Archive for the ‘openonline’ Category

 

DS106 Confidential 2012-06-29 14:24:00

Friday, June 29th, 2012

SLIDE GUY, WHAT HAPPENED?

He was on top, sliding everywhere – tractor tires, waterfalls, in the Andes with Bono.  It was going so well, bigger than planking, bigger than Mikey – then it all started to fall apart.  Little things at first; questions about his socks.  Then that unfortunate interview with Alan Levine where his fans saw a different Slide Guy – angry, bitter, complaining.  He might have been able to recover from that, a few charity gigs, an appearance on The View.  But fate had something else in store for Slide Guy – those photos.  Even if you’re Slide Guy you don’t sit on another meme’s lap. 

Confidential caught up with Slide Guy recently.  We found him sitting alone in a local Chipotle, staring listlessly at a half-eaten burrito, trying unsuccessfully to catch the attention of a nearby table of laughing DTLTists.   He wouldn’t talk to us at first, after all Confidential ran those photos that destroyed him.  All we could get out of him was an angry “You want to know what happened?  Really?  Why don’t you take it up with him?”  We followed his glance towards a dark figure in the corner, wearing a black plaid shirt, a black toque, and big mirrored shades.

I motioned to my photographer – but the guy was too fast.  All he left behind was this:

George, Ray and Abe

Friday, June 29th, 2012

It was the chance discovery of a sixty-year-old radio show while researching for the last podcast that led me to discover these clips of Ray Bolger dancing with a couple of dead presidents. At the end of Ray Bolger’s segment on the Doris Day Radio Show he says that he will see her on the set the next day as he leaves the stage. A little bit of Googling revealed that he was referring to the 1952 Warner Brothers’ musical April in Paris. Until this week, it was a movie I’d never heard of or knew nothing about. But thanks to YouTube and the web, I’ve got enough material for a series of some fun animated GIFs. As mentioned in earlier posts, I continue to find myself always on the lookout for suitable moments to put in to perpetual loop back.

For me, discovering the the process of putting these things together has been an unexpected treat. Looking back and learning about Hollywood legends such as Stanley Kubrick, Jimmy Durante, Kirk Douglas, Judy Garland, Timothy Carey, Eleanor Powell, Ray Bolger and Doris Day allows me to imagine life and circumstances in an era in America that seems more and more illusory.

Speaking of illusion, how about the idea of a low-level State Department official dancing and singing about being in love as portraits of Presidents Washington and Lincoln come to life and begin hoofing along. Sure it’s light fare, but it’s also a lot of fun.

One disheartening realization in looking back at the entertainment and talent of this era is that I need to reexamine my recent dream to reinvent myself as a song and dance man. Fortunately there’s enough inspiration on offer via the web that this illusion too just might be possible.

DS106 Confidential 2012-06-28 20:19:00

Friday, June 29th, 2012

DS106Confidential Exclusive!!!  Film of Alan Levine inside “SHED” 4!!

Confidential reporter Joe Beets caught Alan Levine of Camp MagicMacguffin inside camp Shed 4 today.  Mr. Levine, obviously surprised, appeared friendly at first, answering questions about Shed 4 operations.  He quickly became uncomfortable though when Joe started asking some tough questions.  Just exactly what does “bending space and time” have to do with running a summer camp?  Who is behind CVI?  Why is poutine always available in the camp MagicMacguffin cafeteria? (The entire interview, captured on film, will soon be available to Confidential readers.)

Levine refused to answer further questions and blocked our photographers New Media lens with his hands, calling for Security.

Confidential won’t be stopped so easily Mr. Levine.  We’ll be back!

DS106 Confidential 2012-06-28 19:20:00

Friday, June 29th, 2012

DS106 CONFIDENTIAL!

        Because Everything You Know is Wrong!

Remember a better time?  The air was fresher, streams were cleaner, and gifs were unanimated.  DS106 Confidential wants to go back to that time, the Golden Age of Digital Storytelling 106.  But to do that, a lot of unpleasant truths have to be aired.  A lot of things SOME PEOPLE thought were buried deeply have to be brought to the light of day.  That’s what DS106 Confidential is all about – and were starting right now with two BIG stories.

DS106 Confidential 2012-06-28 17:55:00

Thursday, June 28th, 2012

Slide Guy, Kim Jong Il caught in Panmujong LOVE NEST!!!!

Sure, you thought you knew Slide Guy – a real symbol of unguarded joy, childhood pleasures, and slightly unusual socks.  BUT – EVERYTHING YOU KNOW IS WRONG – DS106 Confidential knows better.  One of our ace camera guys (no names, but he is an expert in NEW MEDIA) caught deceased, former web meme Kim Jong Il and Slide guy in a secluded weekend getaway ”looking at things” in a very suggestive way.


When Confidential contacted the strangely-socked meme, Slide Guy denied everything – no surprise there, he stands to lose big in footwear endorsements when this gets out.  He said “the Dear Leader and I are just good friends, we got together for some casual looking at things and it never went beyond that.”  SURE SLIDE GUY!

ds106: Wiggle Stereoscopy

Thursday, June 28th, 2012

I’ve been a bit MIA at Camp Magic Macguffin for the past week as the family has been in San Diego having a wonderful time. Oddly enough, even on vacation with my family ds106 has not been far from my mind. Walking around Legoland I had many thoughts about assignments, both current ones and possibilities.

We took in Miniland, an area full of cities and creations made of Legos. It’s really quite impressive. I took a few pictures of this Lego steamboat with the purpose of creating a wiggle stereoscopy image. I ended up only using two of the images after trying to get one that worked the way I wanted.

Lego Steamboat

I’m finding as I work through ds106 assignments (slowly, but still) that I don’t fully understand why I think things work or don’t work. Hopefully as I continue with this process I’ll hone my eye and begin, to a bit at least, to be able to explain my thinking.

DS106 Apocalypse Radio

Thursday, June 28th, 2012

You’ll have to check out this week’s audio letter home coming on Sunday to find out why I’ve been away from camp so long. I did manage to make it back for another audio week in which my bunkhouse is engaged in creating a string of stories along a topic – ala This American Life.

Part of the project is to create a 15 to 30 second radio bump to promote our live show airing next week on DS106 Radio.

CC BY-NC-SA by aeviin via Flickr

You’ve seen the news. You know what is coming. What was a few incidents quickly spreads to a pandemic and eventually we will be thrust into chaos and the apocalypse. The virus is being carried by those who were once our friends and neighbors.

What happens when borders close?

What happens when we can no longer escape?

What will we do now?

Ray’s Irresistible Chin

Thursday, June 28th, 2012

I watched many Ray Bolger clips on YouTube while doing research for the last podcast. Several amazing scenes of him dancing have been downloaded and are in the queue to be assembled into animated GIF form. But when I came across Ray’s 1963 appearance on CBS’s The Judy Garland Show, I felt I’d struck gold.


The visual moment I love most, pictured above, comes as Judy asks Ray to sing If I Only Had a Brain. This was his signature song from his role as Scarecrow in The Wizard of Oz. Thirty years prior to this television show is when each of them performed the parts that would, for better or worse, define each of their subsequent careers.

But the most powerful moments in the video are spoken words which obviously don’t lend themselves to animated GIF form. Once such moment was when Ray described the deeper significance of the Oz story as told to him by his mother when he was a boy. The other is Ray recalling how much working with Judy on the movie had meant to him. It’s the sort of nostalgia that could bring a tear to the eye and is very much worth watching.

But there are still a couple more GIFs that might be of interest:

Here’s an extracted moment of Ray singing If I Only Had a Brain. The warmth and affection in Judy’s expression, even if she’s only mugging for the camera, is striking. And given everything else that goes down in the video, I’m of a mind that we are seeing genuine emotion here.

Technically speaking, there’s a bit more jumpiness in this GIF than I’d prefer. In my effort to find beginning and ending points in which the faces, bodies, motions and camera angles coincided, I failed to notice that there was an ever so small camera movement.  That’s why I cropped this image instead of changing the scale as I did with the other two GIFs.

The first two clips were longer sequences than I’ve been capturing lately – each was over than three seconds. Even with a capture rate of  4 fps, I still wound up with over a dozen frames for each GIF. This means that the files sizes are larger than I’d ordinarily prefer.

The same is not true of the final GIF of this series.

The video ends with Ray and Judy doing Follow the Yellow Brick  Road. It speaks for itself, doesn’t it?

Multitask This!

Thursday, June 28th, 2012

Kid these days…

They can text rings around us adults, figure out the most complex of technical devices, and multitask so fast that keyboards are in danger of spontaneous combustion from all the furious clicking of keys, right?

Wrong! I have yet to see any students exhibit on a mass scale the skills and innate abilities that those labeled “digital natives” are supposed to have (note, I never used the term digital native, I thought it was bogus from the start). The truth of the matter is, some students are more apt to be able to figure out complicated software, dart in and out of multiple windows, but no more so than the number of students who excel at football, complex differentials, or playing the guitar. I’m not saying that students can’t adapt, but rather the myths of multi-tasking (aka acquired inattention) need to be laid to rest, and replaced with actual shortcomings of attempting to multi-task.

Which leads me to the following audio snippet I captured earlier this evening at my piano (warning, I’m not that great at piano). To me, the ability to multi-task doesn’t impress unless someone is attempting to accomplish two rather difficult cognitive tasks (completely dependent on the individual’s talents that is). For example, I have a terribly difficult time trying to play the piano and talk at the same time. Thus, I present to you, my attempt to “Multitask This!”






Imagine how much fun it would be to showcase your shortcomings the first day of school by sharing a small piece of audio like this? Let your students know up front that there are some things even teachers have a hard time accomplishing (and maybe get a few laughs out of it). A bit more seriously though, the idea of multi-tasking is that it’s either HARD to accomplish a few tasks well, or it’s EASY to do a pretty crappy job at a lot of tasks. Would you rather have your students struggling to accomplish something monumental, like creating effective and moving persuasive video essays of their written work? Or would you rather keep them busy with an endless litany of mindless “edu-games” that mostly just serve as distractions?

If you’re interested in creating your own “Multitask This!” audio snippet, I’d love to hear the results. Just capture some audio (unedited of course) of you trying to accomplish two tasks that seem rather basic, perhaps even elementary when completed in isolation, yet present quite a challenge for you when combined.

Design Trading Cards

Wednesday, June 27th, 2012

To them, a touch is a blow,
a sound is a noise, a misfortune is a
tragedy, a joy is an ecstasy, a friend
is a lover, a lover is a god, and
failure is death

Add to this cruelly delicate
organism the everpowering necessity
to create, create, create –
so that without the creating
of music or poetry or books or buildings
or something of meaning
their very breath is cut off -

They must create, must pour out creation
By some strange, unknown, inward urgency
they are not really alive
unless they are creating.

– Pearl Buck

No everyone gets to create a building.

It must be an incredible kind of high to walk inside a building that once existed only in your imagination. In honor of interesting buildings that I’d admired in my home, Raleigh, North Carolina, I’ve created a series of “trading cards” for the design elements we’ve studied in DS 106.

Color

color The “painted ladies” as I’ve heard Victorian homes described are lovely in an historic section of downtown Raleigh known as Oakwood. The state bought several and gradually many are becoming office buildings. Quite a change for these elegant homes where I can imagine fancy balls were held for Raleigh’s elite.

My favorite house, the Andrews-Heck House build in 1870, has been unoccupied for years. The paint job, and I understand this can cost thousands of dollars, is a pale yellow base with a shock of another primary hue, burgundy, and a neutral trim, gray. Elegant!

Typography

typography The Dorton Arena ruled the state fairgrounds in my youth. It was a building like no other that this farm girl had ever seen. Its lights have dimmed a bit but I still give the architects (Nowiki and Dietrick) high marks for designing what was for that day a super-sized building with lots of personality.

Someone deserves lots of credit for coming up with the perfect typeface for this building’s sign. The roundness and height of the letters reflect the roundness of the soaring roof line.

Metaphors/Symbols

symbolShakespeare’s Globe Theater has returned with a contemporary flair.  There really is a state-of-the arts multimedia theater inside this steel globe.  Symbolically, it seems to say that Raleigh has a global perspective and serves as a launching pad for seeing the world.

Minimalism and Use of Space

minimalism

The Archdale Building reflects the minimalism of the 70s- 80s.  It’s a no nonsense building, a bit foreboding as you approach.  It guards the south entrance to the government’s football-size mall, Halifax.

It doesn’t fit its space well, much too tall for the peninsula on which it sits. And what might be seen as a strong, quiet elegance elsewhere, here only seems to put off citizens who just hope they never have to enter this modern fortress.

It seems to me that minimalism is all about gestalt and the creating of a sense of connectedness — connections in the design, some elements there and some implied, and connections to the viewer — emotional and inferred.

Form/Function/Message

function I only just recently learned that the North Carolina State Bell Tower is really a war memorial dedicated to the NC State grads who died in World War I. Appropriately, the door to the Shrine Room is inscribed “And they shall beat thou swords into plow shares.”

The building makes sense as a memorial built after the first World War and before the second. It’s stoic and lofty. It is all about sacrifice for something bigger than the individual — something lasting and worthwhile.

Skip ahead 50 years and you read a totally different message in Maya Ying Lin’s simply articulated Viet Nam War Memorial — The Wall. The Wall is low to the earth; even takes you into the earth as you walk down the v-shape’s diagonal. And every single soldier who died is memorialized by name.

Balance

balance

I’ve marveled at the NC State’s Centennial Campus Gateway for years. I was not quite sure why the “gateway” was asymmetrical. Now I can see that it really is a perfect example of balancing the two unequal columns to the left with a smaller column on the right that is the proper distance from the fulcrum.

Interestingly, an orchard of cherry trees is planted on the diagonal and seem to be radiating from the gateway. It’s a beautiful welcome in the spring.

Rhythm

rhythm

This is what a $100 million dollars looks like! The building is named in honor of a former two-time governor, James B. Hunt, Jr. Governor Hunt returned to the governor’s office after several years away to become the 69th and 71st governor.

The massive number of windows framed by “wings” or louvers help lift this starship off the launching pad. They seem to form a “Z-wave” pattern that makes the design dynamic.

Proportion

proportion

I thought for certain that the Legislative Building was designed by an Hawaiian architect the first time I saw it. There’s something about the courtyards and multiple water features that make it seem quite exotic.

I also thought the building had a strong resemblance to the Parthenon — a building renowned for its perfect symmetry and integrated building elements of columns, pediment, and dome(s). Now I know why.

Dominance

dominance

Nowicki and Dietriech, the architects for the Dorton Arena. use design elements to draw the eye to the just-off-center point where the two infinity loops meet. This, I’ve learned, reflects the designer’s efforts to draw the viewer’s eye to the entrance just below this intersection. I have and always will admire its uniqueness.

Unity

unity

Recently christened “the Ugliest Building in Raleigh, North Carolina” by a prominent blogger, this American Institute for Architecture, North Carolina building defies convention with its diversity of building materials (stone, glass, naturally-finished cypress wood, aluminum sheeting, and concrete and minimalist landscaping. I admire the architect, Frank Harmon, respected professor of architecture at NC State, for his ability to create a unity of textures, colors, shapes, and space. The gestalt is very pleasing to my eye.

Though the building is not ugly to me, its positioning in the skyscape of downtown Raleigh is. It seems to hang over the street at the end of a long barren peninsula. I thought a lot about one suggestion that an architect made when I attended the open house. The building’s back borders on the front of legendary Peace College and the architect lamented that the building did not give any sort of nod to this beautiful old campus.

So interestingly, the AIA North Carolina Center for Architecture breaks new ground with its unity of materials but fails to live in unison with its surroundings.

*****

So that’s my Design Safari though it seems now more like a search and rescue. I often know when my design doesn’t work but have no clue how to improve it. I’m looking forward to problem-solving with my Design Trading Cards.