Thursday, December 31, 2009

I tried

I tried to give mtv a chance with the whole "show videos late at night" thing; but most of the videos suck and I've now given up hope.  On the other hand The Situation is my new hero, the dude knows what's up.

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

NYE business usually sucks, this might be different

New Years Eve with Solid Gold at the Marriot.   It's a charity event to support a local high school's music program, school music programs are super important and often one of the first things cut from cash strapped budgets.  Without music or art programs there would probably be fewer artists and musicians out in the world for us to enjoy simply because they were never exposed to that emotional/creative outlet.
   This is a way to put something back into a world that we as music fans enter each time we hit the play button or get our hands stamped.  Besides all of the noble charity stuff this should be a really fun night.   Today I'm going and picking up a few things to make the show look rad.  Unlike the video shoot, I probably will be getting a smoke machine.

song of today


these dudes are from milwaukee. that is probably the biggest reason I chose this for today.  It is a cool track though Les Rhythmes Digitales meets Phoenix

Monday, December 21, 2009

Travolta/Cage the rematch


Pentagon Fast-Tracks Face Transplants; 8 Operations in 18 Months

050218-N-8796S-136
It’s been less than a year since American surgeons completed their first facial transplant — replacing 80 percent of a trauma patient’s face. Now, the Department of Defense wants to fast-track the surgical science, in hopes of helping the estimated 200 veterans who’ve returned from Iraq and Afghanistan with injuries too serious to benefit from basic cosmetic surgery.
The Boston Globe reports that the Defense Department has given a $3.4 million grant to Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, in hopes that the surgical team there — who performed their first facial transplant, and only the second in the country, in April — can operate on six to eight patients in the next 18 months.
For every battlefield fatality, nine troops return with serious injuries, the Globe notes. In earlier conflict, that ratio was more like 1-to-3. Better body armor and improved battlefield medical care are keeping troops alive, but leaving their bodies disfigured.
“All you have to do is walk through the wards here and you’d find patients you’d consider,’’ said Dr. Barry Martin, chief of plastic surgery at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington. “We’re left dealing with some pretty horrific injuries on patients who are going to live.’’
Civilian patients would benefit too, with Brigham surgeons hoping to turn the procedure “into a clinical practice” within two years. As the Globe points out, civilians and vets with traumatic injuries contend with similar struggles.
Although some [vets] have other injuries such as brain damage and missing limbs that limit their ability to work, others return to military jobs, living on or near bases. As is the case with civilians who have lost portions of their faces to burns, disease, or traumatic injury, some of these veterans struggle with going out in public, relationships, and work.
Of course, the surgeries aren’t a cure-all. They’re accompanied by serious physical risks, including a lifetime on immuno-suppressing drugs and the potential for rejection. And experts also warn of the psychological implications: Because of the unique nature of a human face, the transplants could carry a weighty toll for a recipient adjusting to a new set of physical characteristics. Here’s hoping the Pentagon is equally invested in long-term care for recipients of the fast-tracked procedure.
Photo: U.S. Navy

song of today

these guys recently did a cool remix of a Fever Ray track. This is one of their own.  Besides who doesn't appreciate a good animal


Sunday, December 20, 2009

nope

this hasn't been the best week. a pretty shitty one actually

a best thing

a great thing about underestimated is the point when the people you do things for say "thank you", and all you want to mention is the places you messed up.  Being in the conversation with two people who consider thmeselves involved, who have yet both complimented your work, when thy try to dismiss you it is funny to be invovled in the point where the limits of their intelligence appears. Ask me more

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

song of today

                                            

safety first

I had Admiral Ackbar drive my car home the other night; fucker moved the rear view mirror.


Tuesday, December 15, 2009

filling up and killing braincells at the same time

This past weekend was amazing.  I'll leave that as a flat sentence; everything good that can come out of spending four days in a different city came about.  I met or spent time getting to know some exceptionally cool people, I worked artistically on a project that I will always be proud to been included in, I learned a hell of a lot, I was surrounded by great friends, and I fully enjoyed a wonderful city.  If I was killing or if I was filling up my brain, or even if I twisting and bumping up my body I couldn't get enough.  It was a bubble world where optimistic visions weren't weighed down by the realities of life outside of the bubble.  Despite all of that I was so happy to finally come home and sit down.  The fact of the matter is that I learned a lot about life by taking a break from it; not that there were many breaks, we all wanted to get as much out of it as possible and to make the most out of the time.  Once I've recovered from all of the "learning" I did while learning I'll write more about it, maybe post some pictures of behind the scenes video; until then just believe that I've come out of this better than I was when I went into it.  Nothing is more fun than learning and I learned a lot.

Monday, December 14, 2009

This shit is going to be cool

I just got from doing the lighting design for the solid gold's video for matter of time.  We got some really good footage; I am incredibly excited to see the finished product.  When people see this thing they will be impressed.  I am really excited, and I'm really proud of the work I did on this thing. I wish I could just go over and look at some of the raw footage, there are some truly killer shots.  Be excited.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Starting Tomorrow

The lighting for the new solid gold video is going to be done by me.  This shit's going to be cool, I am having second thoughts about not getting a smoke machine, but that can make continuity and editing a real bitch. This is going to be really fun. It's for the song Matter of Time, the one that mountain dew helped put out.  This past summer I drank a bunch of mountain dew, so by default that means I contributed to the budget.  I guess I'm an investor; this thing better make some money, I at least want to make back the money I put into it.  Here's a link to where you can download the song for free:

embed src="http://www.greenlabelsound.com/m/113gLsMdA0" quality="high" bgcolor="#000000" name="GLS_mediaPlayer_113_0_Wed Dec 9 22:47:28 GMT-0600 2009" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" pluginspage="http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflashplayer" align="middle" width="320" height="313" />

song of today



Tuesday, December 8, 2009

This could be really cool and it is happening in Minnesota




Dark Matter Lens This map shows the distribution of dark matter that created the gravitational lens observed by the Hubble telescope during the COSMOS survey. coutesy of Richard Massey and NASA
For the past six years, the CDMS, the world's most sensitive dark matter detector, sat deep beneath the Minnesotan countryside, watching super-cooled Germanium crystals for evidence of material abundant in the Universe, but almost non-existent on Earth. Today, rumors are flying on the Web that the team has finally found the weakly interacting particles (WIMPs) that physicists have long searched for, which could be the key to understanding the fundamental makeup of the universe.
Dark matter, a substance that can't be seen in space but contributes a gravitational pull strong enough to shape galaxies, has never been observed directly. Physicist believe that WIMPs, a theoretical class of particles 100 times heavier than protons, make up the majority of dark matter. The discovery and observation of WIMPs could lead to a rewriting of the most basic laws in both particle physics and astronomy.


The CDMS Facility: Searching for dark matter in Minnesota's deepest iron mine
Today's rumors started to spread after the blogResonaances reported an embargoed physics paper due for publication in next week's issue of the journal Nature. Physics papers rarely appear in that journal, except to announce a new discovery. And with a paper coming out of the CDMS experiment, the natural inference is that the article will announce the discovery of dark matter.

However, Uwe Oberlack, the Chair of Space Physics at Rice University, told us that the potential discovery doesn't represent a new event, so much as a new evaluation of old data.
Last year, an Italian detector called DAMA announced that it had discovered WIMPs, but through a different interaction than observed by the CDMS experiment. While the Italian claim came under attack from a number of different elements of the physics community, the idea of looking for WIMPs with this alternate reaction gained traction.
"There hasn't been any dramatic improvement in the CDMS experiment. They've just been collecting data. You need to be very lucky to find a signal [with their sensitivity]," said Oberlack. "Instead, they're probably looking different parts of their data for inelastic, not elastic, reactions."
And even if the CDMS does find evidence of WIMP interaction in their old data, it hardly closes the book on dark matter. For one, WIMPs aren't a single particle, but a class of particles, and no one knows how many different particle types, or behaviors, might make up the class. Additionally, some people believe that the phenomena called "dark matter" actually encompasses a range of particles and forces, of which WIMPs are only a part.
But most importantly, the CDMS experiment won't mean a thing if it isn't independently repeated and verified. Luckily, we might not have to wait that long for verification as an even more sensitive dark matter detector, the Xenon 100, goes online early next year.
Of course, we don't know if the CDMS detected anything, as the paper remains under wraps until next week. However, any physics paper in Nature is certain to cover some very important science. So, check back next week to find out of if we've finally found evidence of dark matter, or if the CDMS researchers have something totally unexpected up their sleeves.

Lewis might be proud

SyFy channel just did a revision of Alice in Wonderland.  It happens 150 wonderland years after the original.  The characters are all grown up, and the girl who plays alice is kind of hot.  It's pretty awesome, everything looks pretty cool, the Queen of Hearts castle is this 60's mod style place that would be a rad place to live. Alice is kind of hot also.

Who knows how good the Johnny Depp/Tim Burton version will be, hopefully it is good and not like the Willy Wonka thing.

song of today


I'm not really sure if I like this song or not, but they are from wisconsin and the title of the song is the name of the town some of my family have a house in.  it's a nice place

Monday, December 7, 2009

lance armstrong

Anyone who rides a bike or is looking for a new bike should check this out, might come in handy.  Not only that, but the guy in this video seems like a pretty radical dude.

Holiday spirit

I'd like a new watch.  If anyone is feeling generous this one would be okay,


http://www.tokyoflash.com/en/watches/tokyoflash/tibida/






tokyoflash used to be much cooler and much more affordable. then all the dumb fucks like me had to start telling people where we got our watches. a little over a year ago they doubled the prices, reduced the number of watches they offered at any one point (and the many of the ones they do are pretty ugly), started selling jewelry and clothes (also ugly) then made the site look like the set of a game show. it's too bad.  I'll still take that watch though.

song of today


This is from the current's live archive; check out the others, there are some really good performances up there:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3JAmrLL6Jww

here's the how to part

LIGHT UP THE CITY

fuck spray paint, that shit's passe



I'm going to find a video that shows how to make these then post it too

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Today's song



Friday, December 4, 2009

this was one of the greatest shows and best times ever


George Michael / 25 Live stadium tour from Universal Everything on Vimeo.

I love seeing or being at stuff like this.  it's humbling to see things that are so much grander than what you are doing, but it also inspiring to see what is possible; those are two big things that drive me to do better and go bigger.  if you see anything or go to something like this let me know

I'll take one of each

tonight

check out the toys in the attic charity (toys for tots) event, bring a toy and you get in free plus a poster at soovac from 6-9 guys from solid gold will be djing; then head over to sauce inorder to see lookbook play with some other folks
fuck you snow

today's song



info/disclaimer

I want to give an ultra large thanks to my friends at l'etoile for the promotion and publicity on their blog, that's awesome.  They gave the bluefuture a write up about being their friday blog pick. It's a good one, they might have made it sound cooler than it really is.

  FRIDAY BLOG PICK: BLUE FUTURE
Solid Gold lighting luminary and visual artist Bryant Locher's new blog,bluefuture, gives you a look into the mind behind the florescent light box magic. Including everything from a preview of the new Tron movie with a soundtrack helmed by Daft Punk; crazy future-sexy video clips; science news about cyborg helmets; and updates from the Solid Gold front. Other than that, expect "bullshit rambly writings and shameless self-promotion." An intriguing and entertaining mix, if we do say so!
 
I do want to say that this isn't directly connected to solid gold and the work they do. It is connected to my work, be it work for them or for anybody else; there will be updates related to that stuff here. As for solid gold updates look at their official facebook or myspace pages, that's the best place to get information and news about them and their projects.  Solid Gold will be mentioned often because I do some of my biggest stuff for them and I owe them a ton for the opportunities and audiences I get because of their hard work. I plan to promote my friends from all over the place and all of the cool shit they are doing though. Anything about them or anybody else here is cleared from the source or is public knowledge, no gossip or behind the scene secrets.

here's the link to my friday blog pick
http://letoilemagazine.blogspot.com


don't give me credit for this one

I stole this from something one friend posted to another on facebook. some funny star wars shit

http://www.collegehumor.com/article:1794889

Thursday, December 3, 2009


Glass Microbiology


Luke Jerram turns the world’s deadliest diseases into works of art. The British artist’s glass sculptures — which go on display in London in January — depict old standbys (smallpox, E. coli), flashes in the pan (avian flu, SARS), and scourges of the day (H1N1, shown, and HIV). His goal: to explore the tension between the viruses’ devastating beauty and their devastating impact on humanity.


The words above are the copy that goes along with and explains the picture, it's from wired magazine

an ode to classic rock

"To admire an old picture is to pour our sensibility into a funeral urn instead of casting it forward with violent spurts of creation and action. Do you want to waste the best part of your strength in a useless admiration of the past, from which you will emerge exhausted, diminished, trampled on?"
     -FT Marinetti 1909, Futurist Manifesto

only a part of me agrees with this (if I agreed fully I wouldn't have admired and posted a quote from a century ago); I do think that if you are a creative individual or collective the best way to use influences is to use them as the stepping stones to what comes next.  Besides, history is interesting and worth knowing; it can help you win trivia contests at bars.

more friends to the future


lookbook- over and over

Official music video for Lookbook's song "Over and Over" Directed by Bo Hakala Art Director and Special Effects Technician -Sarah Jean Kruchowski Additional help from Ben Krueger and Mike Gunnerson...  

friends to the future


solid gold - bible thumper

This is the video from Solid Gold for the song Bible Thumper off the album Bodies of Water.
The video was directed by John Carlucci, with additional visual effects from Suzanne Dyer.  I can't remember who took the picture above this.

more to come

why?

I wouldn't want to be the child of someone who really likes the band 
phish

song of today



Shit

 So I fall asleep/pass out on the couch after a night drinking.  Nothing wrong with that, the shitty part is that I woke up and there is actually snow on the ground. I know it is december 3rd and I'm in Minneapolis so I should have had this experience a month ago (the snow part), but that doesn't mean I can't be pissed off.  Winter is here, months of cold and misery.  Fuck you snow

there is nothing wrong with liking star trek

I took this from something I read, I think it was from the writer Grant Morrison, but whoever it was said something like this:
         Science fiction writers are not just writing about the future the are writing the present day.  The things they write are the things that inspire people to go forward.

A great example is Gene Roddenberry and Star Trek.  With the exception of intergalactic travel and phasers set to stun (you can buy lasers at walgreens though); we can do anything they could do.  cell phones, smart phones, computers with built in cameras that let us video talk with people all over the world, translation programs, doors that open without us touching anything, flat screen tvs , cars that talk to us or drive themselves (new acuras or bmws), etc etc. Hell, we are even planning a manned mission to mars.

There is nothing wrong with liking science fiction stuff, the real problem is people who don't want to move forward.  I'm not saying that everyone has to read that shit, and despite what the futurists say we can learn from the past; what I'm trying to say is that we should embrace the things that come next, and not criticize the people who tried to see a next that lay beyond what was obviously right before us.

I could go on about this topic, but it's five in the morning and I have to go to bed. Until then post some comments; I'd love to know how stupid the shit I write or post is.

now it's ten am and I woke up on the couch with my shoes on and the computer in my lap. I'm not even going to read this
  

December 5th

For anyone who drinks december 5th is a remarkable day. It is repeal day.  The day that Franklin Roosevelt repealed prohibition.  I'll talk more about this saturday

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

I will always find this anecdote amusing

Alexander the Great seeks out the philosopher Diogenes who was at the time living on the streets of Athens. After finding him and listening to him for a time, as a way of showing his gratitude and admiration Alexander says "ask anything of me and I will give it to you", as he lay on the street Diogenes replies "step to the side you are blocking my light".

fuck-yeah here come the cyborgs


Man Controlled Robotic Hand With Thoughts, Experts Say
ARIEL DAVID | 12/ 2/09 01:16 PM | AP
The Italian-led team said at a news conference Wednesday in Rome that last year it implanted electrodes into the arm of the patient who had lost his left hand and forearm in a car accident.
The prosthetic was not implanted on the patient, only connected through the electrodes. During the news conference, video was shown of 26-year-old Pierpaolo Petruzziello as he concentrated to give orders to the hand placed next to him.
"It's a matter of mind, of concentration," Petruzziello said. "When you think of it as your hand and forearm, it all becomes easier."
During the month he had the electrodes connected, Petruzziello learned to wiggle the robotic fingers independently, make a fist, grab objects and make other movements.
"Some of the gestures cannot be disclosed because they were quite vulgar," joked Paolo Maria Rossini, a neurologist who led the team working at Rome's "Campus Bio-Medico," a university and hospital that specialize in health sciences.
The euro2 million ($3 million) project, funded by the European Union, took five years to complete and produced several scientific papers that have been published or are being submitted to top journals, including Science Translational Medicine and Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Rossini said.

Experts not involved in the study told The Associated Press the experiment was an important step forward in creating an interface between the nervous system and prosthetic limbs, but the challenge now is ensuring that such a system can remain in the patient for years and not just a month.
"It's an important advancement on the work that was done in the mid-2000s," said Dustin Tyler, a professor at Case Western Reserve University and biomedical engineer at the VA Medical Center in Cleveland, Ohio. "The important piece that remains is how long beyond a month we can keep the electrodes in."
After Petruzziello recovered from the microsurgery he underwent to implant the electrodes in his arm, it only took him a few days to master use of the robotic hand, Rossini said. By the time the experiment was over, the hand obeyed the commands it received from the man's brain in 95 percent of cases.
Petruzziello, an Italian who lives in Brazil, said the feedback he got from the hand was amazingly accurate.
"It felt almost the same as a real hand. They stimulated me a lot, even with needles ... you can't imagine what they did to me," he joked with reporters.
While the "LifeHand" experiment lasted only a month, this was the longest time electrodes had remained connected to a human nervous system in such an experiment, said Silvestro Micera, one of the engineers on the team. Similar, shorter-term experiments in 2004-2005 had hooked up amputees to a less-advanced robotic arm, and patients were only able to make basic movements, he said.
Experts around the world have developed other thought-controlled prostheses. One approach used in the United States involves surgery to graft shoulder nerves onto pectoral muscles and then learning to use those muscles to control a bionic arm.
While that approach is necessary when the whole arm has been lost, if a stump survives doctors could opt for the less invasive method proposed by the Italians, connecting the prosthesis to the same system the brain uses to send and receive signals.
"The approach we followed is natural," Rossini said. The patient "didn't have to learn to use muscles that do a different job to move a prosthesis, he just had to concentrate and send to the robotic hand the same messages he used to send to his own hand."
It will take at least two or three years before scientists try to replicate the experiment with a more long-term prosthesis, the experts said. First they need to study if the hair-thin electrodes can be kept in longer.
Results from the experiment are encouraging, as the electrodes removed from Petruzziello showed no damage and could well stay in longer, said Klaus-Peter Hoffmann, a biomedical expert at the Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft, the German research institute that developed the electrodes.
More must also be done to miniaturize the technology on the arm and the bulky machines that translate neural and digital signals between the robot and the patient.
Key steps forward are already being made, Rossini said. While working with Petruzziello, the Italian scientists also were collaborating on a parallel EU-funded project called "SmartHand," which has developed a robotic arm that can be directly implanted on the patient.

Nothing new. A boring idea, some might say stale. Except for the end part

  I'm not trying to change the world with this project.  In fact when I woke up this morning I realized that all of the stuff I wrote about a few posts ago probably comes off as totally stupid and pretty lame.  You know what though, who fucking cares.  I'm pretty sure this whole thing will make me more unlikable.
  I have a few social talents; I can make things less fun, I can over-think the most minute details, I interrupt people when they talk, I could go on and there are probably some that the people around me notice but don't mention.  They should. Let me have it folks, the next time you see me pull me aside and point out the biggest flaw you notice.  I won't be offended, any sort of hurt will be balanced by the knowledge that you are actually looking at this thing; and if I tell you to fuck off don't be offended.  Bring it on

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

I put this up earlier, but I wanted to do it better



an explanation of things

From the last two postings it might seem like it, but I didn't think about tron when I chose the name bluefuture.  The BL in blue are from me and the F in future is a reference to the name of one of my biggest supporters.  Bluefuture came about around 6 years ago when I had to chose an email address to replace the one I had been using since I was 16 (it was pretty bad).  I decided I wanted to have something that I could use in various ways and in different mediums to express a singular vision. Originally I wanted "bluelaser", but it was taken. I went back and decided that I wanted something that actually had some meaning, after some thought "bluefuture" was born. This blog is the newest incarnation.

Along with bullshit rambly writings and shameless self-promotion I plan to post content from things I find and to also promote my friend's projects.  Post comments or send me suggestions about cool stuff, new events, and things that you think should have a larger audience than they might have; if I agree with you I will post it up and hopefully get it out into the world.  I know this isn't a new idea and that there are tons of other sites (local and national) doing the same thing; I'm doing this now because in my head I am egotistical enough to believe that my point of view is worth exposing to the masses.  To really make this work show this blog to friends or point them to the facebook page that goes along with it; it will be my job to impress them into wanting to join up.  I'm serious about this and I'm going to do my best to make this an entertaining place to check out.