For the first review of Blink Kitty Love anyway…sent Adrien-Luc Sanders of About.Com: Animation the Fried Blink Kitty Love episode and he featured it in his New Animation Showcase last week. Exciting to get more Blink Kitty Love notice. Posting a new episode tomorrow so follow along @blinkkittylove for behind the scenes band chatter and early news.
Posts Tagged ‘twitter’
NOT HALF BAD
Posted by lonelypond on November 24, 2009
Posted in Blink Kitty Love, animation | Tagged: About.Com: Animation, twitter | Leave a Comment »
LINKAPALOOZA
Posted by lonelypond on November 17, 2009
Peter Aspden on the problem defining cool + if Miles Davis is the solution.
Fashion Bloggers in the front row…Nicola Copping on how bloggers (example @bryanboy) are gaining influence with designers. Fashion Blogs I follow, well @meandmarisa found me on Twitter and I’ve been enjoying their photos and fashion thoughts.
Sarah Hemming talks to set designers about…set design.
Mexican left-wing printmakers took on church, politics + culture. Review of exhibit at British Museum.
Christine Lagarde, French Finance Minster, ranks #1.
Vanessa Friedman on how dressing for the EU President job will be almost as difficult as landing it.
And to end w/ a dinner tomorrow thought: a pumpkin risotto recipe. Also must make single serving apple crisps in these deep, white ramekins we have — feeling inspired by the season and the big nubbly apples sitting in our fruit bowl.
Posted in Art, Current Events, Financial Times article reference, Photos, culture, design, politics, theatre | Tagged: apples, Christine Lagarde, cool, EU President, Fashion, fashion bloggers, Mexican print makers, Miles Davis, Peter Aspden, pumpkin, pumpkin risotto, recipe, Sarah Hemming, set design, twitter, Vanessa Friedman | 2 Comments »
VETERAN’S DAY
Posted by lonelypond on November 12, 2009
An article about how Armistice Day turned into Veteran’s Day. And as I was clicking through a link to Doonesbury from @zephoria, the social media maven I follow on Twitter, I discovered that Doonesbury on Slate hosts The Sandbox, a milblog with posts from service members deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan. I’ve been reading and the posts are full of philosophy, practical advice, history, humanity, survival tips, Disney discounts, humility, bravery, isolation, comradeship…
I almost ended up in the military twice (although my mother and a buddy of mine in the ROTC program claimed I would have ended up out or in a military prison for insubordination.) In high school, I was interested in and recruited by Navy ROTC, but I didn’t know what I wanted to do for the four years of college and thought it a bad idea to commit to something for five years after that. And then when I got to Northwestern and saw the hours my buddy got up to do PT and drill team, I figured it had been a good decision.
After college, I didn’t have any grand plan, thought travel might be fun, and returned to the military thought. The Marines didn’t want me, not in shape enough, so they suggested the Air Force. The Air Force offered Monterey, foreign languages and adventures. But I was gay, no doubts or apologies, and I wanted to see if anything would develop with Gayle. I wasn’t going to lie. A buddy of mine had lived an entirely double life because the military was something he could not be separated from and gay was something he couldn’t get over — and there was the handy girlfriend who refused to notice. I watched him do it for four years of college and some years after and it was a terrible thing. We once had a half serious discussion about marriage so he would have a cover and I would have health insurance and could keep writing or whatever it was I wanted to do.
A friend from high school led the hidden life with separate mailing addresses. And I sat there in a military recruiter’s office, very curious but unwilling and unable to lie for opportunity.
Over the years, I have read so much about the treatment of women and gays in the military and sometimes I thought, perhaps my mother was right; I would have clocked the first person who yelled in my ear at 0 dark thirty or used a word I didn’t care to be referred to as.
“Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” was never a solution. The time has long passed for its reversal. The Advocate reports today, very fittingly, that the repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell is to be included in next year’s Department of Defense Authorization Bill. The Advocate has also been running excellent articles on gays in the military, their supporters, Congressman and Iraq veteran Patrick J. Murphy, and even one article with an undercover reporter trying to get the view of the average straight soldier in the PX.
So thanks to veterans everywhere for supporting freedom, this country and the Constitution. And I hope that one day soon, this will be a country where we really will be free, with equal rights for every citizen. And I can finally marry the woman I had hopes of getting to know better many years ago.
Posted in Current Events, culture, the family | Tagged: Don't Ask Don't Tell, military, The Advocate, twitter, Veteran's Day | Leave a Comment »
BREAKING NEWS
Posted by lonelypond on November 3, 2009
I’m making robot lists on Twitter (plus a pop culture robot one, let me know if you have any to add.)
FlipBoom is releasing a “teen”/more advanced FlipBoom All-Star version with ability to import images and MP3s, save drawings to a library + a few other snazzy features. Makes me wonder why I upgraded to the full version of Studio w/ its 500+ page manual.
Combine FlipBoom + Robots and you get Blink Kitty Love, featuring I, Jobot. Enjoy.
Posted in Blink Kitty Love, animation, design, entertainment, robots | Tagged: FlipBoom, jonas brothers, software, Toon Boom, twitter | Leave a Comment »
STRANGE MOOD
Posted by lonelypond on October 28, 2009
Mood Halloween continues, I owe several blog posts and yet here I am writing short fiction on Twitter/Tumblr. It’s called The Tale of the Telltale Guitar; you can follow along @stirfryneon or check out the Tumblr archive so far…you have to start at the bottom and read in reverse…looks cool though.
Howl at the moon a little once the rain stops. I might be doing it too.
Posted in Writing | Tagged: short fiction, twitter | Leave a Comment »
ROBOTS + SHAKESPEARE
Posted by lonelypond on October 7, 2009
Because that’s what you’re here for, right?
Robots: my friend @kristynburtt, the creator and host half of my friends @TheWebFiles (@SPWrite the director + producer half) is in Texas at the Texas State Fair running across robot + bird sculptures. So, of course, someone helped her solve the mystery + we have a link to The Traveling Man.
Shakespeare + Sarah Hemming, because those two names seem to go together, here and in The Financial Times. This past weekend she interviewed Mark Rylance, director, actor and theatre extraordinaire type. The interview made me nostalgic for The Tempest, which I swore I would never direct again (just read Act I, scene ii and you’ll know why — Shakespeare should have just written a prequel titled The Duke of Milan instead of that scene.) The actress playing Biondello this summer told Gayle she wanted us to do it + now I’m getting the urge again. We far exceeded our reach for the second year of a program + I got to put magic tricks in — remind me to tell you sometime about a half ton trunk, small children dressed as dogs and why they should never be combined in the same scene. Or about the 15′ tall mast that was magnetically attracted to swimming pools or the producer who had to hold down half our set by clinging to a rope thrown down from the stage…The Tempest seems conducive to epic stories, as the Rylance article reminded me. Hmmmm……
This afternoon’s alternate office discovery (thanks to Wired magazine): How about The Elements — yes, of the Table of Perodic fame. Theodore Gray has written a book about them and it looks great.
And @flyingmonkeyair linked to the site he did for Mizna, the Arab American arts journal/events promoter, where I found a book I must track down, The Night Counter.
What else…Great Vanessa Friedman article about fashion, Rio, Paris runways, no more one liner designs and everything else.
That should keep you busy for a bit. Bon soir.
Posted in Books, Current Events, Financial Times article reference, Shakespeare, culture, entertainment, performance, reading, robots, science, theatre | Tagged: Fashion, Mark Rylance, Mizna, Paris, Rio, Sarah Hemming, Texas State Fair, The Night Counter, The Tempest, The Web Files. Periodic Table of The Elements, twitter, Vanessa Friedman, Wired | Leave a Comment »
LINK LOVE
Posted by lonelypond on September 10, 2009
Peter Aspden on Spike Lee’s Do The Right Thing + how maybe not making a choice (as an artist) can impact + amplify your effect.
Paul Levitz is back on the Legion — YES. Levitz is stepping down as president + publisher and DC is revamping under the Warner Brothers aegis to take on the mega muscle that will be Disney/Marvel.
Great article on Winston Churchill + the fighting spirit.
Saw Ellen MacArthur on Top Gear; superfast sailor; fastest lap in their old Stars in Ordinary Cars derby. Here’s her blog; want to track down her book.
What the heck, @nicolaz + her partner @kelleyeskridge have started an editing business, @sterlingediting. (Yes, I love Twitter; it’s where I, @lonelypond, win friends + influence people; you have been previously warned; and if you influence or amuse me or annoy me in that grit making a pearl happen fashion, hey, you may very well get a mention right here.) I wish them well in their new endeavour. It is the best of feelings to collaborate on something you love with someone you love (oh, no, verging on sentiment — gak* — definition 4 my favorite. Must sleep more — refer previous entry)
Back to FT and other links (but what about the Legion you say? That’s not British. That’s a glitch not a tangent or even a segue. Caught me, but true love supersedes all.)
I actually find myself in sympathetic agreement with the usually too fluffy, but in a pleasant way, for me Susie Boyt as she struggles with going on holiday and running into a “novelist’s self help manual”.
Profile of Gustav Metzger, artist determined to push the world to survive.
Need to read this book judged by it’s cover.
And a review of Twitterville the book. (I prefer Twitterverse myself, but I’ve yet to write that book.)
And that should tide you over while I get some sun, listen to Radio Blink Kitty Love, lunch, work on that other book, and have a Thursday. Enjoy yours.
Posted in Blink Kitty Love, Books, Disney, Financial Times article reference, Writing, animation, comics, culture, entertainment, insomnia, reading | Tagged: DC Comics, Do The Right Thing, Ellen MacArthur, Gustav Metzger, Legion of Superheroes, Paul Levitz, Susie Boyt, twitter, Warner Brothers, Winston Churchill | Leave a Comment »
WEEKEND PLANS (MINE)
Posted by lonelypond on September 5, 2009
Well, none really. I have a stack of movies — we started the Netflix account + some borrowed — that I’d like to make a dent in. The list? Soapdish (Netflix) — ever watch a soap opera, ever laugh at Sally Field and/or Kevin Kline (yes, A Fish Called Wanda is a must see) — then Soapdish is a can’t miss. What else? Blythe — one of my theatre peeps — loaned me Tristam Shandy(movie/book skipping back + forth with the excellent Steve Coogan) + Bubba Ho Tep (Bruce Campbell and Ossie Davis kick some mummy ass) at the end of #tamingshakespeare so I’d like to watch them so I can then arrange a meeting to get my first three Scott Pilgrim graphic novels BACK (yes, I am suffering from a lack of a nearly complete Scott Pilgrim graphic novel stack by my bedside.) Oh, and long ago my former editor + anime/animation connection Mel loaned me Steamboy and although I am reluctant to pop it in, I do want to give it a try. Most of the anime movies I’ve seen are too warcentric for me.
Speaking of movies, my buddies at The Web Files (@The WebFiles) continue to do excellent work and thanks to them I have met my new friends at Movies You May Have Missed (@MYMHM) — we’ve been having snappy conversations the past couple of weeks about remakes + Netflix + streaming movies. Both shows did fun, crossover episodes with each other this week and left me with a craving for MORE movies — The Web Files ep + MYMHM ep. It’s pretty amazing what’s out there on the intrawebs. Check it out…
And, self plug, follow @blinkkittylove’s feed on Twitter, check out the episodes on their blip.tv station, or have some musical fun with lyrics at the Blink Kitty Love site.
Have a great weekend. This is my new favorite song.
I am planning* on curling up with the how to manual for ToonBoom’s Studio 5 program so I can figure out how to have some more Blink Kitty Love fun. Crush you later ; )
*Unless I decide to get distracted by Jane Austen or Harry Potter or my three weeks behind stack of FT’s. Or one of the cats decides the 500 page manual is her (or his) new favorite nap spot. Come back Tuesday to see what won.
Posted in #tamingshakespeare, Blink Kitty Love, Shakespeare, animation, entertainment, meandering, movies, music | Tagged: Movies You May Have Missed, NetFlix, Scott Pilgrim, The Web Files, twitter, web series, weekend | Leave a Comment »
WHILE YOU WERE SLEEPING
Posted by lonelypond on September 2, 2009
I was writing behind the scene posts, linking to fun FT articles, getting rejected by the Chicago International Children’s Film Festival, writing a kick ass Merchant of Venice blurb (yes, I, Michelle Denise Norton, have decided to take on yet another infamous Shakespearean speech. Stayed tuned for round by round updates), buying a shirt, listening to Radio FlashCatFlash, Radio blinkkittylove, searching the web, remembering the 80’s, Twittering, and doing and thinking about a galaxy of other things. Here’s the highlights:
Merchant of Venice blurb for the season brochure (then I stop thinking about it for several months):
Merchant of Venice follows Portia, another of Shakespeare’s inimitable heroines, as she makes her way through an obstacle course of money and marriage. One of Shakespeare’s most misunderstood comedies? Or the cruelest? See for yourself.
An excerpt from my Blink Kitty Love Animator’s Journal:
So many people cite Chuck Jones, Tex Avery, the team at Disney as early animation influences; not me. With Blink Kitty Love, you put Rocky and Bullwinkle, Scooby Doo and Josie and the Pussycats in a blender, press mince and here we are, having a blast + burning a hole in our Wacom tablet.
Read the rest at the Blink Kitty Love blog.
El Tigre won 4 Daytime Emmys…congratulations + to celebrate, here’s a fan made mashup trailer of High School Musical 3 + El Tigre.
FT’s Vanessa Friedman on the fashion industry making itself accessible to the film industry.
Peter Aspden on The Beatles, their digitally remastered back catalogue + a lack of originality in contemporary musical endeavors.
The Steven Spielberg + Peter Jackson Tintin movie coming to a theatre near you Christmas 2011.
And I think that’s enough for tonight *yawn*..wait, you must watch Warehouse 13. It’s smart, funny, well acted, sharply written, surprising and suspenseful…yes, many science fiction stories have the same seeds, but W-13 lets them grow in interesting + intricate ways. Last week’s Alice in Wonderland take was amazing — you can probably catch it next Tuesday at 7.
And yes, it would be nice if Claudia turned out to be gay…
And on that note, a shout out to the Outer Alliance (@nicolaz is a member + my source for this) and the GLBT Bookshelf (@yuricon the source for this one); people are banding together to get lgbt speculative fiction + writing out there. Click through if you’re interested in finding out how/why.
Good night; sleep well.
Posted in #merven, Blink Kitty Love, Books, Current Events, Disney, Financial Times article reference, Shakespeare, TV, Writing, animation, comics, culture, entertainment, insomnia, movies, music | Tagged: El Tigre, gay, GLBT Bookshelf, Outer Alliance, SyFy, The Beatles, TinTin, twitter, Warehouse 13 | 1 Comment »
A RANTING RAMBLE
Posted by lonelypond on August 25, 2009
Ok, I’m taking on faith you have those movie stubs to something original — Bandslam, (500) Days of Summer…I’ll let you off the hook if it’s Julie and Julia or District 9, but G.I. Joe, well G.I. Joe is part of the problem — Hollywood’s ADDICTION to remakes.
Tonight I was having a fairly long + involved Twitter conversation w/ @IDOL_HANDS about remakes starting with the news that Todd McFarlane (Mr. I created Spawn and own the world’s most expensive baseball) is planning a remake of The Wizard of Oz with some Ripley/Alien DNA mixed in. And then for a couple of days, the universe has been buzzing (mostly anti — there’s a Twitition against it) about Robert Zemeckis + Disney’s plan to remake The Yellow Submarine. TYS is not my favorite Beatles movie but it is so one of a kind you have to respect it…my favorite Beatles movie is Hard Day’s Night (must buy), one of the best, cleanest + simplest band movies (I’ve mentioned this before).
I think my friends @TheWebFiles sum it up best: “Telegraph of London says “Twitter killing Hollywood movies?” http://bit.ly/5uF1L Solution? Stop making crappy movies.”
I promised FT links…well, Peter Aspden had a column about Twitter but unlike Vanessa Friedman who paid enough attention to know it didn’t suit her, Aspden tweeted 3 times, follows 3 people + thinks that’s education enough to toss off a column about it…oh, and FT editor folks, if someone’s talking about Twitter in an article (this is happening more frequently + I first noticed it w/ The Pet Shop Boys profile), could you include a link to their @ tag. Thank you. @ me at @lonelypond
And another few links — in a non rant fashion — the aforementioned Ms. Friedman on Mad Men and their trousers.
And the aforementioned Mr. Aspden on Brigitte Bardot (he is considerably more informed + interested about Ms. Bardot than Twitter)…this bit made me perk up: ““Bardot is as important an export as Renault automobiles,” observed Simone de Beauvoir in her perceptive 1959 essay “Brigitte Bardot and the Lolita Syndrome”, a welcome reminder of a time when intellectuals were genuinely fascinated by popular culture.”
Simon Schama’s review of Nicholson Baker’s The Anthologist, which indulges/experiments in verse. I will have to get the library to track me down a copy of the book.
And Harry Eyres finally gets Man on Wire.
Have been transferring CDs to iTunes with plans to make a travel playlist for adventure so I must be getting to doing that. Disappointed to not find the Buffy CD where I expected but the pile included Red, Hot and Blue, Aly and AJ’s Into The Rush, all Depeche Mode The Singles Cds, Pet Shop Boys Very, Carmen McRae, Adam Ant’s Antics in The Forbidden Zone + E.C. Scott’s Come Get Your Love. Mix songs from that with what’s already in my library + it should be interesting. I’ll hit you with a mixtape when I’m done.
Good night!
Note: Warehouse 13 fun; good Eureka so far; no, don’t take the Wizards of Waverly place characters’ powers away in the movie (Gayle claims it’s a tease — Dad will keep his + they’ll continue as wizards in training); enjoying The Middleman DVDs + looking forward to a new season of The Big Bang Theory. Now, read a book and go see Bandslam, darn it.
I did mention rant ; )
Posted in Books, Disney, Financial Times article reference, The Big Bang Theory, culture, entertainment, insomnia, meandering, movies, music, rant, reading | Tagged: Mad Men, mixtape, Nicholson Baker, Peter Aspden, Simon Schama, The Anthologist, twitter, Vanessa Friedman | Leave a Comment »
