Microsoft, Yahoo link instant messaging systems

YAHOO and Microsoft announced that they would tear down the wall
between their formerly exclusive instant messaging services and allow members
to mingle beginning Wednesday. The union of Yahoo Messenger and Windows
Live Messenger systems would create the world’s largest combined IM
network with nearly 350m users, the US companies said in a joint
release.

Click here to read the full story.

Source: AFP, Middle East Times

September 28, 2006. Computer Geek, Journalism, Journalismstuff, Uncategorized. Leave a comment.

Period film posters (meet popular culture)

THE OTHER DAY, I selected a handful of film posters, on the premise they accurately captured an essence of the popular culture (and/or popular factions) in Western cinema at the time.

On a totally separate note, I found a really interesting site that hyper-analyses themes, issues and ideas in cinema. Images: A journal of film and popular culture is an interesting site for a film buff of any degree, purely on the basis of the random information available on the site and also the analysis of relatively obscure ideas and subject matter. The information isn’t organised as thematically or methodically as it could be, but there is some cool stuff on the site. The “In Focus” feature this week is sure to bring tears to the eyes of any warm-blooded North American that grew up in the 60s, 70 or 80s watching old Westerns after school or late at night: “30 Great Westerns.” Ummm, can somebody say John Wayne?

The features on the site more academically written than journalism, but the benefit of that is that its well-researched and methodically analysed or deconstructed. I’ve found a number of must-read articles on the site that I must recommend to anyone that considers themself a cinema enthusiast of any degree …

• “Monster at the Soda Shop: Teenagers and Fifties Horror Films”

• “Cleopatra Jones: 007(Blaxploitation, James bond and Reciprocal Co-optation)**

• “Billy Wilder: About Film Noir” and “Samuel Fuller: About Film Noir” (These are both interviews)

**This article about “Blaxploitation” (The exploitation of black people) in the cinema is a really interesting read.

On a separate note, for anyone studying or interested in the study of popular culture in cinema, this page from the English Department at Berkeley University in California, lists some good resources and links. It’s a starting point. I’m working on a project encompassing this sort of stuff. If anyone knows of any good resources in the realm of iconogaphy, cinema and popular culture — please get in touch. –Saba

1955

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

1963

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

1966

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

1972

Photobucket - Video and Image HostingPhotobucket - Video and Image Hosting

1986

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

2001

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

September 18, 2006. Art and photography, Computer Geek, Editorial Design, Media, Uncategorized. Leave a comment.

A handful of perspective

IN RESPONSE to my post, below, about September 11th, many friends replied to me, by email, by myspace and even a surprise visit to simply share their memory of that day with me. It has been very inspiring and interesting to hear everyone’s stories. Here are a just a few – I will try and add a few more of them when I get some time. Thank you to everyone who took the time to share your thoughts and personal experiences with me. -Saba

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

“WELL, I was in teacher’s college and i was break time for one of my classes. Standing in the hall of UTS, the school that also doubles as part of the teacher’s college, a fellow student came up and told us the news.

“Not really thinking it through I downplayed the severity of it. But boy did I get a shock when I went to the Eaton’s Centre and people were huddled around the TV. Once I saw footage of the crash I got goosebumps all over. Hell I’m getting them right now writing this and thinking about the footage.”
- Peter Liaw, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

“ON SEPTEMBER 11, 2001 I went to the Mercury Music Prize in London, which went ahead despite the tragedy in the States. PJ Harvey won the award which she accepted via telephone from a hotel in Washington, from which she could see the still-smoking Pentagon. ‘I’m not sure this prize means very much today,’ she said. ‘No,’ replied the chairman of the Mercury judges, ‘today music means more than ever.’”
- Ian Gittins, London, England

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

“ON SEPTEMBER 11th, I was living in Washington, DC, finishing up my final semester of undergrad at the University of Maryland. As part of my daily ritual, I would walk through the Student Union building to get to my first class in the morning. The lounge area had TVs set up all over the place, and from the corner of my eye I saw that all of the had the same still shot of what looked like two flag poles. I figured that it was one of those “Please stand by. We will return to our regular programming.” stills you get when the TV station messes up the programming. I simply continued walking to class.

“Upon entering class, our professor announced that there had been a terrible aviation accident and that a plane had hit the World Trade Center. One girl ran out of class, telling us that her father worked in one of the towers. We were excused from class and most of us worked our way to one of the multiple TVs on campus. That is when the second plane hit. I saw everything on live TV from that moment on.

“The news anchor then announced that a plane struck the Pentagon too. I knew that my mom was only two blocks away from the Pentagon, so I gave her a call. She couldn’t be reached. ( I later found out that she was OK, but that she had heard and ‘felt’ the plane crash nearby).

“I went home that afternoon by subway, paranoid of everyone and everything around me. I stayed glued to the TV at home for the next 36 hours. The feeling was terrible.

“That terrible feeling lingered for a while — worsened further months later as I needed to handle ’suspicious packages’ with gloves for fear of anthrax, and then having my favorite-bus-diver-of-all-times murdered by the DC Sniper. I know that these events are totally separate from September 11th, but they all messed with my mind to the point that I needed to move away from DC just to feel as though I could breathe again. I still get a lump in my throat and teary-eyed thinking of that day.”
- Michelle Lennox, Portland, Oregon, USA

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

“I WAS woken up by the phone ringing and my sister from Ohio asking me where Dave was? I was so disoriented it took me a minute to put my head on. She asked me again and then told me to turn on the TV. Right then I saw the second plane crash in to the second tower.

“Dave was in Canada and due to come home on September 11th. I started to panic because I wasn’t sure if he was on a flight and of course I couldn’t reach him. Nobody knew what was going to happen next. The airports on the West Coast hadn’t opened yet, so we didn’t know if there were going to be more catastrophes. Dave had already been out of town for ten days and I was REALLY ready for him to be home. I was working at Transworld still and had two kids to take care of while he was out of town. He finally called me, not knowing what was going on because they were at the airport in Toronto and couldn’t get out. He was with Steve Berra and Juliette Lewis. Steve started to panic and was ready to rent a car, but I think they shut down the borders too. It took another two days for Dave to get home and I was just sooo happy he was alive and nothing happened to him, that the two weeks he ended up being gone didn’t matter.”
- Stacey Swift, Oceanside, California, USA

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

“I WAS self-involved and depressed, in bed, ignoring the phone as it rang and rang and rang and rang; trying to escape the world because i was still (and for a few more years afterward) debilitated from my father’s suicide the year before. He died Sept 8th, 2000. I had no idea that the towers were falling; with the radio and TV off, I had no idea what the phonecalls were about. When I finally got out of bed and heard the messages, I felt even worse; I really couldn’t fathom the scale of what had just happened, but I DID feel like the world truly was ending, and that my father was just smart enough to get himself out of it before the shit hit the fan.

“Here’s a couple writings [ed: I have not included them]. I just realized they are both dated ‘03, I think that’s when I could finally emerge from the hole of darkness I was in and talk about it.”
Mandy Resendes, Los Angeles, California, USA

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

September 17, 2006. Uncategorized. Leave a comment.

Where were you on September 11th?

IT IS REFERRED TO AS THE KENNEDY ASSASINATION OF “our” generation. The single incident of which everyone, everywhere, will always remember where they were when they heard the news that changed “our” sense of life as we once knew it… Life without terrorism.

Looking back, it’s somewhat strange to comprehend that it has been five years since that hazy day. It seems like a lifetime ago.

On September 11, 2001, I was in San Diego, California. I was living there at the time, working for Transworld Media in Oceanside, coastal San Diego, and living just down the coast in a gorgeous house in Encinitas, with my friends Liz and Sierra. Oh, and Brian the funny surfer who lived in our garage for a hundred bucks a month.

I had spent the night earlier at a friend’s place in downtown San Diego as we had gone out on the 10th and I couldn’t be bothered to drive home, 30 miles away.

I set the radio alarm clock to wake me up at 7am and drive home to get ready and go to work. When the alarm went off, I instinctively hit snooze. An hour later – maybe more – I woke up and panicked that I’d be late for work. I ran outside and into my car and zipped on to the 805-North. Normally the 805 is bottleneck congested at 815am, but traffic was moving steadily. I got on the I-5 North to Oceanside, 40 miles or so away. The Interstate, always busy, was only speckled with cars. I didn’t think twice about it. I was still half asleep.

I rolled into the Transworld parking lot, it was empty, bar for two cars. I walked to the door, and it was opened by Tracy, the then accountant. She was crying. “Go home!” she said. “What? Why? What happened?”

“GO HOME!” she cried aloud, “Haven’t you heard? Go home and turn on the the TV!”

I made it home in ten minutes, speeding down the five, screeched onto my driveway and burst in the front door. The TV was on and Liz, Sierra and Brian were sat around it, eyes glued. A building that looked like the World Trade Centre had smoke and some flames coming out of it. I thought maybe there was a bad fire in one of the offices. No one said anything. I took two steps into the living room, my eyes glued to the TV and then we all saw the plane crash into the second tower.

We all sat there breathless, speechless, for hours and hours. Nobody moved.

The next day I went to work. Oceanside is the biggest military town in southern California. That’s because it’s adjacent to Camp Pendleton, one of the largest US military bases (Marine Corps) on the west coast. It has a daytime population of 100,000 and runs along 17 miles of southern Californian coastline, separating San Diego county from Orange County.

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

I saw warships, many of them, off the coast of Camp Pendleton. I wasn’t sure if they were emerging for defense, attack or simply routine check purposes, but they were there and it was freaky. We all talked about it at work, all day. Camp Pendleton was less than a mile from our office and it’s a weird feeling to know there are several United States of America military warships a mile away from you, especially after the events of the day before.

We all talked about it. And that day, on September 12, 2001, after staring at these mammoth war ships outside our office, we simply asked each other what’s going on. Were the WTC attacks an act of war or an act of terrorism? Are war and terrorism separate things or are they the same thing? Ok, so if the US is going to attack or invade somewhere, where would that be?

Somebody asked me if I had any idea as to where Osama bin Laden lived? He pronounced the name wrong and threw up some horns when he said to me: “Fuck that dude, man”.

“Yeah,” I replied.

“Fuck that dude.”

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

September 11, 2006. Journalismstuff, Media, On My Travels, Uncategorized. Comments off.