what is going on here? read more to find out

Charles Csuri, Sine Curve Man

posted 1 day ago #

This portrait, created in 1967 by Charles Csuri, has been sitting on my desktop for months. I tend to keep a tidy digital space but something about this image keeps calling me back. The original piece, printed on a plotter, belongs to the Whitney Museum. A blue silkscreen variant was available at Sotheby's.

The current accolades are nice but my interest is, pure and simple, the aesthetic of it. On that front, I don't really care to dissect the specifics of what I like about an art piece as it's subjective and unnecessary to explain why something is personally appealing. I'll just say, I absolutely love it.

There's plenty more to see from Csuri, as he experimented in digital art for his entire life (he lived to 99!). These early works are my favorites of his. Here's another plotter man, also conveniently entitled "Sine Curve Man."

Let Her Go Home

posted 1 day ago #

Fiona Apple dropped a new song - Pretrial (Let Her Go Home). The song, as it explains itself in text, is an ode to the thousands of women sent to jail for simply not being able to pay a fine during the pretrial process. Despite being innocent, their lack of payment for bail takes them from their family and community. The statistic are harrowing - "On any given day, 60,000 women and girls are caged in jails.", "Over 66% are mothers to minor children."

It's harrowing and heavy to say the least (tho the song is quite catchy). While I appreciate Fiona using her visibility to spread awareness about a terrible issue, what I really love is that she provides a direct call to action to actually help. Too many times we hear how bad things are and the takeaway is simply "sucks, right?"

Not in this case, Fiona ends the video with a call to action to visit Let Her Go Home, a site that provides a central source of information and ways to donate both to Local Bail Funds and national organizations working to help people in this situation. I immediately sent some funds to Free Hearts, a TN local bail fund. I hope you do similar.

WOTT Music 399: Penultimate

posted 2 days ago #

My frequency of posting WOTT Music episodes has really dropped off a cliff.. this year I've only managed to post 3 episodes! Ugh.

For this one, I decided to put together a playlist that contains some of my all-time favorites. I've been curating this show for approximately 18 years, so I have a long list of fantastic songs. This is two hours of a handful of those selections going as far back as 1995 and as recently as 2025. It's a primer to the Nashville indie music scene - not exhaustive but a helluva good listen.

It is available in podcast format - Apple Podcasts, Overcast, etc (tho often banned on Spotify). Or just keep watching it on YouTube!

Hope you enjoy, it's one of my favorites. Continue Reading...

The Relics Of Mary Magdalene

posted 2 days ago #

In Catholic belief, Mary Magdalene is considered a saint and was present at the tomb of Jesus, after his crucifixion. I am not, in any way, here to talk about the validity of such "history" but I am here to tell ya that this relic of her supposed skull is metal as hell. It's incredible! A group of angels holding a disembodied gold sculpture containing a red cloth with an aged skull contained with a glass enclosure - just incredible. What an image!

There's plenty of back story to it, doubts of its authenticity or additional pictures where a face cover is placed over the skull. There are Mary Magdalene sculptures worth having a peek at too. Lots to discover on this particular rabbit hole but nothing tops that Golden Skull.

Interceptor Mega Disk

posted 2 days ago #

This strange looking tank device is the Interceptor Mega Disk, a device used to clone Sega Master System games on to floppy disks. It's a beast of an item and I just wanted to share its existence. It's also wild to think about the production of such a device that was released in 1987. Of course, it was marketed as a backup system but that seems a bit generous.

There are many more of these kinds of devices but none have the menacing look of the Interceptor Mega Disk.

via Chappel Ellison.

Matt and The Watt Gives, The Shade

posted 6 days ago #

Running a little indie label means having to figure out inventive solutions with small budgets. Case in point, Matt & The Watt Gives released a new single last week and wanted to make a video without spending a lot. Matt has a zero point turn lawn mower, a GoPro and a family happy to play around in the yard. Swirl all that together and you got yourself a music video!

Matt sent the footage over to me and I chopped it into this sun soaked concoction. It's not redefining the genre of music videos but, in my biased opinion, it's engaging and enjoyable enough to stick with it for 3 minutes! My favorite part happens around 1:40 - at least stick around for that.

The track is available on Bandcamp, Ampwall, my YK Shop and streaming.

You Wouldn't Steal a Font

posted April 29, 2025 #

You are undoubtedly familiar with the anti-piracy campaign, You Wouldn't Steal a Car. It was a public awareness campaign to let folks know that downloading and theft can be synonmous. After all, you wouldn't steal a car, so why would you steal a download? (many reasons)

Anyway, you know the campaign. You know the Meme spinoffs. What you might not know is the following:
  • That distinctive font is called FF Confidential and was designed by Just van Rossum, the brother of the creator of the Python language! Just a little fun fact. Source.
  • A little sleuthing reveals that the font actually used in the ad is XBand Rough, a pirated knockoff of the original.
That's right, the anti-piracy ad uses pirated software. Couldn't be a more perfect situation.

How To Datamosh

posted April 29, 2025 #

I've been a fan of Datamoshing from the moment I heard the term but haven't really ever tried it much myself. This tutorial is a very insightful walkthrough of the concepts and an actual step-by-step software walkthrough. It's also got a bit of rambling and pontification mixed in but, hey, it's YouTube! Takes all kinds. Jump to 2:16 for the goods if you're impatient.

Misc Reads, Apr 29, 2025

posted April 29, 2025 #

A variety of reads for you:
  • AI-assisted code tools of the now - nice little writeup from Jamie Wilkinson about what tools he is currently using. As he is co-CEO of Glif, it's insight I trust. I also love his sign off... "Lastly, everything in this post will be out-of-date as soon as I press publish. generative AI is nuts rn".
  • Will a CT scan give you cancer? - Turns out, it can! This article is not all doom-and-gloom tho, it's actually a level-headed bit of insight about the risks of ionizing radiation. What I found the most interesting was the lack of standards for the levels of different kinds of scans. I'm a fan of the recent trend of self-advocacy and this kind of intelligent research is good to have at hand should you need it.
  • Algorithmic Underground. - James Dennis waxes on about AI, art and a Baudrillard quote worth contemplating. Also, helluva header gif I just had to nab.

Friday Videos - April 25, 2025

posted April 25, 2025 #

Fun fact, this week I was selected for jury duty and considered for this trial of US Govt vs (Allegedy) Corrupt Politician. I did not make the cut. While I will never know exactly why I was not selected, I like to believe that the Prosecution really pulled for me. I'm going to go ahead and let you in a little secret: the defendants are guilty! Maybe that's why I wasn't picked!

Anyway, lets have some distractions, why don't we?
  • It's Claritin Time - this has been making the rounds on social media. If you were raised in the 90s it may not raise an eyebrow but looking at it objectively, the whole is madness.
  • Switch 2 with Paul Rudd - this is nostalgia bait taken to its extremes but I won't deny that I enjoyed it. Good to see Joe Lo Truglio pop up in there too.
  • This Cheetos Rebrand is Crazy - for a moment, you question if it's a spoof.
  • AIRBOARDERS trailer - as part of my deep dive into all things Game Changer, I'm partaking in Jacob Wysocki's comedy troupe Bath Boys. This is peak Internet here - originally posted in 2013.
  • Yoshinao Satoh: POWER - I have mentioned my enjoyment of Yoshinao Satoh's work in previous posts. This is another example of that goodness.
  • The Most Injured Man in America - Director Seth Pomeroy just announced his new documentary and it reminded me that I need to revisit this incredible montage of clips where he played an injured person receiving settlements. Still absolutely brilliant.

Malcolm Moutenot Things

posted April 25, 2025 #

I had the great fortune of working with producer Roger Moutenot to release his first solo album back in 2024. He's been producing music for decades but never released anything under his own name until Microcosm. Through working with Roger I got to meet his son Malcolm.. who just so happened to release his own first track here in April of 2025.

"Things" is a helluva first single. It's 9 and a half minutes long but never feels like it is overstaying its welcome. It's breezy and atmospheric but it's also engaging and storybound. It's introspective and cut with a dash of melancholy. It's fantastic, start to finish.

Dental Phantoms

posted April 22, 2025 #

Ahh, you gotta love it when someone invents a very practical thing that instantly becomes nightmare fuel. For instance, in 1894 Oswald Fergus pioneered the "Dental Phantom" - a practical device that enabled dental students to get some real world experience without having to work on a human being. Truth be told, the original version was much less menacing but as the concept evolved over time, it's become an absolute terror.

Artist Brian Kubasco takes that horrific vibe and pushes it even further, making the Dental Phantoms into proper horror oddities. The Agent Gallery Chicago has their own nightmares to share.

Ready for these things to get their own franchise already.

Restoring Mickey Mouse - The Band Concert Poster 1935

posted April 22, 2025 #

For awhile I was very into the highly satisfying rug cleaning genre of videos. Not much to them but they soothe for whatever reason.

I recently stumbled across PosterFix, a YouTube channel from Chris Cloutier documenting the work he's and his staff are doing in Brooklyn to restore vintage posters. This Mickey Mouse poster from 1935 is a nice place to start but, all things considered, actually in pretty good shape to start off. They get pieces in much, much worse condition.

The skill involved with these restorations is nuts - truly incomprehensibly impressive at times. And quite soothing to watch.

Game Changer and Other Reads

posted April 16, 2025 #

A few items for you to peruse:

Poison-pilling Music Files

posted April 16, 2025 #

You may recall I have mentioned various "AI poison-pill" concepts in the past. HarmonyCloak buries imperceptible noise into a track that makes it unusable by AI. Nightshade is a similar theory for images.

Benn Jordan's latest video - The Art of Poison-Pilling Music Files - takes those theories into practical application. He walks through the theory and then shows multiple examples of how to obfuscate the actual material of a song when being interpreted by a machine. It's truly fascinating.

It's also quite sad that we're in such early days of AI and already have the need to create tools to "combat" the machines. When Jordan shows his Mute Attack Method - in which Alexa simply does not hear him b/c of a device he has activated - it feels like a prototype scene from Snow Crash. The hackers have come up with their little tools to fight the machines, however small.

I look forward to Jordan distributing his next album with this pill baked in and, hopefully, the technology can become accessible enough for others to do it as well.

Tony Gilroy On Michael Clayton, Andor And More

posted April 15, 2025 #

Fantastic interview with director Tony Gilroy over on Letterboxd covering all sorts of topics but, largely, how Michael Clayton came to be and what it means to folks. If you've never seen that film, put it at the top of your queue - it's one of those highly overlooked gems. From the sounds of the interview, it seems that Duplicity is another one for the queue (myself included).

It's rare to have a director be so forthcoming and open about their experiences. Gilroy is very refreshing with their insights start to finish.

Antinote: The Temporary Note Solution

posted April 15, 2025 #

This is incredibly inefficient but I find myself taking notes in meetings and conversations in whatever window just happens to be available. Google Docs open? Start typing. Zed hanging out in the dock? Start a new scratch doc! Sometimes I'll even use the native Notes app but rarely (not sure why - I think it's the interface).

Enter Antinote - a simple note taking app that is highly configurable, very out of the way and cheap as hell. Just $5!

I'm just getting it into my routine now but I am looking forward to having all my notes in one place, rather than strewn across my ecosystem willy nilly.

Future Primitive Boom Bap Rap Album, Dinosaurs

posted April 10, 2025 #

Longtime friend of the blog Jeremy Okai Davis released a hip-hop album in July of 2024 called Dinosaurs. Now, he and his emcee partner are releasing it on vinyl. It's a fantastic looking package with surreal artwork by Eatcho and loads of features from the likes of DJ Steezo, Zai Outlaw, AMK, Mike Fish and more.

If that all sounds like gibberish - fine! Just know that J-Magic and Big Papa Warrior made a hip-hop record that nods to the golden era of the genre and infuses loads of modernity into it. It's worth a listen and certainly worth backing the Kickstarter.

Sleevenote

posted April 10, 2025 #

Remember when Apple supported the iTunes LP? It was a "format for interactive album artwork" way back in 2009 that attempted to find a way to not let the immersive enjoyability of physical artwork be lost in digital translation. It never really took off and was fully deprecated in 2018.

But that doesn't make it a bad idea! Just a huge hill to climb. Enter Sleevenote, a combination music player and interactive artwork format. The website is really slick, beautiful and professional but I think that actually undermines the project a little bit! There are some UI Update videos that show the interface and device being worked on - seeing it as a slick-but-DIY project feels more appealing to me. Look at this latest prototype! That's a thicc boi! But it's a prototype, so that's okay.

Worth noting: this undertaking is from the musician Tom Vek, which I think does lend it some nice credibility for simply existing to appeal music lovers.

I applied for beta access and got it! I made a Talking with Hands Sleevenote and can see a lot of fun potential with it.

If this seems at all appealing to you - dive into the Design Concept, join the mailing list, follow them on Bluesky, et al.

Yoshinao Satoh, PAPERS

posted April 9, 2025 #

This Yoshinao Satoh short film, PAPERS, is mesmerizing to say the very least. Created in 1991, the nearly 3 minute animation was created from an unbelievable amount of newspaper clippings. Just wrapping your brain around the practical aspect of creating this is enough to make it explode but Satoh amplifies the entire piece but threading together a variety of concepts. Seeing the portraits rotating 360 degrees is... phenomenal.

There's also a shorter, somewhat more frantic, 1 minute version that served as a commercial for Mainichi Shimbun; a Japanese newspaper. I prefer the longer version but both are spellbinding.
  Page 1 of 1,444