29
Oct 11

Vivian Maier: Unknown Photographer

Vivian Maier was a street photographer from the 1950’s to the 1990’s. But nobody saw her amazing work until recently.

Her works are some of the most stunning street photos I’ve ever seen. They were recently discovered in a Chicago auction; the auction house acquired her belongings from her storage locker that was sold off due to delinquent payments. In the collection, there were over 100,000 negatives, thousands of prints, and an untold number of undeveloped film rolls.

Unfortunately she passed away before the buyer tracked her down. Her life is obscure, but her photography is anything but. I’m thrilled that the buyer, John Maloof, has chosen to curate and share her works.

Good street photography is a difficult art… but great street photography takes an innate talent that few of us have. Many of us strive to catch those wonderful moments, but fall short of the mark. Vivian Maier possessed the magic and the talent to harness it.

A huge part of the difficulty is simply aiming a camera at someone. For one thing, it raises suspicion. Also, there is a hesitance to invade someone’s privacy. After those are overcome, snapping the shutter at the right moment is the magic.

Vivian had the ability to see the art in her subject matter. Her photographs are beautiful examples of otherwise mundane life. They implore one to look into and absorb the scene, so as to become a part of it.


Continue reading →


28
Oct 11

Seven Billion Is Such A BIG Number…

Which one are you?

There were 2.5 billion people in the world when I was born in 1947. We are scheduled to hit 7 Billion in the next day or two. That’s almost a three-fold growth in just 64 years. I just hope we can sustain and support the continued logarithmic growth.

I’ve read a couple fictional books about sustaining and supporting an over-populated world. Our increased life expectancy is wonderful, but unfortunately it places even greater burdens on our ability to feed, house, educate, and provide needed medical support.

Something to think about.

Try these books on for size:

Good reading… but be warned: These two books will haunt you long after you’ve read them. Although they are fiction, they are very believable and plausible.


28
Oct 11

Gates: Don’t try to be a billionaire, it’s overrated

That Bill, you gotta love him.

By James Milstid
Bill Gates recently made a rare appearance at the University of Washington. He talked about how technological advances are coming together for major advances in a couple areas he cares most about these days; education and efforts to help the poor people of the world.

The ensuing question and answer session was most memorable when a student asked him how she could become rich like him.

His answer?

“I can understand wanting to have millions of dollars, there’s a certain freedom, meaningful freedom, that comes with that. But once you get much beyond that, I have to tell you, it’s the same hamburger. Dick’s has not raised their prices enough,” he said, referring to the Seattle-area fast-food chain. “But being ambitious is good. You just have to pick what you enjoy doing.”

I truly appreciate his candid answer. Of course, it’s easy for him to say… he’s worth billions; somewhere around $49 billion. But with all the protests against greedy corporate executives these days, it’s refreshing to hear Mr. Gates speak honestly about being uber-rich.

Continue reading →


28
Oct 11

He really said that?

12 Misunderstood and Misquoted Shakespearean Expressions

By Mark Nichol
The plays of William Shakespeare provide a wealth of pithy sayings — many of which he likely popularized rather than produced himself, though we may still be grateful to him for sharing them. Unfortunately, sometimes the original sense is adulterated by careless usage, so that the eloquent force of the expression is weakened. Here are a dozen of Shakespeare’s phrases with comments about their original wording and meaning:

“At one fell swoop”
This phrase from Macduff’s grief-stricken lamentation about the murder of his family in Macbeth uses the archaic word fell, meaning “fierce,” to extend the metaphor of the perpetrator (who he calls a “hell-kite”) as a bird of prey. Modern usage is generally more casual and even comical.

“Brave new world”
This phrase from a speech by Miranda, daughter of the wizard Prospero in The Tempest, naively uses brave in the sense of “handsome” when she first lays eyes on other men. The subtext in Shakespeare is that those she refers to are superficially attractive but substantially deficient in character. The sense is the same in the phrase as it appears in the title of Aldous Huxley’s dystopian classic. Unfortunately, the dark sarcasm is being dulled by use of the phrase to blithely herald a bright future.

Continue reading →


27
Oct 11

Herman Cain: “They came after me like I had talked about their momma!

Herman Cain: ‘I Gotta Fight Romneycare and Get the Nomination’

By Susan Archer
Herman Cain skipped a RNC gala in Washington D.C. tonight to speak at the sold out Nueces County Republican Women’s Dinner in Corpus Christi. Following a private fundraiser in his honor, Cain talked about his 9-9-9 plan and railed against the Obama administration and a healthcare plan he said the American people did not want.

“Back in early 1990s”, Cain said, “I had to fight Hillarycare and be an outspoken voice against Hillarycare. During the passage of Obamacare, I had to fight Obamacare and he passed it anyway against the will of the people. So it seems as if many of my years have been fighting some kind of care. Hillarycare, Obamacare, and now I gotta fight Romneycare and get the nomination.”

Continue reading →


27
Oct 11

Rick, Rick, Rick…

Thank you Nan!


27
Oct 11

Monster – Project Flickr: Eerie


27
Oct 11

Cassie Zhen

Ava - Watercolor by Cassie Zehn

Ava - Watercolor by Cassie Zhen

Cassie Zhen is an art director/illustrator/graphic designer in Germany.

Continue reading →


26
Oct 11

Snake oil and Used Cars…

By James Milstid
Yesterday, presidential candidate Rick Perry (R-Texas) introduced his version of a flat-tax plan for America.

I don’t pretend to be an economics expert, so I won’t make any uneducated comments about the merits or disadvantages of his plan. Nor will I pass judgement on Herman Cain’s 999 tax plan. I’ll save that for the talking-heads in the media.

Such a deal I have for you…
What disturbed me about Rick Perry’s presentation was the slippery, slimy feeling I perceived. I’ve felt it before while shopping for a used car. Or walking through the warehouse-style furniture store. That “is-this-guy-being-straight-with-me” feeling.

When he held up his 5×7 index card, the words “snake-oil” flashed across my mind… in bright flashing neon letters. My internal warning flags were at full mast. But the premise did have a certain appeal on the surface.
Continue reading →


25
Oct 11

Bachmann: Charities Can Take Care Of The Uninsured

Bachmann: Uninsured Americans Can Rely On ‘Charitable Organizations’ For Health Care
By Igor Volsky on Oct 24, 2011 at 9:00 am

Republicans have a hard time explaining how they would make up for the loss in coverage to 32 million Americans if they succeed in repealing the Affordable Care Act. Deregulating the health insurance market and instituting malpractice reform will only do so much — in fact, a Congressional Budget Office analysis of the GOP’s standard health care plan found that such an approach would only extend coverage to three million people and actually increase the overall uninsured rate — and so the party is often forced to look at other less dependable sources for health care: charity.

Continue reading →