I love the internet. It allows us so many amazing opportunities to learn. Every day, people are creating content which we all enjoy. People who are experts in their fields.
I think I never really realized the value of expertise until the past two or three years. I thought that someone could really "master" anything in a short period of time if they had a general set of skills. This may still be the case, but passion and experience can really shine through.
So here are my top-twenty favorite media sources (podcasts, blogs, papers, magazines), in no specific order:
Podcasts (All can be found using an iTunes search)
1. NPR's collection. They've got This American Life, Cartalk, Talk of the Nation, To the Best of Our Knowledge, Intelligence Squared, All Things Considered, All Songs Considered, and Fresh Air, among others. All are superb examples of great journalism and storytelling. Oh- and don't forget Prairie Home Companion and Wait Wait Don't Tell Me!
2. Podrunner. It's just a great way to get exercise music. I don't have to throw together a playlist, I just run my podrunner track and I've got an hour of beats to run or cycle to.
3. Short Stories: Selected Shorts and the New Yorker Fiction podcasts are like little "Buddhist catnaps". Really a great way to spend an hour, these podcasts entertain and challenge.
Blogs
4. Best Week Ever consistently provides some great content. I'm not a fan of celebrity news, but I do like how they mock the hyper-attentive celebrity industry itself.
5. Comics: Penny Arcade is funny in a very deep way; and Tycho's posts are always amusing. PVP is great, too. Both are about video games, but the humor reaches far beyond that.
6. Food blogs are better than porn. I just love Bitten. He makes some pretty great recipes. I love his videos the most. Jia's blog is great, as well as Eating Madison A to Z. Without them, I would never know where to eat on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday!
7. Politics, my favorite subject. DailyKos is the progressive blog, but it is definitely one-sided. Political Arithmetik is a great blog, but now it is mostly superceded by Pollster.com (where the author posts consistently). Media Matters is also a progressive blog with essays regarding media coverage of candidates and issues.
Traditional Media
8. NYT. That's easy. Crosswords, news, international coverage, the Magazine (What a great way to spend a Sunday!), food, art, wine, culture... Definitely worth the whatever-a-month it costs.
That's it for now. What's your favorite media source?
3.23.2008
My favorite media sources / blogs / podcasts
3.10.2008
Badges? We (will spare you the easy joke)
We all want to be well liked and popular, right? Well, besides changing your style, diction, name, and face,-(and picking a better blog title, something more hip) -you can now have your very own front-free blog badge.
What's a blog badge? A badge is a community identifier. It's a patch, a bumper sticker for your blog. It's a statement. It's an advertisement. It's a meme and an individual statement.
So, after today's class, I decided to make the least frontin' badge ever.
Enjoy - and stop frontin'. Hat tip to Frontin'!
Large:
Small:
3.01.2008
new features: rss feed, tag cloud
There are a few cool new features on our blog today.
First, I've added my 'starred' feed from Google Reader. You can now see my most recently starred items. I'll try to only star 5 a day so you can see what I think is cool without having to subscribe the feed.
Adding an RSS feed is pretty straightforward in Blogger. Just add the RSS element and copy the RSS link from your google reader.
Second, I added a Tag Cloud that displays labels from our blog (From Phydeaux). It's pretty handy and in the future will probably be a better representation of my interests than my del.icio.us tagcloud. Del.icio.us has some cool stuff on it but most of my content is - well - lame. Lamer, at least, than LOTR jokes.
I've been reading A.J. Jacob's The Year of Living Biblically. It's quite good and very 'bloggy'. It's written in a diary-esque fashion. It's funny and-at times- moving, but I think he tried to take too much meaning from his experiences. The moral at the end of the story is something we, American consumers, derive way too much pleasure from. I think his documentary style almost requires it. In the vein of Morgan Spurlock, he undertakes some major change in habit for a period of time and document it. His previous book was about reading every article in the encyclopedia.
The religious idea, to live biblically for an entire year, following the commands of the bible with a literalism interpretation, is quite novel and fascinating. Americans are changing religions more and more frequently. We're entering a period where religious enlightenment is not attained through depth, but through breadth. Jacobs explores the depth of the religious movement in this country, but he does it in an individual way (which he acknowledges the limitations of). Unfortunately, it's the group experience which really interests social scientists. The few candid portraits he paints of group experiences - Hasidic Jews in New York having a drunken Crown Heights bash, for instance - are fascinating.
It is a good, interesting book but it definitely could have delved a little deeper and taken a step out of being a memoir. While that style definitely makes for a good read, it sometimes lacks in the subject's content and favors the individual experience.
I've been thinking about my multimedia project for class. I thought of two viable ideas and one completely non-viable idea. I'll try to describe each in a short little blurb, and maybe expand on the two viable ideas before I decide on which to do.
Viable Ideas:
1. Create a flash-based timeline of a historic cultural or political event. I would incorporate video (from youtube, slideshows, etc), audio (music, noise, speech), and static content (pictures, text). It would involve a lot of borrowing (Especially if the content was already collected at some source in another format) and a lot of creation, but it could end up being really cool. Imagine a self-scrollable timeline with shifting colors, content, etc. The form could change as you moved along it to match the event.
2. Economoic / Political Youtube videos. I would create videos describing basic or current political or economic concepts, such as Superdelegates, the subprime lending crisis, etc. The videos would be stylistically similar to the Commoncraft "Explanations in Plain English" videos. Mallory even gave me an idea for a style and a name. I could call it Candycraft or something similar; and use candy to describe basic items. For instance, I could use different colored jellybeans to represent trade goods. I might come up with another, more interesting theme / style; but we'll see.
Non-Viable Idea:
This is more my own little imagination running rampant. I would create a python script with two inputs - two Wikipedia pages. The script would then crawl the pages, collect links, and then piece them together to make a sort of visio-venn diagram/ flow chart (Here, clearly, the "Sort Of" denotes how much work this idea would require to get anywhere). It's like Kevin Bacon meets Wikipedia meets Visio.
Unfortunately, my Python skills aren't all that hot and I'm not sure this would even produce an interesting result. C'est la vie. Sometimes I regret not going into Computer Science. Then I remember how frustrating that can really be.