Action! Horror! Comedy! Romance! The Entertainment Video Collection offers hundreds of films ranging from lighthearted popcorn flicks to thought-provoking dramas, providing Films On Demand subscribers access to movies intended to be viewed for pleasure and entertainment. Plus, students looking for entertaining movies while on summer or winter break can enjoy this commercial-free streaming video source from off campus, ensuring steady usage throughout the year.
This collection is available as a single-subject collection or as part of the Films On Demand Master Academic Video Package. Some Entertainment Video Collection titles contain mature themes or content; viewer discretion is advised.
The Pacifica 4-piece collection features a clean, inviting style that will blend effortlessly in your home. This contemporary collection is perfect for family board games, general entertaining, lounging or watching the big game. With solid New Zealand Radiata wood construction and tops crafted from durable Havea hardwood and coated with a tough water resistant finish, these quality pieces are built to last. The console, coffee table and end tables feature areas for both storage and display. The coffee table has an open bay on top that beautifully integrates with convenient two-way storage drawers below, while the end tables include glass doors on both sides. Expertly crafted with functionality in mind but without any compromise in style, the Pacifica 4-piece Entertainment Collection is a stunning addition to your home.
Organize and display your multimedia equipment in Pacifica style. Constructed of Solid New Zealand Radiata and featuring a solid Rubberwood top, this media console is built to last. Strong, beautiful and timeless appeal, the Pacifica Media Console is a perfect fit for your home.
The Pacifica End Table perfectly frames your sofa to help make a complete living room. With glass doors on two sides, this end table conveniently displays books and magazines or keeps items like remotes and lamps nearby. Made of Radiata pine and beautifully stained in a rich espresso finish, these end tables look at place in any home.
Autodesk Media & Entertainment Collection is software for creating 3D animations and effects. This donation provides a one-year subscription to the Media & Entertainment Collection for one user to install and run the software on a single computer and 25 GB of A360 cloud storage. This collection includes Maya, 3ds Max, Mudbox, and other applications. See a full list of software included with this collection.
If you have experience with 3D modeling, sculpting, motion capture editing, advanced character animation, and visual effects, you can use the Media & Entertainment Collection to design and create 3D entertainment content and provide entertainment creation training to constituents.
This product provides enhanced access to technical support resources, including priority phone assistance from Autodesk support specialists. Account support is available on Autodesk Account. Additional learning resources and community forums are available through the Autodesk Knowledge Network, the Autodesk YouTube Channel, Autodesk University, the Autodesk Sustainability Workshop, and Autodesk Design Academy. The Autodesk Authorized Training Center (ATC) provides fee-based support including courses and certification.
You may request this product through Charity Digital Exchange each year to receive additional one-year subscriptions. Wait until your original subscription has fewer than 30 days left before you request this product again.
Organizations that have purchased an Autodesk product directly from Autodesk within the past three years will need to request an exception from Autodesk before requesting this product from Charity Digital Exchange. See the Autodesk FAQ for more information.
Entertainment has been a staple of Las Vegas since the opening of the El Rancho Hotel and Casino on Highway 91 in 1941. The steady opening of hotels that followed such as the Last Frontier (1942), Flamingo (1946), Thunderbird (1948), Desert Inn (1950), and Sands (1952), among others, provided an opportunity for hundreds of performers to ply their trade on the stages of these hotels in the new desert oasis. From individual headliners in casino showrooms to lounge acts to the fabulous production shows that made the showgirl a Las Vegas icon, entertainment on the Las Vegas Strip has taken many forms. The history of Las Vegas entertainment can be discovered in a variety of formats in Special Collections from photographs and manuscript collections to periodicals and promotional material.
Historical photographs provide visual documentation of individual entertainers on stage and in publicity shots around the hotel, as well as images of dancers and showgirls and the production shows that made them famous such as the Folies Bergere, Lido de Paris, Casino de Paris, Hallelujah Hollywood, etc.
Please note that a number of manuscript collections also include photographs that may not be listed individually. A large number of photographs have been digitized and can be found online in the Dino at the Sands digital collection or Showgirls digital collection.
Biographical and vertical files in Special Collections can also provide insight into entertainment and entertainers in Las Vegas. Of particular interest is a vertical file on Dancers which can be found in the UNLV Libraries Collection of Regional History Files. Request files at the front desk in Special Collections and Archives.
Oral histories of showgirls and dancers, musicians, and other performers provide personal stories of individual careers in Las Vegas entertainment from the 1940s onward. Of particular interest are the oral histories of entertainers from the Arnold Shaw Collection.
Looking to stay on top of the latest news and trends? With MyDeloitte you'll never miss out on the information you need to lead. Simply link your email or social profile and select the newsletters and alerts that matter most to you.
Visit the Deloitte Center for Technology, Media & Telecommunications for more research on the most complex issues facing the technology, media, entertainment, semiconductor, telecommunications, and sports sectors.
The Walter J. Brown Media Archives and Peabody Awards Collection has a wide array of collection materials related to Georgia available in digital format via the Digital Library of Georgia. Highlights include newsfilm from several television stations around state, most notably WSB in Atlanta. Follow this link for a full overview and links to collection materials:
The Walter J. Brown Media Archive & Peabody Awards Collection was started in 1995 and currently preserves over 250,000 titles in film, video, audiotape, transcription disks, and other recording formats dating from the 1920s to the present. Our mission is to preserve, protect, and provide access to the moving image and sound materials that reflect the collective memory of broadcasting and the history of the state of Georgia and its people.
The Peabody Awards Collection contains nearly every entry for the first major broadcast award given in the United States. Entries begin in 1940 for radio and 1948 for television, and we receive at least 1,000 new entries every year --programs by local, national, cable, and international producers. The collection provides a cultural cross-section of television from its infancy to the present day, featuring news, documentary, entertainment, educational, and children's programming. Georgia history is highlighted in three newsfilm collections. The WSB Newsfilm Collection focuses on Atlanta but covers the entire Southeast; the WALB Newsfilm Collection contains raw news footage from Albany and surrounding areas from 1961 to 1978; and the WRDW Newsfilm Collection features footage of the Augusta area from 1961-1976.
Our non-broadcast collection of amateur film, video, and audiotape highlighting Georgia people, places, and musicians includes the Andrew Avery Home Movie Collection; the Kaliska-Greenblatt Home Movie Collection; the Georgia Folklore Collection of field recordings of Georgia folk musicians made by the Georgia Folklore Society; and the Foxfire Collection, among others.
Students wishing to use this footage must sign a licensing agreement with Media Archives. This agreement obligates students to give proper credit to the Archives for footage used and to renegotiate the licensing agreement if other uses beyond coursework are desired.
The Digital Library of Georgia is a GALILEO initiative based at the University of Georgia Libraries that collaborates with Georgia's Libraries, archives, museums, and other institutions of education and culture to provide access to key information resources on Georgia history, culture, and life. This primary mission is accomplished through the ongoing development, maintenance, and preservation of digital collections and online digital library resources. The Digital Library of Georgia also provides digital library and micrographic services, and supports the instruction, research, and service missions of GALILEO and the University System of Georgia through collaboration with university faculty, students, and staff, and through participation on local and national levels in the development of digital library standards, practice, and technology. The Digital Library facilitates cooperative ventures with other organizations and provides leadership for cooperative digital initiatives throughout the state.
b1e95dc632