Monthly Archive for July, 2007

Vignettes

Vimeo, my video shar­ing site of choice, has a run­ning project called 5 Vignettes1. I really like this project because:
1. You have to find the most inter­est­ing five sec­onds of each video
2. The out­come is often very eso­teric
3. The videos are short and retain the inter­est of the viewers

With­out fur­ther ado here are my Vignettes for any occa­sion:

jenna

I love sum­mer (vignettes)

la
A Day in LA Vignette Style

marla
ID4 Vignettes

laura
5 Vignettes

1“Great idea for a project, I applaud you! Jim Jar­musch would be proud of us!!!!!!!!”
-DrPi­ranha

Sunrise

I remem­ber learn­ing in Psy­chol­ogy that dreams some­times act as a way to process our day. Let’s say my dreams don’t always fol­low this model, nei­ther does this one com­pletely, but this dream was pretty close to that over­all idea. So here we go…

The premise was quite sim­i­lar to 28 Days Later. There was a lot of wan­der­ing and evad­ing the “infected.” I don’t remem­ber who exactly was with me, but we were wan­der­ing around L.A. This could have been the sound­track:

I don’t remem­ber where the story began, but the ear­li­est mem­ory I have was that we were in a huge park­ing lot out­side a smaller ver­sion of the Uni­ver­sal Stu­dios tram ride/the tun­nels on the 110 free­way. We walked inside and it was very sim­i­lar to an under­ground sub­way sys­tem for walk­ing. Dalas V. was our host for the tun­nels. It was scary because tons of the “infected” were in the tun­nels and we had to go through in a white can­vas jeep/VW van, looked like some­thing that would be parked at an oasis in the desert.

At one point, we met Bar­bara Jean (Nashville) at her run down man­sion on Mul­hol­land Drive. When we were on her porch I noticed one of the “infected” was this one, but she was no longer “infected”. Another “infected” scratched my thumb, but I was OK. Bar­bara Jean gave us the keys to her Volvo so we could get away from the zom­bies. But she lied to us because she didn’t have any Volvo. There wasn’t any car that had key­less entry at all. We walked around her sta­ble look­ing at all these old dusty cars. We found a Lexus with no engine. Her ser­vants told us there was no car, so we walked off.

I woke up around this time, turned off the fan, and saw the sun ris­ing. There was def­i­nitely more, but it’s been too many hours now to remem­ber any more.

Ten Thousand

I joined Last.fm as a new years res­o­lu­tion of sorts. I was inspired by Kottke’s post, and, in gen­eral, my love for stats. So, need­less to say, I’ve been check­ing up on my Last.fm account from time to time. Today, some­thing very excit­ing hap­pened: Between Jan­u­ary 3, 2007 and now (July 16, 2007 at 4:17 pm) I have lis­tened to 10,000 songs.1 If I con­tinue at this cur­rent rate it will take me almost 6 years to get to 100,000, the next big mile­stone I guess. Any­ways, here’s the stats.

My top 20 artists so far this year are as fol­lows:2
1. The Blow
2. YACHT
3. Mirah
4. Bob Dylan
5. Deer­hoof
6. The Right­eous and Har­mo­nious Fists (rep­re­sent!)
7. Manta
8. Cat Power
9. Adrian Orange
10. Dear Nora

11. The Bad­ger King
12. Wu-Tang Clan
13. Bobby Bird­man
14. Tom Waits
15. Prodigy (of Mobb Deep)
16. Laven­der Dia­mond
17. Dirty Pro­jec­tors
18. High Places
19. CocoRosie
20. Belle and Sebastian

None of these are really sur­pris­ing… If there was a “Top Time Elapsed” I think Pub­lic Radio Inter­na­tional would be higher (cur­rently 29) up in the list because all the pod­casts I lis­ten to are around an hour each.

Some fun graph­i­cal rep­re­sen­ta­tions:
my main­stream per­cent­age
And a weird gooey graph

1This includes my time at work (where I lis­ten the most, 8–5 Monday-Friday since the sum­mer began) and home (Far less than work lately because I’m at home less. Plus lately, with no inter­net con­nec­tion at home, I don’t know how much is being tracked). This does not include my iPod (I know you can track your iPod lis­ten­ing, but I haven’t got­ten around to it yet, plus I haven’t really used my iPod much lately).

2Not includ­ing the cur­rent month.

I Heart Public Radio

I lis­ten to a lot of Pub­lic Radio, espe­cially at work. Here’s what I choose to lis­ten to on a daily basis. And why.

Fair Game (web­site/iTunes)
Fair Game plays a huge part of the first half of my work day. Not that the show is that long. I look for­ward to Fair Game so much. It’s funny as hell. It’s like the Daily Show for the radio, but dif­fer­ent. The show is def­i­nitely aimed at the younger gen­er­a­tion. And let me tell you, we can’t get enough. Also, Faith Salie is cute as hell. “We like her air­headed gig­gles jux­ta­posed with astute commentary.”

This Amer­i­can Life (web­site/iTunes)
The best part of Mon­days is com­ing to work and lis­ten­ing to This Amer­i­can Life. So beau­ti­ful, so tragic. I’m sure you’ve already lis­tened to or at least heard of This Amer­i­can Life, so I’ll move on.

The Writer’s Almanac (web­site/iTunes)
Your daily dose of Gar­ri­son. Com­bines his­toric fac­toids and poetry, all wrapped together in 5:20.

Radio Lab (web­site/iTunes)
I recently dis­cov­ered Radio Lab (via This Amer­i­can Life). At the begin­ning of the pod­cast the announcer says: “Radio Lab is a lim­ited run series.” So far, online, there are only 5 episodes. This show is great because it has the pro­duc­tion qual­ity of This Amer­i­can Life and is like Myth­Busters. Not really like Myth­Busters, but is based on inter­est­ing exper­i­ments and expe­ri­ences. The show leaves you with the feel­ing that life is beautiful.

KPCC (web­site/iTunes)
When­ever. Ran out of pod­casts? Lis­ten to stream­ing Pasadena Pub­lic Awe­some. And, if you give them money, you get a tote.

My Karass

Most of life, in gen­eral, is com­prised of peo­ple act­ing weird. Even in the most sin­cere cases, life is like this. But that’s the big idea isn’t it? Every­thing is silly and can­not be taken seri­ously ever. But at the same time, every­thing is sacred.

This next part is espe­cially for Alisha and Laura, but is equally impor­tant for any­one who loves old men as their own offspring:

“I wish I’d writ­ten Our Town. I wish I’d invented Rollerblades.“
–Kurt Von­negut, Time­quake

SPOILER ALERT*: I can’t really talk about this with­out ruin­ing the surprise.

I have been con­sid­er­ing my karass today. (All of this prob­a­bly has to do with the amount of Von­negut I have been con­sum­ing of late.) I can’t exactly pin­point who these indi­vid­u­als might be, but I know it must involve the Inter­net at some point. I love the idea that we are unknow­ingly work­ing toward some greater goal together. It’s not any­thing we plan. Life, the Uni­verse, plans, they all progress on their own.

*You should read Cat’s Cra­dle or this if you are in a hurry.