If you have not checked out the work over at Sopheava de Lumiere, then you, comrade, are missing out.
It is brilliant work.
Now Ms. Margaret is a friend...and she is also a fan of Mr. Andrew Bird.
So it is for her that I present Andrew Bird on a children's show.
Enjoy
Monday, March 31, 2008
Thursday, March 6, 2008
Alternative Theme: Saul Bass
This is fantastic. This is why, even though modern Hollywood is falling apart, movies are wonderful.
Throughout the film's history, Saul Bass designed the title of several films, such as Psycho, North by Northwest, and Spartacus.
This is what it would look like if Bass had designed the opening to Star Wars.
Just in case you need a refresher.
Saturday, February 23, 2008
Actuality of Mind
Comrade, it's horrible when the mind comes to realize certain things.
Sleep is the enemy. This is what my body is telling me with my insomnia. If I sleep, then I can't work. If I don't work, then I can't prepare and make everything all right.
I can't save them all. I want to, but it's impossible. They make it hard for me to want to try and save them when they treat others so badly. If I can't even leave for a day, then why should I really try to help?
If the state and length of our lives is nothing more than a snowflake in a blizzard, then what is the ultimate goal? The ultimate purpose?
We constantly ask the universe, "Why are we here?" Is that the right question? Shouldn't the question really be, "What is it that you want?"
And what is it that the universe, or God, or Time, or Fate, or the little old man named Murray that lives in the Sun wants?
Mankind...humanity desperately wants a purpose, but why is it needed? Why MUST we have a reason for living? You have an ant farm just so you can watch the ants go about their lives. Usually there is no grand experiment. What if it is the same for us? It could be that there is no grand purpose but a sense of cosmic voyeurism.
We fight for out principles, but hypocrisy is our greatest luxury as human beings. Everyone says they want to help.
Stop global warming.
Help the homeless.
Save our fellow man/animal/cause.
Yet, when the time comes to truly act, so many of us do nothing. The road to Hell is paved with good intentions, but sights are all courtesy of the hypocrites who walk the path.
We, as human beings, fathom the infinite on a daily basis. We constantly question. The problem, however, isn't the questioning. That leads to growth. The problem is that our next generation does not question...they believe they have the answers. They cannot leave anything to chance.
New Money....Old Money. The difference in the way people act is sadly divided in this way.
Too many teenagers these days have too much privilege, and we are all suffering for it. Not even Icarus can save us this time.
Love is a fragile construct. There are many metaphors and similes to describe an emotion about which we know so little. It is also the emotion that we dictate to be the best, but to truly understand love is next to impossible. Not with all of its definitions and connotations and such.
Anger, though a damning emotion, is a wonderful fuel if used right.
Perhaps I'm wrong. Maybe, comrade, there is a higher purpose for everything, but if it's all in the details, then the flaws of mankind are showing themselves to me at a greater frequency. Trust is dying.
Maybe Jack Burton was right.
Here endeth the lesson.
Sleep is the enemy. This is what my body is telling me with my insomnia. If I sleep, then I can't work. If I don't work, then I can't prepare and make everything all right.
I can't save them all. I want to, but it's impossible. They make it hard for me to want to try and save them when they treat others so badly. If I can't even leave for a day, then why should I really try to help?
If the state and length of our lives is nothing more than a snowflake in a blizzard, then what is the ultimate goal? The ultimate purpose?
We constantly ask the universe, "Why are we here?" Is that the right question? Shouldn't the question really be, "What is it that you want?"
And what is it that the universe, or God, or Time, or Fate, or the little old man named Murray that lives in the Sun wants?
Mankind...humanity desperately wants a purpose, but why is it needed? Why MUST we have a reason for living? You have an ant farm just so you can watch the ants go about their lives. Usually there is no grand experiment. What if it is the same for us? It could be that there is no grand purpose but a sense of cosmic voyeurism.
We fight for out principles, but hypocrisy is our greatest luxury as human beings. Everyone says they want to help.
Stop global warming.
Help the homeless.
Save our fellow man/animal/cause.
Yet, when the time comes to truly act, so many of us do nothing. The road to Hell is paved with good intentions, but sights are all courtesy of the hypocrites who walk the path.
We, as human beings, fathom the infinite on a daily basis. We constantly question. The problem, however, isn't the questioning. That leads to growth. The problem is that our next generation does not question...they believe they have the answers. They cannot leave anything to chance.
New Money....Old Money. The difference in the way people act is sadly divided in this way.
Too many teenagers these days have too much privilege, and we are all suffering for it. Not even Icarus can save us this time.
Love is a fragile construct. There are many metaphors and similes to describe an emotion about which we know so little. It is also the emotion that we dictate to be the best, but to truly understand love is next to impossible. Not with all of its definitions and connotations and such.
Anger, though a damning emotion, is a wonderful fuel if used right.
Perhaps I'm wrong. Maybe, comrade, there is a higher purpose for everything, but if it's all in the details, then the flaws of mankind are showing themselves to me at a greater frequency. Trust is dying.
Maybe Jack Burton was right.
Here endeth the lesson.
Monday, February 11, 2008
For Monica
Here is the trailer for Michel Gondry's new film: Be Kind, Rewind.
A brilliant concept to be sure (and one that makes directors everywhere think, "that could be me."
Even better, however is Gondry's take on his own trailer. That can be viewed here.
If you loved Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, then this one is right up your alley.
Here Endeth the Lesson.
A brilliant concept to be sure (and one that makes directors everywhere think, "that could be me."
Even better, however is Gondry's take on his own trailer. That can be viewed here.
If you loved Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, then this one is right up your alley.
Here Endeth the Lesson.
Sunday, February 3, 2008
An Open Letter to Boston and the New England Patriots
I have to thank you. You have proven one of my lessons about the Epic Hero.
Before I explain, let me just add one thing:
You can suck it.
For weeks, the world has had to listen to the fans in Massachusetts talking about how Boston is, "The new Title Town," and how the Giants are just cocky and would lose big.
Simulations were run which showed that the Patriots would walk away with the game.
Pundits screamed about how boring the game would be.
And then there were the New England Patriots, who went out and not only trademarked the term "A Perfect Season," but also had 100,000 copies of a book printed called 19-0.
This is the classic example of the underdog, and it is an even better example of hubris. Let's start with the former.
For some reason, humanity loves an underdog. We always cheer for the little guy to overcome the obstacles. We develop a pathos with the underdog team or person or athelete or whatever, and we truly feel that we understand how that person feels.
"I've overcome obstacles, too," Joe or Jane Doe thinks. "That person (or team) is just like me. No one gives me credit either."
Even in The Bible we have an underdog. Matchups, like tonight's Super Bowl, are considered similar to David and Goliath.
If the pathos is not developed, then we still look at the underdog in an existentialist way. "I was wrong. The other team/person/etc. did have a chance." At the same time, the underdog also defines Existentialism. We look within ourselves to see what we should believe. If we think that the person being given little chance deserves more, then we are tied into the underdog.
Let's just say that somewhere Sartre is laughing.
As for hubris. Ah, the very essence of what's wrong with most heroes. New England got cocky. Bill Belichick, the coach, likes the play games when it comes to answering questions. Tom Brady felt that the predictions of anyone other than New England were silly. Boston fans and sports pundits felt this was a slam dunk.
And yet New York won. Wonder how Mitt Romney feels about this?
When we are on top of our game, regardless of the field, we feel indestructible. That feeling of never losing, never not winning, and then shouting that feeling at others is hubris. It's modern term is egotistical.
You were full of hubris, Bostonians and Patriot fans. You were so sure that New York would get killed. "45-21," I heard one guy say on the radio, "because the Patriots are the best team EVAH (accent included)."
The Epic Hero, such as Ajax, can become full of hubris, and it will lead to demise. Ajax believed he was above the law of the gods, and he paid for it with his life.
The Patriots believed they were better than everyone else in the NFL and walked with a swagger that was almost sickening...and yet they paid for it.
18-1.
Somewhere the 1972 Dolphins are laughing, because they are still the only true undefeated team.
Somewhere bookies are laughing at the amount of money lost by people who thought they had that sure winner in the Patriots.
Somewhere in Boston, a man in a Tom Brady jersey is crying into his beer about an NFL conspiracy and how "The Pats will be back."
And deep in their locker room in Arizona, the Patriot players are realizing that a team that doesn't win the championship and guaranteed they would is nothing more than a pretender.
Odysseus paid for his hubris in being lost for years and having to defeat over a hundred men after his wife. Achilles died partially due to his hubristic nature. Ego is healthy, but too much will kill you.
We usually forget the loser of the Super Bowl. This time...we'll remember the loser more than the winner.
This proves that there is no such thing as perfection. We have perfect moments, but those are short and last only in our memories. The Patriots have shown the world that perfection is truly divine and not for us.
So thank you New England Patriots and Boston. You're arrogance has allowed me to not only feel good about the chances that underdogs have in the modern world, but it allows me to instruct others on what happens and how we deal when our ego is suddenly deflated.
Thank you for showing the world that sometimes the best and brightest cannot predict the outcome. That sometimes our foibles get the best of us.
Of course, by not cheering for the Patriots...does that mean I'll be considered a terrorist?
And, of course, what do I know? I'm actually a Jets fan. I could be wrong.
Signed,
A guy who loves to see the underdog win.
Monday, January 14, 2008
The Second Commandment
Lesson Two.
Big Brother is Watching.
In the modern world, technology has made most, if not all, information available at your fingertips. The government knows this, but so does everyone else. Cellphone signals can be picked up, email and interweb chats can be copied, and people will even dig in the trash and recycling to find whatever information they can. The use of the Web has made things even easier than it used to be.
The most common practice of getting what you want when you can't pay for it is stealing someone else's identity. This is not a very hard practice. Find a poor soul who isn't smart enough to realize that the poor prince from Nigeria really is a drug addict in a basement in Des Moines, and convince him or her to send money. "All I need is a credit card/social security number/bank account." Whatever works.
If you apply for a job, the company will most likely do a background check that will include the FBI (are you a felon?), and possibly a Google search.
There is so much information about you out there, and the more you add, the easier it is to find you.
Of course, there are the simpler ways to track:
There are cameras everywhere.
The cable and satellite companies can track what channels you're watching and make "suggestions."
Banks keep track of your purchases and can call you if they "suspect" something.
Your computer gets updates to help it run better.
And yet, Comrade, I always remember what Mama Orwell always said:
"If you can see the Empire State Building...The Empire State Building can see you."
We are a voyeuristic society that enjoys peeking on everyone, yet we don't want someone else looking in on us.
If you want total anonymity, you have to go off the grid. This means no phones, no computers, no bank cards.
You work in cash, you store the money under the mattress, and you contact others by only face to face contact. That's how avoid Big Brother....
Or you call the phone company and ask if the government is paying its bills, and if they aren't you remove the wiretaps until they pay up. I mean $60,000 bills that aren't paid? And you're going to hound me on a $30 parking ticket? That's blasphemy, Comrade.
Be safe and careful. Don't be stupid and post pictures of yourself doing illegal activities, because someone will know.
Don't make threats over the phone, as someone is listening. Don't believe me? Look up The Conversation.
And if you must be watched, be boring. Because, Comrades, if you're life is boring, no one will want to watch...and that's when you can do fun things.
Here endeth the lesson.
Big Brother is Watching.
In the modern world, technology has made most, if not all, information available at your fingertips. The government knows this, but so does everyone else. Cellphone signals can be picked up, email and interweb chats can be copied, and people will even dig in the trash and recycling to find whatever information they can. The use of the Web has made things even easier than it used to be.
The most common practice of getting what you want when you can't pay for it is stealing someone else's identity. This is not a very hard practice. Find a poor soul who isn't smart enough to realize that the poor prince from Nigeria really is a drug addict in a basement in Des Moines, and convince him or her to send money. "All I need is a credit card/social security number/bank account." Whatever works.
If you apply for a job, the company will most likely do a background check that will include the FBI (are you a felon?), and possibly a Google search.
There is so much information about you out there, and the more you add, the easier it is to find you.
Of course, there are the simpler ways to track:
There are cameras everywhere.
The cable and satellite companies can track what channels you're watching and make "suggestions."
Banks keep track of your purchases and can call you if they "suspect" something.
Your computer gets updates to help it run better.
And yet, Comrade, I always remember what Mama Orwell always said:
"If you can see the Empire State Building...The Empire State Building can see you."
We are a voyeuristic society that enjoys peeking on everyone, yet we don't want someone else looking in on us.
If you want total anonymity, you have to go off the grid. This means no phones, no computers, no bank cards.
You work in cash, you store the money under the mattress, and you contact others by only face to face contact. That's how avoid Big Brother....
Or you call the phone company and ask if the government is paying its bills, and if they aren't you remove the wiretaps until they pay up. I mean $60,000 bills that aren't paid? And you're going to hound me on a $30 parking ticket? That's blasphemy, Comrade.
Be safe and careful. Don't be stupid and post pictures of yourself doing illegal activities, because someone will know.
Don't make threats over the phone, as someone is listening. Don't believe me? Look up The Conversation.
And if you must be watched, be boring. Because, Comrades, if you're life is boring, no one will want to watch...and that's when you can do fun things.
Here endeth the lesson.
Because, Comrade, You're a Dumbass!
Everyone knows the deal with the Eden Prairie Facebook debacle.
The problem I have with these kids is not the drinking. I know, as a teacher I should say, "Hey kids, don't drink...EVER!" That, however, is not going to happen, and I know that.
No, the problem I have with these kids is that they're idiots. In the new world, it's way to easy to find the incriminating evidence online.
These kids, Comrades, are idiots. Let me make that clearer: Hey kids, you're dumbasses!
Athletes: you signed a waiver promising you wouldn't do anything stupid like this...then you get pictures taken.
All of you: you posted pictures. Do you not understand that this goes with you? Let's say you decide to go for a job in a few years. If the company does a background check on you and, oh...I don't know...searches Google, they might come across those images.
What you write, what you post...if it's online, it's out there for the whole world.
You have to be careful, and you idiots, possibly believing that you're untouchable, don't show remorse or brain cells.
You're walkout was also pathetic. I'm not going to beat on the parents, because they should be embarrassed of kids like you who don't understand the true essence of the walkout. You used it as a way to get out of class...and you looked like idiots. Congratulations, those of you in the newspaper should enjoy having that hang over you as you apply to college or go for a job, dude.
A colleague of mine ran into this problem as well. His anonymity gone, his colleagues and students were reading his blog and gossiping about him. Then he made a mistake: he wrote about work. Bam! A colleauge printed some of his work and handed it into the administration who then debated about firing him (it doesn't matter what he wrote, what matters is that he wrote...period). They were afraid.
They're still afraid, except now the fear is less about him talking about the inner workings of his school, and more that he will do something that will make him end up on the front page of the newspaper.
And I know it frustrates him. His first mistake was posting, but his second mistake was appearing in a student's film project for a class. Now his every move is being scrutinized by the administration. He can't talk to the students, and it's making him unhappy.
He's, "just a dirty, old man," or he has, "an inappropriate relationship with the kids."
He stopped writing on his blog, because he was told he would lose his job if he didn't.
He's afraid. Of course, he also told me that he's also unhappy, because he can't fix his students' problems...but that's another story.
This colleague would be the first to tell you that he was a dumbass. He made mistakes.
Learn from what happened to him and from what I'm telling you: whatever you do...if you post it online...then EVERYONE will know. Don't be stupid.
Here endeth the lesson.
The problem I have with these kids is not the drinking. I know, as a teacher I should say, "Hey kids, don't drink...EVER!" That, however, is not going to happen, and I know that.
No, the problem I have with these kids is that they're idiots. In the new world, it's way to easy to find the incriminating evidence online.
These kids, Comrades, are idiots. Let me make that clearer: Hey kids, you're dumbasses!
Athletes: you signed a waiver promising you wouldn't do anything stupid like this...then you get pictures taken.
All of you: you posted pictures. Do you not understand that this goes with you? Let's say you decide to go for a job in a few years. If the company does a background check on you and, oh...I don't know...searches Google, they might come across those images.
What you write, what you post...if it's online, it's out there for the whole world.
You have to be careful, and you idiots, possibly believing that you're untouchable, don't show remorse or brain cells.
You're walkout was also pathetic. I'm not going to beat on the parents, because they should be embarrassed of kids like you who don't understand the true essence of the walkout. You used it as a way to get out of class...and you looked like idiots. Congratulations, those of you in the newspaper should enjoy having that hang over you as you apply to college or go for a job, dude.
A colleague of mine ran into this problem as well. His anonymity gone, his colleagues and students were reading his blog and gossiping about him. Then he made a mistake: he wrote about work. Bam! A colleauge printed some of his work and handed it into the administration who then debated about firing him (it doesn't matter what he wrote, what matters is that he wrote...period). They were afraid.
They're still afraid, except now the fear is less about him talking about the inner workings of his school, and more that he will do something that will make him end up on the front page of the newspaper.
And I know it frustrates him. His first mistake was posting, but his second mistake was appearing in a student's film project for a class. Now his every move is being scrutinized by the administration. He can't talk to the students, and it's making him unhappy.
He's, "just a dirty, old man," or he has, "an inappropriate relationship with the kids."
He stopped writing on his blog, because he was told he would lose his job if he didn't.
He's afraid. Of course, he also told me that he's also unhappy, because he can't fix his students' problems...but that's another story.
This colleague would be the first to tell you that he was a dumbass. He made mistakes.
Learn from what happened to him and from what I'm telling you: whatever you do...if you post it online...then EVERYONE will know. Don't be stupid.
Here endeth the lesson.
Wednesday, January 9, 2008
Understandings
"Why?"
It's the hardest, most frustrating, most pointed question in any language.
"Why me?"
"Why did you do it?"
"Why is the sky blue?"
"Why?"
The last is the hardest and depends on tone.
And yet, we have a desperate need to answer that question. Humans can't live in the unknown. We even tell those who don't ask, "why," they are ignorant.
Standing in the fields and cities, we look to the skies and stars and ask, "Why are we here?"
The worst, however, is when someone looks at you after you present a gift and asks, "Why?"
I recently gave someone a nice gift. I didn't mind that she asked me why as I know it was a total surprise.
What bothered me was the response from others.
"Why did you do that? You're not even that close."
"Why? I've known you longer...I should have been given a gift like that?"
"Why? I mean what are you trying to get out of this?"
Look, here's the bottom line:
I don't need a reason.
I did something nice for a person I respect and care about. That's it. If you're desperate for a reason, then pick and choose from these:
Because I can
Because I knew how much she wanted it going all the way back to the beginning of vita.mn
Because sometimes the very thought of making someone happy is enough to push back the cynicism for another day
Because Karma exists
Because sometimes, comrades, we don't need a reason. We truly can be selfless.
I did something nice for a person who many would argue I barely know. I would say I did something nice for someone who has never put me down, who has never judged me, and who has never used me.
I did something to prove that good things come to those who wait.
If you can't fathom that, then you don't understand the idea behind "why"....
Here endeth the lesson.
It's the hardest, most frustrating, most pointed question in any language.
"Why me?"
"Why did you do it?"
"Why is the sky blue?"
"Why?"
The last is the hardest and depends on tone.
And yet, we have a desperate need to answer that question. Humans can't live in the unknown. We even tell those who don't ask, "why," they are ignorant.
Standing in the fields and cities, we look to the skies and stars and ask, "Why are we here?"
The worst, however, is when someone looks at you after you present a gift and asks, "Why?"
I recently gave someone a nice gift. I didn't mind that she asked me why as I know it was a total surprise.
What bothered me was the response from others.
"Why did you do that? You're not even that close."
"Why? I've known you longer...I should have been given a gift like that?"
"Why? I mean what are you trying to get out of this?"
Look, here's the bottom line:
I don't need a reason.
I did something nice for a person I respect and care about. That's it. If you're desperate for a reason, then pick and choose from these:
Because I can
Because I knew how much she wanted it going all the way back to the beginning of vita.mn
Because sometimes the very thought of making someone happy is enough to push back the cynicism for another day
Because Karma exists
Because sometimes, comrades, we don't need a reason. We truly can be selfless.
I did something nice for a person who many would argue I barely know. I would say I did something nice for someone who has never put me down, who has never judged me, and who has never used me.
I did something to prove that good things come to those who wait.
If you can't fathom that, then you don't understand the idea behind "why"....
Here endeth the lesson.
Sunday, January 6, 2008
Bill Gates...Has a Sense of Humor?
Tonight, Comrade, was the 2008 CES keynote address.
While most of it was pretty boilerplate ("Here's what to expect from technology in the next few years."), Gates did include a short video of what his last day as CEO of Microsoft will look like.
Highlights:
Gates cuts a track with Jay-Z called, "Pimp Master Bill." Yes, this was Bill Gates rapping...and it was bad.
The Master of Microsoft sends an audition tape to Steven Spielberg. Scenes include Gates as Wolverine and as...Napoleon Dynamite.
Spielberg then calls Clooney about playing Gates, who whines about not being able to do it.
Next, he starts calling pundits. First it's Clinton to see if she wants a running mate. She declines.
He calls Obama and says, "Barack...it's Bill."
The response?
"Bill...Shatner?! How are you."
"No...It's BILL."
"Clinton?" Obama asks. "Does SHE know you're calling?"
There's also a scene with John Stewart where Gates asks, "Can I be a co-host of the [Daily] show?"
Gates, in what is easily my favorite section, calls Bono and pulls him off stage to make him listen to Bill's Guitar Hero playing. Bono listens and then says, "Oh for fuck's sake, Bill. I already told you we don't have any room in the band."
You have to love a guy who's willing to poke fun at himself and throw around a ton of money to get celebrities to help you.
No one will probably remember (or care) what Gates says tonight, but they'll remember the video.
When it is posted on Youtube (and it will be), I'll update with a link.
Here endeth the lesson.
Update: yeah...I thought so.
While most of it was pretty boilerplate ("Here's what to expect from technology in the next few years."), Gates did include a short video of what his last day as CEO of Microsoft will look like.
Highlights:
Gates cuts a track with Jay-Z called, "Pimp Master Bill." Yes, this was Bill Gates rapping...and it was bad.
The Master of Microsoft sends an audition tape to Steven Spielberg. Scenes include Gates as Wolverine and as...Napoleon Dynamite.
Spielberg then calls Clooney about playing Gates, who whines about not being able to do it.
Next, he starts calling pundits. First it's Clinton to see if she wants a running mate. She declines.
He calls Obama and says, "Barack...it's Bill."
The response?
"Bill...Shatner?! How are you."
"No...It's BILL."
"Clinton?" Obama asks. "Does SHE know you're calling?"
There's also a scene with John Stewart where Gates asks, "Can I be a co-host of the [Daily] show?"
Gates, in what is easily my favorite section, calls Bono and pulls him off stage to make him listen to Bill's Guitar Hero playing. Bono listens and then says, "Oh for fuck's sake, Bill. I already told you we don't have any room in the band."
You have to love a guy who's willing to poke fun at himself and throw around a ton of money to get celebrities to help you.
No one will probably remember (or care) what Gates says tonight, but they'll remember the video.
When it is posted on Youtube (and it will be), I'll update with a link.
Here endeth the lesson.
Update: yeah...I thought so.
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