Crackhouse Wrap-up pt. 1

The “big dig” project here at the Crackhouse is just about wrapped up and we’re moving back into the downstairs of the place now. Needless to say this is all occuring four months after the project started, not four weeks as originally estimated.

Anyway, here’re a few before/during/after pics of the living room, the new half bath, and the lateral hallway that’s been added:

Living Room
(Click for larger image)
Half Bath
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Hallway
(Click for larger image)

Tokyopop’s Web Exclusives

Journalista » Blog Archive » Aug. 31, 2006: An act of sheer desperation

The blogosphere is alive with the sound of bitching… that is, bitching back and forth about Tokyopop‘s recent announcement that it is making some of its titles available only via their online store.  That means that they’ll be cutting out the usual “middle men” involved in getting the books to Borders, Barnes & Noble, comics shops, etc., and gaining for themselves the lion’s share of the profits in the deal.    Retailers, of course, are mad because they’ve (supposedly) devoted time and money to building up an audience for some of these books, and now that the books have a reader base, the customers can’t get them at those same stores, and those stores don’t reap the long-term profits from selling all the later issues.

I don’t read a ton of Manga, but as (bad) luck would have it, one I’m following right now is Tokyopop’s series, Dragon Head, which is now a “web exclusive.”  Supposedly this book was chosen as one to be a “web exclusive” because it was selling poorly (although no numbers were given to support this claim).  If so, I think this is definitely an Arrested Development indicator, where something that’s obviously very high quality, and not in the least inaccessable, has failed to reach the audience that it really should have.  While Tokyopop seems to be taking a lot of guff for this move, I’ve got to at least give them this:  If a book as good as Dragon Head isn’t selling well the way it’s currently being marketed and sold, there’s definitely something wrong.   On the other hand,  making it a “web exclusive” seems to be going in the wrong direction: making it harder for people to be exposed to it.

David Taylor has an interesting theory about why Dragon Head in particular was selected for this treatment.  I’m thinking he’s maybe right…

Seth’s Nostalgia for the 20s and 30s

The Comics in Canada: An Illustrated History

I’ve been slowly making my way through this nice archive of audio and video interview and feature clips of Canadian cartoonists.  I listened most recently to the one about “Seth,” a cartoonist who really wears his obsession with the 1920s and 30s on his sleeve.  The voiceover referred to him being “nostalgic” for this period, which immediately seemed odd to me.  Can one truly be nostalgic for a time period (or place) which one has never experienced?  The Websters definition isn’t really specific on the subject:

1 : the state of being homesick : HOMESICKNESS
2 : a wistful or excessively sentimental yearning for return to or of some past period or irrecoverable condition; also : something that evokes nostalgia

Can I, for example, be nostalgic for medieval Scotland?

Ed Bumgardner Must Get Stoned

Dylan concert hits bad notes

First off, some clarification:

  1. Ed Bumgardner is a longtime Winston-Salem music critic, who’s currently writing for the Winston-Salem Journal’s weekly free arts and entertainment supplement, Relish.
  2. By “stoned” in the title of this post, I don’t mean stoned as in “under the effects of marijuana,” but rather stoned as in “pelted with large rocks.

Now…

As far as I’m concerned, arguing with critics about their reviews—of music, art, comics, movies, whatever—is usually pointless; such debates tend to devolve into basically “I liked this, and you didn’t.”  However, Ed Bumgardner’s review of the Bob Dylan show I attended last Saturday exhibited such an egregious misunderstanding of the material being reviewed that I can’t let it go without comment.

Bumgardner complains that Dylan’s voice is “shot” and that his pitch wasn’t good.  What makes these assertions so stunningly off-base isn’t a matter of their being false (or true); it’s that they betray such a radical and wholistic misunderstanding of Bob Dylan’s music.  It’s like complaining that Jackson Pollock’s perspective is “shot,” or that the anatomy Picasso’s Les demoiselles d’Avignon isn’t good.  To even voice such complaints demonstrates a broad conceptual mistake about the subject at hand.  Similar bizarre critiques appear throughout the article, includung doozies like “pointless” reworkings of older songs and the like.

I think the lesson to be learned from this is simply, that as a critic, one should stick to subjects that one knows and appreciates.  The critic in question has been kicking around Winston for a while and his musical passions were pretty clearly steeped in the late 80s North Carolina pop scene, and his current tastes—judging by his weekly review columns—still seem to favor this so-called “pop”* music pretty heavily.  There’s nothing wrong with that, but I think that, as a result, he’s clearly out of his element (and a bit pissy tone-wise, in my opinion) trying to evaluate the performance in question.  I don’t read many superhero comics, or a ton of Manga, and so I certainly wouldn’t presume to write a authoritative review of those sorts of works myself—particularly one that happens to be one of the most challenging and quixotic of its type.  Similarly, if one’s area of expertise is Let’s Active, XTC and Big Star, leave the Dylan review to someone else.

* I say “so-called” because few, if any, of the bands referred to as “pop” are, nor ever have been, popular, as the name might imply.  It’s a weird misnomer.

Coolest Mini-golf Ever

The Somerville Open Mini-Golf 2006