Posts Tagged ‘toronto’

Wordstock, Foodstock, Taking Stock

Saturday, October 22nd, 2011

I’ve been meaning to blog about these things for a while now and it kept getting put off. This is just a recounting of some of the things I did recently and not-so-recently.

First up was Wordstock, a festival in Collingwood that celebrates the written word. I was invited by Janet Fairbridge (a friend and colleague from my CBC days) who, in concert with Silann Kaduc, produced their Off The Page cabaret night. It was a blast!

Sean Cullen hosted the event which included readings from Lee Maracle, music from John Somosi and a great band called Snack!, the Toronto Poetry Slam Team, and in the middle of it all was Césan d’Ornellas Levine painting up a storm. Césan’s finished canvas was auctioned off at the end of the night with the proceeds going to support the Wordstock Festival.

I was there as Ruffus and got to engage in some wonderfully silly banter with Cullen before giving the crowd a sneak peek at some clips from our Christmas Carol. Sean is always hilarious and he had me snorking into my microphone or hooting loudly from the back of the room throughout the night.

The whole thing was a lot of fun and I got to meet up with a lot of great people and later at a party Stuart Ross and I had the opportunity to reminisce about the late bp nichol, whom I had known from my days on Fraggle Rock.

So thank you, Janet and Silann for including me in the festivities.

The other event I attended recently was Foodstock, organized by Chef Michael Stadtlander and a host of about 100 other great chefs from across Canada in support of the efforts to stop th edevelopment of a mega-quarry that threatens to destroy 2,316 acres of prime agricultural land in Dufferin County.

What better way to draw the support of the people than to feed them.

The lines of hungry activist citizens wound through the trees of this beautiful landscape and we indulged in a seemingly endless stream of delicious cuisine based on the foods grown and raised locally.

We also met up with a bunch of friends we hadn’t seen in a while.

Good food and a good cause. And a shit load of mud.

The taking stock part of this blog post is my lack of attendance at the ongoing #OccupyTO action which has taken up residence in St. James park and continues to grow. I haven’t been wholly neglectful of our local Occupy protests, I just haven’t shown up in person – yet. I’ve tweeted my ass off (for what that’s worth) about #occupyTO and #ourwallstreet and I WILL be getting out there soon. This is part of a much larger global movement that holds the promise to change our world for the better.

Yeah right. Words. Don’t mean a thing without action.

Sometimes just showing up is the support that’s needed. We can write our rage in tweets and blogs and clever signs but in the end it is physical presence that defines any movement. You gotta show up.

And that’s what I’ll be doing. Not camping out – I’m too old and creaky and selfish to do that – but I’ll give whatever material and moral support I can. Small potatoes for some but for an agoraphobic curmudgeon it’s a relatively big deal.

So, whatever changes you want to see in the world you have to become that change yourself. Get out there. Make a sign. Make a noise. Put on a show. Show up.

And now – speaking of stock – I gotta get my ass back into my own kitchen and finish making some soup.

Cheers.

P. S. Another thing we did a little while back was take part in one of the Nuit Blanche works.

It was called Ride The Rocket and was put together by Kurt Firla and his colleagues.

My wife Karen and I provided and performed a bunch of puppet characters for part of their immersive and surreal streetcar ride.

It was easily the best presentation of the entire festival and that would have been true without our involvement but it was certainly a pantload of fun to play with Kurt and his team and then on the night ride the finished work.

Occupy Wall Street – The Bridge – The UNiTERS

Friday, October 21st, 2011

Ladeez and Gentlemen – the UNiTERS:

Ruffus RoundUp – Thus Far

Tuesday, November 23rd, 2010

As you may have noticed I’ve been posting a lot about our efforts to get Ruffus The Dog’s “A Christmas Carol” financed through contributions from the crowd-funding web site IndieGoGo.

Once upon a time . . .

The time has run out for that effort and while we didn’t raise the full $8,500 we were hoping to, we did clear over $2,000 and managed to garner a bit of attention for the show itself. It’s all good.

The process of using IndieGoGo was an interesting learning experience. I have no doubts we’ll bring other productions forward through that site. The level of participation from contributors is a difficult one to anticipate; I’m sure everybody thinks their own project is the absolute most bestest in the whole universe. There are a lot of great recommendations from the operators of the site on how to best leverage awareness of your project and ensure you are getting the maximum return for your efforts – but it is up to you to make it happen.

Did I do everything humanely possible to guarantee full or even excess funding of “A Christmas Carol”? No, of course not – I’m a lazy procrastinating slob with too much work in front of him and preternaturally shy about blowing my own horn. We did have a lot of help from many people out there – friends, family, colleagues and total strangers – to which we are indebted. It’s gratifying and humbling to see others get out and make noise in an effort to help us in this quest.

Thanks to you all from the bottom of my sordid little heart.

Today is Tuesday – next week, on Monday, we will begin shooting “A Christmas Carol”. I’ll be documenting the entire process here on this blog and probably on another site set up just for that show. There will be photos and tweets and possibly a live video feed on UStream. We can’t get too ambitious with all that because we do have a show to shoot and that is, perforce, ambitious enough in its own right.

When it is all finished and ready for release it will, of course, show up on the official Ruffus The Dog web site as well as its own online location, and right here and on YouTube and anywhere else we can place it.

There’s a lot for me to do between now and when we wrap the shoot – as well as thereafter with our tight post-production schedule – and while there is plenty for me to be raving, raging and ragging on about (TSA, Copyright, Internet Censorship, stupid cat videos, Net Neutrality, the Singularity, government corruption, cool art, corporate malfeasance, fascist hijinks and general monkey assholery to name but a few) I shan’t be able to indulge my usual blog musings in earnest for a while. That doesn’t mean you won’t see things posted here – I am, after all a lazy procrastinating slob – just that my posts may be somewhat minimal for a few more weeks.

After all is said and done will it have been worth it?

Of course! I get the chance to play with my friends in a creative endeavour and tell a great story in our own way and show it to the world. What’s wrong with that? Paying the bills would be nice too but that’s gonna have to wait until we’re finished this – then I’ll go out and get a job and complain about it at length here.

In the meantime, I’m taking great comfort and inspiration from a slender little volume I picked up at our local bookshop – The River Trading Company, on Queen West (the real Queen West: Parkdale) – where I found it perched in their front window display of nifty holiday stuff.

A lovely thing.

It’s an Atlantic Monthly Press 1920 reproduction of the original edition.

I don’t believe in omens and signs but I’ll take what I can get – and this will be the book Ruffus reads from in the show.

Once again – my deepest thanks to everyone who contributed and supported our fund raising efforts – our creative team will now strive to make the best Ruffus show possible. Keep tuning in for updates.

Cheers.

Drawing Toronto With GPS

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

Here’s a really cool video of a cyclist traveling (on a recumbent bike) through the city of Toronto from 2004 to 2009, creating a map comprised of experienced space.

Sports Videos, News, Blogs

There’s a lot of neat shit being talked about Augmented Reality – or AR – and while everyone likes to focus on the most recent and most sexy bit of techno-buzz — like a massive bionic strap-on penis that can slice bread, pick locks and negotiate middle peace treaties (and if we’re waiting on this for the middle east thing, we’re really fucked) — it’s the little advances, use and implementations (like a self-made GPS map) that will make the massive difference.

The ability to manipulate the data of our lives will help us define our lives. As our online existence overlaps with our real world existence we will find it increasingly beneficial to share with the world the details of our lives in ways we never thought possible, plausible nor desirable.

We worry about our privacy – with good cause – and at the same time there is a benefit to revealing our lives, our actions, and – yes – even our motives to the wider world.

Pretty pictures of Toronto culled from the travels of a bike are a minor thing. Add everyone’s information to that map. The levels of meaning to those pretty pictures run as deep as the oceans themselves. This ocean of information about ourselves will help us to create not just one or two or more pretty map-like pictures. It will, if we allow it, build an informational sculpture of our world, our lives, our past and our future.

Let us make the world.

In the fight against whatever tyranny may seek to own and control us, there has always been the model of The Underground. Those valiant fighters who lurk in the shadows against tyranny and inspire us all to keep up the good fight for freedom and all that is human in the world.

Fuck hiding in the shadows.

Stand up and make noise. Shine a light on your face. Leave a trail. Make a map.

Our world has been turned upside down by our emerging technologies which allow us to communicate with one another at a depth, breadth and speed that mimics our our own thoughts. The remedy to any who seek to impose control over those shared experiences is transparency and light.

Don’t hide it.

Can this revealed information be used against us? Yes – and it will. And we will use it against those who seek to intimidate and oppress. Do we need our privacy? Damn straight. And we will fight for that right even as we fight for the right eliminate secrets from the operation of our democratically elected governments. It’s not going to be simple nor easy because the enemy is – ultimately – ourselves – and we are all really just a bunch of fucked up monkeys. But that doesn’t mean we can’t figure this shit out.

Naive? Fuck yeah! And worth dying for.

So there.

Cheers.

New Poster For Zombie Short Film Festival

Saturday, August 22nd, 2009

zombie short film fest poster

Da Boyz have been busy! You can find more information on submissions or attendance to the festival on their website and you should definitely join the Facebook Group.

Cheers.

Trying To Get It All Done

Friday, April 10th, 2009

my_writing_processAlthough today is Good Friday – ( I’m always naturally inclined to shout: “What’s so good about it?!” ) - and that makes it an official sort of holiday, official enough that my son is home from school and underfoot, I am still trying to get my tasks done so I can finally, once and for all, stamped it no erasing, launch my other fucking web site. I’ve used this animated GIF in the earlier iteration of this blog and remembered it fondly enough to include it here. That, of course, lead me down the rabbit hole of leafing through all my image files from the old posts and, just like when you clean out the attic or the cluttered shelf at the back of the closet, found myself saying things like: “Ohhh, I remember that one!” and wanting to post it once again for all to see. In all modesty, I did some funny shit with my Photoshopped images and I will make an effort to re-use them here but for now I can only regard the effort as yet another steaming wad of procrastinaton that stands before me and my goal of project completion. Hell, just writing all these words here is an act of procrastination in itself; dutifully pounding out an endless stream of description that has no deeper meaning or purpose other than to keep me from doing what it I have tasked myself with.

Enough!

I’m still here – I’m still posting – and when I’m done with my work I will post here about that and tell you what went into making it all happen.

Jill Gollick has been kind enough to invite me to participate in one of her great WGC discussions at Camera on April 29th to talk about the project. You can find out more at the Facebook page for the Web Creators Show And Tell event. That should be fun. We might even be streaming the evening online – I’ll let you know if we get that happening.

And now I shall walk away from the interwebs and get my ass to work.

Cheers.