Posts Tagged “totally worth watching”

Magic Rainbow Skateboard Swing

Holy Rainbow, I sure had fun painting (or more accurately dipping in paint and then swinging on) this skateboard deck for Bordo Bello. So much fun, in fact, that I had to make a silly little video!

Bordo Bello is a skateboard art fundraiser designed to support AIGA Colorado’s mentorship opportunities.

If you feel like your home or office could do with a skateboard deck turned rainbow turned swing, you can place a bid on ebay over the next 24 hours!

And now, some behind the scene stuffs…

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Gleaning

Creighton and I spent our morning with a documentary recommended by our friend Rachel: The Gleaners and I. Made by Agnès Varda around 2000, it’s French and quirky. It’s also insightful as hell.

Working with simple hand-held equipment and flirting with themes of love and mortality, Agnès traverses her country to examine the concept of gleaners, those who walk the fields after a harvest to salvage and make use of what’s left behind. The painting that inspired her journey is from 1857, but it’s the modern-day accounts of people who are still gleaning that really get you thinking about how much we waste. These intrepid souls don’t let grapes rot on the vine or copper tubing from old TVs go to the landfill. No way! And that’s a source of great pride for many modern-day gleaners.

We savored having Agnès introduce us to all these beautiful characters who can’t fathom why anyone would let good things be turned to trash. One particulary touching portrait was of a man with a master’s degree who chooses to eat what’s discarded from Paris’s bakeries and street markets while he works without pay to teach immigrants to read. And we loved her intimate portraits of artists who are inspired to work with ordinary, every-day discarded items.

As someone trying to understand her own obsession with nothing-new, this was a morning well spent. Nothing I’ve watched to date has gotten closer to the psychology of one person’s trash as another’s treasure. It’s treasure that provides, for some, the will to live, and for others, the ability to live as they choose.

It’s on Netflix Watch Instantly. I recommend wathing it. Instantly.

After spending the morning with Agnès and her friends, I couldn’t help but think of another documentary recently in theaters, Bill Cunningham New York. Bill has been photographing the style of the streets of New York for decades, and in this documentary, at age 84, he still takes off on his bike, wearing the functional blue smocks he purchases at the hardware store, and gets to it. Watch the documentary and you’ll marvel at the contrast between the complexity of his work and the modest simplicity of his lifestyle. He lives in what basically amounts to a closet with a cot because he’d rather have artistic freedom than money. Money, he explains, always has strings attached.

At the end of this one, you’ll want to hug everyone you see. You’ll thank goodness for the sheer knowledge that such a “happy and nice man” (as Roger Ebert put it) is able to not only exist but find his place in this crazy world.

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I Know Just How She Feels

If I spent a whole night sponging rainbows, I’d be giddy, too! I love it when she has to remind herself to breathe. These are pretty breathtaking.

I don’t know who this enthusiastic crafter is, but I applaud her obvious passion!


Found on Jezebel thanks to Joseph Hughes of Northcoast Zeitgeist.

Passion Offers Perspective

Note to self: Try to have the courage to dance as if no one is looking, even when you know you’re attracting a crowd.

 

I thought I was having a bad day. Then I watched this video. Now a gigantic, open mouth smile has planted itself on my face, and I can’t shake it. Feel totally justified in dropping whatever you’re doing to watch this. And if you’re like me, you’ll need to go ice your cheeks down afterwords.

The sheer passion, not to mention stage presence, of this kid is captivating! What style! What grace! 9 years old? Amazing. This is the way I try to dance when no one is looking, but I’m not this good! The old-school green screen reminds me of my childhood and makes everything even better. Plus I’m pretty sure this is the view from our Studiomates windows from 20 years ago.

Thank you, Twitter, for reminding me:

1. I’d rather fully commit to living passionately than to blend in playing it safe, even if it means attracting eye rolls or criticism.

2. It’s FRIDAY!

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For A Dream

We made this video 3 years ago for my inauguration by Mr. Chris Roan into the Secret Society for Creative Philanthropy. The 4th Annual Meeting of the SSCP is upon us, and I can’t wait to be reunited with all my fellow Agents.

If you haven’t for a while, take a moment and listen to Dr. Kings words…

It’s been one of my life’s highlights to meet Rev. Dr. Joan Brown Campbell, who fought for civil rights along side Dr. King. She often reminds us it is essential to keep dreaming, even though we live in a world where “dreams are dangerous.” Dr. King didn’t let that stop him, and neither should we.

Wishing you a meaningful Martin Luther King, Jr. Day.

What’s Worth More Than a Gold Sequined Dress?

Last night on SNL, Régine Chassagne of Arcade Fire wore the gold sequined dress by which I shall henceforth judge all other gold sequined dresses. It was one part Broadway, one part disco, one part hometown tap recital. Wearing a gold sequined dress of this caliber has now officially been added to my list of Things to Do in My Thirties. Oh, plus there were sequined glovelettes. But you know it’s never really the dress; it’s the way you wear it. My mom taught me that, and this performance confirms it.

Watch it now!

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Like Myself

I’ve spent more of my life than I care to quantify attempting to fit in: trying to lower my voice, covering-up my naiveté and hiding my dorky enthusiasm. Nine times out of ten, I failed. Even worse was when I actually managed to blend. An insidious “this isn’t me” feeling inevitably eroded my well being.

Only recently did I decide to let go and give in to my nature. I’ve taken the new approach of exploiting what makes me differnet and celebrating the weird ways I interpret the world around me. (Part of that is this blog, and so I thank you for participating.) As I become less ashamed of my unbridled optimism and my intense bursts of energy, I become more fulfilled. I’m also beginning to sense the potential for greatness, for eventually being able to offer something valuable to the world, even if I don’t know quite what that is yet. Giving in isn’t giving up. In fact, it’s liberating. It’s also hard work, but for the first time, I really believe I’m fighting the good fight. The people in my life, my friends, family and clients, will ultimately get a better version of me.

This shift has taken surrounding myself with people who are on similar journeys and opening myself to inspiration in all forms. One of my greatest sources of inspiration thus far came when I attended TEDActive last February. I met so many people working to live their dreams and watched several Talks that filled me to the brim with hope and ideas. One Talk I keep coming back to is by an incredible woman named Temple Grandin. Temple is a leading thinker on and researcher of the autistic mind, in addition to being autistic herself. She uses her Talk to explain the spectrum of autism and the different types of autistic minds, advocating that we celebrate differences because they’re what actually advance humanity. After all, if everyone saw things the same way, we wouldn’t have scientific or artistic breakthroughs.

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