Sunday 25 July 2010

A nice little find. When I have a child, I hope they want to draw with me. I want to cover my walls with these. Especially the mountains.

Thursday 22 July 2010

Wednesday 21 July 2010

Will Bishop Stephens www.wrongboy.com
So I had the pleasure of helping out this talented gent on a workshop once, a while ago, and had had had forgotten all about it all, till the other day. This is his MA film and a lovely marriage of completely different styles of animation. It's basically about two Johns and a brain reading machine. The characters designs are excellently fitting to their personas and the whole thing is generally really well executed and still summons me a smile.
Featuring the voice of poet and funny man John Hegley and obviously the animatory creative genius of Will Stephens.
I especially enjoy the 'exciting police drama like on the TV.'
You'll see.

Friday 16 July 2010

greetings from Canada

Hey lovies,
I got a lot to say for such a small amount of time (only been one week!!)
but i'll start with this as it's one of the main projects i'm helping with at The Khyber in Halifax, Nova Scotia (The place Angela ABANDONED!!)

http://khyber.ca/makingtracks/

anyone can get involved by submitting a piece in their chosen media which related to train travel in one way or another.

x

Tuesday 13 July 2010

Popular Music - Mikael Niemi

OK, I'm going to attempt a book review... I'll keep it short and sweet



This little treasure was lent to me by Oliver. Popular Music is about a boy and his peers growing up in a strange and quiet nowhere town, the middle of nowhere, Sweden. It's the sixties, and when eventually pop music finds it way to their world, it sends their heads spinning loudly into a new one of guitars, vinyl, performance and girls. The book writes you into this alien arctic land of moonshine, schnapps, ice, saunas, elk hunting, perculiar characters, weird friends and family values. At times the book is dark, scary and surreal; funny and enchanting; the descriptions are visceral and beautiful and seem to drift in and out of reality and fantasy.
I recommend this book highly, and if you do get a copy, get the hardback one with the cover above as it's pocket-size and design is a treat in itself!
Or maybe Olly will lend it to you if you ask him nicely!

It has also been made into a film, but I can't find one with English subtitles anywhere! So if anyone does, you know what to do...

X

Wednesday 7 July 2010

The Great Green Debate



I was flicking through an old Sunday Times today when I spotted an article titled 'Let your dustbin buy the coffees' in the business section. It turns out, this American guy Ron Gonen has invented a way to get even apathetic people to recycle. Binning responsibly yields points you can spend in various shops, kind of like a nectar card. Apparently RecycleBank has really taken off in America, and now their trial schemes in Windsor and Maidenhead have increased the residents there recycling by 35%. The points to rubbish ratio is worked out by special RecycleBank bins weigh the amount of refuse using an electronic tag system.

Other point-winning strategies include signing up to Ebay's Green Team, which gives you points in return for selling your old furniture et al via the site, with extra points dished out for electronic goods.

Whilst I think this is a great idea, getting recycling to be a part of everyone's lifestyles, doesn't it feel a little bit like bribery? A smug little pat on the head for doing your bit earns you a nice cardie and a capuccino; what about the rest of us who do it anyway, and heaven knows where charity shops will get there tat to peddle from now. I suppose it's a good idea to regiment recycling a bit more but aren't people aware of re-selling via Ebay, classifieds and car boots anyway, we're not that stupid.

Klaus Topfer, Germany's environment minister in 1991 declared, after popularised debates concerning manufacturers' waste and the growing concern of landfill and excessive packaging proposed that waste was a useful resource, which manufacturers' had to be responsible for sorting it themselves, re-using as much as possible and collecting it themselves, thus alleviating us pedants from the job of recycling it and I suppose making them more aware of the amount of rubbish they were creating. I think this bit of the article I found pretty much sums it up:

"The take-back idea has much popular appeal. Everyone is against waste. It seems so...well, wasteful. And pinning responsibility on manufacturers lets consumers off the hook. It makes consumers victims of packaging forced on them by capricious manufacturers--a view adopted by many U.S. environmentalists. "Packaging manufacturers unthinkingly foist millions of dollars of expenses onto us all every day," Allen Hershkowitz of the Natural Resources Defense Council recently told The New York Times.Defining packaging as pollution generated by manufacturers makes the take-back idea seem compatible with the economically (and emotionally) satisfying "polluter-pays" principle. It appeals to the current rage for "market-oriented" environmental policies. If packaging is indeed pollution--if it is an externality, to borrow from economics lingo--Topfer's ordinance is a way of fixing a market failure. It forces manufacturers to take full account of the costs they are imposing on others. Writing in the June 1993 Atlantic, Hershkowitz explicitly applies this model to the take-back concept. The aim, he says, is "making the price of |waste~ collection and utilization internal to each product," thereby giving manufacturers "an incentive to reduce the amount of garbage they build into their products."

Finding all this out has made me more confused than reassured, but I suppose at least the powers that be are taking an interest, please leave comments on what you make of this, our collective mess.


http://www.recyclebank.com

http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1568/is_n1_v26/ai_15382445/?tag=content;col1

bright white


Last night we watched the film 'Under Great White Northern Lights', about The White Stripes. It's a beautiful, surreal, sharply dressed, red and white tour of Canada. They decided to visit and play in every province, secret shows in small clubs, pool halls, bowling alleys, and a visit to inuit elders; as well as their crazy energetic venue shows. The contradiction between the devised image and colour scheme and a once married couple who started playing together for a lark. It seems to reveal two halves to this strange duo.