Wandering Autodidact

I finally got a chance to watch the next lecture in the Yale Theory of Literature online course. During the lecture, Professor Fry makes a reference to an autodidact in Chekhov's The Cherry Orchard. The word jumped out at me since my viewing of these lectures is autodidactic. In fact, part of what has always drawn me to the Internet has been the great potential for autodidacticism. I always enjoyed searching out content that I could glean some new knowledge from. Perhaps it is part of an older form of autodidacticism, my love of wandering in libraries, randomly selecting articles in encyclopedias to read and similar pursuits.

Later, I started reading an essay by Hans-Georg Gadamer about hermeneutics. Yet between some undiagnosed ADD and simply being tired from a long day of work, I couldn't sink my teeth into the essay. So, I resumed my wandering autodidacticism. After all, how does hermeneutics relate to my work as a social media manager, blogger, father, husband activist or aspiring writer?

I briefly looked at some of the RSAnimate videos on YouTube, yet that was still a little too close to the thoughts about hermeneutics. Where could I learn new signifiers and gather new thoughts and ideas to weave together into something of my own.

I spent a little time thinking about mind-bending films, and perhaps I'll spend some more time watching some of them sometime soon. However, with the day almost over, I wanted something quicker to engross myself in. So, I found some Haim June Paik videos on YouTube. This led me to some Phillip Glass, and from there I was off into other experimental videos.

I'm not sure how where this leads to next or how it will all come together, but it did give me pause to think about my interactions on various social media sites. How are they feeding my autodidacticism? What do I really get out of the interactions? And what to the people that read me get out of it?

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Wordless Wednesday



Henna QR Code, originally uploaded by Aldon.

No Comment!

Last week, Dave Lucas wrote a blog post entitled Blog Comments: 7 Scenarios. It explored different reasons people leave comments and whether or not you can really tell anything about a blog by its comments. Dave dropped me an email asking for my thoughts on his blog post, and I was going to add it in a comment when I had time.

However, I've been pretty busy over the past week, and really haven't been interacting much online. I think Dave's description of common motivations for adding comments are pretty accurate, even if they are a tad cynical. While I don't participate in comments on my blog as much as I would like, I appreciate comments as a chance to hear different people's viewpoints and discuss them; pretty close to the 'comments as forum' that Dave describes.

Yet his final thought, "Comments do not make or break any blog or website" is pretty much on the mark.

I thought about this again today as the I read a post in the New Haven Independent, Time Out!, about how they are taking a sabbatical from publishing comments. It seems as if some of the trolls that have been posting obnoxious comments on other news sites have found their way to the New Haven Independent.

While there wasn't a place to comment about it on the New Haven Independent, the link to the post on the Independent's Facebook page drew quite a few comments, including close to a dozen from one person, illustrating why comments needed to be closed. He claimed that is rationale was to show that the comments would occur elsewhere, no matter what, which is true.

However, Facebook does give individuals the ability to block offensive users, so I blocked the person.

Yes, comments will take place other places. But it may be best to let them occur elsewhere on sites that have better tools for blocking spam and obnoxious users, and on sites where full time community managers can keep things on track, allowing reporters, or bloggers to do what they do best.

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Deconstructing Half Time in America

My initial reaction when I saw the beginning of the 'Half Time in America' advertisement was to wonder if it was a political advertisement. It seems like a lot of people are still wondering about that. And, while the people behind the advertisement are claiming it was not intended to be political, the people behind the Susan G. Komen decision about Planned Parenthood made similar assertions. In fact, anything related to hot button topics, like abortion or the auto industry will be viewed as political. When you get right down to it, perhaps, everything is political.

So, instead of focusing on a somewhat meaningless discussion of whether or not something is political, it makes more sense to try and understand the underlying messages. The Chrysler certainly had underlying themes that are more inline with President Obama than with his challengers. The American hope, of getting right back up, a hope that Obama used very effectively in his 2008 campaign came through. The idea of working together comes through. Of course that all working together may sound like socialism to some, probably to some of the same people that oppose Government bailouts.

Looking more closely, it seemed like there were other signs in the ad. Clint Eastwood, a Republican, famously quoted by Reagan, "Go ahead, make my day". Reagan is also evoked in the title of the advertisement, "Half Time in America", echoing Reagan's 1984 re-election advertisement "Morning in America".

In the middle of the advertisement there are several black and white photographs, which made me think of Walker Evans depression era photographs in Let Us Now Praise Famous Men.

Like it, or hate it, Half Time in America is an advertisement worth thinking about, talking about and deconstructing. And, that, unlike so many of the ads which try to appeal to our interest in puppies, humor, or sex, but have little worth thinking about, is worth noting.

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ASR 33 and Citizen Journalism

It was a winter Saturday evening in a small New England College town in the mid nineteen-seventies. It could have been just about any such evening, because there was a similar pattern, a similar flow to such evenings. I was a dorky townie living up on Henderson Road looking down over the Village Beautiful.

I sang in the school choir and played in the band; not very well, but enough to get a little bit of a sense of belonging. I worked in Audio-Visual pushing carts with film strip projectors to classrooms or setting up the video camera. It was an early chance for me to get paid for playing with technology. Either that or I would work in the library around beloved books. When all the returned books were shelved for the day, I would straighten out sections where books were out of order. 811 - Poetry, American always seemed to be in good order, but 796.332 Athletic and outdoor sports and games, Ball Games, Inflated ball driven by foot, American Football, always seemed to be out of order as did 612.6 - Human Physiology - Reproduction. I would always be embarrassed spending long periods of time putting 612.6 back into order.

The evening would start off in a familiar manner. I would get dropped off at the Student Union; my base of operations for the evening. Back then, we didn't have cellphones, so the framework for the evening would be established ahead of time. I would have a dime to call home from a pay phone, if necessary. I might have some money to buy some French Fries at the Student Union or to buy pizza from one of the two local pizza shops in town. The default would be established. If I didn't call by 10:30, for example, I would get picked up at the Student Union at 11.

There was bound to be something going on. Perhaps it was a hockey game, either high school, or college at the skating rink. Maybe a classmate was having a party, or there was some college party I could find my way into. I was never invited to parties, but I always heard about them at the Student Union and would end up showing up, uninvited.

Maybe there was a party at the ABC house. ABC stood for "A Better Chance". It was a program for bringing students from poorer, mostly black under achieving city schools, to mostly well to do, white over achieving schools in the country. Mount Greylock Regional High School was one of those over achieving schools. It was supposed to be so that the kids from the under achieving schools would get a better chance at a good education, but more often than not, it was us country kids that were getting learning the most from the experiences.

Back then, we had a small black and white television set that received three channels. There were no VCRs or DVD players. You watched what was on when it was on, if your parents allowed it. For me, that meant we could watch cartoons on Saturday mornings. Later in the morning, Soul Train would come on; about the closest we ever got to seeing music videos or different cultures, unless, of course, we caught a little bit of Lawrence Welk when we visited relatives. Parties at the ABC house were wonderful. They were Soul Train come to life with great dancing that even though I was normally too embarrassed to join in, sometimes I would get drawn in.

In the basement of the Student Union was the Ratskeller, a coffee house that often had good folk music, and down the hall was the college radio station. For me, the radio station was the place to go. There was a good chance I would run into friends there, and if not, I could enjoy the music while reading the news as it came off the ASR 33 Teletype.

The ASR 33, would click clack along at about 10 characters per second with news coming off of the wires. It was a familiar comforting machine, since I had used an ASR 33 years earlier as my connection to some of the first computers I was ever on.

The old ASR 33 came to mind this morning as I drove up to a discussion sponsored by the Connecticut Society of Professional Journalists about Citizen Journalists. I had a shirt on that Kim had had made for me which said, "I get my news on Twitter". Back when I got the shirt, several years ago, it raised eyebrows, especially at various "future of journalism" conferences I would attend. Now, many people are used to getting news via Twitter. I thought about how writing good tweets is a bit like writing good headlines and how a good headline editor should be a natural on Twitter. I thought about how cool it would be to get an old ASR 33 and hook it up to a computer that would feed tweets to the teletype similar to how the wire service delivered stories years ago.

The discussion took place in an old factory building that is finding new use as the newsroom for the Torrington Register Citizen. it was a good discussion which moved past the tired old discussions about untrained amateur reporters posting biased unverified information on websites they can freely set up thereby driving real journalists, those who went to J school, and sometimes get paid, out of work.

The discussion focused on legal issues anyone writing online needs to know about. It focused on how professional journalists and citizen journalists can work together to improve openness and transparency in government and public life.

The newsroom reminded me of Mass MoCA. In North Adams, MA, next to Williamstown, I had worked at Sprague Electric in the buildings that would later become Mass MoCA. In fact, it was at Sprague that I first encountered an ASR 33. Now, the old factory in North Adams is an art museum and the old factory in Torrington hosts a twenty first century newsroom. The space is wide open. People can join in on the daily story meetings, either in person, or online. There are blogging stations and microfilm readers available to the public. It is a place to gather, to find out what is going on, similar to what the college radio station with the ASR 33 was for me back in the 1970s.

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