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  • Supertome

    A few weeks ago I finished reading Dave Eggers’ “Zeitoun” but for a multitude of reasons — mainly laziness — I neglected to post about it.

    It’s the story of a family living in New Orleans during Katrina, and really about the experience of the father before, during and after the storm. If you’ve read Eggers’ “What Is The What” you’ll recognize the same style of exploring complex issues connected to a historical event through one person’s eyes.

    It’s one of those stories that really shows how quickly we can move on and consume the next event without stopping to fully examine what just happened. We’re all sort of familiar with the broad strokes of Katrina — the rooftop rescues, the nightmare at the Superdome, the broken levees — but it’s what people like Zeitoun saw and were subjected to in New Orleans that really give the situation its gravity.

    I don’t want to get much into the story and spoil things, so I’ll just mention a somewhat relevant quote that pretty well sums up how I’m feeling about my own project:

    “It’s so slow sometimes, so terribly so sometimes, but progress is being made…If he can picture it, it can be. This has been the pattern of his life: ludicrous dreams followed by hours and days and years of work and then a reality surpassing his wildest hopes and expectations.”

    May 22, 2011 books Uncategorized
  • Campus Tour

    During my junior and senior years of college, I was the president (mainly by default) of our school’s film club.

    That meant running a lot of meetings that didn’t accomplish anything and eventually heading up the task of putting on the first- and second-ever student film festivals.

    The first year was tough, as is any event you’re trying to create out of nothing. The club wasn’t very big, and there were more film-watching enthusiasts than filmmakers in the crowd.

    As the event approached, it was clear we weren’t going to have many entries at all. So, given that I had a camera and a vested interest in not totally embarrassing ourselves, I walked around our campus for an hour and came up with a project.

    I really didn’t know what I was doing when I started, but sort of figured it out as I went along. It’s basically a trip around the Susquehanna University campus using common sights from different areas or perspectives as a way to move from one place to the other.

    It’s probably easier to follow if you went to the school, but even those who have never been to Selinsgrove can somewhat keep up. Some of the transitions work better than others — banners using the school logo and signs on buildings look pretty good, lightpoles not so much.

    The music was done by fellow Susquehanna student, and actual legitimate music artist, DLake.

    Enjoy:



  • Dynasite!

    It seems like it has been forever, but AV has finally stopped procrastinating enough that I can share her fantastic project with you.

    Actually, that’s not quite true. She has created a website, which it turns out takes a lot of effort and consequently a lot of time to get things just right. The project started in earnest last fall, but it has been amazing to see how far it has come in just the past month or so.

    It’s called Miss On Her Own, and basically AV wants to help young women with practical advice and resources for starting out in the “real world.”

    In her words, “From cover letters, to car troubles, to building credit, to what the heck is credit?, there are so many issues we encounter as young adults that can leave us feeling lost and confused.” Her hope is the site “can provide quick and easy solutions to your everyday concerns and save you time for the things you’d rather be doing.”

    The tips cover everything from email etiquette at work, exercises you can do at home when you can’t get to the gym, how to enhance your apartment-living experience and, of course, relationships. And that’s just as of today — much more new content is on the way.

    In addition to the website, be sure to check out — and “like” — the Facebook page, and also follow MOHO on Twitter.

    Tell your friends, your daughters, cousins, people you knew in high school but haven’t spoken to since graduation, the intern who always uses the wrong “your” in emails, and the girl in front of you at the grocery store who seems to be buying way too much spaghetti and not enough sauce.

    Basically, spread the word to anyone might be interested in a site like this. AV won’t let them down.

    May 10, 2011 Uncategorized
  • Legitimate Coup

    I’m continuing the quest of sharing videos on days I typically haven’t been posting new content.

    If you missed the one from last week, check it out here. Also remember you can click the labels at the bottom of posts for similar content — in this case “video.”

    This project is one that makes me laugh every time I watch it, even though I’m sure I’ve seen it roughly 2,381 times. I made it for this really amazing class I took in college called Film & Politics. Basically we used films with political themes (All The President’s Men, The China Syndrome, The Manchurian Candidate, Black Hawk Down, etc.) instead of a textbook to drive discussion and papers.

    The final exam was one I knew I was going to get an A on as soon as I saw it: Make a trailer for your own political film (or write some sort of detailed summary of your plot).

    As a communications major who already spent a good deal of time at that school in front of video equipment, there was nothing I liked seeing more in other departments than the opportunity to make a video. The production value alone on my projects I’m sure earned me high grades, but I also enjoyed the opportunity to share those skills with my classmates (in this case in the political science department).

    I have to give great credit to my actors, MB, who is playing an intrepid reporter out to uncover a big conspiracy, and the maniacal Jason, a vice president hellbent on taking over the Oval Office.

    Jason, who lived in my suite and was also in the class, had an amazing project we had to abandon because of technical issues. His idea was to do a sequel for Happy Gilmore, where Happy rides the momentum of his golf fame into a run for Senate. It would have been epic.

    Alas, all we have is mine. Enjoy:



  • Koyaanisportsi

    Part of my life is in total disarray right now.

    Professionally things are fine. I’m getting an adequate amount of sleep. The price of Cocoa Puffs remains at an acceptable level.

    But when it comes to sports, things are getting a bit crazy.

    I understand that many of you don’t care the least thing about sports and want to stop reading. For you, I offer the following video featuring Elmo making an appearance on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon:

    In the sports world, things aren’t as funny. Today I learned that Gary Williams, the head men’s basketball coach at (one of) my alma mater(s) the University of Maryland, is retiring. Gary certainly has his critics, but I have always been a fan and will be sad to see him go.

    Then, on the same day, this news that CBS announcer Gus Johnson is reportedly parting ways with the network. That means the best play-by-play guy in college basketball will no longer be involved with March Madness. The Los Angeles Times says he’s in talks with Fox to do Pac-12 college football, which means I will never hear him announce a game.

    All of that comes on the heels of another epic playoff collapse by my beloved Washington Capitals, who were just swept in the second round by the Tampa Bay Lightning.

    Did I mention the NFL season is in jeopardy?

    What I’m left with is the Washington Nationals, and following their quest to remain near the .500 mark. It could be worse I guess. I could be a Mets fan.

    (P.S. I hope at least some people get the veiled references I often put in the titles of these posts. This one, for example, is a play on the film “Koyaanisqatsi” — titled after a Hopi word meaning something like “life out of balance.”)

  • Breaking News

    In any newsroom, there are stories we feel like we cover in some form every day — a shooting, a debate about education funding, the latest bomb blast in the usual place. Those stories are important and we do our best to tell them.

    But then there are the ones that really make our hearts beat a little faster, the ones that make the cliche of “writing the first draft of history” not seem like such a bloated claim.

    Last night was we had one of those stories.

    I was working the national desk, and not long after I got in we received word that President Obama was going to address the nation at 10:30 p.m. Given that it was a Sunday and an especially late hour, it was clear this going to be something important.

    As we waited for the address — which ended up being delayed until more like 11:30 — word started to leak out that Mr. Obama was going to announce the U.S. had killed Osama bin Laden. It’s always fascinating to see how different news organizations treat that kind of information, and who is willing to risk being wrong for the sake of being first.

    My newsroom is very much on the conservative side, so a senior editor prepared a quick story based on what Mr. Obama was likely to say with the idea of tweaking it once the address began.

    As the president spoke, we quickly confirmed the major details and released the brief story as I took notes that would be used in the subsequent versions. As the following frantic hours went by, I added more and more details from Mr. Obama’s speech as well as new information about the operation we were getting from senior White House officials.

    My last version looked like this.

    As I was writing, I was glancing at the television on my desk seeing the scenes outside the White House and in New York as crowds of people gathered in the early morning hours to celebrate the news. I also thought at one point Twitter was going to crumble under the pressure of the massive number of messages that were being sent.

    But more than anything, I was proud to be a part of a team that calmly and efficiently covered the heck out of this story, and included multiple people rushing to come into work on a day off or going right back to work even though they just left. There’s a reason we do what we do.

    And now it’s time to rest. Goodnight.

    (Bonus: interesting links with some insider info, including how White House officials convince you that you REALLY need to come into work on a Sunday night even if they can’t tell you why.)

    May 2, 2011 Uncategorized
  • Literary Chase

    My brother reminded me the other day that I (a)recently figured out how to embed my own video player here and (b)have a bunch of old video projects on my hard drive.

    So, given that I rarely post new entries early in the week, I’m going to change that by putting up some of those videos.

    Some of them had specific purposes — news packages, class assignments — but many were made either for the sake of learning new things about shooting or editing, or because someone said, “Hey, let’s make a video.”

    I’m starting things off this week with a video called “Literary Chase” that Pat and I made somewhere around 2003. It’s a pretty straightforward story that includes some (hopefully) neat visual effects I wanted to try out. Enjoy:



    May 1, 2011 Uncategorized video
  • Everything in One Bottle

    Sometimes we don’t step back and realize how fortunate we are to live where we do.

    Forget things like reliable access to electricity, clean water and Netflix. It’s the little things that make our lives astounding compared to many parts of the world.

    Last night at work I drank two bottles of tea, which in itself doesn’t sound that incredible. After all, you can get tea in even the poorest countries on Earth.

    What makes our lives really privileged are the adjectives. Just like we have a whole section at the grocery store solely for different varieties, brands and sizes of ketchup, our choice of teas is extensive.

    So, let me try again.

    Last night I drank two bottles of tea. The one on the left, is just a diet, mixed berry-flavored green tea. The one on the right is a thing of engineering beauty, a sparkling, diet, strawberry kiwi-flavored green tea.

    Maybe our lives would be a little simpler without so much choice.

    Then again, adjectives are delicious.

    April 28, 2011 Uncategorized
  • Reading into Readers

    If my blog readers are representative of the world as whole, life on Earth isn’t so bad right now.

    I have a traffic counting service here that shows me some information about everyone, including the Google searches that sometimes bring visitors. I share these from time to time (August 2010, October 2009), usually because they feature ridiculous queries of people who are going to be really disappointed with the lack of answers they find here.

    Apparently making your own ping pong paddle is a major concern these days. Since March, some version of “homemade ping pong paddle” has by far been most-searched term among people who came here from Google. Maybe I should start selling my collection?

    One oddly persistent search string is something like “snl your not tall midget” which refers to a Saturday Night Live skit I posted a link to in September 2009. Sure, it’s a funny segment, but for this one I really have Google to thank. For some reason, my post is the #3 result for that grammatically dubious search, even ahead of the actual Hulu link that’s included in my post.

    We did have one new addition this month thanks to the realization of a lifelong dream for me. Last week someone came here after searching “declares nba draft.” It’s likely they were actually trying a more specific search like “Harrison Barnes declares nba draft” but I hope they enjoyed my story about becoming an official NBA free agent.

    Within the blog, I recently added “labels” below each post that allow you to search for similar content with a simple click. People seem to be slowly catching on to this system, which I think brings a lot of good context with the archives and lessens the need for me to explain who certain people are or recap events I’ve already written about.

    Most of you get here following links I post on Facebook and Twitter, and not surprisingly the vast majority of hits are from the United States. There were hits in the past month from Brazil, Australia, Colombia, Canada, Spain and Chile, though I know some of those people.

    I actually try to use all the info I can see (which also includes your city and Internet service provider) to figure who my readers are. Sometimes it’s very easy — I only know so many people in Denver or in Wilkes-Barre, Pa.

    But I do have one problematic reader. That is, I have one reader for whom I have what I think should be enough information to figure out who they are, but for some reason I just can’t.

    So if we are Facebook friends, and you work at the State Department, please send me a note. Your anonymity is making my head hurt.

    [Update: We have a winner! Just goes to show sometimes all you need to do is ask.]

    April 24, 2011 blog stats Uncategorized
  • In Cold Blood

    What makes mystery fiction compelling is finding out who did it. What makes true crime stories interesting is knowing not only what happened and who did it, but that the writer has an entire book to tell you how and why.

    I wrote last month about the experience of walking past certain books over and over thinking that I really should read them someday, but never actually picking them up. Add Truman Capote’s “In Cold Blood” to the list of books I can’t believe I didn’t read before now, despite considering it for years.

    The story is about the murder of a small-town Kansas family, the Clutters, who were shot inside their home at night. Capote, a writer from New York, saw a brief story about the killing in a newspaper and went to Kansas to research what became an exhaustive account of the murder, investigation and resulting trial.

    Capote tells you pretty much right away that the family is dead. Shortly after he tells you who did it. In crime fiction, you would have little reason to keep reading. But what is masterful about Capote’s work is the way he reveals just how the murders were committed and how the suspects were captured.

    The reader is omniscient in the sense that we know for sure the suspects are guilty, but we only learn many of the details as the investigators do. That creates this sense that, like the townspeople, we want the police to figure out the how and why as quickly as possible. We want to know just like the people who live down the street from a horrific unsolved murder.

    It wasn’t the kind of story that led to a lot of dog-eared items for me to expound upon, but I do have two items.

    The first comes from the description of Nancy Clutter’s bedroom. She is the teenage daughter in the family of four.

    “A cork bulletin board, painted pink, hung above a white-skirted dressing table; dried gardenias, the remains of an ancient corsage, were attached to it, and old valentines, newspaper stories, and snapshots of her baby nephew…”

    When I was a senior in high school, I had a locker just a few down from my friend Kristen, who lived in my neighborhood and caught a ride with me to school. Early in the year I saw her put a red rose upside down in the back of her locker. I made some sort of comment about why she would put it in there to just let it die and disintegrate all over her stuff.

    She kindly informed me of the apparently widely known practice of drying flowers like that. Still, I was dubious, and spent the rest of the year peaking into her locker and saying things like, “Hm, doesn’t look so good today” or “It’s starting to go, I can sense it.”

    You can learn some unexpected things at school.

    Late in the book, after the suspects are captured, they spend an extended time waiting for their punishment to be carried out.

    “In March 1965, after Smith and Hickock had been confined in their Death Row cells almost two thousand days, the Kansas Supreme Court decreed that their lives must end between midnight and 2:00 a.m., Wednesday, April 14, 1965.”

    April 14 is my brother’s birthday, but also a day marked by a few not-so-good events. In 1865, Abraham Lincoln was shot at Ford’s Theatre. In 1912, the Titanic hit an iceberg. It’s also Pete Rose’s birthday.

    If you’re interested in reading more about Capote’s role in launching “New Journalism” with this work, or the scandalous rumors about his connection to one of the killers, here’s a pretty interesting piece from Salon.

    April 23, 2011 books Uncategorized
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