The ds106 99: #15 Suburbia

This is the last episode (thus far) of the Radio Free Ferris soundtrack shows on ds106radio (you can find episodes 1 and 2 here and here). My memory of this one was tainted by the fact that I thought it went off-the-rails and became a free-for-all, but in fact on second listening it is far and away the most compelling of the three. It marks a particular moment in the evolution of ds106radio—at least for me—given that Mikhail Gershovich had figured out how to have Skype and iTunes (or all system audio for that matter) broadcasting together seamlessly (something Downes figured out for the PC before this) but it remained a nut we hadn’t quite cracked for the Mac. If you listen, you’ll note Mikhail is still figuring it out while we are live—he finally gets it working about 10 or 15 minutes in. Also on the call is Noise Professor, Dr. Garcia (who was feeling shunned by us), and later on Scottlo comes in the fold for a while.

Image of the Suburbia PosterThe tension is that Mikhail and I are trying to do a show about the soundtrack of Penelope Spheeris’s 1984 film Suburbia, but it keeps going in all kinds of crazy directions. Dr. Garcia is either breaking out in uncontrollable laughter or typing away at the computer while we’re talking. Noise Professor is being is usual cool, calm, collected California self, but you can sense he is feeling the discomfort because he wants to make it all good. I’m starting to lose it because I have this misdirected idea that my ideas about Suburbia are more compelling than people having a good time. Scottlo is busting out the Liberace from his own computer—-which he could do thanks to Mikhail’s tutorial. And Mikhail sees the whole thing as a an excellent example of why protocol is important on ds106radio. In the end though, what’s so cool about this for me is the tension and the uncertain boundaries we are starting to form as a community that is still getting to know one another. What makes it compelling is that we are going through a series of social and cultural negotiations amongst nascent friends that is happening in the genre of a radio show—it is really quite bizarre when you think about it a bit. The whole show is over two and half hours long!!!—and I think I hung up on Noise Professor and Dr Garcia at about the two hour mark because I was  still stuck on the idea of the show—but as it turns out the stuff about Suburbia was probably the least interesting thing about the experience—what was interesting was our interaction, our making sense of this space for meeting and getting to know people, and the sense of wonder with what we were doing at that moment. This is some ds106radio gold right here, and I hope you all enjoy it.

Radio Free Ferris: Suburbia and much, much more.

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The ds106 99: #14 Some Kind of Wonderful

I figured while it was fresh in my mind from my last post on the Valley Girl soundtrack show for ds106radio that I would upload my earlier soundtrack show—February 19th to be exact—on one of my favorite films of the 80s: Some Kind of Wonderful (1987). After this episode I have one more soundtrack show to upload that I did with Noise Professor, Mikhail Gershovich, and Dr Garcia on Suburbia (1984). The Suburbia show is a total mess, one of my earlier experiments with multiple callers on Skype doing a radio show, which is when I realized just how tough that is to do well.

Image of Some Kind of Wonderful imageI have to admit I have a huge weak spot for just about everything John Hughes made (he actually only wrote this one, Howard Deutch directed it) and Some Kind of Wonderful was my favorite of his teen angst love story films. Pretty in Pink (1986) might seem the obvious choice—especially given it features my all-time favorite actor Harry Dean Stanton—but I loved the Watts (Mary Stuart Masterson) and her whole working class, punk rocker persona melted me. I also deeply related to the scenes between Keith (Eric Stoltz) and his dad (John Ashton) about college, the bonds, and general state of aspiring to more according to a pre-formulated logic that makes college the path to some kind of freedom from labor.

Anyway, this was my first soundtrack show, and it isn’t nearly as tight as the Valley Girl show, but it also isn’t as raucous as the Suburbia soundtrack show. Regardless, I like the idea of having this archived on the bava because I talk a bit about my own high school years, relationships, and the like. A little piece of me as refracted through film.

Radio Free Ferris: Some Kind of Wonderful

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The ds106 99: #13 Valley Girl

Taking a page from Guilia Forsythe’s blog, I figured I’d use the ds106 99 to start archiving a number of radio shows I did over the last couple of months. I literally have gigs and gigs of broadcasts in my Nicecast archive, so what better way to eat up a few blog posts than by posting archives of various shows I did here over the course of the semester.


Back in February, the 20th to be exact, I was playing around with yet another radio show on ds106radio, this one dedicated to film soundtracks. I actually have a plan to bring this one back from the dead, but until then I’ll just get the archives up. My first show was about the John Hughes film Some Kind of Wonderful (1987), and I’ll try and post that one as well soon. But the show about the Valley Girl (1983) soundtrack was where I thought the idea was starting to get a groove. And while by no means perfect, I can’t hate the 80s too much, it’s my formative decade. And few soundtracks/films are more representative of this decade than the 1983 classic Valley Girl—and what should’ve been simply a cheesy Hollywood film attempt to cash in on the craze inspired by a misreading of this lampooning of the phenomenon by Frank Zappa actually turned out to be one of the better pop films of the decade—go figure.

Anyway, here is some vintage ds106radio featuring the Soundtrack of Valley Girl with a pretty fascinating news feature about Frank Zappa’s song that got the whole nationwide craze started, as well as his thoughts on the the whole thing. Good stuff.

Mikhail Gershovich suggested I name my 80s-themed shows Radio Free Ferris, and I think that might have legs. One other thing, I keep saying Valley Girl is 17 years old which is simply a sign I don’t want to come to grips it is almost 30 years old—forgive me.

Radio Free Ferris: The Valley Girl Soundtrack

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The ds106 99: #12 Vidding

I’m currently preparing the next and final creative assignment on fan labor for the penultimate week of ds106 (there will still be an archiving and reflection assignment for the final week). One of the fan labor communities that I think is both fascinating and inspiring are vidders, a community that emerged during the late 70s, early 80s (made up predominantly women) who would recut various TV shows and films using dual VHS decks and send them around to each other through the mail. The would often focus on the representation of various characters by reinforcing certain unrequited relationships or even by subverting traditional relationships (either through gender or sexual orientation). Vids might celebrate or critique a given show or movie, but regardless they were a direct intervention within the text based that was shared within a particular community of fans. The practice is known as vidding, and in the last 30 years—particularly with the explosion of the internet—it has become almost quotidian. We see examples of fan-based interpretations of innumerable songs, TV shows, movies, etc., all over the internet, in fact it may be the web’s most popular genre. Now I don’t want to reduce vidding to fan labor more generally, but this particular subculture of the 80s epitomizes for me the idea that media culture was never really as unilateral in its effect as so many have claimed. A TV series, film, video game, song, etc. doesn’t simply act on you or transform you, you are always at the same time transforming it, and in this negotiation is the basis of a mediated culture that is more than just an opiate or a popular placebo—it is a relationship to our moment that is too often dismissed in school.

All of this led Martha Burtis and I to reflect on the fact that much of what we have been doing in ds106 has in may ways been some version of fan labor, encouraging students to intervene in various forms of media that speak to them in order to intervene within that story to frame their own interpretations of the media landscape we all find ourselves in. So, anyway, all this leads me to this video featuring one of the pioneers of the vidding movement Francesca Coppa. The video of her presentation “Geneaology of Vidding” was taken at the 24/7 DIY Video Summit. I recommend it for anyone interested in fan labor, what’s more Coppa contextualizes the practice of vidding as a direct challenge to the historical gloss that this practice emerged as a result of the advent of YouTube—which in turn is often attributed to guys. She gives a gendered history of vidding and provides a careful reading of a number of works as a means to understand the vidding culture, as well as punctuating her talk with considerations of what is currently happening en masse with social media within a broader, cultural history of fan-created media. It is awesome to hear the technical means by which the early vids were made— dual slide projectors–are you kidding me?! And I love the how-to vid on how to make vids from the 80s—nothing new under the sun. As Henry Jenkins notes in the introduction to this talk, these grass roots communities of DIY media production needed to be attended to because the provide an important history for the revolution of production we are currently undergoing. YouTube may provide us a platform to share video*, but it doesn’t create the videos nor frame the interventions into our media landscape, we do that!

*And as I noted in a previous post, YouTube seems less and less willing to understand the distinction between copyright protections and a transformative work, which makes it an increasingly less and less useful platform in this regard.

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The ds106 99: #11 Managing Media in AutoDJ

This weekend I did something I should have figured out long ago, I actually took the time to understand how you update the Media Folder and how to both create and add various mp3 files to a specific playlist in MyAutoDJ. I had a rough idea for the last couple of months, but other folks like Grant and Brian have been so on the ball that I had been spared the lion’s share of work in regards to ds106radio’s AutoDJ. This weekend I pushed myself to get a fresh run of sounds up there, and I figured it wouldn’t be tough, but then I actually tried it and crashed ds106radio. As Dr Garcia can attest, I had the stream down for about 15 minutes while I figured this out, and this post is meant to be a resource for anyone else who finds themselves in a similar situation with MyAutoDJ. Others have already done a fine job collecting all the ds106radio specifics here for logging in, FTP, etc. What this post offers is a nice play-by-play for updating the Media Folder and creating a new playlist in MyAutoDJ should the need arise.

Note: The tutorial below taken directly from the MyAutoDJ Knowledgebase here.
Continue reading

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The ds106 99: #10 bavatuesdays…the movie

ds106 internaut Elizabeth Castillo recently came up with a Design Assignment I just couldn’t resist: “Create a movie poster for your website.” I kind of think of my blog as inspired by movies, so this assignment immediately appealed to me, and I made quick work of this —kept it minimalistic—but the tag line says it all 🙂

One of the elements of this course that is often overlooked is how cool the “Submit an Assignment” portion of the ds106 site is. It allows anyone to submit an assignment idea and everyone to do it. What’s more, when you link back and use the right tags your interpretation of the assignment shows up beneath it (see this assignment as an example of that). We’ve had an amazing amount of activity in this area of the course (more than 100 assignments submitted), and it’s a veritable treasure chest of assignments that have built-in examples for people to riff off whether or not they are part of the course. I’m going to dedicate a series of the ” ds106 99″ this week to the design of the ds106.us site, but Martha Burtis’s work with “Submit an Assignment” is absolutely one of the most powerful ways we have crowd sourced the teaching of the course itself. I mean I wouldn’t have been pushed to do this movie poster if it weren’t for this capability, and Elizabeth’s willingness to have fun with it. #ds106 FTW!

Update: One more thing, I did this poster entirely in GIMP. It can be a bit clumsy (I wonder how much of that is premised on my comfort with Photoshop?), but in terms of a free, open source Photoshop-alternative it’s top notch. This Summer I will be incorporating GIMP into the class as a free tool for the visual and design assignments. I’ll need to work on some tutorials, but it can more than get the job done, and I am increasingly more comfortable teaching it given I have been playing with it all semester for animated GIFs.

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The ds106 99: #9 A new ds106radio show?

While looking for ripped vinyl to upload to ds106radio this weekend as Jason Toal and Grant Potter broadcasted there awesome adventures around Vancouver on Record Store Day 2011 I was trying to refresh ds106radio’s AutoDJ with some vinyl rips. I’m not sure everything I got my hands on was a vinyl rip, but I did discover some amazing resources through WFMU’s blog. Particularly the “Mining the Audio Motherlode” posts which are probably some of the, if not the, best distillations of free audio around the web going, and Brian Lamb has already wrote about this awesome phenomenon here—and a regular show dedicated to highlight the weekly Motherlode posts over at WFMU would probably be a layup. There are already 112 of these posts that often feature at least five rare or simply wacked out albums—an insane resource really. And a healthy reminder of why WFMU is so amazing, I really have to make good on my $100 pledge—I am a poor deadbeat.

Anyway, that is not the show I am thinking about, but I did find the raw materials for this show from this Mining the Audio Motherlode post featuring movie music. In particular, the collection “Written in Blood: Classic, Unreleased, Unused and Out-of-Print Romantically Macabre Soundtrack Music” which is five volumes of awesome provided by the music blogger Nate Ashley at Ghostcapital. It features music from The Shining, Dead Zone, a ton of Morricone, a bit of Carpenter, and the list goes on and on. There is a lot there I don’t know, so I plan on doing a show dedicated to this collection that uses the clips of music, as well as clips from the movies, as a way of talking about a given film—a few of which I have seen, but many of which I haven’t. I see it as a fun way to get me back into the horror habit, and it could make for some good ds106radio/ds106tv cross-casting action. Well, that’s my idea at least, we’ll see what happens. I still have to name the show for it to be official 🙂 Until then you can enjoy all 5 volumes of this horror movie inspired music all for yourself, just follow the links to the posts that follow: Volumes 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5. Nate Ashley of Ghostcapital is a genius! Thank you kindly.

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The ds106 99: #8 Mayday, mayday. Can anyone hear me?

I am currently working on printing out a poster version of D’Arcy Norman’s minimalist travel poster for John Carpenter’s The Thing featuring Station 31 (see the assignment here).

Image of a minimalist poster for John Carpenter's

It’s just that good, one of my favorite movies of all time and he nailed it.

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The ds106 99: #7 This is your brain on ds106

Inspired by Andrew Allingham’s rather bizzarre “Eggsistential Drug PSA”….

I was inspired to play off his idea for my own mashup/remix/fanfiction/ds106commerical. So, thank you Andrew, and I hope you all enjoy “This is your brain on ds106” —please don’t try this at home…

One more thing, anyone know where I can get a high quality version of this PSA?—the YouTube ones suck. Alas, I’ll keep searching.

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The ds106 99: #6 Jessica Masulli on ds106tv

Last week I interviewed ds106 student, and soon-to-be UMW graduate, Jessica Masulli about the journalism job she recently got, the test on twitter she had to take for that job, and a more general discussion about digital identity, journalism, and how ds106 changed her life 😉 Jessica is awesome, and I ‘m extremely excited for her and her future—-it promises to be bright! More than that, it is always nice to see a UMW grad make good.

Sorry my audio is a little low, but we were playing with mics, and I figure she was the one it was essential to hear.

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