Posts Tagged ‘add’

Charlton Heston: The Future Has Already Been Written

Sunday, February 13th, 2011

My good friend Fred sends me links to stuff all the time and I do the same for (or to) him. Sometimes, because we surf the same end of the interwebs ocean of information, we end up racing to see who can get a link sent first. Fred won this time because I got up late and sat by the window enjoying my coffee and bacon.

This was posted on BoingBoing but it’s a film by Anthony Discenza, an SF based visual artist. This one is called Charlton Heston: The Future Has Already Been Written and it is a mind-warpingly run romp through 3 of Heston’s films – Planet Of The ApesThe Omega Man – and Soylent Green.

Discenza has taken these 3 classic Heston SF films and visually alternated between them every 1/10 of a second, while simultaneously layering the soundtracks. The quote: “It’s a madhouse!” from Planet Of The Apes springs to mind and a lot of the comments on the BoingBoing site show that a lot of people are having a hard time enjoying this.

I love it!

This reminds me of my ADHD youth when I would watch several shows at the same time – flipping back and forth between them – much to the consternation of my parents. This was before we had a remote so imagine a bubble headed buzzcut kid perched right in front of the screen rapidly cranking the dial back and forth. I must have been a very annoying child. Later I’d be accustomed to reading or doing my homework in front of the TV, still switching between shows but not as obsessively.

My son is not as much of a TV cheesehead as I was – although we consume films from my collection like popcorn. He has his Xbox and the online gaming community to rot his brain. I don’t think it’s a bad thing for him. My wife hates the first person shooter games but I know we gently weaned him into that sphere of current culture, protecting him when he was younger from undue commercial or violent influences, until we felt he was mature enough to deal with the grisly content of splattering zombie heads across the landscape. I’ve observed him and his friends in action – both whilst gaming and just sitting in conversation at the dinner table – and I know these young minds spin much faster and are capable of digesting a much more complex and richer informational stream than anyone my age will ever be able to achieve.

Watching mashups like this draws my attention to how kids (mostly boys) are being diagnosed as “learning disabled”, “autistic”, “attention deficient”, “asbergers” – and a myriad of other labels that are used as a means of coercing or medicating them to behave and comply with an established view of how human beings are supposed to be.

While I don’t doubt there are many cases where treatment is necessary I also think the educational and medical establishments need a similar course of treatment so they will be better able to understand more fully that we, as human beings, are very unique creatures and while we can be socialized to behave in unison, fitted into the cogs of a societal machine, or punished and medicated to comply with what is deemed “acceptable behaviour” – we are also very adaptable creatures. As our world changes around us, more and more rapidly, we are adapting to live within it – and our children are adapting faster than we are (or ever could). In time – a generation from now – we won’t recognize a lot of what passes for culture, language and societal norms. A film like Discenza’s could easily be part of the normal supply of entertainment consumed by the masses.

Who knows?

This also reminds me of a couple of earlier posts I did – one about a slit-scan mashup of Singin’ In The Rain and another about a great site called Yooouuutuuube! where videos posted on YouTube are deconstructed in real time to create a mosaic of movement.

I love this stuff!

Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’ll dig out my bong and watch some more.

Cheers.

Getting Dis Organized – Getting Dat Organized

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

Don't laugh - I need to - oh look, another butterfly!Yesterday I went into a tizzy because I couldn’t find a particular backup disk with some important script files on it. Whenever that sort of shit happens to me I behave pretty much the same way I do when my computer or hard drive goes down.

It’s bad enough losing data when one is notorious for not backing up their shit – but when you lose the fucking backup – that’s just too much.

I stomp around and fume and swear and throw things and just generally behave like an ill-tempered ogre that might be prone to dismembering friends and family members if any of them so much as utter the words: “Is something wrong?”

When basic crap around me breaks down or refuses to work – or refuses to be found – I cease to be a civilized human being. I would not fare well in any post-apocalyptic scenario – whether it be an Omega Man or A Boy And His Dog or This Quiet Earth or any other world-gone-wrong scenario. As much as I enjoy watching those films and putting myself in the role of the stalwart and ever-resourceful hero, when confronted with the reality of things-fucking-up I quickly realize I am not the hero type – I am, in fact, the Wallace Shawn character from My Dinner With Andre.

“But, Andre, I like my electric blanket!”

Fortunately, after digging through mountains of improperly filed debris which I like to refer to as my stuff, I managed to find the files I was seeking. However, it would be too easy to simply carry on as before now that the world has been set right once again. It’s not right – it’s still busted – I just happen to be able to once more find a way to pick out a path amongst the shattered landscape that surrounds me. As someone who lives, for the most part, inside their own head, I am all too capable of ignoring the basics that would drive more sane creatures into outrageous fits of despair. Dirty dishes, mounds of laundry, stacks of books, desk buried beneath a sedimentary paper simulacrum of geological proportions – all of it is so easy for me to ignore because all the real action is happening between my ears.

I was better able to cope with this state of affairs when I had an assistant and an office. That’s my excuse – for the moment – and I’m sticking with it. I pretty much need a full time nurse to lead me around and point at the next thing on my To Do List. All the other petty inconveniences that plague normal people and which constitute life in the real world are – in my case – always better handled by someone else.

That someone else is not my wife nor would I ever expect her to assume such a role. Merely thinking of the possibility – let alone voicing it – would ensure my quick demise in flash of eye-ball laser power reducing me to a small pile of smouldering and bewildered ash. She has her own shit to deal with and the attendant shit of sharing her life with the organizational equivalent of Charles Shultz’s Pig Pen.

This is something I must handle on my own.

I’ve done this before, you know. Every time something goes horribly wrong as a consequence of my own inability to cope with the world beyond my eyeballs, I vow to shape up, get my shit together, hunker down, suck it up and a litany of other buzz words all uttered with the intent of, once and for all, ceasing this obsessive compulsive behaviour that is an extension of my fractured thinking processes.

This is my world.Having one’s thinking process be fractured is not, on its own, a bad thing. It leads to many acrostic views and stimulating synchronistic perspectives that can feed multiple creative endeavours.

It just also – in my case at least – requires someone to follow me around with a shovel and a broom.

The human equivalent of a dog-walker, I suppose, prepared to stoop and scoop and perhaps occasionally yank on the leash to keep me off the grass – (that’s intended as a metaphor, yo) – since I am so obviously incapable of doing anything that doesn’t involve what is of immediate interest right in front of my nose or right behind my eyes.

For today, at least, I am making the effort to clear up the strategic piles of thoughts, works, interests, possibilities and potential that allow to cluster about my feet (often literally) and get myself back on the path – any path – that leads to something – anything – remotely productive.

Tomorrow, I’ll probably dig out all the old wind-up toys and spend the day on the floor taking pictures of an as yet to be conjured epic scenario – the dirty laundry can be sculpted to create other worldly landscapes – and those stacks of books can be pressed into service as the ruins of tall buildings from some distant and dysfunctional metropolis.

But what’s really truly important about all of this is . . . I found what I was looking for.

Cheers.

I’m Not Ignoring You

Friday, April 3rd, 2009

too_many_booksI’m just really busy trying to make things happen.

The hardest part is keeping my mind in focus on the tasks at hand. There’s so much really interesting shit I want to rant and babble about. I’ve been bothering my friend Bryan via email – knowing he’s busy himself and will just start bouncing off the walls when I send him more and more intellectual detritus gleaned from my ADD net wanderings.

True to form he’s been leaving big head shaped dents in the drywall of his house. I get to giggle and then carry on with my own attempts at creation.

Soon soon soon. So close. Almost. Very soon.

Cheers.

P. S. And, for no reason at all, here’s a picture of Henry Kissinger picking his nose and eating it.

Yummy!