C’mon, they help prevent cancer!

September 27, 2010 10:16 pm  /  Uncategorized

My CSA share never fails to include at least 3-4 beets each week. Unfortunately they take a lot more time and effort to prepare than any of the other vegetables, so my roommates and I just let them pile up in bottom of our fridge. Tonight I cooked them all at once, hoping that would encourage us to eat them over the next few days.  No takers so far… Looks like I’ll be crying pink tears this week.

Anyone have any good recipes?

View all 4 comments

A Postcard View

September 22, 2010 10:08 pm  /  Uncategorized

Today I hopped around Manhattan to record three interviews for three different clients. The final recording was with Leonard Lauder, former CEO of Estée Lauder; Estée was his mother. He’s also chairman of the Whitney Museum of Art and a major art collector with a particular fondness for postcards, the subject of our recording.

Here’s the view from Estée Lauder’s waiting room (please forgive the camera-phone):


Then we were escorted to a quiet corner conference room to record the interview and enjoy this view of Central Park:

Busy Day

September 18, 2010 7:45 pm  /  Uncategorized

I can’t remember the last time I biked to the park specifically to find a good place to read. I stayed there for hours, until the sun fell behind the trees.

Gmemory

September 17, 2010 6:59 pm  /  Uncategorized

Most of my friends use Gmail and Google’s built-in instant messenger system, Gchat.  By default, Google logs not just every email you’ve ever sent, but every instant message, too.  To wit, only one of my friends has actually gone out of his way to disable this feature (called “going off the record”).

For me, this becomes a question of balancing the potentially frightening implications of recording everything I’ve ever written vs. the fear of losing a chunks of my virtual memory, parts of my real past. After all, thanks to Google, I have a huge keyword-searchable memory backstop.  I’m able to recall nearly any bit of critical information or minutia from the depths of my Gmail archive in a matter of seconds, so long as I can remember just enough peripheral information about an online conversation. For what it’s worth, I haven’t been willing to turn off this auto-logging feature on my own account.  Besides, even if I were to delete these records, presumably they’d still exist on the other person’s account.

I’m curious if and how other people deal with this.  Do you regularly purge your digital memories, or do you (like me) continue archiving everything in your digital life as a matter of practice? Do you ever revisit old conversations? And is that healthy? What do you do with memories or old conversations that you’d rather not remember?  My sense is that the medium makes a big difference; sure, we’re comfortable with managing email, but what about all those instant messages?  What about colorful internet chats with an old lover?

Knowing you can dig back into the past, do you ever fight the urge to look for hints of something you maybe should have noticed, or to say “I told ya so?” How does it make you feel to know that those records still exist, perhaps on someone else’s hard drive and outside of your control, perhaps filed away in perpetuity on a Google server?

I was a big James Joyce fan in college (indeed, there was at least one miserable semester where I thought I was Stephen Dedalus incarnate). Any undergrad Joyce seminar eventually includes some scholarship about the love letters (ahem, very NSFW!) he wrote to his girlfriend (and future wife) Nora Barnacle. I’m going to go out on a limb here and assume that Joyce never expected these private expressions of affection (etc.) wouldn’t stay private. Now these letters are nearly as central to our understanding of Joyce as the spectre of Catholicism that permeates his writing.

Just think: everything you’ve ever written to anyone else is still out there, and it’s keyword-searchable.

View all 3 comments

Compost It

September 17, 2010 7:33 am  /  Uncategorized

YLTLSBCers note: I wasn’t able to post last night because my web-host was down.

So here’s a rough outtake of an experiment I made a few months ago as a possible submission to Third Coast’s “Book Odds” ShortDocs Challenge:

Just Compost It

(You can listen to the piece I ended up submitting here.)

In related news, I (finally) registered to attend the Third Coast Conference this year!

I live on the best block in Brooklyn.

September 11, 2010 9:05 pm  /  Uncategorized

Defense of the statement above to follow.