- published: 01 Mar 2016
- views: 493
One Cup is an Australian short documentary film, produced and released by Scarab Studio and Mutiny Media. Its crew included Dominic Allen, Joel Betts, Nicholas Hansen, Greta Costello, Dylan Tromp.
Filmed in the mountains of Timor-Leste in January 2006, One Cup depicts the struggles and health concerns of coffee farming communities in Timor-Leste, Asia. Featuring then Foreign Minister José Ramos-Horta, Oxfam Program Director Keryn Clark and Timorese coffee farmers, One Cup attempts to illustrate benefits offered by the international fair trade system.
Unlike the documentary film Black Gold (2006), which looks at the issues around fair trade One Cup attempts to show positive benefits of the fair trade system.
Capital One Financial Corp. (NYSE: COF) is a U.S.-based bank holding company specializing in credit cards, home loans, auto loans, banking and savings products. A member of the Fortune 500, the company helped pioneer the mass marketing of credit cards in the early 1990s, and it is now the fourth-largest customer of the United States Postal Service and has the fifth-largest deposit portfolio in the United States.[clarification needed]
It has its corporate offices in Tysons Corner, unincorporated Fairfax County, Virginia, near McLean.
Capital One was founded in 1988 by Richard Fairbank and Nigel Morris as a spin-off of Richmond, Virginia-based Signet Banking Corp (which was subsequently acquired in 1997 by First Union Corporation, which merged with Wachovia in 2001 and is now part of Wells Fargo).
Capital One entered the retail banking market with its acquisition of New Orleans, Louisiana-based Hibernia National Bank in 2005 and Melville, New York-based North Fork Bancorporation in 2006. North Fork Bank and Superior Savings of New England, both subsidiaries of North Fork Bancorporation, began using the branding of Capital One Bank on March 10, 2008. On December 4, 2008, Capital One announced it would purchase Chevy Chase Bank for US$520 million.