Archive - Nov 2010
November 22nd
Music Monday - J Peter Boles
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 11/22/2010 - 11:18It is another cold rainy Monday which probably affects my choices of music for Music Mondays. Whose idea was it anyway to blog about music on Mondays. Sure, the alliteration is good, but really?
So, I sat down with my cup of coffee and listened to some of the latest submissions on Sonicbids for the Music Review section of Orient Lodge.
There is a young musician who did session work for Barney. Upbeat pop sort of stuff. Nice. Perhaps good going into the holiday season, but it didn’t really fit my mood. Anyway, I should have my daughter review that submission.
Clicking through the pages, I came to J. Peter Boles. He has a new Christmas EP out. In my book, it is still too early to be Christmas shopping. There is still a month to go before the serious Christmas shopping begins. I’m not ready to listen to Silent Night or Go Tell It On the Mountain. Yet I like to give each musician a fair chance and listen to their music.
I listened to the guitar intro to Silent Night, and I half expected Boles to start off with “Annie laid her head down in the roses”, except maybe singing Mary instead of Annie. I flipped over to the website to read about The Resinator, a guitar that Boles built with “ocean-swept driftwood & found abalone in a custom polymer resin composite”. Fascinating.
So, if you want to really mix up your music for the holidays, add Boles Christmas Sky to your mix.
Yet there is much more to Boles than his Christmas EP. His debut album has some great songs on them. Perhaps the song that resonates best with me is “Bard Lane / Sweet Eagle Dreams”.
There stands the man that I used to be
He's starin' past the fences out toward the hills
His eyes full of questions, his mailbox full of bills
He wouldn't trade this life, but he can't help but wonder sometimes
...
He sees the sun goin' down like an artist's dream
While the pearly crescent moon begins to gleam
The L.A. freeway's gonna set us free
The Ventura River is flowin' down to the sea
Yeah, another comrade in arms. Boles sings about hobos, the December rain, and tides ebbing and flowing. It’s some good music to listen to on a rainy Monday morning.
November 21st
Random Notes: Diversity, Douchebags and Lieberman
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 11/21/2010 - 21:15Sunday Evening. I’m kind of burnt. I want to get something written for my blog before the evening is through, but just don’t have the energy for something big, so I want to highlight a few different things that I commented on today.
Diversity
CT NewsJunkie has an article, NAACP Criticizes Malloy Transition Team; Malloy Calls Criticism Premature. Friends talked about this on Facebook. Unfortunately, I can’t find my comment on Facebook about it, so I’ll recreate it here.
It seems as if both the NAACP and the Malloy transition team could have handled this better. The CTNewsJunkie article quotes and email from Scot X. Esdaile, president of Connecticut’s NAACP, saying, “The lack of diversity in Dan Malloy’s transition team is a slap in the face to all of the urban areas in the State of Connecticut”.
Malloy’s Chief of Staff Tim Bannon is quoted as responding, “It’s unfortunate that the NAACP chose not to discuss their concerns with us first before sending out a press release”.
I haven’t seen the whole NAACP press release, so I can’t comment in detail on it, but it would seem that a more positive tone might have been more effective, congratulating Governor-Elect Malloy on his election, reminding him of the great diversity of his supporters, and expressing a hope that the transition team and the administration will reflect that diversity.
The Malloy response doesn’t come across much better. From the bits and pieces in the CTNewsJunkie article, it sounds like some of the same old politics, “Let’s have our discussions in private instead of in public”. Some have suggested that there are things happening in the background that justify the tone of the NAACP letter.
Instead, both sides should be much more open, transparent and cordial. It could bring about a nice change.
Doucebags
Some of my longer term readers will recall articles I’ve written about a student, Avery Doninger, who was punished by her high school administration for writing in a LiveJournal post at home one night a comment about “the douchebags at the central office”. Various aspects of this case are still dragging through the courts. One aspect of this is how appropriate or offensive the word douchebag is. This came back to me today when I watched George Takei call out an anti-gay Arkansas school board member:
Be sure to watch at least the first 45 seconds of this video.
Joe Lieberman
Earlier today, Colin McEnroe posted a great column on the Hartford Courant Blogs, Haunted By The Undead? Nope – Just Lieberman. In it he looks at the possibility of Sen. Lieberman running for re-election in 2012. It is a great column with lines like:
At that moment, our eyes fastened on a Merrick Alpert for Senate campaign button sitting in the reddish sand. I bent to pick it up, and the bloody hand of Susan Bysiewicz reached up through the earth's crust and began pulling me down to my death as I screamed and woke up.
Mr. McEnroe suggests that Senator Lieberman’s options are limited and that he is unlikely to get the Democratic, Republican or Connecticut for Lieberman party nominations, leaving him no choice but to run as a write-in candidate.
My comment there:
It seems like you are missing the most obvious option. Sen. Lieberman will simply create a yet another new political party like he did last time. Perhaps it will be "Undead for Lieberman". This would be homage to your article and would set himself up for using the same party for centuries to come, providing he can better fend off the pirates this time around.
Of course, if he wants to appeal to other aspects of popular culture, he might try "Vampires for Lieberman" with a similar effect. This would also position himself well to defend Wall Street.
He could consider the "Steroid Addicted Wrestlers for Lieberman" if he really fears a challenge by Linda McMahon.
However, I think he should go with "Real AG candidates for Senate". This could be a nod to Dick Blumenthal, a slam to Susan Bysiewicz and an open invitation to Martha Dean in a show of bi-partisanship.
November 20th
Your Chance to Star in Validation
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sat, 11/20/2010 - 10:22Have you watched ‘Validation’?
Take the time to watch this video. Then ask yourself, what are you doing to validate others.
Here is one way to help. Help-Portrait 2010.
Help-Portrait is a community of photographers, coming together across the world to use their photography skills to give back to their local community.
On or around 04 December, photographers around the world will be grabbing their cameras, finding people in need and taking their picture. When the prints are ready, the photographs get delivered.
Yep. It really is that easy.
Here’s a video from 2009:
New Haven Photographers Matt and Lindsay Branscombe are helping organize Help Portrait 2010 - New Haven. (Sign up on the Facebook Event Page.)
It isn’t just in New Haven. There are efforts in Bridgeport as well. For more details, check out Mark Smith's blog post about Help Portrait in Bridgeport in 2009 as well as the Bridgeport Public Allies Community Portrait Session to raise awareness for affordable housing in Bridgeport, CT. If you are interested in the Bridgeport efforts this year, check out the Bridgeport Group on the Help Portrait website.
You can help validate people as well. As Mark said in his blog post, “Don't Take Pictures, Give Them!!!”
November 19th
Unfollow Friday @TwitCleaner http://who.unfollowed.me
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Fri, 11/19/2010 - 18:56Typically, people post Follow Friday messages of people that they are following and suggesting that other people follow them back. Today, I’m turning it on its head and posting Unfollow Friday. What’s this about?
Well, currently, I’m following around 2900 people on Twitter. That’s a lot of people. With that, I may not read as many tweets as closely as I should. If I pare down my list a little, I may get more useful information.
Looking a little more closely, when I started working on this blog post, I was following 2911 people. According to who.unfollowed.me, 958 of them are not following me. That leaves 1953 mutual follows. At the same time, there are 3184 people following me. Taking out the mutual followers, that leaves 1231 that I’m not following.
Many of the people that I follow that are not following me back make sense. Using The Twit Cleaner can help give a better understanding. Curiously enough, it reported 958 people that I follow are ‘potentially garbage’. These are not the same 958 people that I follow who are not following me, but there is some overlap.
Two followers were listed as very often having multiple at signs in their messages. 255 followers post nothing but links. 53 repeat the same URLs. 13 repeat the same message. 125 have other ‘dodgy behavior’ and haven’t posted recently. 222 haven’t posted anything in over a month. 48 Don’t interact much with others. 43 Don’t interact at all with others. 128 hardly follow anyone. 17 talk all the time. 52 post mostly retweets and 1 post mostly just quotes.
I don’t find people who post nothing but links all that annoying. I post a lot of links. Many of my posts come from Foursquare and Twitterfeed which both include links. Repeating same URL and the same message is also somewhat understandable. People who haven’t posted in a long time don’t take up space in my twitter stream and I don’t worry about it.
The biggest overlap between people that I follow who do not follow me back and one of the Twitclean categories is followers that hardly follow anyone. None of them follow me. Most are news sources, corporate publicity sites and celebrities.
So, I’ve slowly been cleaning out unfollowers and others who are less interesting. Hopefully, this will mean I catch more interesting tweets going forward.
Story.lab Homework
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Fri, 11/19/2010 - 11:09I am frustrated. My computers are running slowly this morning at I have lots to do. While they are crucial to my work, the computers that I have are pretty old. I’ve managed to keep them running well past their expected lifespan.
One of the things on my todo list, actually for yesterday, but it got bumped to this morning, and I really need to get it done, is this blog post about story.lab. For the past couple of weeks, I’ve been heading down to The Grove to join in a discussion about living the mission of our lives as stories. What are those stories? What is the object of desire in the story? What is the controlling idea? What is the over arching value of my controlling idea? The cause for my overarching idea? How must my character transform if I am able to live my story?
In other discussions, there have been questions about what prevents us from living our stories? What are the antagonists? For home work, we are supposed to think through some of these questions and be prepared to share them. So, here is my first take.
The controlling idea is about engagement. With that, I guess the object of desire is for people to become more engaged in their communities. This is an open ended object of desire. Ideally, it is obtained every day and at the same time becomes the new object of desire. No matter how involved people come, there is always that desire to become more involved.
As people become more involved in their communities, their lives and the lives of their communities become transformed. With that, I need to constantly be finding new ways of helping people become more involved in their communities as I need to constantly better understand and become more involved in the communities I’m part of.
Yet this comes to the antagonists. It is easy to become burnt out. When there is a setback, it is easy to become disillusioned. Through all of this, there is a struggle to make a living, to help get bread on the table. Unfortunately, promoting community involvement often doesn’t pay all that well. It means juggling resources and keeping old computers running and the frustration that comes with it. It means juggling time commitments.
With that, this blog post is written quickly and not edited. I need to juggle some of my time commitments. So, what is the story line for the mission of your life?