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Becky
Time is on his side, and on his sweatband: Q&A with Jonathan Stephens of TIMEBANDITS Watches
by Becky - October 8, 2007 - 7:18 PM

Jonathan Stephens, designer and CEO of TIMEBANDITS Watches, talks about his art, his cosmology, and his X-Files days.

Last week all my posts were about bandits. What do you like about the idea of bandits as part of your brand?

I like the idea of bandits in TIMEBANDITS because it represents “one who is Superior to Time,” and it means that you are a bandit of time–you have the ability to control your own time in your own universe.dd

I came up with the name TIMEBANDITS after obsessively brainstorming for the perfect watch brand name that would fit the kind of designs I had envisioned–I’m talking about pages and pages of names in a notebook. It’s funny: after all of these pages with hundreds of names, I kept coming back to TIMEBANDITS. As if I was drawn to it somehow. It just completely made sense to me.

Do people assume you’ve had some epiphany while watching the Terry Gilliam film of the same name?

The concept of my watch line really has nothing to do with the TIMEBANDITS movie from 1981. Although Terry Gilliam is a visionary director I admire, the watch line is a completely separate entity in my eyes. I do get that a lot from those knowing fans of the ggTIMEBANDITS movie, “Hey isn’t that a movie?”; and I say “Why yes, it is,” and then the conversation moves on to the concept and design of the watches. There might be a correlation; however, I never really focus on it because I’m always thinking of crazy new watches to make.

Read on for a chance to win a free watch as Jonathan solicits your own encounters with the supernatural…

You worked on the X-Files for a number of years. How do you think your time there has influenced your work and your aesthetic as a designer?

By having the fortunate opportunity of working on The X-Files series for 4 seasons, I truly believe that I developed into a fine-tuned, hard working artist. I worked as the assistant to Kim Manners who was the main director and Co-Executive Producer of the show, and I also worked as a still photographer. Kim was my filmmaking mentor. Although I may not be directing film now, I learned life lessons from Kim. He taught me how to be focused, to have vision when communicatingimages-4.jpg with others, and most important of all – to start and finish an ambitious project with absolute clarity.

Regarding my aesthetic in my watch designs, visual art, and photography, The X-Files had a huge impact on me. A lot of my photography on the show consisted of taking forensic photos of bodies at crime scenes. If you look at my work, you can tell that even my hyper-surreal color images even have a haunting quality to them. I’m very much into the dark, haunting, crazy, carnival, colorful side of imagery. I am the opposite of a black and white photographer. I like to push colors to their limits. I like to take shots of artificial light at night. I like painting with long exposures of light. That’s my kinda thing.

Do you think it’s important to be punctual, and do you think wearing a watch increases punctuality? There have been arguments that cell phones make people more likely to be late–they’ll call and let you know, but they’ll still be late.

To be honest, yes. I do think it’s important to be punctual and have absolute respect for the other party.

Yes, by wearing a TIMEBANDITS watch, you will definitely be more punctual. I’m always punctual–ohhhh that’s because I wear a watch on each wrist–he, he…I mean I have to self-promote, and besides I have a problem with just wearing one watch style. I feel like I have to be diverse.

I think the functionality of being able to tell the time at any given minute absolutely provides structure in one’s life. Now we have smart-phones and PDA devices that help to consolidate structure, but I think there will be even more fusion in the future and people will be able to do anything with a device on their wrist or in their hand. It is my firm belief that an individual should have a blueprint–a script, if you will–and then know when to stray off it–but see, the blueprint is always there to come back to; it’s a train that you inevitably have to jump back on, because that’s the beat that the rest of this planet is moving to.

Do you remember the first watch you had as a kid?

Yes, it was a Texas Instruments black digital watch–way retro-looking. Believe it or not, I still have it somewhere in one of my old watch collections.

Do you have a story about sleeping in/not hearing your alarm clock?

Yeah, when I first moved to LA, I was a PA on a Music Video shoot. I showed up 3 hours late to the shoot in the middle of the desert with the camera truck–oooops. Needless to say, I was fired on the spot–the producers didn’t even see me. They were at base camp.images-31.jpg

Do you think it’s possible to steal time?

Yes, you can steal time. You can lose time. You can gain time. You have the ability to perceive time any way you like. You are the creator of your own universe.

Jost Burgi invented the minute hand in 1577–it was part of a clock made for the astronomer Tycho Brahe, who needed an uber-accurate clock. I’m wondering if there’s anyone you think is the Tycho Brahe of our day…

I think Stephen Hawking is the Tycho Brahe of our day. He is looking at the bigger picture of time, space, and matter. Because we have to remember that the Earth is only a small part of the bigger equation that makes everything move the way it does. I can’t even imagine what future generations will learn about the further realizations of time and how our planet relates to other relative matter in the universe.

I love Stephen Hawking. We have the same birthday. (uh, Beat.) When do you think time moves slowest?

When you’re 8 years old in 3rd grade waiting for the last bell to ring.

How much time does it take to make a TIMEBANDITS watch?

Eeeehhhhhh a couple of hours.

The first person reported to wear a wristwatch was Blaise Pascal. Who was the first person (besides you) to wear a TIMEBANDITS watch?

It was Sheryl Crow. She bought two–one for her and one for a friend.

Which X-Files cast member do you think had the biggest issues with the nature of time?

Obviously, CSM. images5.jpgThe infamous Cigarette Smoking Man played by William B.Davis. He was dying of cancer and had limited time on the planet. He wanted to work with the alien colonists and the human scientists at providing a solution for the survival of the human race under the domination of the coming colonization.

Most of your watches come with sweat bands. What do you like about sweat bands?

I came up with the idea for the sweatband watch purely out of a comfort reason. It is absolutely the most comfortable watch you’ll ever put on. I also was drawn to the width of a sweatband and the wow factor that came with it–ok this watch is noticeable. I still get people stopping me all of the time asking–”Hey man, where did you get that watch?” Another thing I like about sweatbands is they take me right back to the 70’s. They just have this retro vibe about them.

How do you feel about sweat?

I actually sweat pretty easily. I’m more of a fall/winter person. To tell you the truth, our sweatband watches keep you really warm during the cold weather. So that’s an added bonus.

Jonathan would love to know a) your most beloved X-Files episode and b) which of his watches is your favorite…And, in the spirit of X-Files-dom, he’s even agreed to comp a watch to the mental_floss reader who shares the most convincing/harrowing real life supernatural occurrence.

Comments (3)
  1. ok, i’ll go first. my story’s kind of long though. it was the end of the summer before i headed off to college. i was hanging out with my friend after a movie. we were looking for something to do and someone had told us about a supposedly haunted house nearby. we drove to go see it, but as we approached the house down a long, curving, dirt driveway, we both broke out screaming at the same time for no other reason (that we could see) than being squealy high school girls. we couldn’t even see the house and we freaked, turned the car around, and hauled tail home. about halfway home, i distinctly felt a left hand on my right shoulder, and panciked for a split-second, but then felt fine. i told my friend about it, but she was just freaked out.

    not too freaky…yet.

    i went to sleep that night and had a dream about the exact same situation. only this time, as we came down the driveway a man came running at the car screaming “leave us alone! why won’t you leave us alone?!” just as we turned the car around, he reached the car and was beating on the hood still screaming, and he chased us down the road. the left hand i felt on my right shoulder turned out to be my grandfather, who had passed away a few months before, and he said “don’t worry, he can’t follow you.”

    if i’m lyin’, i’m dyin’.

    i like watch H45BK.

  2. One time, I was sleeping in my bed when I felt a hand running down the side of my leg. And it felt weird, but I didn’t really think of it as weird at the time (I was still half-asleep at that point). A couple seconds later I happened to glance outside my balcony doors and noticed a little girl standing on a ladder. I did a double take and she was gone. That was all it took to get my heart and mind racing for the entire night.

    I think the whole thing was a dream, but it was still spooky.

    Anyways, I LOVE X-FILES!! One of my favorite episodes has to be “all things.” Unfortunately, Kim Manners didn’t direct that one.

    Like the watches, but fave is d45s

  3. My favorite X-Files episode is Ice from season 1. I was such an X-Files nerd. In addition to the VHS tapes, which only had 4 episodes each as compared to today’s full season DVDs, I also was a big fan of the books. I recall one about an atomic bomb testing on an atoll that went wrong and how a survivor used the spirits of his family to exact revenge on those responsible. My favorite Kim Manners episode was Humbug.

    My favorite watch is definitely D36P. It is very 70s/early 80s prepster and instantly reminds me of my favorite outfit from early elementary school.

    My supernatural experience occurred when I was in high school. Some friends and I were out for a hike. We were big outdoor nerds and just learned how to orienteer properly with a compass so we went off trail to see how complex of a route we could create without getting lost. All of a sudden we came upon a house. It was obviously abandoned but not in terrible shape. It appeared to be early 1900’s architecture and was mansion by the size standards of those days. We explored inside and found some left behind old antique furniture. There were old food containers in the kitchen like cereal boxes. The house looked like someone had left abruptly In the basement we opened the electrical switchbox and noticed some dates scratched on paper. The dates were from the late 80s. What spooked us the most was when leaving we realized the house had no road coming to it. Not even an overgrown road. It was surrounded completely by old growth trees and we were about 9 miles in to the closest road. The dates we saw in the house did not match at all with the rate of vegetation growth. Trees just do not grow that fast in 8 years. Being nerds we later searched county records and could find no account of the house. We hiked back to the area a few times over the next few months but could never find the house again.

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