The “Read” Poster Re-defined

Image of JayZ

Now this is a “Read” poster I can get behind! See another one featuring Tupac here. Both thanks to the creative genius of Tom Woodward at the Bionic Teaching blog.

Anyone know the lyrics that come immediately before this line?

Posted in art | Tagged , , , , | 3 Comments

“[Vito] Acconci is to video…

…what [Marcel] Duchamp is to Sculpture” -Carole Garmon

I hadn’t heard of Vito Acconci before yesterday afternoon when I read these two posts on professor Carole Garmon’s Video Art class blog which led to a discussion (in person!) shortly afterwards about this controversial video artist.

Check out this description of his work excerpted from the Video Data Bank:

A poet of the New York school in the early- and mid-1960s, Vito Acconci moved toward performance, sound, and video work by the end of the decade. Acconci changed direction in order to “define [his] body in space, find a ground for [him]self, an alternate ground for the page ground [he] had as a poet.” Acconci’s early performances—including Claim (1971) and Seedbed (1972)—were extremely controversial, transgressing assumed boundaries between public and private space, and between audience and performer. Positioning his own body as the simultaneous subject and object of the work, Acconci’s early video tapes took advantage of the medium’s self-reflexive potential in mediating his own and the viewer’s attention.

What’s so striking to me about this description, and something Carole pointed out immediately when we talked yesterday, is how Acconci’s fascination with “transgressing assumed boundaries between public and private space” in the early 70s with video has never been more relevant than during our current moment. Now that millions of people can easily allow a complete stranger into their intimate, self-reflexive world vis-a-vis video thanks to sites like YouTube, Acconci’s work may prove quite fascinating as way to think through the impact of an imagined self in the advent of relatively affordable technology that allows us to mediate our identities for unknown viewers around the world.

Carole also pointed me to Acconci’s Theme Song, an incredibly disturbing video that features Acconci lying on his living room floor smoking a cigarette while unnervingly flirting with an unknown viewer on the other end of his video camera–and act which might sound rather common in this day and age. He is so very schmary and gross which makes this piece all the more effective. I have embedded it below, it is nine minutes long, but even two or three will give you a good sense of what’s happening here. It will take thirty seconds before you see Acconci, for he seems to be setting up the camera during the initial part of this video broadcast -can anyone say YouTube?

If that didn’t scare you away (and it should have!) check out these two crazy shorts:

Open Book

Remote Control

Can I possibly count the ways UMW Blogs is continually feeding my curiosity, imagination, and general thirst for all things bizarre? Thanks Carole!

Posted in art, UMW Blogs, video, YouTube | Tagged , , , , , | 6 Comments

Wonder Twin Powers Activate!

Finally, the controversial episode from this static duo’s past has recently been unearthed. “Wonder Twins Gopher Moat” is now available on YouTube and all the dirt they never wanted you to see has finally been made available.

This short episode documents something everyone who has had to suffer through a Wonder Twins episode already knows: a lack of imagination when using the tools available is not only irresponsible, it is potentially murderous. Shame on them!

To quote the brilliance of Scott Leslie:
“…and so ‘gopher moat’ enters the vocabulary of educational technologists everywhere – a half-baked, ineffective solution.”

Posted in fun, YouTube | Tagged , , , | 6 Comments

If you will it, it is no dream!

Image of another faithful disciple

Nathan‘s just one of many recently converted disciples, this could be you!

And another disciple in Barbara, who seems to have a shrine going…

Image of Touched by the Rev

Thanks for playing along with my shameless self-promotion!

Posted in fun | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Raiding the Internet Archive

Figured I’d start the week off right and play with some public domain video from the Internet Archive. I set a couple of clips (Babies on Parade and Television Commercials: Telephone) to the mellifluous sounds of one of my favorite bands from the early 90s: Slug (not to be confused with the West Coast rapper). Slug was an experimental noise band that did some awesome loops, re-mixes, and just downright good noise. Enjoy the discord!

You Hardly Ever Crawl at All

Telephone

Posted in film, films, movies, video, YouTube | Tagged , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Two Must-See Melodramas by Douglas Sirk

if you’re not yet a Douglas Sirk fan, you really should be. All that Heaven Allows (1955) and Written on the Wind (1956)–both starring the beautiful and extremely talented Rock Hudson–are two of his best 1950s melodramas and would make an awesome double feature.

Don’t believe me? Check out the the following scene from Written on the Wind which features Dorothy Malone (who won an Oscar for this performance) doing a fiendish dance while here father topples down the stairs from a grief-induced heart attack. Dorothy Malone embodies the pulp caricature of the bad girl in this role in so many powerful ways. This is just far out melodrama, and the cinematography is as spellbinding as the tensions created in every scene. Beautiful stuff!

All that Heaven Allows is another gem by Sirk, and Jane Wyman gives a masterful performance in this picture perfect film about “irresistible love,” social status, and the conservatism of small communities. Pay attention to the pop psychology of this widowed mother’s daughter (Hitchcockesque in its simple and powerful resonance) and the interesting fact (for me at least) that her son is is heading off to Iraq to work with American oil interests there. Just a beautiful slice of the 1950s that complicates questions of gender, class, and sexual orientation. Throw in Sirk’s most famous film–Imitation of Life (1959)–and race in mainstream cinema is also examined in some heretofore unique ways. Check out the trailer for All that Heaven Allows below.

I’ll end with a word of caution, be sure to avoid Todd Haynes’s Far from Heaven (2002) at all costs. Despite what critics might say, it’s a cheap, revisionist knock-off of All that Heaven Allows that captures none of the magic, yet capitalizes on its “privileged historical faculty” of hindsight to feign thoughtfulness and spell-out all ambiguities and erase any texture of the original–good job Todd!

Posted in bavapick, film, films, movies, YouTube | Tagged , , , , , | 4 Comments

Why I Want to Move to Canada…

Image of canadian HeartNow there are a lot of great people in Canada (particularly in the EdTech realm) but I have a fine time communicating with and learning from them in a distributed manner from the continental 48. It wasn’t until I read that the Canadian police will no longer target individuals who download copyrighted material for personal use in this post on Torrent freak that I have seriously considered applying for citizenship. Would anyone like to sponsor me? I think I could learn to love hockey, and I clean up real good!

Why is it so difficult in this day and age for a US citizen to even begin to fathom a policy of tolerance from its government? These are dark days indeed for the U.S.A.

Posted in bitTorrent | Tagged , , , | 6 Comments

Customize the WPMu Dashboard

Here’s a simple hack to make your WordPress Multi-User Dashboard display news and recent posts from within your specific WPMu community. For example, I am going to briefly illustrate how to display the “Latest News” for our community (traditionally where the WordPress development news appears) as well as the 20 most recent posts from around UMW Blogs (traditionally where posts from Planet WordPress are displayed).

Below is a screen shot of what it looks like (click on the image to see a larger version to get a fuller sense of how this looks).

UMW Blogs Dashboard

The idea was sparked by Gardner Campbell during the UMW Blogs forum we had a couple of weeks ago, and I think it is an awesome way to connect each individual with the larger UMW Blogs community right where they live—their blog dashboard.

It is a really simple hack that only requires changing a few lines of code in both the index.php and index-extra.php files within the wp-admin folder.

Here’s how:

First the index.php file found in the wp-admin folder:

Find the following line in this file:

And change it to the title of your WPMu community. Ours looks like this:

Next, find the following line of code:

Image of Need help WP

And link it to your own documentation if you have some handy. Ours looks like this:

Image Need Help UMW Code

That’s it for the index.php file in wp-admin. Now, we need to modify a few lines on the index-extra.php file in the same directory and that’s all there is to it!

Find the following lines of code:

case 'devnews' :
$rss = @fetch_rss(apply_filters( 'dashboard_primary_feed', 'http://wordpress.org/development/feed/' ));
if ( isset($rss->items) && 0 != count($rss->items) ) {
?>

And change the ‘devnews’ primary feed to a feed URL that will deliver news specific to your community. Then change the title from ‘WordPress Development Blog’ to something more appropriate. Ours looks like this:

case 'devnews' :
$rss = @fetch_rss(apply_filters( 'dashboard_primary_feed', 'http://umwblogs.org/feed/' ));
if ( isset($rss->items) && 0 != count($rss->items) ) {
?>

Next, do the same exact thing for the Planet News feed, just use the Sitewide Feed for WPMu or some other feed you might have that will feature a range of content from a number of blogs in the community.

case 'planetnews' :
$rss = @fetch_rss(apply_filters( 'dashboard_secondary_feed', 'http://planet.wordpress.org/feed/' ));
if ( isset($rss->items) && 0 != count($rss->items) ) {
?>

Ours looks like this:
case 'planetnews' :
$rss = @fetch_rss(apply_filters( 'dashboard_secondary_feed', 'http://umwblogs.org/wpmu-feed/' ));
if ( isset($rss->items) && 0 != count($rss->items) ) {
?>

    Finally, find the following line of code (which is the “More” link after 20 most recent posts in the blog community):

    Image of Read More Code Hack

    And change the URL to something that will bring the readers to more recent post. In our case we have a page that list excerpts from the fifty most recent posts, and that would be where we would want to send folks who want to see more. Below is the UMW Blogs code:

    Image of read more code hack 2

    That’s it, now each and every user in your community has immediate access to a range of information and other people’s posts from right within their dashboard. Bring the content to them, don’t make them search too hard for it!

Posted in UMW Blogs, Uncategorized, WordPress, wordpress multi-user, wpmu | Tagged , , , , , , | 4 Comments

UMW Guerilla Art Blog

Martha and I were talking yesterday about the unlikely place we separately discovered a new Mary Washington blog: Campus Walk. A big banner on the main stretch through campus featured a little information about the Guerilla Art Liberation Lives (GALL) group on campus along with this blogspot URL for more information: http://umwguerillaart.blogspot.com


Image of UMW Guerilla Art Blog

I plugged in the URL when I got to a computer and found their blog. This occasion confirmed something many of us already know all too well: getting your message out there has never been easier. This group uses a blogger blog, a GMail account for contact info, and a Photobucket powered photo/video repository– all of which are free, simple, and effective.

The group is doing some interesting things like a Blanket experiment on Campus Walk and the Human Paper experiment. They also posted a description of their club and their Constitution for all to read. Below is from their description of the club:

GALL stands for Guerilla Art Liberation Lives. Our goal is to rescue the arts from the glass case in which modern society has imprisoned it. We believe that the separation of art from its audience is detrimental to the pursuit of art itself. As a reaction to society, art should also elicit an immediate reaction from society. Our aim is not to create art that will go down in history, but rather art that those who encounter it will not soon forget.

They just started in September of this year (or that’s what I gather from their blog) and it promises to be an interesting development on campus.

Now some of you who know I am UMW Blogs obsessed may be wondering if I am not a bit sad that this wasn’t done with UMW Blogs? Well, of course, but it also pushed me to do a little experiment that has me pretty excited. In theory UMW Blogs can integrate Blogger feeds into the latest post display as well as the archive of all posts, but I hadn’t tested it out with a live blog yet.

Well, I finally got my chance!!! The UMW Guerilla Art blog is now being fed into UMW Blogs’ latest posts page and being stored in the searchable archive, moreover the tags they use will show up in the UMW Blogs tag cloud -sweet! All of which simply means if folks are looking for some Guerilla Art at UMW they will find it via UMW Blogs (or Google of course) –but hey, small pieces loosely joined is all about providing many ways to make your voice more widely heard, and UMW Blogs fits the bill. So, get your own blogger blog people, we’re not scared, just give us the feed!!!

If you’re interested, do a quick search for Guerilla Art in the UMW Blogs Archive and see if you can find their posts. Finally, if someone from the UMW Guerilla Art club is concerned I fed this into UMW Blogs just let me know in the comments and I will remove it immediately for I don’t want to be the subject of your next experiment 🙂

Image of UMW Archive after Guerilla Art search

Posted in art, fun, UMW Blogs | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

ffmpegX makes DVDs easy

Sometimes I do a bad impression of the New Media guy on DTLT TV. I’m not very convincing, but that’s just because I use a MAC.

Speaking of which, I think it’s high time I started doing a little documentation for one of my favorite free applications: ffmpegX. The following fast and loose slideshow takes you through the steps for reformatting DV files (but applies equally to several other codecs) to Video Object Files (VOBs) so that they can in turn be burnt onto a DVD that will work with a stand alone player. And, while you can’t edit clips effectively in ffmpegX, you can join two clips which may prove useful–with little of the iMovie bloat. Also, see this list of digital video resources for more free options (particularly MPEG Streamclip) that enables basic edits and file compression.

A similar tutorial can be found on the ffmpegX site here, and I fully acknowledge that mine is derivative. I am really just throwing a few screenshots up on Flickr (replete with descriptions) to take you through this process with a recent version of ffmpegX, namely because I had to do this six different times this morning because I couldn’t get iMovie and iDVD to cooperate. And I figured there can never be enough digital video documentation out there.

Click on each image for specific directions for this step-by-step tutorial. Hope it’s helpful.


Created with Admarket’s flickrSLiDR.

Posted in video | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments