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Tag Archives: web video

links list: audio-video edition

27 Friday Nov 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in linkspam

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web audio, web video

Last Monday, I spent seven hours at Northeastern entering metadata (“information about information”) into the Greenstone database for my scrapbook digitization project. Since this only really required the left side of my brain, I entertained the right side of my brain by listening to podcasts, NPR programming, and other miscellaneous audio programs. Here’s some of what I listened to.

I started out with the latest podcast from RhRealityCheck (25 minutes), which included a interesting interview with author Laura Scott, who is doing a survey/book/documentary project about couples who remain “childless by choice.” As Hanna remarked, do we really need a whole website to support the decision not to have kids? But she had some thoughtful observations and thankfully did not come across as defensive or hateful of children, which in my experience many people who identify themselves as “childfree” or “childless by choice” do — especially in the anonymous spaces of the internet.

Then came the week’s episode on Wait! Wait! Don’t Tell Me which included a great riff by the panelists on the new Twilight movie, New Moon, out in theatres this week: Who’s Carl This Time? (9 minutes)

From On the Media’s November 20 show came Online and Isolated?
(7 minutes, transcript after the jump):

Social scientists have long suspected that the internet contributes to our growing isolation. But Lee Rainie, director of the Pew Internet and American Life Project, set out to test that assumption. He says they found that Americans aren’t as isolated as we thought and that being active on the internet might actually help prevent social isolation.

On September 23, Terry Gross interviewed author David Weigel @ Fresh Air (40 minutes)

Is the conservative right undergoing a transformation? Journalist David Weigel thinks so. Weigel covers the Republican party for the online magazine The Washington Independent, where he’s written about tea party protests, anti-health care activists, the “birther” movement and the recent Values Voter summit.

Weigel formerly covered national politics for the libertarian magazine Reason. He’s also written for Slate, Time.com and The Nation.

And finally, writer Lenore Skenazy @ Free-Range Kids posted a lecture on free-range parenting she gave at Yale University’s Zigler Center. Skenazy talks about the insane levels of parental fear about letting children explore the world (1 hour video).

*image credit: valu thrift headphones by Thrift Store Addict @ Flickr.

from the neighborhood: buddy the christmas lobster

15 Thursday Oct 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in Uncategorized

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domesticity, from the neighborhood, humor, photos, web video

Hanna was at lush earlier this week restocking on a few of our regular shampoo and soap products and she brought me home one of the new Christmas season “bath bomb” bubble bath bars, gnome name, which she informs me at the local store they are referring to as “buddy the christmas lobster” which suggests that they are all well-versed in the nativity play performed in love actually.

friday fun: ‘simon’s cat’ video

09 Friday Oct 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in media

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fun, web video

Hanna via Diana tuned me in to this series of animated videos on YouTube. All of you who have cared for a cat will appreciate them! (Click through the embedded video to the YouTube site for more shorts).

more vintage video fun: "a date with your family"

29 Tuesday Sep 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in media

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history, humor, movies, web video

Brought to you from mst3k, another educational short (about 10 minutes) demonstrating the proper attitude towards, and behavior at, nightly dinner with one’s family.

My favorite sequence:

Narrator: “First of all, Daughter has changed from school clothes to something more festive.

I know I certainly put on my Sunday best before Hanna and I sit down to supper. Also, it’s creepy that all the characters are referred to by their generic member-of-the-family label, not actual names.

“Dressing a little makes her feel — and consequently look — more charming.”

because it’s all about performance, girls! remember that!

“Mother too changes from her daytime clothes. The women of this family seem to feel that they owe it to the men of the family to look relaxed, rested, and attractive at dinner time.”

In the words of Mike & Co: “So they’re unsuspecting when they kill them!”

aside from the fact it’s about women performing for men, I love the way the emphasis is on appearance: it’s important to “look” relaxed, rested, and attractive . . . never mind that Mother and Daughter are the ones preparing and serving the entire meal!

The whole film, in fact, emphasized the performance of an ideal 1950s family, with the suppression of unpleasant news and discord in favor of harmony and surface-level conversation. The narrator’s script keeps emphasizing this point, as if he’s just begging for us to wonder what evils are lurking in the shadows, unspoken.

. . . “Everyone wants to flee this seething cauldron of angst!”

video wednesday: the home economics story

23 Wednesday Sep 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in media

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education, feminism, history, web video

Hanna introduced me to this timely 1951 promotional video from Iowa State College just as I was reading Paul Goodman’s Growing Up Absurd last week. It is an incredible snapshot of the way college attendance was presented to young women in the postwar period; watch to be bitter end for the senior year requirement to play house in preparation for “real life” for the full creepy effect. Almost as good as the marriage preparedness video I posted back in March.

Running time: 25:02 minutes.

UPDATE: Hanna chastised me for not including the mystery science theater version of this short, which is available via YouTube, so here are the links (it comes in two parts): part one and part two. Better late than never?

Midweek Fourth Plinth Post

07 Tuesday Jul 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in media

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fun, web video

Hanna and I have been slightly mesmerized by a performance art project going on in London’s Trafalgar Square, 6 July – 14 October, atop the Fourth Plinth. 2400 UK citizens have been selected randomly from a pool of 22120 applicants to spend one hour each, twenty-four hours a day, for one hundred days as living art on the empty plinth in the square outside the National Gallery. This morning when we logged on, for example, a young woman just starting her hour (early afternoon in the UK) was tossing 1,000 paper airplanes into the crowd. Yesterday at about the same time, a woman was enjoying tea under a red umbrella in the company of a small garden gnome. Up next, as I’m typing this, is a small purple puppet named Cheeky.


The project, titled “One & Other,” is the brainchild of artist Antony Gormley.

The official website of the project is live streaming video footage of the plinth twenty-four/seven and a flickr pool has been created to gather the still photographs people take and upload to the web.

Go and be captivated. Hope you all have a good midweek.

"Did You Know?": Am I crazy or is this xenophobic?

13 Saturday Jun 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in think pieces

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education, politics, simmons, web video

This web video pops up in my Simmons library science courses at least once a semester and, predictably, it turned up again today in the first session of my technology course.

Reactions in class were divided between, well, me and everyone else who spoke up.

Watching the video this time around, in the context of other reading I’ve been doing about conservative fears of a European “demographic winter” and non-Western population growth, I couldn’t shake the feeling that the way this data was presented had a certain element of xenophobia — specifically fear about the U.S. being overtaken intellectually and economically by Asian countries like India and China.

I was also struck by the way it frames achievement by conventional educational terms (for example, IQ scores and the concept of education as job training). The fear of non-American young people “out performing” American students has a long history in the American discourse about education (think of Cold War anxieties about Soviet students with higher test scores than American students). Watching the video in light of these two contexts (fearmongering demographic debates and anxiety about academic performance on the international stage) makes me distinctly uncomfortable about the way this data is presented and the way it is offered, for the most part uncritically, in our library science classes as a wake-up call for the future of information organization.

The other students in class seemed to think I was reading the film too negatively, and offered an alternative reading to the effect of, “look how much human potential we have in the world — let’s make the most of it!” Yet at the same time, they, too, were voicing competitive anxieties about how Americans can’t afford to rest easy in the assumption they have the technological advantage — an anxiety that I feel buys into an “us vs. them” framework that can slide into, well, xenophobia and isolationism. Particularly in a period of economic constraint.

Thoughts?

Movienotes: Jaws, In Bruges & Silent Hill

01 Monday Jun 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in media

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domesticity, movies, web video

In my apartment we have what we refer to as The List. It began as something Hanna and I put together to swap book and movie titles one of us hadn’t seen and thought the other would like . . . over the past year it has morphed into a list of films and books which Hanna considers an essential part of my cultural literacy. I am industriously (and, I admit, quite pleasurably) making my way through The List — a little more swiftly and purposefully at the moment, now that I don’t have classes and homework with impending deadlines. This past week, I ticked no less than three films off the list: Jaws, In Bruges, and Silent Hill.

To begin with the least serious first, I realize I’m a good three decades late with a review of Jaws and one of a diminishingly small group of Americans who made it passed their twenty-fifth birthday without seeing the film — but I did, so let me just say it was fun. Since I hate submarines, I’m glad there were no scenes with subs, and I thought Richard Dreyfuss was hilarious. It made me giggle a lot, but this was possibly because I was watching it with a stiff gin & tonic in hand, and also because being bitten in half by a shark has never been a particular fear of mine.

In Bruges was breathtaking: smart, hilarious, incredibly violent, and ferociously acted. When I told Hanna the bit about it being hilarious the next morning, her response was: “Isn’t it just. Until it isn’t. And then it really isn’t.” which I thought summed it up quite nicely.” I actually think the less said about the actual plot of the film the better, since I went into it with only the vague sense it was about a group of hit men on a job gone horribly wrong. Why it’s gone wrong and each individual’s response to the situation is best left to unfold without a lot of advance preparation. If I had to pick a moment in which the entire film suddenly switched from violent comedy to comedic tragedy, I’d have to pick the final conversation between Brendon Gleeson’s character, Ken, and Ralph Fienne’s character, Harry, at the top of the sight-seeing tower, and the events that ensue. You’ll know when you get there. In the meantime, enjoy the way Ken and Colin Farrell’s character, Ray, bounce off each other. It’s priceless.

This afternoon, I watched Silent Hill, a horror film about a stolen child, Sharon, and a haunted coal-mining town with dark secrets, in which her mother, Rose, must struggle against the forces of darkness to recover her. It is based, Hanna tells me, on a video game, and thus bounded by certain parameters — virtually all of the action takes place in a circumscribed place, cut off from the outside world, and Rose in effect must go on a quest in order to solve the mystery of the town and (hopefully) set her daughter free. As I’m typing this, it actually strikes me that visually and narratively, it bears some resemblance to the exquisite Pan’s Labyrinth, also on The List, which I watched with rapt attention shortly after the end of term. Silent Hill doesn’t have the poetry of del Toro’s film, but it is nevertheless operating on the same fantastical principles.

About three-quarters of the way through the film, I was struck by the absence of central male characters — Sharon’s father, sweetly played by Sean Bean, is stuck on the outside of the town with a officious police officer, also male, but other than that all of the men are unnamed extras. In a horror/action movie this seems striking to me, although I admit limited knowledge of both genres. The fact that it goes unremarked upon internally is also notable: the film doesn’t seem to be consciously setting itself up as a film populated by women — they are simply the characters who happen to populate the script.

At the same time, it is definitely a story about women — there are gender dimensions to the narrative of horror and redemption that unfold. After all, the story begins with a mother (Rose) attempting to heal, and then rescue, her daughter (Sharon). As the plot unfolds, further pairings of mothers and daughters appear, and overlap, with the original pairings, and the relationships between these parents and their children are key to the drama that plays out. I’ll definitely still be thinking about this one in the week ahead. (Though hopefully not dreaming about it tonight!)

In the week ahead? We have the original X-men movie coming, since seeing Wolverine prompted both Hanna and I to say, “oh, it would be fun to see that again!” and now that I’ve seen In Bruges Hanna has consented to watch The Station Agent (also starring Peter Dinklage). Beyond that, we’ve also been watching on DVD the television show Bones about a team of forensic anthropologists at the Smithsonian who consult with the FBI on criminal investigations. At one hour a pop, they keep themselves ticking through witty dialog and great interplay between the core of main characters. Oh, and then there’s Carnivale to finish . . .

Thursday video: digital emulation edition

01 Friday May 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in media

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books, librarians, simmons, web video

In my archives class tonight (LIS440: Archival Access and Use) were were getting the cliff notes version of digital preservation, the future of archives. Because even though we will continue for the foreseeable future to have and acquire traditional materials in, say, paper form (or am I seriously the only person who still keeps my journal long-hand? writes actual pen-and-ink letters?), we’ll also get an increasing proportion of “born digital” materials — say drafts of a novel preserved in Word format, or an Excel file detailing travel expenses for a conference, or a computer program modeling data sets from a science experiment.

One of the concepts for preserving this data and making it available to researchers is “emulation.” Basically, it’s creating–using newer technology–a way of accessing older data that will re-create as closely as possible the original experience of accessing the data. For example, making it possible to run an old computer game (Donkey Kong anyone?) on newer technology, but maintaining the look and feel of the original game.

Our professor, Susan Pyzynski, showed us this digital archive, the agrippa files dedicated to Agrippa (a book of the dead), a sort of performance art collaboration created in 1992 by artist Dennis Ashbaugh, author William Gibson, and publisher Kevin Begos, Jr. It was a limited-edition book meant to be read for a limited time only before its text faded packaged with a diskette containing a digital file of a poem meant to be opened and read only once before it self-destructed.

the agrippa files managed to capture and emulate the experience of reading this poem, a process which they detail on the website and have made available through Google video with the permission of the original creators. Check out this experiment in 21st century archival access!

(note: if you actually care about reading the poem, you can find a higher-resolution Quicktime video on the agrippa file website)

Friday video: cutest. robot. ever.

24 Friday Apr 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in media

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fun, outdoors, random kindness, web video

well, okay. maybe not EVER. Wall-E was pretty darned adorable. but, anyway, via Alas, a Blog comes this New York City art project involving mobile “tweenbots” who are let loose on the streets of the city and aided by passersby.

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