Friday, March 13, 2009

Project Ideas

Clint and I are hoping to look at environmental problems in the area we live in. We were thinking about taking a closer look at the Vestavia Hills Library and the plans to build a new green building. We are thinking about attending a city council meeting and asking about the plans and whether it wold be LEED certified. We could document the whole thing on film and in an essay.
Also, We would be interested in seeing how people feel about the new sidewalks. Also Vestavia was forced to remove trees from the middle of the road on 31. We would be interested in how people think that has effected the way they view Vestavia.
We also just want to see the overall environmental outlook Vestavia has and compare it to other communities.

Fandom

So I've been reading Tina's posts about Super Junior (or Suju as she likes to call them) and I have to say I find it fascinating. The whole phenomen created by one group of pop singers is amazing. The reactions of the fans and the way there seem to be factions...just interesting. It reminds me a lot of when I was much more obessed with Harry Potter.

The way these celebrities create followings and sub cultures is fascinatng. With Harry Potter, there was a whole other language that had to be learned to understand what people in the fourms were talking about.
Here's a fake example of a convo:
Are you a shipper?
Sure, I'm all for Orange Crush.
Oh. Too bad I sail the Good Ship.

Understand it? Didn't think so. Fandom is the collective productions of fans of a specific thing, be it a celebrity, a book, a tv, or a comic. In the fandom circles, everything is almost written in code. Not only that but there are references to past events in fandom.

It's these similarities that fascinate me. While Tina may be a fan of Suju and I am a fan of HP, there are so many similarities between the fandoms. There are factions. Super Fans. Lingo. Everything.

Hamentashen and Shaloch Manos

So this week we talked about food. We talked about how food is modified. How it gets to where it needs to be. How it is marketed. But never did we even mentioned the great impacted it has on culture.

This week, more specifically, this tuesday was the Jewish holiday of Purim. Now on Purim there are a few different things you do. Dress up, get drunk(if you're over 21 of course) and eat. Food is always an important part of Jewish life. On Purim we eat hamentashen, triangular shaped cookies with fruit filling that are almost more fun to make then to eat. The shape is symbolic of course, modeled after the three side hat of the villian of the Purim story. Why do we feel the need to eat the villians hat? No clue. It's tradition.

Purim also comes with a mitzvah (good deed) centered around food. Shaloch Manos are gift you are suppose to give to at least two people (the more the merrier) containing food of two different types. One fruit, on cake. Some wine, some hamentashen. Etc. Etc.

For more info about Purim and just a generally good resource for information about Judiaism:

http://www.chabad.org/holidays/purim/default_cdo/jewish/purim.htm

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

One Way to Look at Things

So I may be getting ahead of myself as we have yet to even really start talking about food, but I found an interesting site. The site, called so_many_a_second illustrates different statistics by streaming pictures dow the web browser. From the site itself:

"so_many_a_second is a visualizer that shows mondial statistics on a human scale. Depicting the ongoing stream of events, this application tries to get the user in touch with the emotional actuality of these objective data."

Some of the more relevant statistic the site includes are things like how many tons of food are produced per second, how many new people have no access to water per second, and how many trees are cut down per second. I liked the way the site help give a more solid meaning to numbers we talk about all the time.