Ryan Rittenhouse, founder of Santa Cruz Surf Apparel Co., held a press conference today, Jan. 5, to dispel the Santa Cruz Surfing Club Preservation Society’s current allegations against him...
The facilities run by the city of Watsonville will be closed completely until Jan. 5, 2009, as the city attempts to save money in a slumping economy. The move...
University police had a busy morning on Wednesday, Dec. 17, as they took stock of the previous night’s vandalisms on the campus. The crimes were scattered across the large...
Sportsracers! Ze Frank is back with Color Wars 2008 , a series of contests fought by Twitterpatted internet nerds to the virtual death. The battle that just finished is youngme/nowme , in which you post a picture of yourself as a kid, then recreate that photo as best you can now. The results are entertaining , hilarious , adorable , and sometimes just scary .
Up next: something to do with Google Maps and the street view feature. Futuristic scavenger hunt? Choose your color, choose your team, and prepare to get it on...
Here's an interesting article on the position of the media in an internet-saturated society . (Hat tip, Peter Koht.) Its basic point is that the media no longer contains stories within its own sphere, but is a part of the information stream that occupies each individual's sphere. It also posits that the printing of a story is just one part of the story's lifespan, and no longer the final stage with the ability to link, comment, and propagate without media's so-called blessing.
Once again, I find the role of the internet to be greatly exaggerated in terms of its transformative value. I'm not sure the internet transformed anything, just exploded it. The first diagram of the world being filtered exclusively through the media before being digested by people is overly simplistic. For one, people don't have direct access to the world now without 'media' -- the internet is a medium, and if much of its content is generated by non-professionals, that doesn't change the fact that it's administered by large corporations and the government, and paid for by end users. Nobody argues that radio is not a medium, and that radio stations are part of this media sphere. The internet is sort of like radio, just with a much, much higher proportion of shortwave hobbyist broadcasters.
Secondly, stories have always lived on beyond their printing or broadcasting -- comments and links are just public and technological versions of backfence gossip and dinner conversation. When was the last time you saw a story's content genuinely advanced by the comments section? It happens, but the main purpose of that function is to append the public's editorial feelings about the topic to the actual source of information. Whereas before, reporters never really knew what people were saying about their story, now it's right there under the column, in all its splendor.
Thirdly, the struggle for traditional media organizations is not, as so many people have asserted, finding a way to corral "citizen journalism" and other brands of user-generated content. The whole point of user-generated content is that users just go ahead and generate it, without media's old-ass organization stepping in to facilitate. It turns out, media organizations still have a tremendous spotlight to shine on stories, and still, in a way, 'create' stories by using that spotlight. The dissemination that happens afterward doesn't fundamentally alter this role. What it alters is the ability to make money on this role.
And there's the rub. All this hand-wringing about a changing media landscape is really just a financial panic because internet revenues are not as money-grown-on-trees easy to come by as paper and broadcast revenues. I bet they will be, though, someday soon. In the meantime, any organization that makes enormous and expensive changes to its newsgathering room (unless those changes are geared toward efficiency) is missing the point. People aren't looking for a new kind of news. Almost every link to every story you see on the internet and Google comes from 'old' kinds of news. People are just spreading that news in a way that circumvents traditional modes of revenue. This is a business crisis much more than an editorial one.
It's amazing what funny voices do for stand-up comedy. In the 1980s, before he sold his soul to Satan in exchange for a goatee and a fake southern accent, Larry the Cable Guy was Dan Whitney, the jokey and occasionally offensive comedian from Nebraska. I'm fascinated by the quirks he tries to incorporate into this persona, with a strange masticating mouth move and the compulsive need to sell every joke with the "and, uh" pause. Compare it to his current character, which is calm and oddly feels more 'real' than his original persona (which may or may not be his actual accent and personality ... there is no depth to the creature we know as Larry).
Also interesting to note: both incarnations tell bad jokes.
These hand puppets are awesome because they're not puppets—just eyes taped to Dutch performer Lejo's fingers. Check out this Dutch Sesame Street clip of his creation in action to see how expressive a few fingers can be. More clips too adorable to link to at lejo.nu .
You could read something depressing about the war or recession or something. Or, you could read about how this one time, in the 1980s, Mr. T totally cured a boy's coma .
"Somebody told the doctors I was in town, so they called me down there. I closed the curtains and prayed. Then, as I was walking down the hall, the kid suddenly came out of the coma and hollered out."
According to a new study from the National Science Foundation, the cumulative effects of global warming could be reversed in a matter of decades, not centuries as previously thought, if a specific vaporized metalloid compound is added to the layer of atmosphere just above the ozone layer.
Forgive me, Santa Cruz, but I'm on a bit of a personal mission. I don't think the street performers on Pacific Avenue are as creative as this city deserves, and I plan to goad the community about this fact any chance I get. For instance: here's a man who decided not to wear two of his ugly ties anymore . Not content to merely deposit them in a giveaway bin, he has decided to inform the public, with a sign. While not ostensibly street performance, the resulting interplay between him and random pedestrians is high art, and he's even recorded many of the conversations he has. Parading around what you don't wear; think of him as the anti-Umbrella Man.
It seems that every time there is a fatal accident between a car and a bicycle in Santa Cruz, officials and advocates rally the flags for more driver awareness on the roads. This video from England highlights just how much awareness is needed, and possibly how futile it is for the onus to be completely on drivers.
This 1959 comedy album from Del Close plays with language, slang, and a nascent drug culture to craft one of the best hip-meets-square routines I've ever heard. It's the ur-Cheech & Chong. Streaming for free in its entirety on this site .
Pluto Enters Capricorn I have read several predictions from astrologers about the return of Pluto to Capricorn, the natal position of American when she was born, and they all speak of love and the soul and the one-ness of m...
Town Hall with Sam Farr
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Town Hall with Sam Farr | Print | E-mail
Written by Sam Farr
Monday, 05 January 2009
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LETTER TO PRESIDENT-ELECT BARACK OBAMA
Laval, Canada, January ...
What's different about California's budget? Look at how we got where we are, to see the solution. Any money the state gets they will use to raise tghe pay and benefits of state employees. They now retire on 70 to 90 percent of their pay, and a...
Say a Little Prayer Diane Wiscombe,
I unfortunately wrote my comment while you were posting yours, and oh how I wish I had seen it prior to my spouting off. I admit I was rather angered by the resoundingly critical resp...
Say a Little Prayer I've had many similar experiences as you growing up in a devoutly LDS family in the 90's, though I must admit that I was blessed growing up in the liberal San Francisco Bay Area. I think our wards wer...