If I Had A Monkey, You Think I'd Be Here Now?

How many blogs can one guy have? 5. Yes, 5.

May 14
The Archivist Part 1

Tonight I pulled out the plastic bag with various musical archives. After sorting out 27 years of ticket stubs, a folder of iTunes mixes printed out and an entire notebook of playlists from DJing in 2002 at Roxy on Smith Street, I came upon the cassette mix files. Yes, I am *that* guy that has almost every mix he made from 1989 to 2000 documented on paper. (This pic documents mixes from 1995, 1998 & 1999). Now I just need to match up the sheets with the unlabeled tapes I have and figure out what to digitize. 

Seriously, how did I end up with a girlfriend with archives like this?

The Archivist Part 1

Tonight I pulled out the plastic bag with various musical archives. After sorting out 27 years of ticket stubs, a folder of iTunes mixes printed out and an entire notebook of playlists from DJing in 2002 at Roxy on Smith Street, I came upon the cassette mix files. Yes, I am *that* guy that has almost every mix he made from 1989 to 2000 documented on paper. (This pic documents mixes from 1995, 1998 & 1999). Now I just need to match up the sheets with the unlabeled tapes I have and figure out what to digitize.

Seriously, how did I end up with a girlfriend with archives like this?


May 9
leitch:

Progress, followed immediately by something decidedly less than that.

<facepalm>
Times like this I wish NYC could just become its own country.

leitch:

Progress, followed immediately by something decidedly less than that.


<facepalm>

Times like this I wish NYC could just become its own country.


May 3

Tumbleweeds

Damn, I’ve neglected this for so long. I swear, words will start flowing again soon. I’m not having a writers block per se, I’m just trying to figure out what to write next.

(And the post below was a reference to the Idolator blog, which was awesome when Maura ran it. Fortunately, she’s still doing great work now at the Voice.)


maura asked: thank you <3 what was your commenter name? you can answer privately.

It’s been a while, but I believe it was Figgsrock. I wasn’t a huge commenter (mostly on the chart type posts I LOVED), but I was a faithful reader when you ran it. I knew very little about Idol (I had yet to watch an episode at that point) but those recaps were so damn entertaining.


Feb 11

johnrossbowie:

Hey — @jamiedenbo! Set aside a date night in April!!!

Oh. My. God. I HAVE to see this opening day.


Jan 14
iamkayhanley:

Whoa. Um. I am in love with this analysis. 

a12thway2reachme:

tristn:

feministfilm:

(screencap by http://ohilovecaps.tumblr.com)
Last night on Parks and Recreation, internet-beloved twerp Ben Wyatt wore a Letters to Cleo shirt, and the internet is freaking out about it. To demonstrate how much the internet is freaking out about it, let me point you toward benwyattinletterstocleoshirts.tumblr.com (disclaimer: a fantumblr which I curate).
In this episode, “The Comeback Kid,” Ben is visited at home by Chris, who is concerned that Ben is depressed. Ben of course denies this, insisting instead that he’s just burying himself in his hobbies since his recent job loss.
The producers piled on physical and material markers of “depression”—the wearing of gray, the stubble, the fatty foods, the unkempt hair. But it was this shirt that resonated most with the audience—why? A less well-orchestrated show would have picked something a little more obvious (Whitney might have gone with The Cure, Up All Night maybe Smashing Pumpkins), but Parks and Recreation is not only more clever (as far as I’m concerned), but they are clearly uniquely tapped into their audience base: women in their early twenties who are on tumblr.
It was a really interesting depiction of mental illness, and not an entirely unfair one. It’s no secret that both Ben and Chris are experiencing mental health issues in different ways. Here, Chris’s tried to intervene with Ben’s patterns by using his own coping mechanisms (gross health shakes), which (of course) didn’t work. But it was the act of an intervention of perception at all that disrupted Ben’s patterns and made him notice that he was depressed. He was too buried to realize it before.
Mostly, I’ve been thinking hard about what that Letters to Cleo shirt means. It’s no secret that Letters to Cleo is for Feelings, including Depressed Feelings. What made the use of the shirt most remarkable is that it wasn’t used to feminize Ben. It wasn’t used as a marker to show how depression makes men weak and feminine and therefore into Kay Hanley, it was used as a marker to make the audience identify even more with Ben. I know it’s a cheap way to talk about it, but: no one was laughing at Ben, we were laughing with him in a way that I’ve rarely ever seen. And that’s why [mostly] women on the internet are reacting with such force, I think.
Further, it’s significant that depression itself wasn’t the butt of the joke at all, it was Ben’s mechanisms for cheaply masking his depression which founded the joke (mechanisms which were funny because of the way Ben is, and his ridiculous fondness for calzones).
I don’t think it’s a stretch to claim that there’s a deep cultural connection between Letters to Cleo and commercial female adolescence in the 1990s. I started a post about this very phenomenon in the summer, but I tabled it. I’ll definitely revisit that soon.

A+++++

Check it, Hanley.


Whoa. This is awesome.

iamkayhanley:

Whoa. Um. I am in love with this analysis. 

a12thway2reachme:

tristn:

feministfilm:

(screencap by http://ohilovecaps.tumblr.com)

Last night on Parks and Recreation, internet-beloved twerp Ben Wyatt wore a Letters to Cleo shirt, and the internet is freaking out about it. To demonstrate how much the internet is freaking out about it, let me point you toward benwyattinletterstocleoshirts.tumblr.com (disclaimer: a fantumblr which I curate).

In this episode, “The Comeback Kid,” Ben is visited at home by Chris, who is concerned that Ben is depressed. Ben of course denies this, insisting instead that he’s just burying himself in his hobbies since his recent job loss.

The producers piled on physical and material markers of “depression”—the wearing of gray, the stubble, the fatty foods, the unkempt hair. But it was this shirt that resonated most with the audience—why? A less well-orchestrated show would have picked something a little more obvious (Whitney might have gone with The Cure, Up All Night maybe Smashing Pumpkins), but Parks and Recreation is not only more clever (as far as I’m concerned), but they are clearly uniquely tapped into their audience base: women in their early twenties who are on tumblr.

It was a really interesting depiction of mental illness, and not an entirely unfair one. It’s no secret that both Ben and Chris are experiencing mental health issues in different ways. Here, Chris’s tried to intervene with Ben’s patterns by using his own coping mechanisms (gross health shakes), which (of course) didn’t work. But it was the act of an intervention of perception at all that disrupted Ben’s patterns and made him notice that he was depressed. He was too buried to realize it before.

Mostly, I’ve been thinking hard about what that Letters to Cleo shirt means. It’s no secret that Letters to Cleo is for Feelings, including Depressed Feelings. What made the use of the shirt most remarkable is that it wasn’t used to feminize Ben. It wasn’t used as a marker to show how depression makes men weak and feminine and therefore into Kay Hanley, it was used as a marker to make the audience identify even more with Ben. I know it’s a cheap way to talk about it, but: no one was laughing at Ben, we were laughing with him in a way that I’ve rarely ever seen. And that’s why [mostly] women on the internet are reacting with such force, I think.

Further, it’s significant that depression itself wasn’t the butt of the joke at all, it was Ben’s mechanisms for cheaply masking his depression which founded the joke (mechanisms which were funny because of the way Ben is, and his ridiculous fondness for calzones).

I don’t think it’s a stretch to claim that there’s a deep cultural connection between Letters to Cleo and commercial female adolescence in the 1990s. I started a post about this very phenomenon in the summer, but I tabled it. I’ll definitely revisit that soon.

A+++++

Check it, Hanley.

Whoa. This is awesome.


Nov 15
yourfandomsucks:

5 things you can do to help Community (feel free to reblog the gif without the text)
1- Watch it on Hulu or NBC.com, because yes, it counts. NBC generates profit from both, and that’s all they care about.
2- Send a message to NBC if you are so inclined, and let them know that you will be be effectively boycotting the station if Community gets the axe. Tv stations need to know that they are held accountable for their actions by the fans.  If that is a bit too much for you, message them anyway and let them know how much the show means to you. 
3- By the Dvds, because yes, that also counts. 
4- Sign the petition over at Save-Community.com
5- Encourage your followers, friends, and family to watch Community. Let them know why it’s great. Sit down and watch it with them. Maybe you will only get one person into the show, but they might share with with somebody else, and so on.  The more people who learn about the greatness that is Community, the better chance we have. There are tons of fandom folks on Tumblr; many of which are looking for new shows to enjoy. Start a chain of Community love and it will spread. 


Worst news of the day.

yourfandomsucks:

5 things you can do to help Community (feel free to reblog the gif without the text)

1- Watch it on Hulu or NBC.com, because yes, it counts. NBC generates profit from both, and that’s all they care about.

2- Send a message to NBC if you are so inclined, and let them know that you will be be effectively boycotting the station if Community gets the axe. Tv stations need to know that they are held accountable for their actions by the fans.  If that is a bit too much for you, message them anyway and let them know how much the show means to you. 

3- By the Dvds, because yes, that also counts. 

4- Sign the petition over at Save-Community.com

5- Encourage your followers, friends, and family to watch Community. Let them know why it’s great. Sit down and watch it with them. Maybe you will only get one person into the show, but they might share with with somebody else, and so on.  The more people who learn about the greatness that is Community, the better chance we have. There are tons of fandom folks on Tumblr; many of which are looking for new shows to enjoy. Start a chain of Community love and it will spread. 

Worst news of the day.

(via johnrossbowie)


Sep 27
johnrossbowie:

Submitted without comment. I don’t know who made this, but will gladly give them credit.

Yup.

johnrossbowie:

Submitted without comment. I don’t know who made this, but will gladly give them credit.

Yup.


Aug 1

Jul 12

Panic on the Streets of Kensington

As I walked home tonight I noticed a sign on the door to Denny’s that was a missing person notice for a nine year old orthodox kid. He has been missing since Monday after leaving the day camp in the next neighborhood over. And then I saw 15 orthodox men asking “Have you seen this child?” and handing out flyers in the next block and a half. (The kid is the subject of an Amber alert right now.)
I took a flyer to bring home because you never know what you might see. As I got closer to my house I realized something wasn’t quite right. And then as I put my key in the front door it hit me — not a single kid was out on the street. I live on a 90% orthodox block, and the implications were evident. People are afraid here, perhaps for the first time since the 2003 blackout.


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