Brandon Donnelly
Daily insights for city builders. Published since 2013 by Toronto-based real estate developer Brandon Donnelly.
Brandon Donnelly
Daily insights for city builders. Published since 2013 by Toronto-based real estate developer Brandon Donnelly.
Utah got a new state flag over the weekend that looks like this:

And I immediately thought of this TED Talk by Roman Mars. For those of you who don't know, Roman is the creator of 99% Invisible and a great lover of well-designed flags. His general rules of thumb are to keep things super simple and to use meaningful symbolism. And I'm fairly certain that he knows what he's talking about because, in his talk, he refers to the Canadian flag as the gold standard for flags.
In the case of Utah's new flag, the symbols are this. The blue at the top is meant to represent Utah's wide-open skies and lakes. The white in the middle represents its snowy mountains (of course). The red stripe is meant to represent Southern Utah's red canyon landscape. The hexagon is meant to reference a honeycomb. And finally, the beehive is there because, well, Utah is the beehive state.
Utah has long enjoyed this reference to beehives. Supposedly, it was early pioneers who started throwing around this reference because they believed it symbolized working together, perseverance, and overall industry. And that's why the state's official motto is, "Industry." So I'd say that they used/kept the right meaningful symbolism.
Though when I first saw the new flag, I immediately wondered whether the hexagon and honeycomb could have been made just a little simpler. Was the yellow fimbriation, for example, really needed within the blue hexagon? But the more I look at it, the more I like it and the more I think that Roman Mars would be happy with how this turned out. What are your thoughts?


Art and culture are powerful tools for city building. Pictured here is a laneway in downtown Detroit that is known as "The Belt." It is called this because of its location in the city's former garment district, but today, it has been redefined as a cultural alley. In it, and deep within unmarked basements, you'll find venues like

I have written about Bright Moments before. They are a digital art company exploring the intersection of NFTs and real-world experiences. It started as a popup gallery in Venice Beach California, where artists could show new work and where collectors could buy IRL. They then created their own pixel art collection called CryptoVenetians. It included 1,000 different people-centered NFTs by artist QianQian. Since then, they have gone on to host events and create new CryptoCitizen collections in New York, Berlin, London, Mexico City, Tokyo, and Buenos Aires. And this week they were in Paris.
(I don't know why they skipped over Toronto!)
https://twitter.com/seth/status/1761302227216376000?s=20
Their end goal is to create a complete collection of 10,000 NFTs, most of which are tied to a specific city. (The only one that isn't is their CryptoGalacticans collection.) What's obviously great about this approach is that it's a way to promote digital art and onboard new users into the crypto space. They are literally going around the world, throwing parties, and saying "look how cool and fun this whole crypto thing is." At the same time, it also links the digital and the physical, which I believe is fundamental. We're social beings and web3 will never change that.
The other interesting thing about Bright Moments is that they are structured as a decentralized autonomous organization (or DOA). That's like a company, except that governance is distributed to its tokenholders and it's all managed on a blockchain. But it still operates as a company and it can raise money like one too. In 2021,
Utah got a new state flag over the weekend that looks like this:

And I immediately thought of this TED Talk by Roman Mars. For those of you who don't know, Roman is the creator of 99% Invisible and a great lover of well-designed flags. His general rules of thumb are to keep things super simple and to use meaningful symbolism. And I'm fairly certain that he knows what he's talking about because, in his talk, he refers to the Canadian flag as the gold standard for flags.
In the case of Utah's new flag, the symbols are this. The blue at the top is meant to represent Utah's wide-open skies and lakes. The white in the middle represents its snowy mountains (of course). The red stripe is meant to represent Southern Utah's red canyon landscape. The hexagon is meant to reference a honeycomb. And finally, the beehive is there because, well, Utah is the beehive state.
Utah has long enjoyed this reference to beehives. Supposedly, it was early pioneers who started throwing around this reference because they believed it symbolized working together, perseverance, and overall industry. And that's why the state's official motto is, "Industry." So I'd say that they used/kept the right meaningful symbolism.
Though when I first saw the new flag, I immediately wondered whether the hexagon and honeycomb could have been made just a little simpler. Was the yellow fimbriation, for example, really needed within the blue hexagon? But the more I look at it, the more I like it and the more I think that Roman Mars would be happy with how this turned out. What are your thoughts?


Art and culture are powerful tools for city building. Pictured here is a laneway in downtown Detroit that is known as "The Belt." It is called this because of its location in the city's former garment district, but today, it has been redefined as a cultural alley. In it, and deep within unmarked basements, you'll find venues like

I have written about Bright Moments before. They are a digital art company exploring the intersection of NFTs and real-world experiences. It started as a popup gallery in Venice Beach California, where artists could show new work and where collectors could buy IRL. They then created their own pixel art collection called CryptoVenetians. It included 1,000 different people-centered NFTs by artist QianQian. Since then, they have gone on to host events and create new CryptoCitizen collections in New York, Berlin, London, Mexico City, Tokyo, and Buenos Aires. And this week they were in Paris.
(I don't know why they skipped over Toronto!)
https://twitter.com/seth/status/1761302227216376000?s=20
Their end goal is to create a complete collection of 10,000 NFTs, most of which are tied to a specific city. (The only one that isn't is their CryptoGalacticans collection.) What's obviously great about this approach is that it's a way to promote digital art and onboard new users into the crypto space. They are literally going around the world, throwing parties, and saying "look how cool and fun this whole crypto thing is." At the same time, it also links the digital and the physical, which I believe is fundamental. We're social beings and web3 will never change that.
The other interesting thing about Bright Moments is that they are structured as a decentralized autonomous organization (or DOA). That's like a company, except that governance is distributed to its tokenholders and it's all managed on a blockchain. But it still operates as a company and it can raise money like one too. In 2021,

This alley isn't brand new. It was conceptualized by the art gallery Library Street Collective a few years after it was founded in 2012. But I think it remains an excellent example of at least two things. One, Detroit is cool. It really has been going through a cultural renaissance. (You should also know that Detroit is the birthplace of techno.) And two, The Belt remains a perfect example of what is possible with our underutilized urban spaces.
Virtually every city has alleys exactly like this one. But too few are doing something as cool with them.
Image: The Belt & Deluxx Fluxx
In the case of Bright Moments, its tokenholders are the people who own a CryptoCitizen. These are the people who get to vote on how the organization is run. They can also earn money if they do things like host a community dinner or organize a local meetup, with the idea being that, as an organization, you want to encourage this sort of bottom-up participation and innovation. I find it fascinating to watch this new governance and entity structure emerge, and it will only continue to evolve.
I've been following Bright Moments more or less since they dropped the CryptoVenetians. I thought about jumping in then, but I figured I would wait to see if there would be a CryptoTorontonian. That would obviously be my number one choice. But once they announced their final list of cities, and Toronto wasn't on it, I grumpily decided I would instead wait for a CryptoParisian. And since this week was Paris, it was time.
I now hold CryptoParisian #112:

I like that it has the Pont Neuf and that the human is wearing sunglasses.
This means that I now have a small ownership stake in the Bright Moments DOA. So presumably I'll soon have a say in important and serious matters! It also means that when they launch their final CryptoCitizen collection in Venice, Italy this spring (nice work going full circle here), there is a chance I might get airdropped a CryptoVenetian. It's a random process, so whatever. I also know that it's easy to look at this pixelated Parisian and think, "WTF, Brandon." But something new is building here. And I'm sure that all of the folks who were in Paris this week can testify to that.

This alley isn't brand new. It was conceptualized by the art gallery Library Street Collective a few years after it was founded in 2012. But I think it remains an excellent example of at least two things. One, Detroit is cool. It really has been going through a cultural renaissance. (You should also know that Detroit is the birthplace of techno.) And two, The Belt remains a perfect example of what is possible with our underutilized urban spaces.
Virtually every city has alleys exactly like this one. But too few are doing something as cool with them.
Image: The Belt & Deluxx Fluxx
In the case of Bright Moments, its tokenholders are the people who own a CryptoCitizen. These are the people who get to vote on how the organization is run. They can also earn money if they do things like host a community dinner or organize a local meetup, with the idea being that, as an organization, you want to encourage this sort of bottom-up participation and innovation. I find it fascinating to watch this new governance and entity structure emerge, and it will only continue to evolve.
I've been following Bright Moments more or less since they dropped the CryptoVenetians. I thought about jumping in then, but I figured I would wait to see if there would be a CryptoTorontonian. That would obviously be my number one choice. But once they announced their final list of cities, and Toronto wasn't on it, I grumpily decided I would instead wait for a CryptoParisian. And since this week was Paris, it was time.
I now hold CryptoParisian #112:

I like that it has the Pont Neuf and that the human is wearing sunglasses.
This means that I now have a small ownership stake in the Bright Moments DOA. So presumably I'll soon have a say in important and serious matters! It also means that when they launch their final CryptoCitizen collection in Venice, Italy this spring (nice work going full circle here), there is a chance I might get airdropped a CryptoVenetian. It's a random process, so whatever. I also know that it's easy to look at this pixelated Parisian and think, "WTF, Brandon." But something new is building here. And I'm sure that all of the folks who were in Paris this week can testify to that.
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