teams.
A court-appointed trustee will now take over Knaken’s remaining assets, review its finances, and determine how much can be returned to customers and other creditors. For the roughly 30,000 users locked out since early June, the central question remains unanswered: whether they will see their money again and how €7 million came to be missing in the first place.
Also Read: Cardano Contributor Exits After Bankruptcy, Criticizes Governance
Disclaimer: The information researched and reported by The Crypto Times is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional financial advice. Investing in crypto assets involves significant risk due to market volatility. Always Do Your Own Research (DYOR) and consult with a qualified Financial Advisor before making any investment decisions.
Who’d have thought, in an age where IP and nostalgia reign supreme, that the way to become the most popular director on the planet would be to make cerebral, thought-provoking films that actually challenge audiences. That’s exactly the magic trick Christopher Nolan has pulled off, which is partly why when the man has something to say, there’ll never be a shortage of fans eager to listen.
Of course, the Westminster-born director had to work his way up to the kind of magnificent, complex blockbuster epics for which we know him today. In the late-90s he was just an ambitious filmmaker with a vision, one that he began to realize with his 1998 neo-noir crime movie “Following.” Filmed guerilla style on the streets of London, the project was made for just $6,000 and caused enough of a buzz for Nolan to court the interest of a relatively small studio. Newmarket Films handed the director $4.5 million and “Memento” was the result. Heralding the arrival of one of the most exciting new filmmakers of the era, the mind-bending 2000 thriller remains one of Nolan’s most celebrated movies more than 25 years after its release.
Since then, he’s continued to deliver challenging, thought-provoking films that interrogate complex philosophical concepts, examine the legacies of towering historical figures, and with “The Odyssey,” reimagine ancient Greek epics for the modern age. The man even managed to make a film about complex quantum physics and produce his emotional masterpiece “Interstellar” as a result. Somehow, this decade-spanning cinematic enterprise has also turned Nolan into one of the highest-grossing directors of all time. How has he done it? Well, he has a unique perspective on directing, which he articulated during a 2026 interview in a statement that has now become our quote of the day.
Quote of the Day by Christopher Nolan
Static Media
“You can say it’s the conductor of an orchestra. But really, what the director is, is the audience. I’m there on set going, ‘Does this move me? What is this shot? OK, now what’s the next thing I need to see?'”
Christopher Nolan said this during a 2026 interview with Richard Roeper (via WBEZ Chicago), in which he discussed his approach to making his exhausting yet exhilarating epic “The Odyssey.” It seems to go without saying that a filmmaker should use their discretion to decide what works in a movie and what doesn’t. But Nolan’s specific way of putting it — of drawing a parallel between filmmaker and audience member — demystifies the role of a director, which can often seem nebulous and ill-defined to those on the outside.
Indeed, as he goes on to say, “It’s very difficult to pin down the job of the director, because I don’t photograph the film. I don’t act in the film. I don’t record the sound. I mean, I have done different bits of those jobs on smaller films, but what does a director do?” By giving the almost anti-climactic answer that directors are merely audience members, Nolan encapsulates the spirit of his films which similarly take complex ideas and make them more digestible for mass audiences. Put this way, suddenly, the role of director seems immediately intelligible. Whether he’s speaking directly or via his films, the man has a gift for clarification!
Deeper Meaning of Christopher Nolan’s quote: Trust Your Instincts
Universal Pictures
In his interview with Richard Roeper, Christopher Nolan explains how he prepared for “The Odyssey” by writing “a list of all the things that [he] wanted to see” in a film version of Homer’s poem. That ultimately guided him through the creation of the movie. He took a similar approach to the Dark Knight trilogy. As he told Film Comment, “I got excited about the idea of filling in this interesting gap—no one had ever told the origin story of Batman.” It wasn’t necessarily that he thought such a thing would appeal to others, it was that he wanted to see how Batman became Batman. Likewise, a lifelong fascination with dreams led Nolan to “Inception.” As the director went on to tell Roeper, “You really are making the film for yourself, and then in a paradoxical way you kind of never get to watch it that way because you’re very familiar with it.”
That said, asking yourself what you want to see and then actually coming up with an answer is, for many, easier said than done. You may have doubts about your own sensibility. You may question your instincts or struggle to decide between alternatives. It’s not enough to be an audience member, you have to trust your own opinion. Nolan possesses that clarity of vision, which isn’t necessarily captured in the director=audience formulation.
Nevertheless, Nolan effectively demystifies the role of director, and also delivers a powerful affirmation of the idea that artistic merit comes from following your own vision. That’s an important sentiment for the biggest director in the world to express, especially at a time when our nostalgia-mad monoculture has yielded something as craven as a “Harry Potter” reboot.
More quotes from Christopher Nolan
Melinda Sue Gordon/Universal Pictures
“Every film should have its own world, a logic and feel to it that expands beyond the exact image that the audience is seeing.”
“Breaking rules isn’t interesting. It’s making up new ones that keeps things exciting.”
“You’re never going to learn something as profoundly as when it’s purely out of curiosity.”
“The screen is the same size for every story. A shot of a teacup is the same size as an army coming over the hill. It’s all storytelling.”
“As a filmmaker, you know, no matter how positive things seem, you always notice the bad reviews, you always notice that the things people love are the same things other people hate, so you can’t react to that. To me, it’s all about doing what you believe in.”
Friday, July 17th 2026Tags: ShoesAlessandro Gasparini
Share
Share this post
Subscribe
4 Comments
Add to favourites
||- Begin Content -||
Alessandro Gasparini makes high-end loafers that are slim and light: Blake stitched, but with materials on a par with the likes of an Edward Green or John Lobb.
That’s probably the most important thing to say first, as the prices can seem high compared to some Blake-stitched loafers or Belgians: leather models are £545 and suede £525. That price is largely because of the quality of the materials and make, rather than being a big designer brand.
Interestingly though, Gasparini’s background is in brands, having been a shoe designer at various ones over the years, including Dunhill. Like a few new outfits we’ve covered recently – August Special, Museum Garments – he’s coming to this with experience, and that’s why the product feels so complete, rather than work in progress.
The Moccaso in black leather
The other thing to establish early is that I have a pair (the black smooth leather above) and have been wearing them frequently over the past three months. The fit is probably the best I’ve had in a low-vamp loafer like this, and they were comfortable straight away.
I took my regular shoe size – 9 UK, 43 EU – and apart from a little biting on the joint of my big toe, which always happens with me, they fit very well. I wore them consistently during Pitti (where they are pictured here – with a cotton suit at top and my Whitcomb cotton jacket below) and they did very well.
My slim heel means I often get a lot of heel slippage, particularly in something like Alden, but here it was minimal. Of course, this is personal and depends on your foot, but hopefully the experience is helpful to get a sense of what the shape is like.
The loafers in a semi-smart outfit
Gasparini worked designing women’s shoe lines as well as men’s, but as often happens with these start-ups, struggled to find shoes he wanted.
“Partly that was because of the size of my feet,” he says. “I’m a size 6 and few people go down that far. But also, I liked 1980s styles in particular, Ralph Lauren ones from back then with a low throat line.”
A throat line, I learned, is what bespoke shoemakers also call the top line – the top of the shoe around the ankle and the sides of the feet. This is indeed lower on Gasparini’s shoes, though I’d say it’s barely noticeable. The low vamp – how far the front of the shoe extends up your foot – is more noticeable.
“It felt fresh to me, showing more of the instep,” he says. “I didn’t want to make them look vintage or old, from a particular era, just fresh and elegant. So I started making them myself in the factories I was working with, and people started asking me where they could buy them.”
Vintage 1980s alligator loafers with a low vamp
I’ve been wearing an old pair of 1980s Ralph Lauren loafers quite a lot since I found them on eBay a couple of years ago, which is a coincidence – that’s them pictured above, and they were also in this article on wearing black shoes with jeans.
The style is slightly unusual and more feminine, although that’s also subjective – a lot of those 80s suits that were seen as so masculine were worn with slim, low-vamped Italian shoes.
And I’ve found both my old Ralph ones and these Gasparinis very wearable. In fact, probably more wearable than the Belgian loafers from Baudoin & Lange and others that have been so popular for the last 15 years or so. They feel simpler and more classic.
The Gasparini loafer doesn’t have some of the innovations of the B&L Sagan, but I don’t find it any less comfortable. This is partly due to the quality of the materials – the full leather sock and lining is really nice even against bare skin – but there is also a thin layer of padding on the insole.
The suede loafer with its turned top edge (so no stitching)
“Initially I made the shoes in Milan, because it was easy – I was flying home to Como from London all the time, so I could stop in and see them,” says Gasparini. “But they mostly made women’s shoes there, and you could feel they were too perfect and too delicate.
He moved the production to a small workshop in the Marche, which makes more men’s shoes, and preferred that: “The attitude with womenswear is just always to keep things clean and perfect, but the men’s is about craft that makes things look better with age, which I love.”
He did keep some of the elements from those first designs. For example, the suede loafers have a turned finish on the top line, so there’s no visible seam. I like that as a detail, particularly because it’s so subtle.
Gasparini used a Blake-stitched sole to get the slimness he wanted, but he likes a Goodyear welt as well, and there will be future styles in that style. He also insisted on a hidden channel on the sole, so the stitching isn’t visible, which makes it rather more refined.
Cléa Carlier of @classic_nonchalance in a pair of the loafers
I got the smooth-leather model in black because I know how much I wore those Ralph ones and my EG Piccadilly loafers in that colour.
Compared to Edward Green (or another English Goodyear-welted style) the Gasparini loafers are slightly more casual and easier to wear with warm weather pieces, like a linen trouser – but I’d say the difference is really more a style choice.
It used to be that loafers like this were referred to generically as Italian loafers, because so many came from Italian makers or brands – whereas English and American shoes were welted and chunkier. The division is less stark these days, but that’s still a good way to think of the style. It’s a question of which you prefer, and you probably don’t need both. Though of course there’s nothing stopping you.
Alessandro Gasparini shoes are only currently available on his website; the only wholesale is in Japan. The shoes fit true to size and Simon wears his regular size of 9 UK.
The cotton suit shown at top is from Luca Museo and will be reviewed separately. The white cotton jacket is from Whitcomb & Shaftesbury and was covered in detail recently on two articles, here and here.
You can follow the discussion on Alessandro Gasparini: Refined low-vamp loafers by entering your email address in the box below. You will then receive an email every time a new comment is added. These will also contain a link to a page where you can stop the alerts, and remove all of your related data from the site.
Cantor Fitzgerald and Securitize announced a partnership on July 15 to bring IPOs and follow-on offerings by public companies onto blockchain infrastructure, in an effort to expand tokenization from secondary market trading to the primary capital-raising process of traditional capital markets.
Cantor Turns to Securitize for On-chain IPOs
Cantor Fitzgerald is attempting to forge a new path for traditional capital markets by partnering with Securitize to bring IPOs and follow-on offerings of public companies onto blockchain infrastructure. In their July 15 announcement, the two parties stated that this model will still operate within the framework of traditional capital markets, but will use tokenization to issue, distribute, and manage securities in a more digital manner.
Securitize and Cantor Fitzgerald are bringing IPOs and follow-on offerings onchain.
Together, we’re creating a regulated way for companies to raise capital and conduct IPOs using blockchain-based infrastructure. pic.twitter.com/lWmaXrvT7E
— Securitize (@Securitize) July 15, 2026
If successfully implemented for IPOs, it will touch the very core of equity capital markets, where the primary capital-raising process still relies heavily on multiple layers of intermediaries and highly manual post-trade verification processes. For Cantor, this is a way to transition its ECM and trading capabilities onto a new infrastructure layer; for Securitize, it is an opportunity to push tokenization technology deeper into public securities issuance.
How On-chain IPOs Would Work
According to the announcement, Cantor will be in charge of market structure and distribution, while Securitize will provide the infrastructure for issuing, distributing, and servicing tokenized securities. In this model, the blockchain does not replace the entire IPO process but instead serves as the infrastructure layer for recording, transferring, and managing ownership rights.
Investors will still participate in an offering following the logic of traditional capital markets, but the securities can be represented as tokens on the blockchain. Securitize emphasized that the implementation remains within an “established capital markets framework,” meaning it must still adhere to existing requirements regarding offerings, custody, settlement, and transaction oversight.
The inclusion of Securitize Markets, LLC, an SEC-registered broker-dealer, in this structure demonstrates that the model is designed to operate within the existing regulatory system. The novelty lies in how the infrastructure is more digitalized, not in bypassing securities regulations.
Securitize’s Track Record
Securitize was founded in 2017 and has built a highly distinct position in the tokenized assets sector. According to Securitize, the company now manages over $5 billion in assets as of July 2026 and stated that it has tokenized over $4 billion in assets. Among its most prominent products is BlackRock’s BUIDL, a tokenized treasury fund that has been closely watched by the market over the past year.
The company also recently went public under the ticker SECZ following a SPAC merger deal involving Cantor Fitzgerald, with a valuation of approximately $1.25 billion, according to previously reported sources. Securitize shares rose following the partnership news with Cantor, showing that investors are viewing this agreement as part of the company’s expansion story, rather than just a media-focused announcement.
Why Wall Street Is Moving Toward Tokenization
The Cantor-Securitize agreement comes at a time when Wall Street is ramping up broad-scale tokenization testing. The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported that the DTCC is launching a trial to tokenize stocks and Treasury bonds with nearly 40 participating institutions, including JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, BlackRock, Vanguard, and the NYSE. The participation of many major names indicates that tokenization is gradually shifting from an experimental topic to a direction for upgrading financial infrastructure.
Wall Street is interested in tokenization because traditional issuance and trading processes still pass through many intermediary layers, creating friction in ownership registration, settlement, and distribution. Tokenization is expected to reduce these frictions, increase tracking capabilities, and expand distribution reach while remaining within existing regulatory frameworks.
What to Watch Next
This model will only be proven once a first issuer actually uses it. The agreement currently only opens up a path for on-chain IPOs and follow-on offerings, while the actual impact will only become clear once the first transaction occurs.
Operational details will also determine how far the model can go, from voting rights, dividends, and transfer restrictions to final settlement.
Another point to watch is whether on-chain offerings will start with follow-on offerings or go straight into primary IPOs. If follow-on offerings prove effective, it could serve as a stepping stone for larger deals later on.