Archive for June, 2007

Doughnuts and Art 2.0

Doughnuts and Art 2.0 is taking place on August 25th, which is a Saturday.

It’s an event that showcases local artists, bands, DJ’s, as well as any other related business. It is once again taking place in Bellevue Pennsylvania at the Creative Treehouse.

At this time I am currently scouting for artists / magazines / organizations that are interested in being in the show.

If you are interested in participating in the show, please contact me
A.S.A.P. and let me know. You can e-mail me at gondek@mattgondek.com or leave a comment.

Zines and organizations are also allowed to set up space at this show to
promote their cause.

There is no fee to be in the show like last time. Also, all profits you
make at the show will once again go directly to you.

Other info like price of admission and whatnot are not set in stone at
this time. Like last time, please refer to www.doughnutsandart.com for all available information as it becomes available.

If you know anyone who’d be interesting in showing work or helping promote, please send them our way. Thanks

Electric Chaircut

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Electric Chaircut is a one man solo show based out of

New York by artist / hairdresser Nelson Loskamp. What he does is ties volunteers out of the audience to a chair, blindfolds them, and then uses amplified electric hair clippers that run through guitar effect pedals. Not only do the spectators get to see this firsthand, but a few lucky ones get a new hair style out of it too. Loskamp originally started cutting hair to support himself as a painter. However, Electric Chaircut came about from friends and customers requesting strange things like asking to be roughed up a bit while getting their trim, or asking if the clippers could be louder.

About the Making of TV Show “Lil’ Bush”: The Politics of Washington Seem Like a Schoolyard

Comedy Central Orders Lil' Bush For Next Year

 

Lil’ Bush: Resident of the United States” is a cartoon created by writer/producer Donick Cary (“Letterman,” “The Simpsons”). The idea started out as a series of five-minute cell phone cartoons for Amp’d Mobile in September 2006, and has now become a half-hour series on Comedy Central with two 10-minutes cartoons in each episode.

Lil’ Bush pals around with other young versions of his administration including Lil’ Cheney, Lil’ Condi, and Lil’ Rummy. Lil’ Tony Blair, Lil’ Barack Obama, Lil’ Bill Clinton, and all sorts of other lil’ political leaders have made appearances since the television episodes starting airing June 13, 2007.

If you go to Amp’d Mobile’s site promoting the series, you can watch a “Behind the Scenes of Lil’ Bush,” that contains a short interview with Cary. In it, he explains that he always liked the concept of “shrinking people down” and making them little versions of themselves.

Making a cartoon of a young Bush administration made sense to Cary because “on a basic level” the politics of Washington seem “so childish…it in some ways seems like a schoolyard or like kids just screwing around.” The narrow-minded and supremely confident judgments made by Lil’ Bush and his pals work because they are just innocent kids. It’s funny because you can disassociate the outrageous content of the cartoon (Lil’ Bush giving Bush Senior an Iraqi orphan called “Lamey…because he can’t walk so good” as a feel-good Father’s Day gift to make up for all the negative press coverage from Iraq, for example) from the real, more outrageous problems facing our nation on account of our leadership.

To create the show, Cary collaborates with a group of internet designers and artists from Bulgaria, one of them being a childhood friend. He explains, “It’s been sorta funny, uh, the translation of stuff, cause’ they don’t totally understand why you’d make fun of your president. They were sorta like ‘Isn’t that your leader? You all support him, right?’ And it’s like, n…ah, it’s kinda, you know, 30% of us do and the rest kinda just shrug, you know?” He stumbles through the interview trying not to be “too political” or perhaps, too honest about how the majority of Americans view the President.

I am sure the artists in Bulgaria are not the only ones perplexed by our reported overwhelming disapproval of the President and our endorsement of fake news shows like “The Daily Show” and satirical cartoons like “Lil’ Bush.” Part of living in a democratic state means questioning our elected representatives and having a system of checks and balances. However, have the politics in Washington become so unbelievably unbalanced that the only way to accept the reality is to think of it as fake? Are we accomplishing anything by laughing it off?

I’ll admit, I watch the entire Comedy Central lineup of “Lil’ Bush,” “The Daily Show” and “The Colbert Report” every week, and “Lil’ Bush” makes me laugh out loud – every week. I don’t know if I necessarily feel good about it though.

“Lil’ Bush” currently airs on Comedy Central, Wednesdays at 10:30 p.m., Eastern and Pacific times; 9:30, Central time.

The Washington D.C. Air and Space Museum

Although not an “art” museum, it’s still interesting to go and see these giant rockets, shuttles, and planes that people created to send people up into the air.

All those stories about how brave the astronauts were all true. As you stand in from of these giant monstrosities, you begin to notice how shoddy and poorly put together they look. They’re not smooth and round like TV suggests. They are all blocky, with pieces sticking out, and uneven surfaces that look poorly weilded together. I’d be crying if I had to go into outer space in one of these dang contraptions.

Still, it’s fun to check out this stuff, along with all the airplanes and helicopters they have. The museum has a large collection of space suits they used throughout the years, which is fun to check out too. Not to mention, the gift shop has space ice cream 8-)

I took pictures of the pretty looking ones. You can eye them up below.

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Krunk or Punk? The right kind of music for yins kids.

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Underground music is, in the easiest way to describe it, music by bands and artists that have yet to get famous and break into the mainstream. To most younger people, it’s considered cool to listen to only underground bands, and anything that plays on the radio is lame.

What most young people don’t understand is that most underground music has so much commercial backing now, that they are actually feeding the mainstream culture they are trying to avoid. All the major record labels have subsidiary labels that sponsor and fund “underground” bands. Now you can go into the mall and buy t-shirts from underground bands, and they are usually more readily available than a Godsmack or a Nickleback shirt. Selling and promoting “Underground” music is a GIGANTIC business. Isn’t the core ethics behind Underground D.I.Y. music about avoiding all the commercialism? I’m not saying that I don’t support this kind of music or these bands, because to me, I really like most of it. What I’m saying is that all these people need to wake up and realize that they are not being “punk” or “keeping it real”, because they’re not… Dawg.

If you break it down, there are four different kinds of music that young people listen to. They are Rap, Rock, Country, and Techno. Country and Techno suck, so let’s forget about them. That leaves the two major genres… rock and rap.

Rock bands’ songs are usually about how hard life is or about a girl they can’t have. To be famous in this genre, it’s important to be as good looking as possible. Look at Fallout Boy. I was once in a taco bell and overheard a fourteen or so year old girl say “When Pete (their bassist) came onstage, my vagina exploded”. It doesn’t matter what you wear. As long as your looking good wearing it. How many fat rock stars do you see on TV? Once your band makes it famous, your core audience will drop you because you’re a sell out.

 

Rap artists’ songs are usually about how easy life is or about having too many girls. To be famous in this genre, your personal looks are not important. Look at Ludicris. He’s about 90 pounds and most of it is his ears. Or Fat Joe..  It’s all about what you wear. Once you become famous, your core audience will still love you, and you will finally get the respect you deserve. Another perk about being a rapper, is that even after you die, you can still continue to release records from beyond the grave for years to come.

 

So, you have to decide for yourself, which is more important to me? An artist you can like now, and hope that they don’t get famous because you’ll have to listen to someone else, or an artist who is ugly but you can like forever?

National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C.

The National Gallery of Art is a giant maze-like building of artwork from different time periods and cultures. Each room has about six or seven pieces, a couch, and a depressed security guard.

I don’t want to name drop, but where else can you get the fresh scoop on Rembrant AND Sabin in the same day? The National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C., or as I like to call it, the NGOAIWfuggin’DC. That’s where.

You can spend hours looking at everything there, or at least until 5pm, which is when it closes. They even have Picasso’s boyhood gift shop located conviently in the building. Now even you can buy a ton of prints from artists and pieces that are not even located anywhere near the NGOAIWfuggin’DC. That’s right.. all kinds of prints for sale of pieces not even in the museum, which is kind of lame if you ask me. It seems like the gift shop is BFF with Andy Warhol, whose museum is here in good ole Pittsburgh.. not anywhere NEAR the president’s place. Below is some photos I took at the musem. Enjoy!
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Carl Kurlander’s Advice to Pittsburgh

“Pittsburgh. It’s the city that built America with its steel, cured polio, opened the world’s first movie theater, invented everything from aluminum to the Big Mac, and inspired hometown icon Fred Rogers.” 

-From the “About the Film: A Tale of Two Cities” section of the website for Carl Kurlander’s new documentary

The Sunday, June 24, 2007 issue of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette highlights an opinion piece entitled “Pittsburgh - We can make it here” by Carl Kurlander (follow the link to read the article online).  Kurlander, a Pittsburgh native most famously known for writing the hit film “St. Elmo’s Fire,” recognizes the potential for greatness in Pittsburgh with the many resources - the universities, great old movie houses, WQED, the Carnegie Mellon Entertainment Technology Center, Pittsburgh Filmmakers, Civic Light Opera, Pittsburgh Public Theater, etc. - and explains that someone “has got to sew all this up…to get everything to work together to transform these nonprofit resources into a lucrative business.”

His advice is precisely the idea I have in mind for starting a business.  I want to combine the local talent and resources available in abundance and transform Pittsburgh into a city with an entrepreneurial focus.

Where do we start?  Kurlander says, “Invest in talent.”

To put his advice into perspective, he invites readers to think back to the city one hundred years ago when “this was the Silicon Valley of the Industrial Revolution.”  He notes that “back then if you were 22-year-old Charles Hull with an idea about the process for making aluminum or 21-year-old George Westinghouse with the idea for an air brake, you came to Pittsburgh to get your ideas funded.”  In 1905, Pittsburgh was arguably the best city in the world for entrepreneurs.

In 2007, Pittsburgh natives find success utilizing their creative talents elsewhere, as Kurlander explains.  Rob Marshall, director of “Chicago,” grew up in Squirrel Hill and attended the Carnegie Mellon School of Drama.  Mt. Lebanon native Terri Minksy created the TV series “Lizzie McGuire.”  Bernie Goldmann, who also grew up in Squirrel Hill, produced “300″ and George A. Romero’s “Land of the Dead.”  Today, when the “entertainment industry makes more than the steel and automobile industry,” it is time for Pittsburgh to invest in retaining more local creative ventures.

Currently, Kurlander works as a Visiting Distinguished Senior Lecturer for the University of Pittsburgh and has been finishing a documentary about Pittsburgh reinventing itself called, “My Pittsburgh: A Tale of Two Cities.”  In the film, he points to the flourishing Pittsburgh of the past and legendary Pittsburgh talent Andy Warhol, Gene Kelly, and August Wilson to remind Pittsburghers of the rich artistic legacy cultivated in this city.  He summarizes his message concerning Pittsburgh’s future in four points: 1) Pass the film incentive legislation, 2) Take intellectual property seriously, 3) Bring the talent back, and 4) Invest in emerging talent.

Kurlander has taken great strides to facilitate the process of retaining local talent by creating the organization Pitt in Hollywood and co-founding the Steeltown Entertainment Project, each an effort to promote more interaction with the entertainment industry and emerging artists in Southwestern Pennsylvania.  As part of the initiatives of the Steeltown Entertainment Project, Kurlander wants to launch the Steeltown Film Factory, where emerging artists can attend workshops and participate in competitions to work with successful Pittsburgh-native film and television mentors and create up to three short films about Pittsburgh.

At the end of the Post-Gazette article, Kurlander leaves readers with these thoughts: “WHAT PITTSBURGH NEEDS MOST OF ALL IS A HIT- a film, a TV show, an Internet company to take off.  But to get that hit, we must do what people in Hollywood and Silicon Valley do and what has worked here in the past with manufacturing and medicine - take a variety of bets on talented people with good ideas.  Growing a sector requires:

  • Mentoring from experienced professionals who have a track record of success
  • Exposure to an entrepreneurial community who knows calculated risks are what it takes to launch an idea
  • Venture capital to make sure that idea happens in a timely way and has exposure to the markets”

I know there are many efforts to transform Pittsburgh into a profitable artistic center, one of which being the upcoming event PodCamp Pittsburgh 2, a community “unconference” to learn about blogs, vlogs, audio podcasts, web video, content networks and new media monetization.  The event will be held at the Art Institute of Pittsburgh August 18-19, 2007. 

I will be attending the second planning session this coming Thursday, June 28, 2007 @ 7:00 PM, held at the Creative Treehouse in Bellevue.

Advancing artistic endeavors taking place in Pittsburgh, PA is one of the main ideas at echoflip.com.  As soon as I come up with a way to turn the ideas into a lucrative business, as Carl Kurlander advises, I will be sure to share it here with Pittsburgh and the world.  If anyone has anymore advice for me or other young aspiring entrepreneurs and artists in Pittsburgh, please post a comment.

Washington D.C.

5in1-reader-wcord.jpgfca5_1.jpgI recently got back from a Trip to Washington D.C. One of the biggest differences between there and here in Pittsburgh is that the bums yell at you in foreign languages. Also, everything is more expensive. A $28 shirt from Urban Outfitters here will cost you $32 there. Not to mention the $27 I spent on two drinks at an upscale Asian French Restaurant called OYA.

Also, for some reason, the back of the White House was completely blocked off, and there were military people at the Washington Monument to “scare” tourists (his own actual words). Eventually we found out that they were there for a ceremony later that day which we missed. There weren’t alot of places to buy a drink, which was bad due to the constant walking and heat.

Everyone there that works for the city was mean, including the lady who was working at the Metro Station. When we asked her for change for a dollar that wouldn’t feed into the ticket machine, she refused and we had to get change from a random woman.

Also, there was no grafitti or anything of that sort anywhere. It was a very clean city and all the buildings were really nice and visually pleasing.

More pictures later.

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Washington Monument
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El Casa De Presidante


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The Capital Building

eBay Live! 07

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Free customized business cards and business card holder received at eBay Live! 07

eBay held their 6th annual eBay Live! conference June 14-16, 2007 in Boston.  With 178 seminars in total, each attendee had lots of activities, classes, and speakers to choose from.

Since my brother and I had never used eBay,  or Paypal, Skype (both eBay companies), and pretty much every other tool concerning eBay, we started off the conference at the orientation, then went to Skype 101, and ended the first morning at Selling Basics: Paypal Payments.  eBay thankfully had structured the conference for an entire range of users from the very beginners (us) to the very advanced.

Here is a little lesson for those readers that are also unfamiliar:

Skype is software free to download from the site that allows you to talk over the Internet to anyone in the world for free (Skype-to-Skype) using a headset or any form of speakers and a microphone (note: most webcams have a microphone).  For a fee, you can also call any mobile or landline phone and use advanced features such as voicemail and call forwarding.  It is available in 28 languages and used in almost every country around the world.  The service makes online communication simple and efficient, particularly for small business owners (such as with eBay stores), and even provides features for webcams, conference calls with up to 9 users, and file sharing.  To give you an idea of the amount of users on Skype, at 10:30 AM on June 14, 2007, there were 9,025,169 users online.  The instructor cited 196 million Skype users in total.

Paypal lets anyone with an email address send and receive money securely, easily, and quickly.  There are 3 account settings: Personal (free), Premier, and Business.  To sell on eBay, a user must sign up for a Premier or Business account.  The service has acquired 100 million account members worldwide and is available in 190 countries.  Note: you can manage 8 different IDs with one Paypal account, which also is helpful to small business owners.

Other noteworthy items concerning the conference:

  • Seth Godin gave a speech about marketing and the spreading of ideas.  His presentation alone was worth the entire cost of admission to the conference ($60 since I registered early).  It was that remarkable and warrants its own post - coming soon.
  • Stair Advertising - my new favorite marketing tool

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  • Cell Phone Charging Machines - Saw the machine below for the first time at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center.  I have a feeling I will see it a lot more in the future.

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  • Free conference CD - eBay gave each attendee a CD which contains the presentation slides for most of the seminars to review or in case you missed one and would like the information.

I only attended the conference on Thursday and part of Friday (it ran Thurs-Sat night).  For the time I spent, I got some great ideas and as a result, signed up to sell on eBay, opened a Paypal account, downloaded Skype software, and now I want to be an intern for Squidoo (more to follow concerning my Squidoo lens and vying for an internship position, but please check it out in the meantime!).

Anticipation for Michael Moore’s “Sicko”

SiCKO Ambulance 

Say what you want about Michael Moore, he gets people talking.  His films have been known to end with standing ovations from audiences in theaters.  “Sicko” promises the same - and it opens June 29, 2007.

As a country, we must realize the American healthcare system is broken.  I can’t wait for a serious debate on the topic in which citizens become more informed about how the system works and how we can alleviate the problems.

So in anticipation for the film debut, I wanted to share a small portion of an interview with Michael Moore from TIME magazine’s Jeffrey Kluger (”Moore in the E.R.,” May 17, 2007) on “Sicko”:

TIME: So if there’s no argument that the [healthcare] system is broken, why use your energies to start one?

Moore: Because what’s even more broken is the fact that our Congress and White House are bought and paid for by these two industries, which rival the oil industry in terms of money and influence.  They have a vested interest in maintaining their control.  But they’re not dumb.  They know which way the wind is blowing and that this is the No. 1 domestic issue with Americans.  Their job now is to try to control it so that universal health care is run through them, so that they can still skim the money, make the obscene profits and keep their investors happy.

What was the hardest thing about making this movie?

Getting insurance.  How do you convince an insurance company to insure a film about insurance?  I finally found this guy who’s got a little company out in Kansas City.  I think he’s the only Democrat who owns an insurance company.

After taking aim at so many big targets, who do you plan to go after next?

I don’t know.  I’m going to wait and see how people respond to this.  After that, I think it’s time for a romantic comedy. 


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