Author Archives: lanazp

Twaffic

Ashton Kutcher tweeted this morning that he hopes The Johnny Cash Project, a Chris Milk/@radical.media production, wins the Grammy for best music video of the year.   The website for the project allows anyone to draw single frames from the video and strings them together, creating a crowd-sourced product that is never the same twice. Now that there are tens of thousands of people on the site checking out or contributing to the project, I thought I’d just add to the site traffic by blogging about it here.  Part of my job is sorting through the CMS and approving images for the video.  Here’s a hint: no porn, no slurs, no hate. Otherwise, go crazy.

“The Night of the Navy Blue Blazer”

Check out what Radical made for Tommy Hilfiger’s 25th anniversary collection.

Radical Media

Three days shy of exactly one year ago, I started this blog with the intent of commenting on and cataloging media of all forms and origins.  I have since finished my senior thesis on new media and neighborhoods, graduated from college, and moved to the West Village.  Now I work @radical.media, which I suppose is only fitting.

Countless blogging opportunities have passed while Media Serial lay dormant.  Now that I’m settled in at Radical, I’m ready to resurrect Media Serial and radicalize it.

The Real Thing

The model and the almost-fully-constructed set. More pictures from the production to come!

Design Dump: Attend the Tale…

I’m designing the set for the Spring Fling 2010 production of Sweeney Todd at Penn.  Here’s the progression of SketchUp models so far, from unedited inklings to something close to the final thing. There will be more to come as the process of building unfolds.

Parts in the models I didn’t create (from Google 3D Warehouse):
Wall Sconce by Google
Bench by Shinnah
Chair by de Blac
Table by Acorn
Bed by anonymous

Tickle Me Typo

A search for a “laptop” on the Toys “R” Us website produces 439 results.  Overwhelmed by these options, I decided to narrow the search to the 3-4 year old age bracket, which brought the count down to 21 PC-like toys.  I find this markedly-reduced number no less disconcerting, however; there are 21 laptop products for customers who are, essentially, toddlers?  It’s never to early to introduce another glowing rectangle into your child’s life…

The collection includes products like these:

This investigation into personal computing options for small children was precipitated by an article on Bits two days ago about the Fisher-Price iXL, an $80 iPad imitation — let’s call it the iPadlet — complete with apps, a touch screen, an SD-card slot and a USB port.  Utter insanity.  That it ‘opens like a book’ is an ironic slap-on-the-face for those dinosauric purists who might argue that such products represent yet another turn away from the bona fide book and the literacies it engenders.

Thou Art Chang’d

Facebook’s Birthday Makeover

Yesterday was Facebook’s sixth birthday, and, as a gift to itself and all its friends, it has begun to rollout of a new design that anchors and organizes navigating power on a meatier left sidebar, features the search box up front and center, and streamlines the menu bar by removing most text and adding new icons.  For a more detailed report of the changes, see PC World.  The redesign has been met with criticism (Surprise!), but, as usual, once users get the hang of the new site the grievances will subside.  According to TechCrunch, Facebook also plans to provide free e-mail service in the hopes of becoming the next big webmail provider.  “Internally it’s known as Project Titan,” writes Michael Arrington, “Or, unofficially and perhaps over-enthusiastically, the Gmail killer.”  Nothing like a birthday to prompt a makeover and the addition of a few lofty items to one’s lifelong to-do list! [Photo from Techie Buzz]

Moving Television Online

Tonight, The Wall Street Journal’s Ethan Smith reports on the big plans of a small start-up called Move Networks Inc. that hopes to bring television to the Internet.  Unlike Hulu or YouTube, which offer a patchwork of content of mixed quality, Move has the technology to allow streaming of high quality, consolidated television content and would reintroduce the sort of planned watching that the Internet has discouraged.  There are a few extra perks of the online experience, Smith writes, like being able to scroll backwards in time on the guide and watch shows after they’ve “aired,” a la DVR.  Some of the financial backers of Move include media big-wigs like Comcast, Microsoft and Disney, but whether they’ll make deals to share content when the time comes is unclear/doubtful.  If Move is successful, cable television and its infrastructure could be the latest technological fossils, resting in a dusty pile above landlines and VCRs. [Photo from Move Networks on WSJ.com]

Vanity, Thy Name is Doppelgänger

If you haven’t been on Facebook lately, you might not know that this week (and last week, and next week…) is DOPPLEGÄNGER WEEK (from PCWorld).

During Doppelgänger Week, one changes his or her Facebook profile picture to the photograph of one’s celebrity look-alike, usually at the suggestion of friends (or the people on the street who mistook you for said celebrity) or, you know, if you do say so yourself. While a proliferation of Angelinas, Blake Livelys and Natalie Portmans is to be expected, one also comes across the occasional historical figure, cartoon, or animal. Most of us don’t look like famous people.

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