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  • 01 May

    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:



    By cjhannas Uncategorized video
  • 28 Apr

    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.

    By cjhannas Uncategorized
  • 24 Apr

    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.]

  • 23 Apr

    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.

    By cjhannas books Uncategorized
  • 22 Apr

    I Tawt I Taw a Tweety Tat

    A few of my friends have recently joined Twitter and asked for advice about some of the intricacies of using the micro-blogging service.

    Some of those questions have been about specific things like, “What are hashtags?” or “Who can see my Tweets?” Others have centered on more macro issues such as, “What do I do with it?”

    There are about 200 million Twitter users, and many of them would answer that last question differently. My account is all about snarky responses to other people’s tweets, sharing links to interesting articles I read, offering quick observations that aren’t enough for a blog post (though sometimes they end up here), and posting links to my work.

    I joined in 2008 and since then have sent out 1,347 messages. I was looking back through them today after AV asked if they stay on your account forever (they do, and also get recorded by the Library of Congress). Naturally, I was curious to see what my first post was like. It was boring, and somewhat puzzling for my first foray into the Twitterverse:

    I was looking for my next job at the time, but not sure why I felt compelled to share that with the world. Since then, I think it’s become a more entertaining feed to follow.

    There’s the observational stuff:


    Some insight into my life:


    And the constant reminder that I’m not that smart:


    AV and I also talked about the trove of messages as in interesting place to research certain events. It would be fascinating to see how the Tweets unfolded as a particular event was happening, as people made conclusions and expressed opinions based on limited information and even how those things changed as more became clear. You could also compare international events looking through different lenses, such as how Americans viewed the uprising in Egypt or how Israelis and Palestinians talked about an airstrike in Gaza.

    Or you could look at your ancestors and find really interesting nuggets about incredibly important milestones in their lives:

    Of course, you can also do that with yourself. This seemed innocuous at the time, but given a group of people I have met since then, it would probably get me beaten up today:

    Tweet carefully.

  • 15 Apr

    On Eagle’s Wings

    I usually write stories that get no immediate feedback.

    Sure, some people comment right after they read something here, or an editor might say something after going over one of my scripts. I’ve also spoken to many fine residents of Jacksonville, Florida, who wanted to lodge some complaint about one of the news shows I produced.

    But that’s not the same as having people react in the moment — to see their faces and sense them as you’re reading something.

    Last week, I actually did that, presenting a short piece at a “coffee house” event held at my church. As I may have suspected, it was an odd experience having a crowd instead of just sending my story off as a bunch of anonymous electronic signals.

    But at least they applauded at the end. My normal audience may do that, but not loud enough for me to hear.

    In case you weren’t in attendance, I recorded a version here (3.5 mins). Brace yourself for the part where I made the questionable decision to sing, letting what I thought the story needed at that point supersede my total lack of ability to adequately provide it.

  • 14 Apr

    Will & Kate Overrate-d

    Just in case you didn’t already assume as much, I am definitely not one of the people who is super-psyched for the Royal Wedding.

    I’m sure Will and Kate are perfectly nice people, but I just can’t get that excited about their wedding and all of the massive hoopla surrounding the event.

    And yet, I somehow can’t help but stay really informed about it. Sure, I’m a journalist and tend to know a lot about what is going on in the world. But beyond writing a story about the announcement of the wedding date, I haven’t had any actual need to know this information.

    In several recent conversations someone has mentioned a piece of Will and Kate news — like that the blouse she wore in the engagement photos was available in stores again — and I had to admit I was already aware. (Sad side note: To find that link, all I had to Google was “Kate blouse”).

    I also know there’s a Lifetime movie about the couple, which happens to star a former Susquehanna University student as Kate.

    She was apparently only there for a semester during my sophomore year, and I’m fairly certain I never met her. But given what she says about the school in an interview on Lopez Tonight, there’s at least a chance my roommate, Shawn L., did. (The brief Susquehanna portion starts around the 3:27 mark).

    She basically says she wasn’t a big fan of the middle-of-nowhere, Amish country nature of the school and that there wasn’t much to do in the area. None of that is totally false — the campus is in a quiet, rural section that has lots of stores nearby and some great local business in town. It’s not exactly the New York club scene, but as the esteemed rock band Harvey Danger once said, “If you’re bored than you’re boring.”

    Unlike Camilla, some people who come from big city areas actually like those aspects as a complete departure from what they’ve known the rest of their life. I found it refreshing to be able to drive somewhere without sitting in traffic, or to walk down the street in town and have a stranger walking by say hello to you.

    And if that’s not for her, that’s OK. I’m not sure as a freshman I would have liked the University of Maryland, but as a graduate student I loved it.

    What I found kind of funny about the interview — and where Shawn L. comes in — is when she mentions hanging out at the gas station as one of the prime attractions.


    Me outside the Sunoco gas station in Selinsgrove, Pa., sometime during the 2001-02 school year (Photo by MinChin)

    Shawn absolutely despised campus food and spent a good chunk of time at that gas station buying donuts and all kinds of random treats to eat instead. In fact, those habits earned him the nickname “Tastykakes.”

    I can definitely see Camilla eating her nachos at the gas station as Shawn and his slightly humorous mustache stumbled in at 2 a.m. in search of some Swiss Rolls. Now that would have been a great conversation.

  • 08 Apr

    Waiting for Shutdown

    I have done a lot of video projects in the past, most of which have had a very concrete purpose.

    Today, I have one for you that really was meant to be nothing more than learning more about ways to embed video on this site without having to use YouTube.

    After work on Thursday I went down to the Tidal Basin in Washington, D.C., to shoot some video of the cherry blossom trees. On the way there I grabbed some shots of the Capitol, White House, Washington Monument and Lincoln Memorial.

    I didn’t spend a ton of time editing the montage, and did it before creating the background music, so it’s far from my best work. I also intended the music to be more in the “soothing” category than “ominous” (my apologies to anyone with actual musical training).

    But the overall result could pass as a film school piece about the possible government shutdown.



    What do you think? Do we like this player? More video on the site? Step away from the piano?

    By cjhannas piano Uncategorized video
  • 07 Apr

    Helping Haiti

    I know what you’re thinking, you really want to help me out right now.

    And by that I mean help out my “family.”

    And by that I really mean help the people in the town of Grand-Bois, Haiti.

    My step-cousin (yes, that’s a thing) Paige is going to Haiti this summer as part of her grad school thesis research. She’s studying art therapy counseling, and while I don’t have an exact definition, I think it’s exactly what it sounds like.

    Maybe I should let her explain what she’ll be doing:

    “I am going to be working with students from nearby schools as well as other community members on completing a mural at the community Health Clinic. Documentation of the process will be used to help support my research about how community arts can help highlight and support resilience, as well as build community and celebrate culture.”

    Here’s where you come in. Supplies for this project cost money and you definitely want to give some, even if it’s just $1. Just click here.

    Don’t think you have the cash? Skip Starbucks tomorrow. Think the donation process is hard? You can use your Amazon account and donate in roughly seven seconds.

    Think this post needs a photo? Fine:

    That’s a collection my siblings and cousins, with a kid, some girlfriends and a dog thrown in there. Paige is in the green/white in the back row. Hopefully you can figure out which one is me.

    By cjhannas family Uncategorized
  • 01 Apr

    Creativity Continues

    It has been a while since I updated you on the creative projects AV and I are working on.

    If you remember from late February, she had ditched the novel-writing plan to focus all of her efforts on a different project. She thought back then it would be ready to share by April 1, but it’s not quiiiite there yet.

    I assure you she’s really close, even though I temporarily destroyed months of her work and nearly got punched in the face. But everything is fine now and she’s happy with the way things are turning out.

    So, the absolute deadline for officially launching is May 1. Full details then.

    As for my project, today was the deadline for completing my novel outline. I finished last week, but after talking to AV I have had to rethink some things. Let’s say it’s 97 percent done.

    I posted a cryptic note on Facebook a few days ago asking “question without context: Sophie or Leah?”

    AV convinced me I should change the name of one of the lead characters, and those were our two finalists. Despite a votes for George and for “nothing,” I can tell you the lead female character is now named Sophie.

    Now it’s time to start writing. I still have to work out the final 3 percent of the outline, but the issues are near the end of the story so it’s not critical I figure that out today.

    Stay tuned.

    By cjhannas Uncategorized writing
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