Michael Cosentino

Interactive Design & User Experience
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Michael is a specialist in interactive design and user experience based in Oakland, California, by way of London, Paris, and Brooklyn, NY. He is the currently the Design Director of gdgt in San Francisco.

Michael started his professional career in 1995 as tech support person and assistant system administrator at the dialup internet provider Planet Earth Communications in New York City. There he learned system administration and programming for the web, and in 1996 was hired at Robert Greenberg Associates. While being hired as a web developer, he often assisted in interactive design and continued to move in that direction, focusing on ways to bring the two together.

He achieved his goal in 1997 when he was hired at CBS' fledgling New Media division as an interactive designer and developer. After working on numerous high profile projects, including a top-down site redesign for The Late Show with David Letterman, he was promotoed to the role of Senior Art Director for the marketing and entertainment division of CBS.com. In late 1999, he left CBS to co-found the interactive agency Fistful of Digits.

Acting as partner and creative director at F.O.D., he designed and oversaw the design of a wide range of projects for clients such as FOX, Comedy Central, Revlon, and Black Entertainment Television, among others. In mid 2001 he resigned from his post and ventured out on his own, soon joining HBO and becoming the lead designer for The Sopranos website which launched later in the year.

After consulting at various companies and interactive agencies, including Sporting News where he designed interactive television applications, and POP and Company, where he designed Flash-based games and companion sites for television shows, he joined the New York Times. In 2006, he relocated to Paris, France where he was the Director of Design and User Experience at The International Herald Tribune's site. Today he finds himself designing interactive experiences in the heart of San Francisco.

In addition to the work he does for his career, Michael has also been a street photographer since 2000. He maintained the popular and innovative photoblog Meccapixel.com (formerly Brooklynkid.com), has been published in Gawker and Gothamist, and has participated in panel discussions at the Apple store in SoHo, NYC. In 2001 he appeared on CTV Canada's TalkTV to discuss weblog culture in the wake of 9/11.

Today he is an active contributor to Flickr.com, Twitter, and Facebook. In Paris he shared a blog with his wife Rion Nakaya at mikeandrion.com. He is also the former Editor-in-Chief of Parisist.com, part of the Gothamist global blog network.

In 1997 he designed the graffiti-styled typeface Brooklyn Kid and made it available freely for personal and commercial use. It has become one of the most highly downloaded fonts in the world and has been used in myriad print, video, and online projects for such companies as MTV, VH1, Comedy Central, Cartoon Network, Activision, Electronic Arts, McDonalds, Altoids, and many more.

You may contact Michael here.

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