9.0 Animal Kingdom

Animal Kingdom

A gritty web of tension from start to finish, half this film is shot in slomo, with gorgeous camera work, and it crackles. How do you survive hopeless situations with your morality intact? Bits of Trainspotting and Guy Ritchie are the icing.

9.5 Modern Family

Arrested Development proved that the human brain enjoys tracking a dozen unique and hilarious characters simultaneously, and Modern Family continues that tradition in style. And they have a fun dad, a sexy mom, and troublemaking kids, just like us! ha!

10.0 TEDx Talks, Raleigh

If you don’t know what TED Talks are, they are 15-minute talks on Really Important and Inspiring Topics, meant to quickly educate and inspire you. They have been going on for quite a while. Bill Gates famously released mosquitos at one talk, and explained his plan for extracting energy from spent nuclear fuel in another. There are talks on stopping aging and poverty and global warming. In short, they are just fantastic. If you haven’t ever seen them, go browse. Now. You will have one of the better days of your life. :>

So when I heard that there was going to be TED talks here in Raleigh, I just about blew a fuse with excitement. Turns out it was a TEDx event. These are not official TED events, they are put together by anyone that wants to, borrowing the format and a few resources from TED.

It couldn’t have been better. Jim Brown checked in and wanted to meet for lunch – NetApp finally wised up and hired him after a dozen interviews, whoooop! – so he biked downtown (of course) and we headed over to the Raleigh IMAX for lunch, where the event was taking place all day.

I had been streaming it at work in the morning, and was already pretty amped up. When we got there, there was no one really manning the entrance. We asked one guy behind the main desk and he sort of shrugged his shoulders and mumbled something about preregistering, so I said “Oh OK, well we’re just going to peek in and grab some empty seats for a little bit”. I sent a tweet that we got in, and someone tweeted back that I’d better run, they were coming for me. But I was long gone by then. Whee!

The two talks we saw must have been custom-designed for me. The costs of factory farming and unlimited geothermal energy. Holy crap

The first talk was from a local farmer who got out 30 years ago and recently got back in. He was alarmed at the extent that factory farming had taken over. To optimize production at all costs, the “natural” farm cycle had been split into specialized factories. Hogs are produced in one place, corn in another, etc. This broke the cycle of efficiency of the traditional farm, where animal waste fertilized crops that fed the animals. With the new methods, hog waste is a toxic waste problem, and corn fertilizers are produced from largely imported petroleum products. And the products themselves are tainted – milk has to be pasteurized and meat cleansed with ammonia. While the production has actually not gone up that much, the energy efficiency has dropped significantly, requiring an enormous amount of input energy offset by subsidies and military action to protect the flow of oil. Jim took exception to that :> but otherwise generally agreed with the good points. Which was good to hear because I felt like he thought I must have set him up with this talk. Which I didn’t! :>

The second talk was from a retired NASA engineer who is looking for investors for his geothermal energy plants, wahoo! He has everything designed already, he just wants about $200 to build a prototype and get things rolling. Basically it’s a plant that takes advantage of the temperature differential between deep-ocean and surface temperatures. Turbines produce energy, you can harvest purified water from it, and you can even set it up to produce hydrogen fuel. He said with 900 shoreline plants, we could replace the need for imported oil. Get this thing rolling now!!

Back at work, I watched some more and got further pumped up. Videos about the amazing magician who trained to break the record for holding his breath, another documenting the horrible result of our disposable plastic society – all gathering at various oceanic locations around the world. I’ve been going bagless at the grocery store ever since.

It’s so great to know that people are engaging in real problems and taking them head-on. It’s a good day when your faith in humanity is somewhat restored. Keep at it good peoples! :>

9.5 Breaking Bad

Breaking Bad
This show is a gift to guys in midlife crisis that dream every day about how they can put it all out there.

Jessie’s girl rolled him over first, man she loved him. Hurts so good.

You wicked tease writers, start cranking out your goodness again!

10.0 Jack Johnson “To The Sea” concert, one total pearl jam

This was such a kickin’ good time in so many ways.

An entire green village was available pre-show for us to explore. We got a nice little booklet explaining all the green steps taken by Jack on the tour. He donates 100% of profits to charities – YES 100%!! and he did the same on the last tour!!  Think about that for a minute.  Beautiful.

The booklet had a section of stamps to collect for doing green things:

  • visiting a non-profit booth in the village, groups included:
    • reduce plastic usage
    • beaver preserve – Found out about an excellent beaver preserve right in downtown Durham.  Chatted with the people running the four related preserves.  Turns out Jack had found and contacted them personally and asked them to set up an exhibit.  They are working on an interconnected set of preserves to make an entire greenway belt, awesome.  Got two stamps from them, for visiting and donating, and they gave me a nice refillable water bottle which i used to earn another stamp! wahoo!  I wore my “Bummer” shirt (w pic of Hummer), the lady at the booth got mad cause she thought it said Hummer, and we had a good laugh.
    • CO2 offset purchasing
  • donating
  • buying a CO2 offset right at the concert
  • getting a picture in the picture booth signifying “i commit to reduce plastic usage”
  • refillable water stations – They proactively encouraged water refill usage, you got a stamp for filling up!  Sponsored by brita filters, this was unbelievable that they got permission for this, as the pavillion charges $4.50 for disposable bottles.


During the pre-show, they played back time-lapse photos of the stage as it filled up.  They also showed all the pictures from the photo booth, awesome, the girls right in front of us popped up on the big screen and laughed at themselves.

The show itself was a total pearl jam.  They got the party started on a high with “you and your heart” – the BEST.  Jack is truly a great guy, and he brought out LOTS of friends he’s made along the way:

  • Paula Fuga, a Hawaiian woman playing ukelele to a couple of her excellent songs (country road,…)
  • the awesome slide guitarist from Animal Liberation Orchestra
  • G Love jamming on harmonica (I heard he helped Jack get started by playing some of Jack’s songs)
  • the band’s keyboard player (Zack Gill, also from ALO) jammed on an ACCORDIAN for a while oh yeah – this guy was just so much fun, riffed on the piano like it was part of his body.
  • the bassist kicked out a wicked rap

LOTS of jammmmmming ensued!  Jack also worked in some cars lyrics into “sitting waiting wishing”, perfect mashup… once he remembered the lyrics, haha, he made fun of himself… “i dont mind you comin here, and wasting all my time…”  They also played a full version of steve miller’s the joker, perfect.  And just about every great song he’s written… which is to say, A LOT OF UNBELIEVABLY GOOD MUSIC!!  :P

Thank you Jack!


9.5 Massive Attack – Paradise Circus (Breakage’s Tight Rope remix)

I didn’t pick up on this song until TapTapRevenge gave it away for free, and I realized I already had it on my iPhone. 10 years ago, my friend Zac didn’t appreciate the subtleties of Massive Attack, instead preferring more-direct bands like slipknot and Powerman 5000 that got right to the point. I could understand this – 15 years before I was Ministry’s single biggest fan. But Massive Attack is to ultraviolent music as thrillers are to action movies – it’s a matter of suspense and minimalism. Minimalism is hard to do right. Anyone can create music in moments (and it seems like everyone has) by cutting and pasting measures repeatedly, resulting in mind-numbing banality. Simple is beautiful, but it’s so easy to slide into simplicity. Bands like Massive Attack and Depeche Mode realized that you can easily lay down 50 tracks of sonic wall but when the user slips on the headphones they only hear one sound. That one sound is essential.

A couple other recent selections that get the minimalist thing pretty well are Bassnectar’s CozzaFrenzy, GetDarker presents “This is Dubstep” and The Crystal Method’s Legion of Boom.

This post brought to you by Dragon Naturally Speaking on the iPhone – sure beats typing on that stupid “auto-correcting” (sic) thing!

9.5 Caprica

Although I must endure perpetual geek jokes from Andrea and Wren, I have enjoyed my obsession with the “reimagined” Battlestar Galactica. Most of the jokes involve some form of chanting “So Say We All”, the nationalistic and quasi-religious mantra of this brand of homo sapien, and it doesn’t look like the jokes will end soon. The reimagined fun continues with Caprica, a rewind to the beginning of humanity’s romance with robots, and there are robots aplenty – along with mad scientists, religious fanatics, obsessed government agents, and anime-inspired uniformed schoolgirls with big round eyes. Reiley and I watched the pilot (skipping some inappropriate sections) and the first 9 episodes in one fell swoop, and had a blast. Make sure you catch up before the next half-season starts up!