Monday, December 7, 2009

My Ten Tweets and Analysis

I hate Twitter. There isn't much else to be said about this website for me. I don't care if it's going to be the next Facebook, I don't care how convenient it is or how the technology is going to revolutionize online media, I. DON'T. CARE. That is me ranting, and I apologize (Scott) for being so blunt but I just had to get it out there. Twitter is annoying and stupid and whatever benefits people might get from it the idiocy it generates far outweighs them. That being said, using Twitter to "tweet" (urgh) about my final project didn't really help me very much. I expected my class to respond, to be right there tweeting away about their own mishaps and maybe giving some advice or whatever, but I was tweeting into a void. It was quite lonely, I have to say. I didn't need to throw out the issues I was having, or the progress I was making, because I already knew what was going on with my final, and no one else needed to. If they did, it certainly didn't seem that way. I understand the importance of writing down your creative process, but I don't think Twitter worked for me in this case.

Here are my ten TWEETS:

Will be posting my final this afternoon or tonight. Success! That's one less thing to stress about at least #wftw from web
Delete
e-mailed Scott to ask about youtube. That's an okay for me, which is good news. Too bad I'm at the library and my footage is at home! #wftw from web
Delete
so my video is only 15 seconds long..is that bad? there are three that i want to upload but they would have to be watched separately:/ #wftw from web
Delete
is it okay if we upload our video to youtube and then embed it into our masslive post? anyone? #wftw from web
Delete
my video has uploaded as a quicktime file. gonna be honest and say i have no idea where to go from here. uh oh. #wftw from web
Delete
the article's complete, now I just need to upload the video. I think I'll incorporate some photos too, just to be safe #wftw from web
Delete
just finished my interview for project number 2. i have a handy mp3 recorder so i feel like a real reporter! #wftw from web
Delete
also, no idea how i'm going to edit this! way more complicated than i thought #wftw from web
Delete
kind of sucks that the english society meeting i recorded was a bunch of horsing around. gotta work with it #wftw from web
Delete
i have my video for the project, but do we need pictures for it as well? #wftw

Sunday, December 6, 2009

One More Referential Post

My third post on Masslive for this final week is going to be another referential post. But, it isn't an article I'll be refering to. I'm going to post a video I recently stumbled upon from www.ted.com, a really awesome website that has thousands of clips of talks and lectures by the most brilliant minds all around the world. It's like taking an intellectual bath when you browse that website. Anyway, I found a great video of the poet C.K. Williams reading his poetry to the TED crowd, and I thought it would be cool to post the video and blog about it.

Check out ted.com if you have the time, I guarantee you'll end up spending at least an hour watching these fascinating videos.

The Calm Before the Storm


I can't believe this is the last week of classes. I can't believe this is the last week I'll be stressing out about blogging!!! I'm honestly going to miss it; this class has, though I resisted almost every step of the way, taught me a lot about the online world of media and how blogging (a word I never wanted to use as a verb, ever) is a big part of it. I enjoy rambling about english and poetry and events that I go to and hear about around Amherst, and knowing that anyone out there on the web could stumble across my musings. It's fun.


I think, aside from my second project for Writing for the Web that I already have outlined, I'm going to post to Masslive about upcoming literary events in the Spring, and how it's fun and easy to attend them and make the most out of the literary scene here in Western Massachusetts. I think I can flesh that out a lot and make it into a decent article.


Aside from that, I'm just really trying to get through this second project. For some reason, it's more challenging to me than the others that we've been assigned. Maybe I'm just putting up mental blocks because of the whole video thing we have to incorporate. This is definitely the most high-tech thing I've ever done for school. We'll see how it turns out!

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Masslive Masslive Masslive!!!

AHHHH!!!!! I never know what to write about for my Masslive posts. Ever. It's like, I have Thursdays where I go to meetings for English Society and then a reading, and that's it. This Thursday was Thanksgiving! I couldn't bear to step foot inside my high school after all that, so I didn't get the scoop on whether or not there even is a literary journal there anymore. I guess that's fine, since it didn't relate to my beat being in and around Amherst...

I'm thinking for this week's posts I'll put together an article that talks about why literary journals are important for the undergraduate community here at UMass. There are three that I know of: Ellipsis, which is a freshman literary journal run by students in Butterfield; Shortcuts, which is a journal composed of undergraduate short fiction; and of course, Jabberwocky, which is mostly poetry but some short fiction too.

I think I'll do another referential article as well, because those are kind of fun and I like researching my beat on the web.

Monday, November 30, 2009

Project #2 Outline


For my second project for Writing for the Web, I plan to do a follow-up piece on the article I wrote on English Society and the UMass undergraduate literary journal "Jabberwocky." The article is going to focus on the selection and publication process of the journal. Although it is early in the year for an annual publication, I'm going to ask Soo Bee Murray and some of the other returning members to outline the events that are being planned to fundraise and what it will take to actually put the journal together. At this Thursday's meeting, I am going to bring my camera which also records video to take photos. I am going to use the video to interview some of the members and ask what the selection process is like for them as individuals and how they think English Society works as a whole.


It should be fun, I'm going to talk to Soo Bee about it after class on Wednesday. Maybe it will motivate ES to really get moving!

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Writer's Block

I'm having a lot of trouble coming up with another idea for my MassLive blog. There's a Visiting Writers reading next Thursday in Memorial Hall, which I will write about, but as of right now...I just don't know. Can I do another list? Is that okay? What would it even be on? I feel like I've hit a wall. Maybe I should have thought about it earlier, but I was so absorbed in my article on Charles Simic that I wasn't really thinking about the fact that I should have at the very least two MassLive posts by the time class starts tonight. Ahhh!

This is really just me brainstorming. What could be good enough to post on there that won't take a few days to research and complete? Since I have about an hour and a half at this point...

I was thinking of doing something humorous...maybe writing about how to not write a poem. But who am I to pass judgement that way? I don't think any of the poetry I write is good. I can't just go publish my amateur opinions on a blog that a lot of people in this community read. I'm quite stuck. Maybe I could do a post about my two favorite poets? Naruda and e.e. cummings. But I never quite know how to write about what I like about poetry. There are only so many adjectives you can use before you begin to sound trite.

Well...here it goes. I'll think of something...I hope.

Home, Finally



So, I'm going to be headed home for Thanksgiving break. The first time since I left for the school year. I'm pretty excited, mostly because I might be able to crash some of the community's artsyfartsy happenings around town and maybe even blog about them...get kind of an island perspective on what I've been writing about all semester. Who knows what the high school and the theater community are up to at the moment. It will be fun to drop in on my old haunting grounds and look at it with a completely different eye.

Back here on campus, English Society is going as well as can be expected. It's fun to go to those meetings, because everyone wants to go to the readings that happen afterwards every Thursday. But it's also frustrating, because there are so many submissions to go through and we never have enough time. I realize Jabberwocky is an annual publication so we do have the rest of the year, but it worries me that the selection process is taking so long. Ah well...

The Visiting Writers Series is really fascinating this year. I think it's because I'm looking at it as a collective whole now instead of just a few random events that happen on this vast campus. The English Department is really on top of things. I think they could do a better job publicizing these events, because I kind of have to hunt for the dates and times and often miss some readings all together, but the calendar line-up is so full it almost doesn't matter. Almost.

Charles Simic




I really loved this reading, and I loved writing about it too. Charles Simic was just so personable! He answered questions at the end, he commented on each poem and made the audience laugh inbetween each reading...I was surprised that something like this could be made so intimate...between the author and the audience. Like Simic said, poetry is something done privately. It isn't everyday that you get to interact with the poet who is reciting what he's written, taken deep down from his very bones. I don't know if I would ever have the guts to do that, or the generosity really.

I took pictures for this reading as well, which will be posted to Masslive as per Scott's request. They aren't very high quality because the lighting was so bad, and because I have a dinky little point and shoot camera, but they'll do. Hope you enjoy it!

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Photography...Effective? I Think So.

The two galleries I liked best from tonight's class assignment were:

- The Gallery on the Anniversary of the Fall of the Berlin Wall

- The Gallery on the worldwide Days of the Dead

I liked the Fall of the Berlin Wall gallery for a number of reasons. Particularly, I appreciated how there were pictures from November 9, 1989, as well as photographs of the remains of the wall and the surrounding areas of Berlin from present-day. The fade effect was striking as well; there were quite a few photos from 1989 that prompted you to click, which then faded into photos of what that same area looks like today. It really made a statement and reiterated the significance of the 20-year anniversary of such a momentous historical event. I also appreciated how there weren’t only before and after photos of the Berlin Wall itself, but snapshots from 1989 of the actual people who helped take the wall down, and the shots of the crowd. It really added a human element to something read about in textbooks that I think makes this decades-old event shockingly real to those of us who were not alive when it occurred, and thus more relatable. The photos make tangible and relevant what the written word cannot. The paragraph describing what the photos are of and why they are important become secondary when juxtaposed against the reality of the situation that the gallery depicts.

The Days of the Dead gallery was fascinating not only because of the subject matter, especially so soon after Halloween, but because it showed such a wide array of cultures celebrating one of the more mysterious and intriguing times of the year. It illustrated beautifully the fact that people all over the world are connected through this tradition of celebrating and acknowledging death, and it did so in a wide variety of ways. From the eerie to the delightful, the gallery took us around the world and made a reality out of an abstract acknowledgement of worldwide cultural similarities. Yet again, the visual element of this feature article is what made it interesting. Photos like these, as I said before, add an intensely personal facet to what otherwise would have been words on a page. The photos draw the reader in; professionally and beautifully executed, the gallery shows instead of tells, and holds the reader there until the end.

Does a Top Three Work?

I've decided to post a top three list to Masslive on my three favorite reading venues in Amherst. I thought it'd be a fun idea, and relatively hassle-free seeing as I'm just talking about my own opinions. I've chosen Amherst Books, Amherst Cinema and Memorial Hall, which is on the UMass campus. It's definitely way more informal than my other Masslive articles, but since we've been discussing it so much in class I figured I'd just go for it and try the first-person, slightly less formal (in my mind) type of post. I don't know if top three is the best number for a list, since it's such a popular one, but beggers can't be choosers.

Happy Tuesday!

Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company Review



I went to see this performance last week, because I had heard that this company was renowned for their use of onstage multimedia - which meant text. They took historical literature and speeches and wove the words into the dance piece. I thought it would be an interesting twist on my literary beat, getting into a different genre of art. Interesting...yes. What I expected? Definitely not. My review doesn't even focus on the literary aspects of this performance because it was so disjointed. I left the theater completely confused. I'm still going to post it to MassLive because I like the different perspective it adds to my beat, but I won't deny that it's quite a stretch. It's funny, because I interviewed Kathryn Maguet, who is the Director for the Fine Art Concert Hall Center Series this year (the program that hosted the Bill T. Jones performance), and she said it was the performance she was most looking forward to because of it's unique modern style. Perhaps my eye isn't as sharp when it comes to the performing arts. You be the judge!

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Homesick


I grew up on an island. 30 miles out to sea for the first 18 years of my life, I rarely saw the need to leave unless it was to go shopping for school clothes, or to visit family for brief periods of time. When I left to attend UMass, I hadn't yet grasped the notion that life is different outside of the Never-Never Land that Nantucket has always been to me. The year-round locals call leaving going to "America," as if we aren't a real part of the country at all. If you ever spend a year there, you'll know what they mean.

Home, for me, is the smell of brine. It is gray shingles and steely ocean waves. It is cobblestones and roads that lead only to the coast. No further.

I love school now, but my freshman year was brutal. For the first time in years, I felt the kind of panic a child feels when they know they are lost in a department store. Like I would never find my home again. Gradually, I realized that there was more to the world than 98 square miles of sand, and that it was livable, and exciting. It was freeing to be able to get into a car and drive and drive and drive and not hit a wall of water. I broke a barrier that year. I cut the umbilical cord that had connected me to Nantucket for so long the day I got on the ferry to leave, to start my life away from home. It was liberating and terrifying and there are many people I know who have never been able to do that. There are a few older people on the island who have never left, not once, and never will.

I realize how strange that is. I also know that it is the same for small towns all across America. I suppose I've always felt differently about my hometown, not only because it is mine, but because of it's identity as the furthest eastern point of the country. Alone out there, surrounded by the ocean, a busy little community completely detached from the mainland. Almost independent of it.

There is something romantic and eerie about it, and I know that I will never feel about any other place the way I do about that island. Living away from home, aside from the four insane summer months, I've been able to shake that mindset. I feel a bittersweet pang of nostalgia though, everytime I leave, when I remember my childhood years, and how I felt so physically and emotionally attached to a part of the earth. How it was alive to me, and how I loved it, as if it were family.

Sorry for the Minor Hiatus

The past two weeks have sadly been devoid of too many literary happenings around campus. I did recently attend a performance in the Concert Hall by Bill T. Jones and the Zane Dance company which incorporated a lot of text into the production. I'll be reviewing that shortly, hopefully to be posted onto Masslive.

English Society has been taking a break as well...the past three Thursdays meetings have been cancelled. It's not only inconvenient for my beat, but it's also disappointing because I really enjoy my time spent there. It's always fascinating for me to read my peers' work and hear what my fellow Jabberwocky staff have to say about it. This Thursday a whole lot of literary stuff will be going on. English Society will finally start meeting again, and there will be an author speaking at 8:00 PM in Memorial Hall.

As a part of the Visiting Writer's Series, Gillian Conoley will come to campus to discuss her upcoming novel and read from her past work. Novels will be on sale from Amherst Books at the end of the reading, so if I like what I hear maybe I'll pick one up and be able to write a legitimate review for Masslive.

Sorry about the lack of posts on UVoices lately, Scott. Things will be picking up shortly though!

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

The Death of Poetry?

This week's class assignment was to post a 400-600 referential article on Masslive that had to do with our beat. I chose an article from Newsweek about the supposed decline of poetry readership and popularity, and what it means for the verse-inclined community at large.

I'm actually really glad I stumbled across this article for the assignment, because it's something that's been in the back of my mind for awhile. Most of the writing I find myself doing for pleasure consists of poetry...and though it isn't very noteworthy I think it's something I'll continue to do for the rest of my life. If I could think of something I love that I want to make a career out of, it would be writing poetry and short-fiction. You can imagine that isn't the most lucrative of passions but I suppose that has never mattered very much to me. Living here in Amherst is kind of like living in a literary-oriented bubble. It seems like every corner you turn, there is something going on having to do with literature and verse. The very air we breathe in this part of New England seems saturated in poetry. I've never experienced that anywhere else, not even in my hometown of Nantucket, where the natural beauty is as breathtaking to me as the hills of Tuscany were during my visit there, four years ago. I think that's because the people here are so unique. Everyone is literate, everyone is searching for knowledge, it seems everyone has their own individual take on the world. That is what poetry conveys. I don't know, I'm kind of just rambling but the Newsweek article really got to me. Check it out on Masslive once it's posted. Hopefully I'll be able to gather my thoughts a little better there.

Cheers.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Another Class Assignment


Link Number 1: The Referential Post

Link Number 2: The Article it's Referring to


I think this referential post works well for two reasons. The blog I found this article on, treehugger.com, is all about raising awareness about environmental issues and publishing recent research and discoveries relevant to the "green movement." People go to this website as a concentrated source on environmental campaigns, etc. The dying coral reefs have been so highly debated and steeped in controversy, you could find a million articles on the issue but not very many with much substance. Treehugger manages to blog about a seriously important aspect of the coral reef problem that was originally published by BBC; a respected and credible source. So, firstly, they provide for a specific audience, and secondly, they take what they write about from legitimate resources.

Spooky


So it's Halloween time, yet again, and the UMass literary scene knows how to put on a show.


2009 marks the 200th birthday of the one and only Edgar Allan Poe, and to commemorate his work and his influence on creative writing and the visual arts in New England, UMass is holding a Halloween weekend event in his honor. Aside from Thursday nights open conference featuring readings by Martin Espada, a UMass English professor, as well as John Crowley and Elizabeth Hand, two published poets, there will be weekend long campus-wide events.


I'll definitely be attending Thursday night's conference, which should be a lot of fun. Maybe I'll learn something new about the historical brooding poet. In any case, it should be a fun post to write up for MassLive...maybe top four spookiest poems by Poe?


Happy Halloween everyone!

Monday, October 26, 2009

A Case of the Mondays


As Scott pointed out to me via e-mail a few days ago, my latest post on the MassLive blog comes up third or fourth on Google if you're searching for the poet James Haug. That's pretty neat, I think.

I'm really disappointed in myself because....I FORGOT to go to Northampton Saturday night for the poetry slam show. I was honestly really looking forward to it but Friday night wiped me out and I ended up falling asleep at like 8:30. Definitely not how I wanted to spend the rest of the weekend. Sorry to those looking forward to a review on that. However, there's still a lot to look forward to concerning the literary scene here in Amherst.

Wednesday night there will be a poetry reading held for undergrads in the Student Union Art Gallery at 7:00 PM. Anyone is welcome to read their work. If I get the courage, I might even step up to the podium (but don't count on it). I hope to see some of my fellow English majors up there! A review on MassLive to follow.

Happy Monday!

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

And Now, A Quick Class Assignment


Three different posts from the same blog:





What's different about them? What's the same? Well...to start off, each of these blog posts are dealing with current events. Granted, they are popular current events, big in the media for their entertainment value and not exactly their vital importance to the world-at-large. Political humor (i.e. Sarah Palin Halloween costumes), Blogger tech and what's big in that world (the Twitter craze), and the latest crazy news headline (Balloon Boy)...everyone knows about these things. Everyone reads about them and has their own opinion about them.


What's different about each blog post is their individual amount of gravity. Each of them incorporate some sort of humor, just because of the topics. But the post about Twitter is the most matter-of-fact, while the post on Halloween costumes definitely meets the criteria for silliest. The Balloon Boy post sits somewhere in the middle, mostly because the topic is so ridiculous, outrageous even, that it's kind of hard to believe...you might even want to think that it's a joke. But it's not. It's 100% true and it's splashed all over the internet media outlets.


This blog reaches out to a large audience, but it's definitely the younger generations that are going to read all of this and understand it. Techies, gossips, and CNN-a-holics alike will find what they want to read on this blog, and won't be disappointed.


Entertainment + Relevance + Information = A Readable Blog

Best Damn Poetry Show in Western Mass


Sounds intriguing, doesn't it? Scott took the time to send me an e-mail about this slam poetry show, and I'm really glad he did because it sounds amazing. Maybe I can even get some ES people to tag along, because really, who doesn't love a trip to Northampton on a Saturday night?

Check out the info here, and in the meantime I'll have some cool stuff posted about Emily Dickinson...the historic poet who lived right here in Amherst.

Write on, my friends, write on.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Poetry Festival in your Backyard

I'm super happy I've gotten so involved with Jabberwocky and English Society this semester, because it gives me a group of people to attend all of these amazing readings happening around the Pioneer Valley with who love literature as much as I do. Tomorrow night, instead of the usual meeting in the Bartlett Cube, we're all going to the Poetry Festival at Amherst Cinema.

James Tate will be reading, and is an Amherst local favorite, UM Amherst MFA chair, and a nationally recognized poet with awards ranging from the Pulitzer Prize to the William Carlos
Williams Award. It really amazes me that I have the opportunity to hear him read his work in person. Ellen Dore Watson and James Haug will also be reading. All three are the kick-off to what I'm sure is going to be an amazing week here in Amherst, saturated in words.

Tickets are $5 if you're interested in coming. I'll be interviewing people in the audience on their reactions and their history with the poets, and I can't wait to write the full review for the masslive blog.

Cheers!

Monday, October 5, 2009

Hurray for English Society

Lots of fun stuff going on in the creative writing scene. Last Thursday I went to my second English Society meeting, we talked about Jabberwocky, fundraising, and read our first submission. I postered all around campus on Friday, and finally got my interview with Soo Bee, the editor of the journal who is also just a really cool girl. I hope the article I wrote can be submitted to the Collegian as well as MassLive, for this class, because I think the publicity would do the ES some good.

In other news, the Poetry Festival is coming up on the 15th. I'm really excited for that, I've never been to anything like it. Also, the Visiting Writer's series is going strong, unfortunately Sherman Alexie's lecture was postponed. I was going to blog about it but sadly, there hasn't been a rescheduled date posted yet. More on that later.

I'm thinking of heading to Smith College sometime this week to look at the Sylvia Plath pieces that are a part of the "Unconquered by Flames: The Literary Lights of Yaddo" exhibit there. Her poetry is very haunting. This is my favorite, a villanelle, that I had to analyze my senior year of high school in AP English. Take a look. Hopefully I'll have more to post on that after my trip to check it out.

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Off and Away

So, last Thursday I went to the first meeting for the English Association, which is basically in charge of the official UMass undergraduate literary journal "Jabberwocky." Looks like I'm on the staff now! It was a really great meeting, and everyone who was there was just as passionate about poetry and fiction as I am. I'm really looking forward to getting started on the magazine and keeping everyone updated through the blog.

After the meeting, we went to a poetry reading by Dara Wier. Aside from being an incredibly accomplished and acclaimed poet, she is also the director of the MFA program for Poets and Writers here at UMass Amherst.

The reading was overwhelmingly beautiful, and I found myself purchasing her newest book "Selected Poems" from the table in the back afterwards.

Her words were so personal, and so real, it was as if she were reading to every individual in the audience. Take a look at these three poems, and if you find yourself in a bookstore, pick up her latest book of poetry and find the poem "Longing." The solidity and sway of her imagery captures the imagination in a way that is so tangible, and so utterly lovely even when it is harsh, that the words stay with you long after you've finished reading them.

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Brainstorming


So, to round out my beat, my professor's asked us to come up with five story ideas relating to what we've chosen to follow.

Number one:

Do a piece on the undergraduate literary journal "Jabberwocky." This journal is a big deal for fiction writers on campus, and a big part of the magazine includes poetry by undergrads like us. I've even submitted to them a few times. Not only will I be able to be behind-the-scenes for this dynamic literary post, hopefully I'll be able to be a part of it all semester and keep everyone updated on "Jabberwocky." Their first meeting of the semester is tomorrow at 6:30, and then afterwards we're all going to go to a reading.


Number two:

October 15th, Amherst Cinema is presenting a "poetry festival" through film. $5 a pop for students, so everyone should check it out. I'll be there, and hopefully some of the authors will as well. If I can score interviews, and even if I can't, it'll be a great story and I'm looking forward to covering it.


Number three:

UMass Amherst's writing program places among the top ten in the United States. There's a reason for this! I want to write a story on grads and undergrads in the writing department that have made a name for themselves with poetry, and I'd like to incorporate some of the reasons why UMass is such a haven for the literary-inclined. That includes interviewing professors of the poetry classes, students, and authors who have graduated or still attend.


Number four:

There is a Visiting Writers Series here at UMass Amherst. Not a lot of people know about it. The only reason I do is because I took a one-credit literary course my freshman year that required us to go to every single reading on and around campus. This semester, for my beat, I'd like to write stories on the individual poets who come to read their work here on campus. Onsite interviews with the author is something no one can really pass up. The first poetry reading is happening Thursday night at 7:00 (the same one the Jabberwocky group is heading to), at Memorial Hall, with Dara Wier.


Number five:

Emily Dickinson. We've all heard of her, the famously tragic poet, and we've all read some of her work. Lucky for me, the Emily Dickinson Museum is located directly in the center of Amherst, and their annual Emily Dickinson read-a-thon is happening Saturday, from from 7:00AM-10:00PM. I'd like to check it out, and write a story on why the poet is so important in this area of the country. I'll get interviews from the museum staff, and hopefully the hardcore fans of Dickinson's work who attend this annual Poetry marathon. Should be interesting, eh?



So there you have it, some rough ideas of what this blog is gonna be all about.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Sooo Ironic.


My professor asked us to write a short piece about a beat blog that we've heard of, been following, or just got into, and keep up with it for the duration of the semester. I chose "Stuff White People Like." I read a hilarious article on this website before they got a book deal, I think it was about a year ago, and I've checked up on the site regularly since. Maybe you've heard of it, maybe you haven't, in any case, here's my take on why this thing is so successful:

The blog “Stuff White People Like” has kind of taken the nation by storm in the past year. It uses backhanded sarcasm and wit so flawlessly executed even the irony-loving middle-class white people who read it might have some trouble interpreting every entry as just “a joke.”

The truth behind the stereotype is what keeps this blog going. They’ve even gotten a book deal! And with over 30 million hits, it’s not hard to see why. We love to read about ourselves. And face it; we love politically-incorrect humor, just so long as it’s implemented in a way that lets the satirically-perceptive…well…perceive the satire.

With numbered entries like “#120: Taking a Year Off,” for the perpetually free-spirited college student, and “#114: America,” after the 2008 Presidential Election, one can’t help but laugh at the ridiculous accuracy with which Christian Lander has pegged the hipster generation in this society.

What some may find offensive, Lander explains on the about section of the blog, is the gut-reaction so many people have to stereotyping, especially when it comes to race. He makes his argument by pointing out that the blog “is not filled with hateful or negative stereotypes and it’s not meant to incite anger or demean white people,” nor is it truly about race. It’s a good-natured, comedic way of revealing the ideals of an entire generation. What this blog is meant to do is help people laugh at themselves, and apparently we needed the lesson, because “Stuff White People Like” is nowhere near its peak.

Re-imagine poetry



Amazingly excited to go to this.
New experiences are always dazzling.
Adventures in verse, to be continued.

Monday, September 14, 2009

Shrink-Wrap

Journalism in today’s modern world is a method of communication, between all people, everywhere. It is an outlet for knowledge, facts, events, art, trends, and politics. Online journalism is different in that it is instantaneous. It is a constant outpouring of the latest in everything all over the world, from all points of view.
Unlike newspapers, magazines, and television, online journalism grabs the latest headlines, spreads it over the internet, and is often the first place citizens of every country go to learn about what has happened and is happening, in that very moment. Online journalism is a fast-paced, in-the-moment method of communication which has truly revolutionized the way people gather information. It has shrunk the world into the click of a mouse.