Muxtape

•March 29, 2008 • Leave a Comment

From http://downbythehipster.blogspot.com/… 

What’s got all the little kiddies going crazy this week? Muxtape. That’s right, Muxtape, the online mix tape website that recently launched and has quickly become the Tumblr for music. Now all you hipsters and wanna be DJ’s can create an account, upload your songs, and send it along to your friends. We have quickly become obsessed and figured we would share it with you…

shopping list memoirs?

•March 25, 2008 • Leave a Comment

I picked up the new book Book A La Cart by Hillary Carlip at Food for Thought Books yesterday. It’s a really interesting book that provides insight into the lives of strangers via their shopping lists. here’s a review from the Intelligent Life Magazine blog (which is sweet by the way):

“Shopping lists are the new memoir”, says Hillary Carlip, a performance artist. They offer a glimpse of the needs and desires of strangers. “Everyone wants to know what everyone else is eating, drinking, wearing,” she explains to Deborah Stoll. This is how she came to write “A la Cart” …

Special to MORE INTELLIGENT LIFE

Woody writes his grocery list on the inside of a matchbook cover: “Coors, Oreos”. He is ready “to meet just one special lady with NO KIDS and NO BANKRUPTICES.”

Anush, stoic in her leopard-print caftan, is at her wit’s end with her mother-in-law’s demanding shopping list: “A fairly good size of veal shanks IF tender (lamb shanks IF not veal). Gata IF soft not hard. Bulk bargain sour cherries IF small ripe and firm.”

Vera, a Judith Krantz fan, writes her shopping list on notepaper emblazoned with “When the going gets tough, the tough go shopping.” Maggie is on the lookout for “Aunt Spray”, and Derrick knows he needs “Mouse traps. Cheese. Mouse.” He has even drawn a diagram to show how the three connect.

All of these characters are alive and well(ish) in Hillary Carlip’s new book, “A la Cart: The Secret Lives of Grocery Shoppers“. Ever since she was a teenager, Carlip has collected the discarded grocery lists of strangers, harbouring fantasies about the lives behind them. A performance artist with experience as a self-styled detective (recounted in her funny memoir, “Queen of the Oddballs“), Carlip was primed to mine the psychic depths of these phantom shoppers.

When I call Carlip on the phone, there is a brief pause after I say my name. Then a gravelly, unbridled laugh. “Oh Deborah Stoll!”, she exclaimed. “When you said Deborah, I immediately thought Deborah Gibson, and I thought, why is Deborah Gibson calling me?”

Carlip’s sentences are all punctuated with exclamation marks. Her voice rises and falls like a teenager’s, her words blurring with excitement. But then she’ll suddenly belt out that gravelly, world-weary laugh. “I’ve had this book in my head for a long time, but it seemed like now was the right time for it,” she explained. “All the reality shows, the voyeurism…everyone wants to know what everyone else is eating, drinking, wearing.”

After selecting a few choice lists (“1 lb black forrest ham” on a Prozac notepad, for example), Carlip carefully analysed the handwriting, paper and items recorded to deduce the essence of the shopper’s character. She then transformed herself into each one, dressing up as everything from an elderly widower to a bodacious ex-porn star. Dominie Till and Chris Nelson, make-up and hair artists, helped Carlip with these changes and Barbara Green photographed the dramatic results.

In these various guises, Carlip toured a range of shops, from chain stores to Jewish mahkohlets, liquor stores to farmer’s markets. Wandering the aisles in costume helped her understand these people better–how others responded to them; how she felt in their clothes. (Think of a cross between Cindy Sherman and Amy Sedaris.) It was only then that Carlip felt ready to write their stories . “Once I felt I had inhabited their beings, I wrote their story and then had to decide what part I wanted to tell.”

A common misconception about short stories is that they take a lot less time to write than a novel. This is not always the case. For a short story, a writer must know everything about her characters–arguably enough to fill a full-length novel–yet must whittle down this information in a meaningful way. Carlip’s characters are impressively vivid because she has taken the time to discover their inner lives.

Some of the stories feel a bit too intimate, as if we are reading a page from their diaries. “Lloyd has that list with a box for staples and inside the box he writes ‘1 box staples’”, Carlip said. “I mean, that really gets me.” Her keen eye for dialogue and sympathy for the dread of the everyday make this book hilarious and painful in turns.

Take Karen, who is pictured standing in front of a row of maxi pads and panty-liners, holding a box of Massengill and wearing an over-sized navy shirt covered with pictures of dogs.

1) Pick up Gean’s mail and prepare bills.
2) Pick up purse
3) Pick up robe and gown
4) Take Gean flowers
5) Clean up myself and do whatever I want

The list has the minimalist beauty of a haiku. After reading Hillary Carlip’s engaging new book, you will never see your grocery list in quite the same way again.

“A la Cart: The Secret Lives of Grocery Shoppers” is now in stores. Carlip is also the creator, host and editor of Fresh Yarn.

love is free… so are images of post-katrina new orleans…

•March 25, 2008 • 1 Comment

Sheryl Crow seems to be banking on both…

Is it just me, or the video for Sheryl Crow’s new song, Love is Free, super inappropriate? It basically intertwines images eccentric New Orleans “characters” with post-Katrina flood images… I think it’s supposed to have a message somewhere along the lines of “look at how vibrant New Orleans is despite all that it’s been through”… but it really comes off as more of a sugar-coated simultaneous glosses over and exploits the victims of hurricane Katrina. Crow literally sails through the wreckage in a little boat strumming her guitar. Continue reading ‘love is free… so are images of post-katrina new orleans…’

words to live by

•March 25, 2008 • Leave a Comment

“Yoku ki ga tsuku ne.”

 A Japanese statement in appreciation of sensitivity and appropriate gestures in response to the needs of others.  

bobby mc ferrin covers blackbird

•March 11, 2008 • Leave a Comment

nuts. circular breathing. no big deal.

why i can’t wait for 30 Rock to return, april 10

•March 10, 2008 • Leave a Comment

www.poetv.com/video.php?vid=25907

Ok so this clip is old news (plus I couldn’t get the video link to work) but it gets me every time… Alec Baldwin is a freaking genius. If you don’t already watch 30 Rock, please do yourself a favor and catch up on nbc.com.

crimewave- crystal castles

•March 8, 2008 • Leave a Comment

Can’t seem to stop listening to the song Crimwave lately. Just found this YouTube video for the song, which combines the most terrifying scene in any children’s movie, ever, with Crystal Castles‘ sweet electro-grooves. Go ahead, freak yourself out with this blast from the past.

P.S. This blog is totally back in action after a many-mooned hiatus.

drink for free: myopenbar.com

•June 7, 2007 • Leave a Comment

I found this gem of a website today… it lets you know where in your city open bars are happening. Right now it only covers NYC, LA, and San Fran, but Boston, DC, and Seattle are coming soon!

best of the best

•May 31, 2007 • 1 Comment

bestuff.jpgI stumbled across this website a few days ago. In a nutshell, Bestuff invites people to vote in various categories of superlatives created by other users, or to create their own. Examples include “the best answer to the meaning of life” (music is at #1 with 860 votes) and “the best savior” (Chuck Norris is beating Jesus 157 to 134). According to the site, “Bestuff is an open, organic, polymorphous site which, depending on the user, could take on diverse forms and meanings. The site simply asks you to input your “best stuff” in the world.” It’s a pretty fun place to waste some time

credit card art?

•May 28, 2007 • 1 Comment

credit coversToday the New York Times had an interesting article on a new company called CreditCovers that makes skins for credit cards “with special designs that consumers can stick over the fronts of their cards, theoretically transforming them from mere financial tools to emblems of identity and potential conversation starters.” The concept behind CreditCovers was thought-up by a guy named Anthony David Adams, who wanted to think up a business that would involve selling something that wouldn’t cost much to produce and could be sold on a mass scale. Continue reading ‘credit card art?’

 
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