Archives for the month of: August, 2001

pictures!

I finally got my butt in gear and put up pictures from a couple of the Martial Arts events I’ve participated in. You can check them out at the RMA Seminar’s Page

The battle against the magazines continues to be fought. Another 10 went out today, thanks in part to my recent bout with insomnia. Last night I spent from midnight to 2am sitting on the floor, reading and cutting out articles. Of course the next big effort is organizing all of the clippings into notebooks. My goal is to assemble a number of collections of articles & notes that I’ll always have available for reference.

I have a couple projects like that which I’ve been holding off on until Di leaves for school. For the moment I’m trying to spend as much time as I can with her as she’ll be leaving in a few days.

Just another manic Monday..

Di and I had quite the packed weekend. Friday, we had originally planned to go to the local $1 theatre to see Moulin Rouge. However fate and friends were against that plan and we ended up going to see American Pie 2. Never was a sequel so unnecessary and yet so good. It had the same “gross out” qualities as the first. But it also had more heart and more truth as well. I had went in with low expectations and ended up being pleasantly surprised. Plus, I’ve come to the conclusion that just about anything with Eugene Levy in it is going to be good.

Saturday we both got our hair cut at Kim & Novak’s. Then we headed over to the George Eastman House. I often forget how much Eastman impresses me. He was an extremely progressive thinker for the time. In fact sometimes I wonder what his reaction would be to the way that his company(and my employer) is run today (but that is the subject of another blog). After that it was off to an Indian Dinner and then to finally take in Moulin Rouge. I really enjoyed the film, but couldn’t shake comparing Baz Luhrmann the director, with Oscar Wilde (that’ll be the subject of another blog).

Sunday was a day of cleaning. I scrubbed through a bunch of pictures from the Super Summer’s weekend and will have a page of them up by tomorrow on the RMA site. I also scrubbed (or at lease mopped the floor), picked up the bedroom and continued my war on magazines (the count is now at 232! and rising). We wrapped up the day visiting out friends Peter and Virginia for dinner. Peter teaches theatre arts at RIT and one of my co-conspirators in the Exact Theatre company. We shared the usual evening of conversation, debate and a bad movie. Virginia, Peter’s wife, like me is a fan of schlock movies. Our selection form last night was a 60’s Mexican ditty called “Ship of Monsters.” It involved among other things a futuristic swimsuit wearing female aliens, cheezy monsters, a robot that strangely resembled Bender from Futurama who was in love with a jukebox, and a singing Mexican cowboy for a hero. In Spanish with no subtitles, it was a great viewing experience.

in other news

  • Jenny’s Blog has been hijacked by Aaron. CNN is expected to start coverage with cool graphics at any time.
  • Tina is in LA and ODin’ on Jamba Juice.
  • The small city of Jamestown NY has been scandalized by it’s deputy mayor’s blog. (or something like that)

fingertips

Just a couple of quick things:

  • Palm Situation – I just bought a Palm iiic on e-bay. So I’m entering the world of color. Actually I’m more excited about having a hand held with 8mb of memory. I may still get a replacement screen for the cracked Palm
  • Rubber Fest 01 – Tomorrow night at the Dryden Theatre at the Eastman House we’re going to see Destroy All Monsters. Mmmm monster wrestling… what? oh… I can understand how Rubber Fest might have been misinterpreted
  • BobbinsSluggy Freelance got mentioned on blog which has been hijacked by Aaron. Sluggy is one of the best web comics out there. Bobbins is another one. Created in the UK, part of its appeal is seeing aspects of 80’s pop culture (The A-Team, Rocky, Transformers, ect) creep into it since we (folks in the US) often think that is only part of our experience. Plus it well drawn and gives me my daily dose of Brit slang.

crash…

*sigh* last night I sent my palm pilot on a magical mystery tour across the apartment. It’s been really hot in Rochester and the bedroom, at the front of the house seems to retain the most heat. So last night I was going to sleep out in the main room. But I needed a top sheet for the futon. So I went and grabbed the top sheet off the bed and pulled. It was at that point that the palm pilot, which I had forgotten was on top of the bed, decided to play Superman. While it soared beautifully, it just hasn’t mastered landing. So now I have a palm with a cracked screen (different than a Master with Cracked Fingers). Anyone who knows where I can get a palm screen fixed please let me know.

gojira & grad school

Last night I headed over to the Dryden Theatre at the Eastman House to check out the original Japanese version of Godzilla. I had seen the 1954 American cut of this, but never the real original version. What a difference. As it turns out when the film came to the states three things were done to it:

  • They added scenes with Perry Mason…err… Raymond Burr as a US Reporter in Tokyo
  • They edited the film so that the story was being told after it happened by Burr’s character in a news report
  • They dubbed it really, really poorly

The original Japanese Version runs 98 minutes, the American Version, with new footage, runs 76. Needless to say a lot of the original plot ended up on a Hollywood floor. With that footage restored you fully understand how good the film originally was and how much of a allegory for Nuclear War it was. The scientists in the movie debate their morality of their actions. While the military only wants to destroy Godzilla, on scientist wants to study the monster in hopes that they can understand how it survived an H-bomb (and in turn how they can as well).

Yes the effects are cheesy, but the acting and direction isn’t. As it turns out the film was directed by Akira Kurosawa’s Assistant Director and stars notable Japanese actors. That combined with historical context (the film was release less than a decade after the 2 nuclear attacks on Japan) give the film a much more serious feeling than any of it sequels.

In other news, I think I’m really making some progress around my efforts to get into Grad school. I’ve been really pushing on what I want to study. This is my current goal:

To study the ways global data communications networks (primarily Internet based) have effected the development and mobilization of communities of interest and to apply that knowledge to the crafting of plans for and implementation of tools to meet their needs.

Now if I can simplify that a little more I think I’ll really be on to something. Basically I want to learn tools for anthropological, business and design study and execution. So far Stanford and Universtiy of Chicago are looking like good choices.

p.s. No sign of Karmic retaliation yet

p.p.s. It’s Abby’s Birthday!