Poignant.
“Photo of people walking” pretty much captures the state of medical care in this country today.
WHY AREN’T YOU HEALTHY LIKE THESE PEOPLE WHO ARE WALKING?
Also, pictures of peppers.
Please, please. Hold your applause. Because this isn’t about me. This isn’t about my accomplishments. This is about the people in my life, my friends, my family, the people who stood steadfastly by my side as I pursued my dream.
My dream of running four times in 1,906 years.
Thank you, dear friends. At last, I am an athlete.
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Nicholson accepted Kubrick’s mandate to discover what could be found in the script by demanding take after take, looking for different ways of doing almost everything required. “Anything you do as many times as a successful actor, you can’t have one set of theories,” Nicholson said to the documentary crew. “You can go for years saying, ‘I’m going to get this thing real, because they really haven’t seen it real.’ They just keep seeing one fashion of unreal after the other that passes as real and you go mad with realism. And then you come up against someone like Stanley who says, ‘Yeah, it’s real, but it’s not interesting.’”
- Stanley Kubrick: A Biography
Real, but not interesting.
Kate Rutter mentioned this to me once, regarding ideas. Theories. Et cetera. She said it terrified her, when first she heard of it.
It terrifies me, too.
Rise free from care before the dawn, and seek adventures. Let the noon find thee by other lakes, and the night overtake thee everywhere at home. There are no larger fields than these, no worthier games than may here be played.
Grow wild according to thy nature, like these sedges and brakes, which will never become English bay. Let the thunder rumble; what if it threaten ruin to farmers’ crops? That is not its errand to thee. Take shelter under the cloud, while they flee to carts and sheds.
Let not to get a living be thy trade, but thy sport. Enjoy the land, but own it not. Through want of enterprise and faith men are where they are, buying and selling, and spending their lives like serfs.
— Henry David Thoreau, WaldenWhat the heck is going on in this photo?
It was taken on Shattuck in Berkeley, in front of Philz Coffee. The camera is pointed southwest towards the Guerilla Café.
But the angles are all wrong. Those dogs are wooden dogs. There are two matching street signs, poorly Photoshopped, one which has apparently been mounted to Philz’ sandwich board.
The dude on the right? His head is stuck in the awning. The tree out front grows into the awning and disappears. The dude on the left is sitting in a chair at a table in the street. There’s a wicker chair from next door. That coffee mug does not exist. No one would dare park their black Honda Civic on Shattuck.
What the heck is going on here, and why doesn’t my Instagram do this?
Next page.
More ads.
Same diff.
Cinematic geography and the problem of genius -
“Academia teaches us to ask questions like Shay’s — and generally, to answer them ourselves. So we find parallels and influences that make sense on paper without worrying too much about whether they’re actually true.”
John August, on what has definitely, most definitely, been for me the hardest part of my transition from graduate school to professional life.
It’s when I stopped making up truths out of thin air, or really, when I stopped fundamentally valuing those truths, that I kind of ran out of things to say.
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Design is the activity we humans engage in when we are not satisfied with our reality and we decide to intentionally change it. It is an approach that deals with overwhelmingly complexity, that rely on judgment as its logic, and that is focused on the creation of the ultimate particular. — Erik Stolterman in The Death of Design Thinking…