Heading Out There

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I desperately need to get out there and take some pictures. But I recently found this very very old photograph on Echo. We’re doing a big clean-up and consolidation of our machines, and I’ve been getting rid of old websites that people left behind as they moved on down the information superhighway.

This is a picture taken soon after Echo first started, so I’m guessing it’s around 1990. That’s a MAC SE on the right. I still have that. I also still have the plastic rat and Godzilla that can be seen in this shot. Those are modems on the left, sitting on red shelves. They must have been 1200 and 2400 baud!!

I wish it were more hi-res, but what are you going to do? Hopefully I will have some great shots when I get back. Although I suspect it’s most crazed football fans out there, and everyone else is in hiding.

Alive Inside: A Story of Music and Memory

Alive Inside: A Story of Music and Memory, a wonderful project that I contributed to when they had a Kickstarter campaign is doing so well! They just won the Audience Award for U.S. Documentary at the Sundance Film Festival. It’s one of the most dramatic examples I’ve seen of how music can bring people back to life. From a review after the Sundance premiere:

Alive Inside is a pitch-perfect documentary that brilliantly explores the transformational effects of music on elders with Alzheimer’s and dementia. A savvy distributor should snap this one up; despite its apparent marketing challenges, the film is emotional, uplifting, hopeful, and action-oriented …

Director Michael Rossato-Bennett followed social worker Dan Cohen for three years, for what began as an experiment and became a crusade. Cohen, volunteering to work in a nursing home, discovered that by giving the residents iPods and allowing them to experience the music of their past, their symptoms reduced and even seemed to vanish at times. The extraordinary transformations as 90-year-olds put on headphones and suddenly light up with spirit, moving with joy in ways that seemed impossible just moments before, are among the most emotional in the film.

Grace Church, where my Choral Society performs. Scroll down for how it looked in 1846, when the Church first opened …

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Before pews were installed, and lanterns hung. If you go back and forth it’s amazing how little has changed. Or, not so amazing. Why mess with something so beautiful. The glowing reredoes (the altarpiece or decoration) and altar was designed by James Renwick Jr. (who designed the Church) and executed by Ellin & Kitson in 1878. The choir furniture was built and installed in 1903.

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The Word Thug is not Code for Black

I use the word to describe bullying, threatening, behavior. It has nothing to do with race. For instance, Congressman’s Michael Grimm’s response to the reporter was thuggish. “I will break you in half, like a boy.” Yeah, I’m as perplexed as everyone as to what that even means. Do boys break in half differently than girls or men or women? Or is he saying he’s going regress and break the reporter in half like a boy might do it?

Back to thug. Conductor John Eliot Gardiner used the word to describe Bach, for christ’s sake! “It is just as credible that the bewigged cantor-to-be was the third in a line of delinquent school prefects — a reformed teenage thug.” (From the new book Bach: Music in the Castle of Heaven.) But my experience is not everyone’s. Have other people found the word “thug” applied disproportionately to blacks?

Yet another cat picture. I need to spend a day taking pictures of other things besides cats.

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My YouTube Channel Introduction

Every time I add a video to my YouTube channel I’m encouraged to make a “channel introduction” video to introduce new subscribers to my channel. Today I finally made one. What do you think? I’m think I should probably just include take two.

Okay, here’s the short version. Yeah, I think this is better.

The Secret Life of Walter Mitty

I’ve tweeted about it, talked about it on Echo and Facebook, and now I’m going to mention it here. See The Secret Life of Walter Mitty. It is such a genuinely sweet movie. I was feeling a little blue yesterday and needed something uplifting and this movie is it. Thank you, Ben Stiller. I can’t believe there hasn’t been a lot more talk about it. I just love the heart of this movie. Everyone in it is great, even though some of them only get a few minutes of screen time. You’ll love them all. I could gush about specifics, but I don’t want to spoil a second of it for anyone.

I wasn’t happy with the picture I took of Finney yesterday. Bleeck looked cute, I thought, but not Finney, who looked irritated, and he probably was. So I tried again. Much better, I think. He’s in a favorite spot and baking in the sunlight, so less cranky. (Note the lights from my prisms.)

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