Sunday, September 9, 2012

This n' That


I love the Greek Fest, and went twice this year, with Jo on Thursday and Jo, Denise and Debra on Saturday. As always the food was fantastic, and the weather was sunny and beautiful. I was hoping that more of the Around the Corner gang would have joined us, but hopefully we will have a nice crowd at Christmas for the Cookie Party.

I have gotten a lot done on the desk in the last month. I finished sanding, and as of this morning, put the third coat of oil on the last two sections. I will put on one to two more coats, and then the real fun will begin of putting it all back together. The weather is supposed to be nice again this week, after some rain tomorrow, so I should be able to be to get most of that done by the weekend.

Sadly, this Saturday may bring an end to the "Davemobile". The transmission went out on the 1983 Buick Skylark I got from my late neighbor Dave in mid-June, and I cannot afford to fix it. I will be getting the car towed away and sold for scrap, I was hoping it was going to make it 30 years, but that was not to be.

I had fun catching up on the past week of The Daily Show from the conventions. There were too many funny sections for me to embed all of them here. But of course in between the humor were some pretty wry observations as well, I recommend checking them out.

Monday, September 3, 2012

Internet Cat Video Film Festival



August 30th, 8:30 pm, Walker Open Field
View the playlist of videos screened at #catvidfest here after the event. And click here for a playlist of honorable mentions.




Garfield High grad wins Internet Cat Video Film Festival | Local News | The Seattle Times


Garfield High grad wins Internet Cat Video Film Festival

Local filmmaker helps make local cat an award-winning star.
Seattle Times staff reporter      
Will Braden holds Henri, the cat who stars in Braden's videos.
Enlarge this photo
ELLEN M. BANNER / THE SEATTLE TIMES
Will Braden holds Henri, the cat who stars in Braden's video






He is Henri the Existential Cat, certainly the most famous feline in Seattle, and now among the most famous in the country.
He lives a pampered life in a North End home, oblivious to his notoriety and a national award that was bestowed upon him last week.
Henri doesn't care that the three YouTube videos in which he stars have been viewed 5.3 million times. In them, he tells — much in the style of a 1950s avant-garde film, in French with English subtitles — of his tortured cat soul.
Better to just take a nap.                                                   
On Thursday, at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, a video about Henri, "Henri 2: Paw de Deux," by local filmmaker Will Braden, won the first Internet Cat Video Film Festival.
The event drew 10,136 entries, with more than 10,000 cat lovers showing up to watch as the videos were projected for free in a large open field outside the center.
It's no secret that cat videos generate clicks on the Web, but even the Walker Art Center people were shocked at the response.
"When we thought of this idea six weeks ago, we thought that maybe 100 people would show up," said spokeswoman Rachel Joyce. "Then we started getting a little attention, and we thought a couple of thousand people will be here. But we were absolutely overwhelmed."
The contest included a number of categories — documentary and foreign, among others — but only one winner, chosen by public vote on the Web.
It was Braden and Henri who won the "People's Choice" Golden Kitty award "by a landslide," says Joyce. They even beat the world-famous Japanese cat, Maru, whose videos have been viewed 174 million times.
The award was for the second of the three videos by Braden starring Henri.
But it was his first video, "Henri," that introduced the angst-ridden cat to the world: "I am a black cat ... ," the subtitles began. "I live a life of luxury ... But I feel empty ... ."
The award cost about $30 and is a piggy bank, shaped like a fat cat and sprayed in a gold color to make it look more like a real award.
Braden, 32, is a graduate of Garfield High School and Western Washington University who also studied at the Seattle Film Institute.
It was for a project at the film institute that Braden made the first video of Henri.
It was in 2006, and the students had been watching a number of black-and-white French movies from the 1940s and '50s. Braden began thinking about how Americans viewed these films — "the French films were very pretentious and self-involved."
He decided to do a parody. "And what could be more self-absorbed and pampered than a house cat?" he said.
Henri, who used to be just plain Henry, is a "tuxedo" cat, so named because of his black-and-white coloring. Now 8, he was adopted from the Seattle Animal Shelter.
He does not live with Braden, and, because of his fame, his actual ownership is a private matter.
It was to make him more French that Henry became "Henri" in the video.
Braden wrote the scripts, and his mother, who speaks fluent French, helped him with the pronunciations and proper usage.
The 2-½-minute video got good reaction from the instructors and fellow students, and eventually Braden decided to start a Facebook page for the cat, "Henri, le Chat Noir," for "Henri, the Black Cat."
At the end of 2011 he made the second video, which made Henri an online star. All those Facebook friends helped make Henri the People's Choice winner in the recent contest.
Braden had been making a living doing videos at weddings and corporate events. Now, Braden has a website dedicated to Henri that sells everything from T-shirts to mugs, and generates $800 to $1,000 a week in sales.
Braden also says he has a book contract with Ten Speed Press, a subsidiary of Random House, for a book of Henri photos and musings.
On his Facebook page, which has nearly 40,000 followers, Braden also posts regular Henri existential quotes:
"Am I supposed to be excited that the world has made one more rotation? We are hurtling through space, yet going nowhere."
"Once, after an abundance of catnip, I hallucinated that I was ascending to the heavens and touching the whiskers of God. I woke up on top of the refrigerator."
To get into an existential mood, Braden says he buys used books and goes online to get e-books by existential authors, such as Friedrich Nietzsche and Albert Camus.
"It's a little disheartening that you can get a book on existentialism for 99 cents, and Kim Kardashian's memoirs sell for like $17," he says.
Braden says that one reason he chose Henri to star in the videos — besides the fact that his black-and-white fur would show up better — is that the cat is so easygoing.
Henri lives with three other cats, including a white one that has made appearances in the videos, with Henri referring to him as "the white imbecile."
If Braden wants a shot of Henri looking out the window for some moody pondering, "I just put him there."
And if he needs to have the cat at a certain angle by the cat dish, "I just slide him one way or the other. As long as I give him treats, he's happy."
Finally, courtesy of Braden, this from Henri, on winning the contest:
"That I have received this golden, smiling idol for a film documenting my metaphysical torment speaks volumes about the spiritual void of humanity. Shiny and meaningless, life marches on."
Erik Lacitis: 206-464-2237 or elacitis@seattletimes.com

Truthiness is Not a Joke, from The Huffington Post


Truthiness Is Not a Joke: Lying and Loving It at the RNC

Posted: 09/02/2012 3:21 pm








When comedian Stephen Colbert launched his show,The Colbert Report (2005), he introduced the word "truthiness" to the U.S. public. Speaking in character as a bloviating right-wing pundit, Colbert explained that truthiness was thinking from the gut, ignoring facts, and holding beliefs with no basis in reality.
At the time, his main target was George W. Bush, who had repeatedly told the U.S. public during his presidency that things he felt were necessarily true. The word also emerged in response to claims by the administration that the War in Iraq was about finding Weapons of Mass Destruction. You can watch the segment where he calls the WMD justification a flat out lie here:
It didn't take long for "truthiness" to enter widespread use and it was named the Word of the Year by Webster's in 2006. In those early days, the word held the punch of satire and it encouraged critical thinking about the ways that truth was increasingly absent from policy decisions, media coverage, and public perceptions.
But whatever the context for the word's role in 2005, we have clearly hit a new era in political discourse where truthiness trumps truth all the time with little, if any, repercussions. The proof is in last week's Republican National Convention where truthiness was alarmingly on display at a rate we have never seen in U.S. history.
Each day as the speeches wound down, media outlets dedicated stories to fact-checking the speeches. After Paul Ryan's speech, Joan Walsh of Salon.com wrote that "Paul Ryan gave a feisty anti-Obama speech that will have fact-checkers working for days." CBS News reported that most of the major claims made by Ryan about Obama's record were misleading and untrue. Ryan then kept up his pattern of truthiness after the RNC when he lied about his best time in a marathon, shaving off more than an hour from his finish time. Seriously?
The master of truthiness-checking himself, Stephen Colbert also gave his audience his own version of the truth. Watch the clip where he fact-check's Ryan speech here:
Ryan's lying was followed by Romney's. Perhaps even more disturbingly, some media reporting found comfort in the fact that Romney's speech was not as lie-ridden as Ryan's. According toUSAToday the good news is that Romney's speech mostly included "puffery and exaggeration" in comparison to Ryan's flat-out lying:
In a speech heavy on anecdotal history but short on policy details, Mitt Romney avoided major falsehoods in making his case to the American public while accepting the presidential nomination at the Republican National Convention. Even a key Democratic strategist, Bill Burton, a former press secretary for President Obama, tweeted shortly after the speech ended: "Romney actually avoided almost all of the lies from Ryan's speech."
While he may have avoided the same lies as Ryan, Romney's speech had its own fair share offalsehoods too.
And lest it seem like the fact-checking was simply a partisan matter, Sally Kohn of Fox News wrotethat "to anyone paying the slightest bit of attention to facts, Ryan's speech was an apparent attempt to set the world record for the greatest number of blatant lies and misrepresentations slipped into a single political speech."
So given the fact that we have learned that the RNC was full of falsehoods, why aren't the liars suffering from backlash? Why aren't their supporters enraged that the candidates they support were incapable of stating their positions and describing their differences with Obama without lying? Has the Republican Party simply given up on truth and embraced truthiness?
According to the Romney campaign's pollster Neil Newhouse it has. After the media questioned the accuracy of speeches at the RNC, he explained that "we're not going let our campaign be dictated by fact-checkers."
The politicians lied. The media proved the lies. But does anyone care? Nope.
Or at least they don't care enough. Polls showed that the RNC gave the Romney ticket a bump that now puts them in the lead. While post-convention bumps are considered common, it is worth asking why the lying and the public knowledge of it didn't make any difference. Shouldn't their numbers have gone down? Is our knowledge of political truthiness now just a joke with no punch line?
When Colbert first described truthiness his hope was that he could encourage the U.S. public to expect the truth from the nation's leaders. Colbert's truthiness was a joke -- but it was a joke that was meant to be taken seriously. In the world of satire the idea is to mock in a way that makes a difference. First we spot the truthiness and then we do something about it.
The worrying trend today is that even when there is abundant evidence of lying, there are no repercussions. It's a case of lying and loving it. And it needs to be stopped. If on Election Day we no longer care about the difference between truth and truthiness, then the joke will be on us.

I wanted to share this, because while I don't think any candidate is perfect, and even though I follow politics, I am constantly disgusted with what political races have become. The presenting of opinions as truths, and  all the money being thrown around by the same people that claim they are being gouged by government. Yet those folks always seem to have copious amounts of money to throw behind a candidate that is close to their heart. If even half the time and money that goes in to politics these days was spent on truly worth causes, most of the issues that every one is complaining about would be resolved...

The Daily Show in Tampa for the RNC 2012


The Daily Show at the RNC on August 31, 2012  had several good segments, but this one really stuck with me.

This segment was from August 30th, featuring Paul Ryan, the epitome of an honest man? I don't think so!




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RNC 2012 - The Road to Jeb Bush 2016 - Paul Ryan's Convenient Truths
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Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Alec Baldwin and Jerry Seinfeld - Comedians In Cars Getting Coffee

Just a Lazy Shiftless Bastard - Alec Baldwin - Comedians In Cars Getting Coffee

I have watched this video probably a dozen times now - Alec Baldwin is a very funny conversationalist and mimic. Like me, he has a bit of a potty mouth; I'm trying to reform myself. Kate's question at our stand-up meeting at work today was what alternate words we use to swear. I started using the word fudgecicle to replace the f-word. The phrase that a few folks use that cracked me up was "shut the front door" instead of "shut the f-up". I had never heard that and thought it was pretty funny.