Blog

  • A Trick from Art School

    July 11, 2005

    I was talking to my buddy Alen tonight, mentioning that I think I need an editor to give me some focus on a series of articles I’m planning on writing on New Media or development. The conversation went something like this:

    “I’ve figured out that I need to have someone ask me a question, then I seem to be able to write”, I said. “Like when you ask me some question like what hard drive to buy, I send you a feckin’ book. But if I’m just in a vacuum by myself…nothing!

    “Well yeah”, observed Alen. “That’s a trick they teach you in Art School. Like when you come up with some theme like The Circle of Life. and yeah ok, it’s all arty and good. Then you paint it and it just sucks for some reason. But then you think of it as a gift for someone…and you paint it for your Mom and everything’s cool.”

    I sort of gape at this, because it seems so obvious and I’ve heard it before: Don’t just write…write for someone. I’ve thought about audience in general terms, but not a specific person and all that entails. Could it be that simple?

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    DSri Seah
  • Lambretta Twist

    July 11, 2005

    Sis sent me a link to The Lambretta Twist, an Italian scooter manufacturer advertisement from the 60s. It’s absolutely awesome. For some reason reminds me a bit of the the Speed Racer opening and closing themes…it might be the music (especially the horns), and some of the camera angles. It’s just so darn happy. Tonally it’s sort of like those Old Navy ads in terms of bizarreness.

    Still from Lambretta TwistStill from Lambretta TwistStill from Lambretta Twist

    We think scooters are cool; of course it was Sis who first made me aware of this through Chynna Clugston-Major’s graphic novel Scooter Girl. There’s also apparently some kind of scooter cafe in Providence that we have to check out.

    Still from Lambretta TwistScooters are awesome! Too bad I look like a bear riding a unicycle when I sit on one.

    Originally via rocketboom, which featured a mash-up of the Lambretta Twist.

    UPDATE: I read on PocketPig that this ad was performed by Italian vocal group I Cetra. Neat!

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    DSri Seah
  • Aaron Copland on Creativity

    July 10, 2005

    Last night I started reading What to Listen For in Music by American composer Aaron Copland. It’s an introduction to musical theory for the interested layperson, lucidly written and filled with insight, “the only book of its kind written by a great composer”.

    I found an interesting passage in Chapter 3, The Creative Process In Music, which I thought might be univerally applicable to finding one’s role in the world:

    […] The layman always finds it hard to realize how natural it is for the composer to compose. He has a tendency to put himself into the position of a composer and to visualize the problems involved, including that of inspiration, from the perspective of the layman. He forgets that composing to a composer is like fulfilling a natural function. It is like eating or sleeping. It is something that the composer happens to have been born to do; and, because of that, it loses the character of a special virtue in the composer’s eyes.

    A natural function! Do I even know what mine is? I suspect it might not actually be all those things I “do” like programming or interface design, despite all the energy I’ve put into this. What I appear to do the most these days is categorize experience and write it up, make connections, and communicate via a number of channels: email, this blog, and person-to-person contact.

    Yesterday I was showing someone how to do something, and she commented that I was a good teacher. I seem to get this compliment quite a lot, and I am starting to wonder if this is a viable direction to move in. What makes for an excellent teacher? And what to teach? How much focus is necessary? And who do I talk to?

    A longer excerpt from Copland’s chapter on creativity is online at this person’s site on music, if you’d like to read more.

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    DSri Seah
  • Parker Lewis Holds Up

    July 9, 2005

    0713-parker.jpg After years of searching, I’ve finally re-watched an episode of Parker Lewis Can’t Lose, one of my favorite shows from the early 1990s. Despite being in the “high school sitcom” genre, it was actually highly inventive and surrealistically funny, the spiritual ancestor of shows like Malcolm in the Middle. It’s something of a cult classic; I found an article comparing it to Ferris Bueller’s Day Off at MutantReviewers.com:
    The show was peppered with playful optical effects (most notably being the “pixalating” of the screen before and after commercials), Parker’s bizarre and colorful shirts, Jerry’s bottomless trenchcoat pockets, lots of jokes, and hysterical parodies. I personally loved how the guys had a secret hideout in one of the lockers. Critics praised the show’s innovative camerawork as well as not having a laugh track. And long before “Ally McBeal” started her streak of pseudo-fantasy moments, “Parker Lewis Can’t Lose” had these in spades.

    Like a lot of inventive shows, it got messed with by a nervous network (Fox) and drained of fun before being cancelled; Season One is the best.

    PLCL isn’t available on DVD, so I got it through the Digital Archive Project. Apparently PLCL is available in Europe on DVD, but not here in the US (update: I may have been mistaking a homebrew DVD on a french auction site for a commercial release).

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    DSri Seah
  • Timeline

    July 8, 2005

    Visit Site I stumbled upon this collection of timekeeping Flash movies. This one I particularly liked for its rectilinear presentation.
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    DSri Seah