Friday, April 9, 2010

Summer 2010

Plans for this summer are slowly coming together. It consists of many pieces each being cropped to fit into the reality of time. Still hitting the road. Thinking about going to Pitchfork Festival if I can make it, but maybe only for the Friday night show. Broken Social Scene is opening for Modest Mouse and that sounds pretty great to me. Broken Social Scene, incidentally, is coming out with a new LP in May.



On the schedule this coming weekend and week are a number of things.

-Sat. April 10th, 7pm - National Poetry Month Cram Reading @ Cafe Ballou

-Sun. April 11th, 2pm - RHINO zine 2010 spring reading @ Ralph Hamilton Residence

-Tue. April 13th, 6pm - Poetry Off the Shelf @ Jazz Showcase

- Wed. April 14th, 7pm - Male Poets Reading @ Gerber-Hart Library

- Sat. April 17th - Chicago Poetry Symposium @ Regenstein Library, University of Chicago

In literature, I am reading Welcome to the Monkey House by Kurt Vonnegut and The White Album by Joan Didion.


Monday, March 15, 2010

It Overwhelms Us!

Hi folks, as you may or may not know, we are in the midst of Story Week at Columbia College. As always my extracurricular schedule is pretty packed, so here's the event schedule for this week. Sloth recommends you check these happenings out, especially the anti-war march on the 18th.

Wednesday, March 17th, 8pm - Palabra Pura presents Linda Rodriguez @ Decima Musa

Thursday, March 18th, 5:30pm - Anti-War March on the 7th Anniversary of the Invasion of Iraq @ Federal Plaza

There are also a ton of events related to Story Week, many of them at the HWLC. Find the schedule here.

And then it's Spring Break!

Sunday, February 28, 2010

Thursday, February 25, 2010

good news, good news, came to me...

Yeah, do yourselves a favor; listen to Percy's Song by Bob Dylan.

And now the justifications for my excellent mood...

1) California may have legislation on the ballot in November to COMPLETELY LEGALIZE AND TAX MARIJUANA!!!!!!! And recent polls suggest %50 of the state supports this motion. Obviously there's no guarantees, but HOLY SHIT! As if I needed another reason to go to California next winter.

2) GM has discontinued Hummer. No one else is buying. FUCK YOU HUMMER! FUCK YOU TO DEATH!



I'd also like to say a word about the current inertia of the health care bill in Washington and the Democratic Party's failure to exercise their own power. What the fuck ever happened to majority rule? That's how a democracy works, yes? So if most polls show that more than %50 of Americans want this bill, then fuck the other %49, right? Sure, you could say it's cruel but that's inherently HOW IT WORKS, or how it should anyways.

Especially when I disagree with the minority.

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

i'm a big-kid... now.

Haa Haa! Keeping it live in the virtual blogging world. In one of my previous posts I remarked that I hope to do a lot more blogging this semester... Well, that worked out. Regardless, this semester is in full fifth-week steam now, and there's no time for peripheral vision. My life is, as always, a constant stream of consciousness. I made chili and pumpkin-spiced coffee (from Coffee & Tea Exchange on Broadway, check it out!) for dinner, and now I'm hunkering down to do my Anthropology homework... Sometime in the next 12 hours.

Meanwhile! I finished reading All the King's Men by Robert Penn Warren over the winter break. Great read! I first stumbled upon this Pulitzer Prize winning novel in my Fiction Writing class (we read an excerpt). Realizing that I had a copy of this book on my shelf, I decided to read the whole thing. Set in the 1930's and told from the perspective of an American historian, albeit a very unconventional one, who works as an aide to Southern politician Willie Stark throughout his rise to power. The book was most interesting because you were able to see the world through the narrator's eyes and how he applied historical process to his own life as well as the other characters. For example, at one point he is reading through the diary of his ancestor, and the author's ability to accurately recreate a civil-war era voice is impeccable.



In other readings, I am attempting to keep up with The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay by Michael Chabon (another Pulitzer Prize winner) and Hell's Angels by Hunter S. Thompson, as well as my class readings which include most notably On the Road by Jack Kerouac, Roughing It by Mark Twain, The Oxford Book of American Poetry, and 13 Stories & 13 Epigraphs by William T. Vollmann (by far the best, followed by Hell's Angels, followed by On the Road). I hadn't discovered Vollmann till last semester, and I recommend you all read him immediately. He ranges from short story collections to huge novels, such as The Royal Family (780 pages). I also finished Queer by William S. Burroughs sometime in January. It is very different from Naked Lunch, and for anyone new to Burroughs, I would suggest starting here. Interestingly, both Burroughs and Vollmann endured personal trauma in their lives, and attribute much of their lives as writers to these specific events in one way or another. I am speaking of Burroughs accidentally shooting and killing his wife in Mexico, and Vollmann's inability to save his drowning sister at a young age.
















A good deal of my literature is made possible thanks to the Harold Washington Library Center at State and Van Buren. This is a wonderful place, and I try to make a visit at least every two weeks, if not more.



Classes are all going pretty well. I may not be enthralled by my radio or journalism classes, but we did have a writer from WBEZ as a guest speaker today (!!!). I am becoming completely immersed in the writing program, and I am writing so much these days, it feels wonderful. Now it's just the tricky dichotomy of making my talents specific enough to hone, yet diverse enough to tackle anything, as well as making the right decisions. For instance, I think I want writing, travel, and photography in my future. Is journalism the better path?

Politically speaking (briefly): Hunter S. Thompson once said that the Democratic Party would destroy itself if it knew what was good for it. I consider myself a Democrat, but sometimes the party is so fucking spineless. Let's put it this way; in the last ten years, Republicans were able to achieve a war that nobody wanted, while Democrats can't even pass a health bill that everyone wants. Just saying.

Oh, and this is what my summer is looking like, as of now.



Seeya soon!

Saturday, January 23, 2010

New online radio in Chicago!

Last Sunday, the Chicago Independent Radio Project went live online. Legal technicalities have prevented them from broadcasting on the airwaves, but CHIRP is working to resolve this. I've been listening to CHIRP all week and the music is diverse and exciting, and all delivered from a community funded public radio station. Where else can you hear Beastie Boys'"Intergalactic" followed by Sam Cooke's "Chain Gang"? So here's to great music broadcasting in Chicago:

CHIRP Radio

Monday, January 18, 2010

Hello 2010!

A happy new year to you all, and MLK day as well. Right now I'm enjoying this:



I've been on Holiday break for the last three weeks, but now I'm back in Chicago ready for things to accelerate. I had a great New Year, and on January 1st I was walking around Bardstown Road with the same people I hailed in 2008 with; Elliot and Thomas, my former roommates. It's so good to be back home and riding my bike again.

This semester is going to be a lot of fun. I'm not taking any photo classes, but hopefully I'll still find the time to be active in pictures, as well as improv and scholarship hunting. There is much to be considered in recapping the decade, which I'll have more on later.

Classes for Spring 2010:

CRW: Writers on the Road
Reporting and Writing I
Intro to Radio
Intro to Anthropology
Intro to Poetry

That's a lot of introductions, but I'm still setting high standards. Classes don't start until January 25th, I'll have much more information then. My grades turned out pretty well from fall, and I now have a 3.5 gpa.

As far as travel plans go, I'm thinking Canada for spring break (probably Toronto), and then New York and anywhere else during the summer. 2010 already sounds promising.

In the arts, I've recently been introduced to the work of Gabriel Orozco, who has been active for more than 30 years, and whose work has changed immensely in that time period. Here is on of his newer pieces, which is graphite on bone.