Little did we know that not only is the origin of the high five as a congratulatory greeting well documented, it is also a fairly recent one and was conceived (on 2 October, 1977 to be precise—although there are antecedent anecdotes and competing stories) by a largely forgotten professional athlete called Glenn Burke, who just happens was and remains the only major league baseball player in the US to come out as a homosexual during his career. Visit รon magazine at the link above to watch a documentary on the Burke, his struggle with prejudice and his salute.
Tuesday, 1 November 2016
hand jive or out of the park
catagories: ⚾️, ๐ณ️๐
journeyman
For those nomadic souls that could set up shop and work from anywhere or need to be at hand for a particular gig or assignment one automotive company with a significant manufacturing presence in the UK has created a fully electric mobile office space, housed in a minivan. Although not as impressive or committed, in my opinion, as the gentleman that shared his custom project to live on the road, the portable, pop-up office looks really clever and conducive to productivity. Designing the interior to look like a coffee shop is also a nice touch. Click on the link up top to get a full tour of the features and watch a demonstration video.
catagories: lifestyle, transportation
oppdemmingspolitikk
Monday, 31 October 2016
macguffin
Not to diminish the acclaim or original nature of Black Mirror, which makes us confront our relations to technology and convenience in the same way shows like the Twilight Zone or the Outer Limits made us question our tenuous hold on reality and moral uprightness, I think I’d like to preview this adaptation inspired by Roald Dahl’s collection of short stories, thrillers for adults. Despite running for eleven seasons, I have no recollection of Tales of the Unexpected—the plot summaries of the episodes do sound archetypal, not formulaic, and leave the view challenged and draw his or her own conclusions.
phreaking
Lately the term “dog-whistle” has taken on a purely figurative meaning for veiled code words that a signals a political response to those in the know, however, apparently marketers are adopting a very literal feature outside of the human range of hearing to gather and spread demographic information about potential consumers without their knowledge—with potential for much more invasive acts.
Though the method is comparatively an indirect one, it made me think of the subliminal messages embedded in movies to make people salivate and seek refreshment—and then perhaps as a closer parallel was the earlier experimental techniques of phreakers, playing a sequence of tones into headsets to commandeer telephone networks and make free long-distance calls. There’s surely nothing savoury in ultrasonic hacking and while the big telecoms may have seen nothing redeeming in “toll fraud” that undercut their profits, the founders of Apple and other industry luminaries got their start in this community.
catagories: ๐ฅธ, networking and blogging
reprise or i know what my people are thinking tonight
The doggedly diligent campaign reporters of Nation Public Radio’s Politics Podcast have been working virtually non-stop during this entire physically and emotionally taxing election cycle in America, serving up a refreshingly thoughtful and reflective reporting on the election despite the usual common discourse and the pace of change. Now they’re working even harder with daily broadcasts, but recently to bridge the weekend presented a really interesting episode from this summer that I’d missed before—before all these dread realities began to coalesce and was not a regular listener. Encore examines the role of music—specifically musical theatre in the shaping of campaigns and presidencies.
I knew that FDR with “Happy Days are Here Again” (Chasing Rainbows, 1930) and Truman with “I’m just Wild about Harry” (Shuffle Along, 1921—for addressing social justice questions) had capitalized on popular, feel-good songs of their day—just like other rallying standards, but I didn’t realise that the Kennedy White House did not become characterised as Camelot organically but rather became known as such because the Lerner and Loewe Broadway production about to be adapted to film was so popular. Musical numbers might not have the same purchase on cultural currency as they did in decades past—at least not one that’s immediately recognisable—having been replaced by other power-ballads, but it’s interesting how the discussion touches on one candidate’s invoking of songs from The Phantom of the Opera as part of his regular playlist (plus some number with those damn dancing cats, whereas perhaps “Tomorrow belongs to Me” from Cabaret may work better) because of his connection to New York and the Great White Way, and the other who backed away from her rather accidental though intended as flattering comparison to Eva Perรณn.
it's the great pumpkin, charlie brown
catagories: holidays and observances
Sunday, 30 October 2016
5x5
the pet collective: omnibus of video clips of humans supportive of animals behaving oddly
bird’s eye: a collection of stunning satellite photographs of diverse, manmade landscapes
colour guard: Richard Nixon though the Secret Service ought to have fancy uniforms, like the palace details of other countries
unterirdisch รผberleben: a tour of Lucerne’s still operational, massive fall-out shelter
althing: tiny Iceland has no fewer than seven viable political parties and will now have a governing coalition that includes the Pirate Party
catagories: ⚛️, ๐ฎ๐ธ, ๐บ๐ธ, environment, lifestyle