October 2008

World in the Satin Bag

Twitteriffic Stuffs

Here’s my random twitter nonsense for the day: 10:32 @ikkepagrasset Yeah, the Sci Fi channel can be really annoying…BSG is so good, why can’t they repeat that model? # 10:33 About to head off to class, but started a new short story called "Door". It’s completely and utterly bizarre and came out of nowhere… # 11:22 New blog post: New Beginnings tinyurl.com/3nyoc6 # 23:06 So, I’m officially re-registered to vote (I moved, so had to change things). I’m happy because I really want to vote this time around. # 23:06 Feminism actually terrifies me… # 00:22 New blog post: Broaching the Education/Science Problem (one stop at a time) tinyurl.com/4w43qx # 01:24 @ikkepagrasset Women? What about them? # 01:24 So, the story "Door" is coming along nicely. It’s really…cool, in a bizarre sort of way. I don’t quite understand it. # 01:52 New blog post: Twitteriffic Stuffs tinyurl.com/4ho3ps # 01:52 New blog post: Twitteriffic Stuffs tinyurl.com/4vsvsb # 01:52 New blog post: Twitteriffic Stuffs tinyurl.com/4xyz68 # 01:52 New blog post: Twitteriffic Stuffs tinyurl.com/3pw45x # 01:52 New blog post: Twitteriffic Stuffs tinyurl.com/3o6pcv # Thanks for not exploding. Automatically shipped by LoudTwitter (Don’t click the read more, there isn’t any more after this!)

World in the Satin Bag

Broaching the Education/Science Problem (one stop at a time)

The other day I had a rather unusual experience while walking downtown on my way to the bus stop and ultimately home up in the lovely forested mountains. It started in front of Borders. There was a crowd and some really big things sitting in the middle of the sidewalk. It occurred to me, after a second or two of staring, dumbfounded, that they were telescopes. Since that evening was also “dress-up-like-a-celeb” night, I figured it was someone dressing up as some scientist that nobody other than myself would get anyway, and moved on into the Borders to peruse the aisles for a short while (it makes me feel good to see books lined up in alphabetical order on the bookshelf). When I came out the crowd had dispersed slightly and I soon realized that they weren’t replicas or some kid’s science project or something else. They were real telescopes and people could actually look into the night sky with them. What’s even more interesting is that the guy who had them set up on the street had built them by hand. That’s right. By hand. They looked it too, but when I took the time to actually look I got a chance to see Jupiter (and what looked like three of its moons) and an amazingly detailed view of the moon (the likes of which I hadn’t seen except through photos online). It was an amazing experience. I don’t know when it was that I last saw Jupiter or the moon through a telescope. What makes it more amazing is that this man, whose name I didn’t get for some stupid reason, was not only allowing people to see these things through his handmade telescopes, he was handing out literature too. It was the first time I think I’ve ever seen an educational display on a public street that wasn’t part of a science fair or on a school campus (or provided by the lovely religious people who offer free food in exchange for them preaching to you for an hour). And this all goes to the point of this blog post: education and science. It’s a well known fact that people in America are consistently ignorant of the basic laws of science. Additionally, there seems to be a, shall we say, negative reaction to the very idea of science–even mentioning the word “science” earns a few rolled eyes. Most kids these days (including myself, actually) are given an education in basic science that falls below the “rudimentary” line. Most of them, as Richard Dawkins has made most apparent, don’t even trust the natural laws that we know exist. What are we to do about this? Well, that gentleman downtown has a good idea. It’s probably unlikely that he had any intention of being a part of the “educational revolution”–a term I’m going to use here to indicate the battle that science and its related fields are waging right now to maintain its relevance in a society of people that don’t even understand it. But what that man had done was introduce people to a field of science that is more than just long division, algebra, and other “boring” number games. They got a chance to see that science can actually be beautiful, perhaps artistic. It occurred to me that most of the folks who looked through his telescopes probably had no idea that the dark areas on the moon are actually at lower elevations than the rest. But maybe some of them know now. A few of them actually took his literature (perhaps some of them will have a desire to build their own telescopes, or at least buy one).The problem with this country is that we aren’t embracing science. By “we” I mean the United States as a whole. Most of us aren’t scientist material (I don’t think I am even though I do love science), but that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t have some basic understanding of how physics works or what’s up with all those burning balls of gas in the sky, etc. We’re shunning these very things because we don’t understand them. Think of it along the same lines as the various things once feared by the Church so long ago that were considered sins. Science is, in a way, the new witchcraft and America could very well be the new Salem (and I’m not suggesting here that this is a religious war, although certain religious groups have had a heavy hand in ruining scientific credibility in this country). What we need more than anything else right now is a collective explosion of cool science. I don’t mean projects like the LHC, which most people largely don’t give a frak about anyway (I care, but I’m not most people). We need to see what made science so “cool” and “fascinating” so long ago, when our kids were actually interesting in winning scientific prizes and what not. I suspect a lot of that “fascination” had to do with the fact that science was up-and-coming. Astronomy was just beginning to sprout as a truly engaging medium right along with the push to put people in space. The problem, perhaps, is that science has lost that exciting flare. This is the same argument used against science fiction from time to time and it’s a valid one too. There’s no gosh-wow. But there could be. That’s the key. There could be a massive gosh-wow moment if we were to introduce people to the beautiful aspects of science. Nobody has to be a genius to enjoy what science has to offer. We just need to get them thinking and enjoying things. I’d be happy if more people were interesting in the stars, at least enough to look at them and want to see what they look like through telescopes. It’d be better if more people understand some of the basic principles of physics (I’m not genius on physics, but I think I have a firm grasp of the basics,

World in the Satin Bag

New Beginnings

I’m going to be on staff for two UCSC magazines this year, which is fantastic. I could really use the experience and this will look fantastic on my resume. I still have concerns about getting the right kind of job in the future (after graduation), but I think the more I push myself, the better my chances are of starting a wonderful career. My LinkedIn resume is getting longer and longer. Additionally, while I was waiting for our first meeting for Matchbox (one of the magazines I’m working on), I started looking through my little Moleskine at all the story ideas I’d written down in there. I think I initially intended to come up with new ideas, but in the end I got stuck on something I had written in there some time back. It was only a single sentence attached to something cryptic that came from a book I was reading, but didn’t have with me. It wasn’t even a completed sentence; just a fragment. I stared at it for a while and then I started writing. Now I have a new story called “Door,” which is bizarre in number of ways (particularly because it opens with the image of a living creature that the main character was born with attached to his face). Unfortunately the writing got cut short, but when I got home I transferred everything I’d written in my Moleskine to the computer and added more to it. I have no idea where the story is going, but I really like it. I think it’s more of a character-focuses story than some of the more plot-driven stories I’ve written. This is probably a good thing, though. I don’t know.In any case, that’s what’s up with me. How’s the writing coming for everyone else? (Don’t click the read more, there isn’t any more after this!)

World in the Satin Bag

Video Found: Toy Story + The Dark Knight = Awesomeness

Stolen from SF Signal, this is what happens when someone with too much time on their hands, video from Toy Story and audio from The Dark Knight, and an amazing ability with a video editor decides to do something truly profound and creepy. Witness Toy Story as you’ve never seen it before: (Don’t click the read more, there isn’t any more after this!)

World in the Satin Bag

Birthday Come and Gone

This is late, but so be it. Yesterday (the 6th) was my birthday. Yup, I’m officially 25, which makes me far too old for my own good. And this is a very special birthday because Lindsey gave me something truly extraordinary as a gift. It’s not finished yet, but I can’t hold it back from you guys, because this gift is the most thoughtful thing I’ve ever been given.Lindsey made me a website! It’s not finished yet, but you can check it out here. That’s right, I have an official website now! We’re still working in it so it integrates with the blog and everything, but isn’t that cool? Best gift ever!Not sure what else to say except that I love it! (Don’t click the read more, there isn’t any more after this!)

World in the Satin Bag

This Is Not the Great Depression x 2

Take this into account before we all start tossing our cookies and thinking the world is crumbling into another Great Depression and the U.S. is going to fall apart, or that life is ever so hard right now: 1930sPopulation: Roughly 123,000,000 (census was taken in 1930, so there will have been growth)Unemployment Rates: In 1930 it was 3.7% and climbed by 1933 to 24.9% 2000sPopulation: Roughly 300,000,000 (give or take a few million for growth)Unemployment Rates: In 2000 it was roughly at 4.0% and climbed to a current 6.1% in 2008. That’s a measly 2.1% jump in eight years in comparison to a 21.2% jump in three years during the Great Depression. And we’ve been in a relative recession since Bush took office in 2000, if you look at the figures. Is it possible that unemployment might climb to record proportions? Yes, but it’s also possible that Galactus will descend from the sky and consume the Earth, but not as a big supernatural cloud like they had in that Fantastic Four movie, but as his big, pinkish self with the funny hat and all that. Or maybe some other giant celestial being will descend upon us, like that one planet with the mouth (Ego I think). So, stop your bitching. We are nowhere near the panic point. When unemployment jumps over 10.0%, then start worrying, but until that happens, stop throwing a fit about how bad life is right now. We have nothing to bitch about as a collective entity. The people in the Great Depression had something to bitch about. We at least have minimum wage. They basically were allowed to breathe in exchange for work in horrible conditions, etc. Consider yourselves blessed that we live in the America we have now. Yes, get pissed at the President, get pissed about things changing, etc., but stop talking like this is the Great Depression, because it’s not and it makes all of you look like idiots. Do you have food in your belly? What about hot water? How about clean water? Plumbing? A roof over your head? Do your kids get to go to school? Do you have a car? If not, do you have a bike? If not that, is not having a car or bike a personal choice because you can get to work/school via other means? If you said yes to any of those questions, tuck your tail firmly between your legs and find something reasonable to bitch about, like how your President is violating your rights or how almost nothing has been done to help stifle the current recession and how there shouldn’t even be a recession remotely visual enough for people to be upset about. Or maybe just get upset that our President is a moron and that another moron is running for office and hired a religious wacko who has about as much political experience as Gumby. Plenty of things to bitch about. Thank you. P.S.: And before anyone goes, “Oh you’re all secure with your college money and blah blah blah,” it should be noted that I will be over $21,000 in debt to the government when I graduate with my BA. So, I have a good reason to be concerned about the economy and jobs too, because I have to deal with the conditions when I get my degree. I just don’t have concerns that I won’t find a job, just that I won’t find the job I want. There are plenty of jobs out there, but they are jobs that people don’t want to fall back on and I respect that. I don’t want to work at Taco Bell either, not after all this damned college work. And I know those of you who had careers or have careers and are worried about losing them don’t want to go from such a good spot to the living hell of customer service.

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