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August, 2010

  1. 5 Awesome Acapella Videos

    August 28, 2010 by Earnest Pettie

    acapellalogo

    Why do glee clubs and college acapella groups exist? Because there’s strength in numbers. You can diss one scrawny lover of vocal music, but the time and effort required to diss an entire group requires a bit more effort than the payoff is usually worth. I have always had a soft spot for these groups, but I’ve fallen hardcore for a certain substrain of these a capella groups. I love groups that cover current hip hop and pop songs, taking something that was already cool, making it geeky, but pushing the geekiness to an extreme that is wonderful. The most recent of these videos to become popular is this Columbia/Barnard cover of a Dr. Dre classic.

    This is a cover of Ben Fold’s cover, and what pushes this video into the realm of geeky cool is the costuming choices the girls have made. Tennis racquets? That’s the whole nine!

    Of course, I’ve amassed a number of other favorites over the years. Here a few I consider classic.

    The Final Countdown

    I borrowed a friend’s time machine and went back to 1996 just so that I could feel ok suggesting that this choreography is the bomb. After using that slang I returned to the present because in 1996, watching video on the internet meant using Quicktime and waiting half an hour to download ten seconds of postage stamp-sized video over Compuserve.

    Gangsta’s Paradise

    This is by one of my favorite acapella groups, UCLA’s Scattertones. Their b-girl stances and posturing are enough to make this video killer, but it’s the when you get to the bridge, where they kick the choreo into high gear with a step routine, that this video begins to soar. Even Coolio responded to this video on Youtube because it was so awesome. Coolio doesn’t just respond to anyone– unless you start by saying “I’m an agent, and I’m pretty sure I can sell your brand of feel-good party rap with gangsta feel to nostalgic  30-somethings in the Midwest.”

    Harder Better Faster Stronger

    This Daft Punk song was unavoidable on the Internet for a while. It’s popularity coincided with the birth of Youtube, and there were at least two other wildly popular viral videos based on the song. For me, this was more about the strength of the performance than the charisma of the performers or any other wow factor. I also like that the group is called the Carleton Knights because the group may not have been named for him, but who doesn’t think of Carlton from the Fresh Prince when thinking about glee clubs?

    Just Dance

    Normally, I disqualify songs that include musical accompaniment, but PS22 can not be bound by anything, least of all my arbitrary rules. These kids are amazing, and have several stellar covers under their belts, including Survivor’s Eye of the Tiger. My fear is that these kids will attempt to enroll at High School Musical’s East High in a few years, only to discover that it exists only in film, and then layers of their reality will fly away Inception-style. “People don’t like acapella?” “The people on Glee are autotuned?” “Our teacher isn’t cool outside of school?”

    I love Fox’s Glee. Glee has made this kind of music acceptable in the mainstream, but Glee actually does this kind of music a disservice. The vocals on the show are sometimes painfully post-produced, and only Lea Michele has a voice strong enough to make you forget about the instrumental accompaniment. That’s why I’m thankful for all the groups who have come up with their own quirky performances and uploaded them to the net over the years. Here is one bonus video for those of you who have made it this far.

    Videogame Medley:


  2. What’s New With The Crew? 8/28

    August 28, 2010 by Earnest Pettie

    Take a quick trip around the bend with a few of my friends’ blogs, won’t you?

    Arnold Benedict had two problems: A bum for a roommate, and, after evicting said roommate, an empty room full of potential. Instead of exploiting said room for profit, he built a camera obscura!

    …if you’re like me, you have a lot of time on your hands, and not a whole lot of money [re: broke as shit from three paragraphs above], and no immediate desire to move someone into that empty space. So I did some research and decided to look into building a camera obscura [after getting denied access previously on account of I'm 'not an old person' (statement made by a security guard at the senior recreation center in Santa Monica in response to 'can we go in there?')].

    -Read more at Down in the Well

    Over at Notzombies.com, between recaps of True Blood and Bachelor Pad (yes, Bachelor Pad), NotZombies discusses the day, this week, when his lunch hour went action movie.

    At that exact moment, less than a block away, an armed officer of the Beverly Hills Police Department was screaming into his shoulder mic for reinforcements. “I NEED BACK UP! GOD DAMN IT, I AM IN THE SHIT HERE! CALL SWAT! FUCK, CALL THE GOD DAMN ARMY! JUST GET ME SOME FIREPOWER AND GET IT HERE 10 MINUTES AGO!”

    -Read More at NotZombies

    Inkoo at Thinkovision recaps Mad Men

    The Don v. Ted feud had a brilliant dénouement, but the upstart rival storyline was a fly I kept swatting away.  We didn’t know enough about the Pete-ish Ted to gauge whether he posed a real challenge to Don, making the feud hard to care about — though to get the attention of the New York Times, Ted must be a pretty gifted self-promoter, if not a great ad man.

    -Read More at Thinkovision

    Amy weighs in on Piranha 3D with her review for Boxoffice.com

    Are you a breast man? An ass man? Or a fish man? Either way, there’s plenty of all three in this bloody spree by French director Alexandre Aja. The script is ridiculous, the bodies are great and the film skates so long on the line between knowingly bad and bad that by the time the body count hits 100 and the booby count hits 1000, we’ve lost track of the difference.

    -Read more at Amyweekly

    And Ross Lincoln has been up to… update your blog, Ross! 


  3. New Invention: Brainstorming App

    August 21, 2010 by Earnest Pettie

    I have a lot of reasons to brainstorm when away from the computer: blog posts, script ideas, jokes, etc…. I have never been one of the kinds of guys who has been able to use more traditional means of keeping track of ideas. I can’t handle the embarrassment of talking into any device to record ideas for later. I get embarrassed doing that even in the privacy of my own home. On the other hand, I almost never have a pen and pad handy. If I have one, then the other is inevitably missing. The one way I have been able to keep notes is digitally. When I bought my first palm pilot, I finally had something that I could keep track of and use all the time for jotting down ideas. Then I lost it. That is the problem with using non-networked digital devices to keep track of anything. When the device is gone– so are your books, movies, music, and ideas. An ideal solution for me and, I assume, many others, would be to use one of the devices we keep on ourselves and store the information remotely.

    When you think about it, those little bits of ideas that come to you and must be jotted down or else be forgotten are ideal for microblogging. Think Twitter. Unlike the ideas released into the Twitter ecosphere, these ideas are not meant to be seen by the public. After all, they are the seeds that must grow into full blown ideas. They have to be private.  They should be hidden away and stored in your Integrated Digital Journal Idea Tracker, your IDJIT.

    The Core:

    The core of the service is the IDJIT site, to which all of the IDJIT clients send your updates. Like other microblogging services, your updates are listed chronologically from the most recent entry through the oldest. That is the primary microblog view with which we are all familiar. You may, however, opt for a journal view, which reorders your thoughts from the oldest through the newest and removes timestamps. Instead of the standard microblog display, this view takes place in a text editor screen. Additionally, you may tag your entries with different subjects and interact with those subjects as their own idea threads.

    Interacting:

    There are many ways you may send your brainstorms to yourself. You may send text messages from your cell phone, instant messages from your IM client, or E-mail. These provide you with standard text functionality. Mobile App interaction would extend your functionality by allowing you to add images or voice (which would be transcribed).

    Incentive:

    I have not thought this through entirely, but maybe the standard interaction would be free, but you would have to pay to interact by mobile App. The fee per update would be minimal. Maybe 2 cents. 1 cent would be the fee, and 1 cent would go into the user’s account. Thus the more the user interacts with the service through the mobile app, the greater his or her personal account grows, and at the end of each month, the total savings is transferred to the user through Paypal. That way it feels as if the user is getting a bonus just for being creative and brainstorming with IDJIT.

    These are just my initial ideas on the service. I’ve been juggling these ideas in my mind over the past couple days, probably because I don’t have an IDJIT yet.


  4. Creepy Chrysler Town and Country Ad

    August 14, 2010 by Earnest Pettie

    townandcountry

    I have a superpower. When a commercial break interrupts a television program I’m watching, I can disappear completely into my head for the duration of the commercial break. I don’t need the commercial skip on my Tivo because I’ve trained myself to skip them. That’s one of the reasons I was surprised when my wife pointed out to me something very interesting about an ad for the Chrysler Town and Country minivan that I’m sure must’ve passed before my eyes hundreds of times without any notice. The ad depicts a young boy being challenged to a race home from school by some of his classmates. Once he makes it to his mom’s minivan, he taunts his friends as his mom pulls away. Check it out.

    All fun and games, right?

    Well, if you watch the ad without audio, it become another ad, entirely. It then becomes an ad about a poor kid being picked on by bullies at school. They wait for him after school’s out and chase him all the way to his house, where the mama’s boy leaps into the safety of his mom’s minivan and rolls away, taunting his tormentors. I’ve added a little different music to the commercial to better underscore the point.

    Poor kid!

    The best part is once you’ve had the benefit of watching it this way, it becomes obvious how tacked on the kid’s voice-over is in the official commercial. That leads me to wonder what the commercial was originally like. I imagine the tagline was “Chrysler Town and Country. The next best thing to returning to the womb.”


  5. Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World

    August 14, 2010 by Earnest Pettie

    scott-pilgrim-vs-world-review-meta

    I haven’t yet seen Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World, so I don’t have any thoughts of my own to share about the movie yet. I’ve noticed, however, that many of my friends have published their thoughts on the movie, so I thought I’d do a little metareview of the movie.

    Amy Nicholson for IE Weekly says:

    Edgar Wright has made a 112-minute entertainment contraption, celluloid that shapeshifts its frames into video games, comic books and sitcoms…. It could give a seizure to anyone in the Twitterverse unused to dividing their brain among twelve browser windows. But for the already addled—myself, millions more and metastasizing—it’s a blast: fun, fresh and unbounded with an ensemble that delivers every joke and elbow jab.  Read the rest here.

    Inkoo Kang at Thinkovision offers:

    Scott Pilgrim is an adorable indie action-romance told in video game language that is far better than the sum of its genre parts…. if the plot isn’t super-original, the winsomely nerdy way it’s told more than makes up for the narrative’s by-the-bookiness.  Read the rest here.

    Benji Briggs for Screenjunkies writes:

    Wright, like a painter with vintage nintendo system, builds the 8-bit video game action of Scott Pilgrim to come at us with such freshness and detail that you’ll keep asking for more, more, more.  Read the rest here.

    Tasha Carter gushes:

    Dude-man-girlfriend you will NOT be disappointed! It’s tons of fun! The only thing that bummed me out was the thought of eventually not being able to see it on the big screen anymore with a kickass sound system. It just won’t be the same on dvd. :-( (Yes I realize that I am thinking very far ahead)   Via Facebook.

    Brian Huntington for Not Zombies dissents:

    Scott Pilgrim- really disappointing. Great visuals. Even better sound. Couldn’t care less about the characters. Via Twitter

    That’s once around the horn with people I know and trust, and the bulk of the sentiment seems to land solidly in the movie’s camp. I look forward to the movie, and maybe I’ll relate my own thoughts after watching Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World. Just after I finish my rebuttal to Roger Ebert’s review of Kick-Ass… so sometime in 2012, just before the world ends. Allegedly.


  6. E-Book Now Available For Free

    August 8, 2010 by admin

    Many years ago, I put together a book of my short stories and essays, comprised of most of my output up until that time. It included everything from a short story I’d written for an application to the University of Chicago that I never sent in to recent blog entries. I whipped out Adobe Pagemaker, put a book together, and uploaded it to Lulu.com for sale. I was working at Kim’s Mediapolis in New York at the time, and the guy who was running the book department there kindly allowed me to display my book for sale inside the store. I sold less than a handful of copies. That didn’t really bother me. I was just happy to have accomplished something like that.

    Looking back, some of the work was juvenile and some of it was very funny. It was a mixed bag from which, if I ever publish another compilation, I might retain about half the work. I’d completely lost track of the book until I was on a Writing subreddit and noticed that someone had made a digital version of their book available for free download in order to receive feedback. I did the same. The reason I bring it up here is if you’d like to download a copy of a six-year-old book, filled with the ramblings of an 18 to 25 year old me, now is your chance!

    You can download a digital version of “Party Tricks! The Book” for free from lulu.com. I promise the next book will be a grab bag of slightly higher quality. Oh, and the download is a PDF so it will work in your E-Book readers!