Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Marty and Ashlee at the Bonneville Salt Flats

One video I didn't bring had Marty saying "We drove all the way to the salt flats in Utah and they were filled with water."

These three videos demonstrate this, and contain an important message for future visitors.



I like the sound. That water isn't getting any deeper.





So... Shoes if you have them. Yes.

Monday, March 25, 2013

Peeps used to be yellow...

Peeps used to be yellow, long years ago. Then there were some pink ones. Now several colors. But in all those yeara I never thought about this thing (in a photo by Kyra Traaseth of the makings of s'mores, at their house):





I did think to photograph the display at Albertson's near our house, though, to share with my non-Peeps-familiar friends. Glad Kyra's photo reminded me to bring them out.

From a distance it looks like a basket, and that's sweet. The closer you get, though, same old Peeps.






People who are out of Peeps-range would never have needed to know had it not been for Youtube, and things like this (and please note that Jesus and the Pope are portrayed by yellow Peeps, so the other colors are not made in the image of God. Plato's ideal Peep would have been yellow. Jung's archetypical Peep... same):



Here's something quite recent:

Saturday, March 16, 2013

My David Bowie letter in an analytical article

http://www.openculture.com/2012/12/david_bowies_first_american_fan_letter_and_his_evolving_views_of_the_us_1967-1997.html

I'm brought the text in case that other post disappears.   

 David Bowie’s First American Fan Letter And His Evolving Views of the U.S. (1967-1997)

David Bowie’s relationship with America has typified the outsider’s view: an ambivalence ranging from fascination to fear that he expressed in a reply to his first letter from a U.S. fan in 1967 (click to read in large format). The fan, intrepid 14-year-oldSandra Dodd, had gotten her hands on an advance copy of Bowie’s first album and written him to praise his work and offer to start a fan club for him stateside. Bowie’s response is very interesting.We’ve written before about his rise from obscure R&B and folk singer to Ziggy Stardust, which required him to shake off a natural shyness to inhabit his breakout persona. In the letter, the 20-year-old Bowie initially comes off as a naïve, slightly self-involved young pop singer. Then, after answering the usual fan queries—what’s his real name, birthday, height—he turns to the subject of the U.S., a country he had yet to visit. Bowie writes:
I hope one day to get to America. My manager tells me lots about it as he has been there many times with other acts he manages. I was watching an old film on TV the other night called “No Down Payment” a great film, but rather depressing if it is a true reflection of The American Way Of Life. However, shortly after that they showed a documentary about Robert Frost the American poet, filmed mainly at his home in Vermont, and that evened the score. I am sure that that is nearer the real America.
Drawing his impressions from movies, Bowie references two views. The first, Martin Ritt’s 1957 No Down Payment, is full of the banality and melodrama we’ve come to expect from Mad Men, making incisive critiques of mid-50s cultural problems simmering under the surface of the suburbs like alcoholism, racism, and infidelity. As one fan writes, the film depicted what “no one wanted to see… a soiled American Dream,” or what Bowie capitalizes as “The American Way Of Life.”
The other view Bowie takes of the States comes from a film on Robert Frost—most likely 1963’s Robert Frost: A Lover’s Quarrel With the World. Little wonder this film “evened the score” for the lyrical young songwriter, who chooses in his letter to believe it represents the “real America,” a sentiment he would not hold for long.
Flash forward to 1984, and Bowie is an international pop star. Most fans would argue his best work was far behind him, but the 80s saw him break out into more mainstream film roles in The Elephant Man and Labyrinththat kept him at the forefront of American pop culture. His soundtrack work was memorable as well, although the track below “This is Not America,” written with Pat Metheny for The Falcon and the Snowman doesn’t get much attention these days. Bowie’s impressionistic lyrics–which Metheny called “profound and meaningful”–show him in mourning for the country that puzzled his younger self:
A little piece of you
The little peace in me
Will die
For this is not America
Blossom fails to bloom
This season
Promise not to stare
Too long
For this is not a miracle
And again, move forward to 1997, thirty years after Bowie’s letter above, and we find him in a jaundiced mood in “I’m Afraid of Americans” from his album Earthling (the song originally appeared on what may be one of the most cynical films ever made, Showgirls). Bowie explained the genesis of the song in a press release:
I’m Afraid of Americans’ was written by myself and Eno. It’s not as truly hostile about Americans as say “Born in the USA”: it’s merely sardonic. I was traveling in Java when the first McDonalds went up: it was like, “for fuck’s sake.” The invasion by any homogenized culture is so depressing, the erection of another Disney World in, say, Umbria, Italy, more so. It strangles the indigenous culture and narrows expression of life.
The cultural homogenization that so depressed the young Bowie in No Down Payment is now a global phenomenon, and the well-traveled, worldly Bowie seems to harbor few illusions when he sings:
Johnny’s in America
No tricks at the wheel
No one needs anyone
They don’t even just pretend
In the award-winning video, Trent Reznor plays a Travis Bickle-like figure, a menacing creature of alienation and unprovoked, random violence and Bowie a paranoid outsider running from what he perceives as citizens attacking each other on every streetcorner. Stripped of the 50s veneer, it’s a country where people “don’t even pretend”; the violence and misanthropy are now on full display. It’s a view of America that hasn’t dimmed since the mid-nineties. It’s simply moved out of the city and spilled out into the once self-contained suburbs. These three artifacts show Bowie’s evolution in relation to a country that he hoped to find the best in, that nearly always embraced him, and that came to freak him out and piss him off in later years.
via Letters of Note

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There was an image of the letter, too (which I have here.   Their picture of the letter was yellowish, but I don't know why.  The paper was and still is quite white. :-)    [Wait... I checked.  the image they used was a photo made by Rex Features when Holly and James Daniel took the papers to them for high-quality photos.  When I scanned my original, it was as white as the original.  So honestly... I know know why Rex Features' copy is yellowish.  But anyway... (I think my scanner corrected for contrast, and their camera emphasized color, maybe.)



Sunday, March 10, 2013

Prince(s)

An image search for "Prince" was all Minnesota Prince for a few dozen, and then branched out a bit:




Tuesday, March 05, 2013

Michael Masterson's sewing machines and stuff

Michael Masterson interview: http://www.denimbro.com/michael-masterson_topic408.html

It's always fun to read interviews with people I know in real life.

Saturday, March 02, 2013

America: Peanut Butter and Jerkey

When I travel I LOVE to go to grocery stores. In India I saw corn flakes with real mango! In a Sainsbury's near Hull, the place where they had butter and shortening was marked "fats."

I've started trying to look at my own grocery store outings as a foreigner might.


I was in a filling-station convenience store one day and it seemed to me that everything was internationally normal and boring, until I came to the jerkey. I wouldn't have thought much about jerkey if Ollie Daniel hadn't said that when he was in the RAF they went to an American airbase for some training or something, and went to the PX and got some American things to try, like jerkey.

Candid jerkey section in Albuquerque, New Mexico, 2013:




If anyone wants to examine that second photo in more detail, click here, and then click the image that loads. It will be too gross for vegetarians and Hindus. Might be too gross for most people. That's a lot in one place.

If you like looking at image details, you might really like Shorpy: http://www.shorpy.com/image (Nearly every file is huge, and you can drive around the little details; much nicer than my photo, only not jerkey from 2013.)