Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Making A Short

Inspired by the crazy experimental films at Alfred University I decided to try my hand at a short.  Conner, Kat, Dan, and their roomate, Brida, were terribly good sports and starred in the video.  I'm just editing it now and it should be up within the next week-Conner's also writing some music for the soundtrack!

In the meantime I'll leave you with this photo I found on the Boooooom blog...

Friday, September 24, 2010

Martin Arnold Video Art

I went with Kathleen last night to see a film history class taught by Gerar Edizel.  As a former art history buff, I still get excited about obscure art every once in a while although I've never been swept away by video art in general.  However, of the films that Gerar showed the other night, this one by Martin Arnold was my favorite.
Martin Arnold, Piece Touchee--(go ahead and skip to 28:10 for the Andy Hardy rework) "The cinema of Hollywood is a cinema of exclusion, reduction and denial, a cinema of repression. There is always something behind that which is being represented, which was not represented. And it is exactly that that is most interesting to consider."

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Flickr and Photobucket

I was posting all these photos from our travels on Flickr and now that I'm reaching the 200 photo limit they require that I upgrade and get Flickr Pro.  So I've switched to Photobucket for the time being.  All the new photos (many that I haven't posted on blogger) can be found here.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Omaha, Nebraska

We took I-80 all the way across Nebraska, camping for a night at the loudest rest stop ever, to visit our friend, Ben Thomas, in Omaha...of course, this was at the end of August but I'm just getting round to posting it now.  I met Ben through Couchsurfing when he came to Austin for a friend’s bachelor party.  Couchsurfing is a great website to meet people, find a free comfy couch to crash upon, and get quick local insight while traveling.  So here’s Ben’s shorthand take on Omaha, Somewhere In Middle America.
Ben in O'LeaversHome of the TV dinner, the Reuben sandwich (there’s some controversy over the originator but Omaha’s in the running), the one-time richest man in the Universe-Warren Buffet, five Fortune 500 companies, the largest indoor rainforest, and birthplace of Malcolm X.  They also have a ton of thrift, antique, and junk stores because he says jokingly, “we have no future so we’re tied to the past”.  Conner, Dan, and I rode our bikes down to the Old Market area (so cute!) and the boys went to go get a beer while I antiqued it up.  I went to three stores in two hours.  They’re huge with so many hidden rooms to scope out that before you know it, you’re down in the basement and you still have an hours worth of looking to go.  My favorite was Second Chance on Jackson St downtown.  I snuck a couple photos in.
Old Market St
Old Market St area downtown Omaha
Santas
Plastic Santas at Second Chance antique shop
Singing At O'Leavers
Ben was super sweet and organized a last-minute acoustic gig for the boys at O'Leavers Pub. If I lived in Omaha this would probably be my go-to bar as well.  They even sponsor an adult Soapbox Derby.  How fun would that be?  Probably a lot.
Bakers

Surprise!

Crab Ash Tray
Ben has this cute crab in his apartment...
Crab Ash Tray
But check it out, it's an ash tray!  I mean, catchy right?  But get this, this is what really bowls me over.  He got it at the anti-abortion thrift store a block from his house--the store is called Surprise.  What the fuck?  There's a place of commerce that supports this in our fair land of Middle-America?  I was so astonished that I made him show me where it was before we left town.
Surprise
Surprise

Some Great People

One last thing about Denver.
Jena and Dustin Dupont are freaking awesome.  We stayed with these folks and their two young daughters for a week and had a total blast the whole time.  Thanks again guys for letting us stay : )
Jena
Jena
Bake Off 1
Dustin during his biscuits and gravy cook-off
The Girls
Lily and Vada, the kids.  The funniest thing was that Vada (the youngest) immediately saddled right up to Dan and was his buddy the entire time.  We were walking up the steps at Red Rocks during the day and Dustin offered to take her hand to help her up the steep stairs.  She pushed her hair out of her face, pointed up to Dan and said, "I want that."  Haha, so funny.  I don't remember being such a ham when I was younger but Kat said she totally was.  Maybe we're all merciless flirts as young girls and some of us just try to block it out.
The Whole Gang
The Whole Gang: Dan, Vada, me, Conner, Dustin, Lily, Jena
The Pond
Conner and I--well, more like Conner--helped Jena put this pond in their back yard.  Apparently now there's even goldfish in it.  

Monday, September 20, 2010

Alfred University And Their Library

While we're up here in NY visiting Kat and Dan I'm using Alfred University's awesome library to edit all my photos and dump it all online.  I'll try to start from Denver and show our trip across the Midwest, through Canada, to New York in order but you know, we'll see how it goes : )

View Recent Travels in a larger map
Momentarily broken down in the Home Depot parking lot outside Denver
Eco-classic car guy Ronnie that stopped by while broken down.  He had the best glasses ever.

We're Not Dead...

Haha, I keep talking to people who exclaim, "Where are you?!  I'm so glad you're not dead!  I was a little worried there for a minute..."  So yeah, just for the record, we're not dead.  Right now we're in the Village of Alfred, NY where Dan has moved in order to drop off the rest of his belongings.  It's a super small but cute town that has two colleges with a median age of 20.4.   Alfred is notable for it's art program but as most students keep telling us, that's about the only thing going for it.  There's talk of 17 below temperatures in the winter and for goodness sake, everyone's practically a baby here! 

But Kat's friends whom we've met are all awesome, and energetic, and giddy and frankly, it's refreshing.  It makes me want to go back to school hard-core.  It also makes me think of when the last time I felt really excited and giddy...it was months ago in Colorado when Conner's mom let me borrow her 1941 sewing machine for the trip.  Haha, I mean, come on, it's freaking awesome and totally made my month.  I've totally put it to use in making myself a new 1950's wardrobe so I can match the car.  That was the last time.
Aww, world's smallest violin--I think my little Rachel light, the one that's supposed to burn so bright, has dimmed a bit under the super ambitious project that we've undertaken.  Because we're stuck in the middle of our "Oh shit, how the hell our we going to pull this off?!" moment...well, we can't see the forest since we're stuck under a stump at the moment...or something to that effect.  But again, on account of stubbornness and blind faith, we're going to finish this thing.  Otherwise I might look back on this with a mixture of fondness, failure, and regret.  And I feel like there's nothing worse in life than feeling like you've failed.  Hence, finishing is essential.  So if anyone has any thoughts or words of encouragement, then please send them along because Conner and I could use them at the moment.

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Goodbye Dan...


Conner and I have been MIA for a while now; we’ve been wallowing in a bit of a Funk Fest.  Dan flew out from Chicago on August 10th to see about a girl; he moved in with his girlfriend in upstate New York and to get a job.  He had some medical problems, including hospital visits, and no insurance.  Being responsible he left the project to begin the long process of paying for his health care out-of-pocket. 
Truth be told, things have not been working out as we planned…or as we failed to plan.  I followed advice that life on the road never works out as expected and to leave room to be flexible.  I didn’t exactly find a musician in each place that committed to working with us, I only had a lot of possible leads.  There was also the problem of finding a place to stay for a month at a time that we thought would work itself out.  But it didn’t, especially not in larger cities like Chicago.   

After Dan left, Conner mourned the loss of his musical right-hand-man.  He hasn’t really played out since Omaha.  However, he did purchase Music Theory For Dummies and has been pouring over treble and bass clefs.

Conner and I were both silently stressed out over how rapidly our money was evaporating.  We traveled through half the mid-west missing all these amazing sites because we were trying to stretch our small savings across the US and into next March.  It was a futile exercise.   While we were in Indianapolis I bought a USA travel guide and after much moping, we decided that we would spend what little money we had left actually enjoying ourselves, and make a beeline for North Carolina.  My parents live in Chapel Hill and we can stay in their driveway, get jobs through the holidays, and plan our next leg better.  Chapel Hill is also the home of the Mountain Goats, Ben Folds Five, and the Squirrel Nut Zippers; it’s a music-centered town and will hopefully be good in getting Conner back on the musical bandwagon. 
Squirrel Nut Zippers photo via MTV
We recently received a grant for $650 from the Puffin Foundation, a non-profit group in NJ that funds the arts.  While not a huge amount of money, it’s still amazing and it was the first grant I ever wrote.  I took a class on grant writing ages ago and learned that grants are not just free money; they are more like a contract and you best be following through on what you proposed, otherwise you have to give the money back.  The grant coupled with my general stubbornness-well, we just gotta finish this project now.  And I have ultimate faith that we can pull this off; the deadline hasn’t arrived yet, there’s still time.