April 12, 2003

set phasers to fun

I’ve been busy working my kiester off for Geek Prom the last two days. …scrubbed down some harlequins, wore my fingers raw tying balloons to string, got lost in the attic of the Norshor after my flashlight burned out, built a teleporter, got covered in black light paint, and set up some sweet-ass lighting on our two glitter balls.

Once Manplanet, the Hospital People and all my fellow geeks show up, this place is gonna be rockin’. Last year’s King Geek is stuck home with a sick child, and since I was second runner up for king there is a good chance I will be serving on the Celebrity Geek Judging Panel with the likes of George Kessler.

Geek out, futhermockers.


April 11, 2003

butterfly vengance

Things have been running pretty dry ’round here as of late. School has been granting me repeated atomic wedgies with such delicious repetition that I hardly even notice the funny walk, anymore. Our jazz sextet has been playing Wednesday late-night gigs the last few weeks, which psychologically splits each week into two weeks for me. The first week runs Sunday to Wednesday and the second picks up from Thursday to Saturday. It is awful to wake up on Thursday, feel like it should be Saturday, and realize that it’s actually Monday. I doubt I’m explaining this effectively, so I’ll just drink more beer and move on…

Today was by far the nicest day this town has seen since last October. I hopped in the wagon this morning and trucked on down to Park Point to chill in the sand and take some pictures. After all the high winds we’ve been having, the bay is now completely filled up with gleaming white chunks of ice. It looks like they’ve been stocking the Lake with hunks of marble for building an elegant Duluth II.

Out at the Point, 10-foot drifts of snow have accumulated at water’s edge over the course of the winter, and now in the blazing heat of April their days stand numbered. As soon as I reached the beach I kicked off my Birkenstocks and ran out in an attempt to climb these icy sentinels, but the wide expanse of slush that stood between me and my desired conquests proved too much for my bare feet. It was the kind of cold where you jump back into warmth and the pain just intensifies, flooding up from your feet into your spine, making you lurch and stumble about for a few moments in nauseating agony. It was so fun I did it a couple of times. Then it stopped being fun.

I found a few things. Pictures will follow soon after post-processing and when I’m not so tired. For now, ponder their vague meaning:

“He who controls the Spice, controls Arakkis. He who controls Arakkis, controls Dune.”

Words of love in the sand.

A star-spangled lighter.

On the drive back into Canal Park I saw a butterfly. It greased across my windshield. I ran my wipers to remove its presence but my window was down so all the washer fluid drained off the glass and into my face. By the luck of a terrible design flaw the butterfly got its vengenace.



April 8, 2003

to do list-a-boo

Write 5-7 page essay analyzing the DHTML website Assember.org. Somehow work in the “Erotic Ontology of Cyberspace,” just so I can put on a resume somewhere down the road that I wrote an essay on the erotic ontology of cyberspace. BAM! Instant employment.

Speaking of BAM!, I went to Great Clips today and got a really lame haircut. Maybe it’s really not that bad, but the bangs are too short and the sides are too short and the back is too long. Everyone thinks I put highlights in it cuz the bleach job I did over the summer is finally growing out. I look like an ugly girl trying to grow a mullet.

Redesign website for the Department of Philosophy.

Write an electronic picture book to the Phish song Rift.

Write a webpage detailing my experience with the 2001 Big Wu Family Reunion.

Buy new sax reeds.

Learn how to play flute before the Big Band Extravaganza on April 16th.

Memorize the windsurfing product catalogue for my summer job.

Study for communications test next Monday.

Practice for Luce gig tomorrow.

Figure out what I need to do for Geek Prom this Saturday.

Quit my senseless blogging and get to work.


April 7, 2003

propa-gandhi

The Spontaneous Combustion Jazz Sextet

Live at the downtown Duluth Pizza Luce

Wednesday, April 9, 2003

11:00 PM (HEADLINING, BABY)

Whenever I think of propaganda I think of Propagandhi (which is actually the name of a band that Rockstar introduced me to, as I recall). Whenever I think of Gandhi I think of my sister’s computer, freshman year at Carleton. I was installing a tank game called Bolo and noticed that the file for her final essay in one class was named “FUCK GANDHI”.

Quite a bold statement. It seemed so uncharacteristic that I’m not sure I was supposed to know about it. Come to think of it, I don’t think that you’re supposed to know. I don’t think Google is supposed to know, either, even though anyone that types ‘fuck gandhi’ in the search engine will now be directed to this post.

Kinda cool, in that respect. I’ll have to remember to turn off comments for this post at some point.


flex. release.

I redid the splash page ’round here, which is always a guilty pleasure because web design books encircling the globe in a glistening ring of detritus all agree that splash pages are the worst evil you could ever wish upon your viewers. “Better to give them an eyeful of content on the first page than to tease with images.”

M’eh. One time Lileks had a splash page that was torn out of an olde olde magazine. It showed a fellow mowing the lawn, and the engine in the motor shook back and forth. I was hooked. “Better to thumb them in the eye than in the bum,” I say.

So. We’ve got a picture of downtown Hood River, with saturation cranked to such amounts that it looks like Crazy Happy Colorfast Clown Land. But really, that’s the way things look out in Oregon. If you don’t believe me, blast away from this godforsaken moon state and go check it out. It’s lush out there, ladies and gentlemen. When you’ve had enough of angry pellety Gobstopper hail that cuts open your cheeks, saucy snow that falls up from the ground and gets in your skivvies, and 60 mile an hour winds that threaten to scrape civilization off the earth and cast it into the roiling depths of Lake Superior, go take in some heavy draughts of the left coast.

But of course, I romanticize. By moving out to Hood River I will get to pay the pump chump tax, whereby I am disallowed to pump my own gas and must pay someone else to perform a service that I am more than willing, more than capable, and more than happy to do myself. I won’t need to pay sales tax (unless they’ve got some slippery city sales tax that crept under the radar of NO STATE SALES TAX while I wasn’t looking), but I’ll probably lose 50 percent of my wages to government subsidized universal health.

But whatevs. I get to live in the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area, a place so beautiful that they found it appropriate to draw dark green lines around it on maps. I get to live thirty miles away from a dormant volcano that tops out above 11,000 feet and offers snowboarding year-round. All this stuff really should cost something, and if somehow indirectly the pump chump tax keeps out the riff-raff, I’ll take it. I might not be able to eat anything but ramen and boot leather, but I’ll take it. Anything to be groovy.

And that’s what I find missing from Minnesota. The groove. We’re tough and crazy, sure. No one in their right mind thinks that Minnesota is a great place to live when the THIRD BLIZZARD OF APRIL rolls around (it’s only the 7th and we’re waiting for number four, now). It’s a great place to live in December when the snow is new. It’s a great place to live in July when the snow finally leaves. For some, suffering through the winter is merely the price you have to pay to be surrounded by forests and lakes and fellow gun nuts. For others, winter is merely the price you have to pay to live near 494 and have a two-hour commute through grinding traffic every day. You can pick and choose your battles, you see. Gas tax and a city that worships bluegrass music? Millfoil and rezoned farmland? You decide.

I find that Minnesota has no center. There’s no such thing as a Minnesota Nice, so much as there is a Minnesota Tongue-Biting. We’re not a murderous lot, but we’re not especially nice, either. We mind our own business. There’s a mutually understood apathy, if nothing else. We say that the weather is worth the price of admission, but are we being honest with ourselves?

At my most cynical, I would say that the only reason someone would want to stay around these parts is for the bragging rights. If you wake up and start the truck in twenty below weather, with ice crystals whippin’ across the prairie and digging into your face as you brush off a foot of snow, there’s a good chance that no one in another state can top you. You swear and curse about the experience all day. You tell your co-workers. You tell your family. You tell the guy at the gas station that he’s lucky he ain’t out pumpin’ gas, right now, cuz man it’s miserable out there.

You derrive a sadistic joy from this hardship, knowing that at any point at any party, You can whip it out and top all the other guys in town. You hate the weather. You love the weather. The thing you hate becomes the things you love not because you learned how to love it, but because you deceived yourself into loving it. You convince yourself that you have no choice but to love it, because dammit, you’re stuck here, love it or leave it.

But then, you’re not stuck here. If you hate the splash page you can click right on through it. Or you can go somewhere else entirely.

Hood River.


April 6, 2003

plastic makes it possible

I got a new keyboard over the weekend, as my old one had become infected with orange juice, candle wax and hissy-fits while using Adobe Premiere. One time I hit the keyboard so hard two keys flew off. I never bothered putting them back on.

The keyboard came in a plastic bag, and as plastic bags are one of mankind’s most dangerous inventions ever (right up there with machine guns, nuclear weapons, and paper cuts), it was littered with warnings. People need to be protected from themselves, ya know.

Not just text warnings, but pictures for all you visual learners out there.

WARNING: PLASTIC BAG WILL GIVE YOU THE SUDDEN AND IRREVERSIBLE ABILITY TO SING LIKE MANY POPULAR SONG GROUPS.

Doesn’t this one remind you of a dog with a bucket stuck on its head? Seriously, is there anything in the world funnier than a dog running around with a bucket on its head?

WARNING: PLASTIC BAG WILL RESULT IN YOUR CHILD LOOKING RIDICULOUSLY ADORABLE FOR THE FEW MOMENTS BEFORE IT SUFFOCATES TO DEATH.


April 4, 2003

emo farm? har!

The other day I ordered a few matt pond PA cds from Polyvinyl Records. If you are not familiar (and many aren’t), matt pond PA is a “chamber pop” group, where the standard rock band line-up is complemented by two cellos, a violin, a vibraphone, a harp and a french horn. It rocks my socks.

In addition to those cds, Polyvinyl also sent me a sampler cd of other artists in their stable, and they’ve got some excellent stuff in there. If you’re down with the whole geek rock or emo scene (or if you’re not down and you want to be down, or if you’re not down and don’t want to be down but feel compelled to be down because I’m down and I’m so cool that you want to be like me and be down, too) you should totally check this stuff out. I list them here in my order of preference, based on the one song of each that I have heard.

Mates of State

Paris, Texas

Sunday’s Best

The Red Hot Valentines

Owen

AM/FM

Saturday Looks Good to Me

Kyle Fischer

Dig, yo.



April 3, 2003

velvet whuzzat?

Tonight we’re poking around a bit under the U.S. Copyright Office website.

Oh look, they have an Frequently Asked Questions section. I’m sure that this will contain pertinent information for my property rights essay. Let’s take a look at question number 58:

How do I protect my sighting of Elvis?

Copyright law does not protect sightings. However, copyright law will protect your photo (or other depiction) of your sighting of Elvis. Just send it to us with a form VA application and the $30 filing fee. No one can lawfully use your photo of your sighting, although someone else may file his own photo of his sighting. Copyright law protects the original photograph, not the subject of the photograph.

Now you know. And knowing is half the battle.