CATALYSTS

Monday, October 31, 2005

Is There Anybody On The Air?
In what has become a tradition of sorts at the Industrial Brand Creative studio, Halloween was toasted with a broadcast of the Orson Welles' radio classic "The War of the Worlds". Looking back from our media-saturated present day, it seems incredulous that a population could be so naive as to fall for such a hoax. But then again, if you look at the hysteria that was churned up by the anthrax scare in the weeks following 9/11, one might argue otherwise (granted, that was based a tad more on truth). Regardless, with radio serving as the nation's primary news source and a year-old Un-American Activites Committee stirring up unrest about another kind of 'Red invader', it was the singular moment for just such a event to have occured. Some great background info including police reports and newspaper coverage of the public panic can be found at www.war-ofthe-worlds.co.uk.
 

Monday, October 24, 2005

A Million Little Pieces
A Million Little Pieces
It is amazing how a cultural virus can enter your periphery and then suddenly dominate the horizon like a horde of locusts. This weekend, I was introduced to the hype that is "A Million Little Pieces" by James Frey. It started on Friday with a casual reference in an email from my friend West. Then on Saturday, I learned that Chapters had sold out all 12 copies that had arrived earlier that morning within the first two hours - no doubt due to Oprah's blessing. Then it was Jane pointing out its #1 spot on the New York Times Non-Fiction Bestseller's List. And to top it all off, my Sunday night phone call to my parents began with an account of my mother's book club meeting and the inevitable "Have you heard of this book..?"

It would seem that once you're in the loop, it is hard to find your way back out again. Has anyone out there read it? Is James Frey the new Dave Eggers? Claire Zulkey provides a review for the book that is currently shaking up the literary world over at PopMatters.

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Wednesday, October 19, 2005

William Gibson and the Garage Kubrick
Garage Kubrick
"Ingmar Bergman...in 1966 demanded that stills for Persona be taken from the negative – and, moreover, reproduced with their sprocket holes; proof that one was seeing the whole image as he conceived and shot it."

A fascinating essay by John Baxter on William Gibson and the Garage Kubrick. via Coudal's inimitable "Stuff about Kubrick".

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Wednesday, October 05, 2005

Gochiso-sama
House of Mao - Best Ramen in Tokyo
China/Japan: the photos.

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