Monday, February 23, 2009
And the Oscar goes to:
As limiting as the Oscars might be as a display of talent, they are still a worthy show. The Academy is a purveyor of mainstream film phenomenon, and that is all that really need be expected of it.
I always especially enjoy the short animated films, but these two are my favourites from this year’s picks—-Lavatory Lovestory, and La Maison en Petits Cubes (the winner). Lavatory Lovestory is just cute because of its subtle references to humanity, while La Maison en Petites Cubes is touching because of the way the character is esblished--his story and his memories are played in reverse, showing both how his life was built up piece by piece, and how it slowly fell apart. Sad, but beautiful :'(
Уборная история - любовная история (Lavatory-Lovestory)
Uploaded by alexeych
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
Tulip Studies
Sunday, February 15, 2009
What did you do on Valentine's Day?
Then we made chocolate cupcakes, with extra chocolate chips, because that seems like the right thing to do on a holiday so obsessed with sweet things:
And then I amused myself by playing with the editing features of my new camera. Lots of fun, I must tell you :) Until the battery died...
After which we watched a marathon stream of Friends re-runs all night.
I would have taken a picture of breakfast, which was really nice too (goat cheese, prosciutto, salami, mmmmmmm), but my camera was dead.
So that, my people, was exactly how my Valentine's day played out. Very exciting :P Seems it centred around food consumption and photography...good thing my metabolism is still fast, because otherwise I'd get massively fat from all the tasty things I consume.
It's a beautiful day today, anyways. Hopefully the sun sticks around a little longer...
Tuesday, February 10, 2009
Angelina is bothered by the fact that she is inarticluate and uncomposed today, not to mention many other days... 2 minutes ago - clear
But now I'm here trying to decide how I might convey this in a more blog-appropriate format, and I don't know where to begin without writing a full-out essay. It feels like a blog warrants a little explanation, while on a status update it's the vagueness and mystery that give it its charm. Overall I'd have to say the status update is much easier, both because of its concise nature and because it doesn't reveal too much.
And now, I'm going to go join Twitter, because I've been trying to avoid it knowing it will swallow up yet more of my life, but I'm procrastinating starting that book report for Journalism...
Monday, February 2, 2009
Hyperlink Assignment
***Note*** You probably have to be logged on to UBC VPN to view the academic sources in the article.
The Challenge with New Media: Old practices, New Format
The media world is very set in its ways, and many of its current practices have remained unchanged since the advent of newspapers after the development of the Gutenberg Press in the mid-1400s. The role of journalists as singularly responsible for setting the standards for newsworthy topics is no longer entirely acceptable, as new media liberates the distribution of information. With this being said, anyone can be a “journalist”, in the sense that they are distributers information.
With the bulk of media in transition from old to new (that is, from the television and print media format it has followed for the last half-century, to new digital forms like websites, forums, and blogs), traditional media outlets, and the media business in general, are facing issues of audience loss, revenue loss, atomization of information, loss of diversity, and deterioration of quality. People are getting accustomed to free, fast, and quantitative information on the web, demands that are only enhancing the problems faced by traditional media.
While there are many positive aspects to the proliferation of information through new media, such as abundance, interactivity, and the collapse of geographical limitations, the potential extinction of traditional media due to audience and revenue loss could be catastrophic to the quality of information available on the net. Already, it is noticeable that less original information is out there—rather, many “amateur” sources are interpretations, or even copies, of traditional sources—leading to loss of research and information diversity. Add to this the speed with which modern journalists are expected to produce articles, and the lack of regulation with which amateur articles are produced, and a potential deterioration of quality ensues.
If the old media moguls are to survive this digital shift in the media, they will have to adapt new methods of production and distribution, and manipulate the prospectively limitless options of technology.