Muddle



kottke.org: The Criterion Collection is almost always nearly free on Hulu

jkottke:

Last weekend, Sarah alerted us that the Criterion Collection movies on Hulu were available to watch for free all weekend long. It was a classic kottke.org post: here’s something of very high quality that everyone can experience right now. Spot on, nailed it, I personally got excited and I would have taken full advantage had I not been out of the country.

The funny thing is that Hulu’s Criterion movies are almost always nearly free. There are many films — like Hoop DreamsBabette’s FeastA Woman Under the Influence, and Rashomon — that are totally free right now, just click the links and they start playing. But the rest of the Criterion films (looks like there’s dozens if not hundreds of them) are very nearly free all the time, all available if you subscribe to Hulu Plus for $7.99 per month. Dammit, I don’t want to do this but I’m trotting out the hoary cups of coffee metric here: for the price of two cups of coffee, you can watch as many Criterion-caliber films in the next month as you want, until your eyeballs pus over and burst from all the electromagnetic radiation pulsing into your retinas. And you also get all three seasons of Arrested Development!

Gob Bluth

Thank you, G.O.B. Most iPhone apps are either free or nearly free. Hundreds of classic works of literature are available on your favorite reading device for free or nearly free. There are enough freely available longreads out there to gag Instapaper. And let’s not even get started on YouTube, it’s a cultural fucking goldmine. Louis, you were right: everything is amazing and nobody’s happy. Because who has two thumbs, disposable income, an interest in excellent films, and is not subscribing to Hulu Plus because it seems like too much money and too much effort? This spoiled idiot right here.

Turn off the TV, stop scrolling through your social network with zombie face. You can now consume many great things for free!



Reblogged from kottke.org.

February 25, 2013, 5:41pm

David Foster Wallace

tetw:

The Complete Essays

image

The ultimate David Foster Wallace nonfiction collection, including links to every essay available online.

That aughta keep me busy for awhile.



Reblogged from The Electric Typewriter.

February 01, 2013, 3:09am

30 Great Reads from 2012

tetw:

As chosen by Stuart Waterman

image

A couple of weeks ago we came across a guy who had published a complete list of the 457 articles he read in 2012! We asked him to let us which were his favourites, and this is the list he sent us…

The Internet:

The Human Behind Horse_ebooks by Adrain Chen - On the trail of the internet’s favorite spambot.

Violentacrez by Adrain Chen - The biggest troll on the web.

Scamworld by Joseph L. Flatley -  How the internet and fear of a failing economy drive the ultimate long con.

Psychology:

The Money-Empathy Gap by Lisa Miller - New research suggests that money makes people act less human, or less humane.

Spoiled Rotten by Elizabeth Kolbert - Why kids rule the roost.

Deep Intellect by Sy Montgomery - Inside the Mind of the Octopus

The Chase Is The Thing And The Thing Is The Chase by Chris Gethard - “Getting that gig, getting that approval, whatever your version of that dream job is – doesn’t erase the anxiety.”

Body Language by Arika Okrent - As Jews and Italians became American, so did their gestures.

Crime and Punishment:

Drive-By Truckers by Ginger Strand - At least twenty-five former truckers are serving time in American prisons for serial murder.

Marathon Man by Mark Singer - Is Kip Lytton a marathon fraud?

The Innocent Man by Pamela Colloff - On August 13, 1986, Michael Morton came home from work to discover that his wife had been brutally murdered in their bed. His nightmare had only begun.

The Gray Box by Susan Greene
- An investigative look at solitary confinement.

Music:

The Song Machine by John Seabrook - The hitmakers behind Rihanna.

Tour Diary by Jon Spencer
- Noel Gallagher: what’s the point?

Hollywood:

Warren Beatty Thinks This Song Is About Him by Anne Helen Petersen - His sister said he “couldn’t even commit to dinner.” Woody Allen once asked to be reincarnated as his fingertips.

Katie Holmes-Cruise Has Left the Building by Benjamin Wallace
- An inquiry into the very public private marriage of Katie Holmes and Tom Cruise

I Was an A-List Writer of B-List Productions by Stephen Harrigan
- Reflections on a career writing made-for-TV movies.

The Man Who Hacked Hollywood by David Kushner - “There stood Scarlett Johansson, her famous face unmistakable in the foreground, her naked backside reflected in the bathroom mirror…”

Leading Mannequins by Molly Young - “The most important person behind an actor’s image isn’t his agent—it’s his stylist.”

What Katie Didn’t Know by Maureen Orth
- How a gorgeous Scientologist named Nazanin Boniadi was selected by officials in the organization to be Tom Cruise’s next girlfriend.

How One Response to a Reddit Query Became a Big-Budget Flick by Jason Fagone
- How a man from web pundit to Hollywood screenwriter in a couple of weeks.

Miscelaneous:

My Father and Me by Yudhijit Bhattacharjee - A Spy Story

When Did Young People Start Spending 25% of Their Paychecks on Pickled Lamb’s Tongues? by Michael Idov - Foodie-ism, as youth culture.

Operation Midnight Climax by Troy Hooper - How the CIA dosed innocent citizens with LSD.

Death on the Path to Enlightenment by Scott Carney - Inside the Rise of India Syndrome.

Portrait of the Artist as a Postman by Jason Sheeler - The only American artist ever to have designed scarves for Hermès, a postal worker from Waco.

Confessions of an Ivy League Frat Boy by Janet Reitman - Inside Dartmouth’s Hazing Abuses

The Man Who Broke Atlantic City by Mark Bowden - How a man won nearly $6 million playing blackjack in one night.

Animals by Chris Jones - The Zanesville Zoo animal escape.

For many more excellent reads, make sure you check out Stuart Waterman’s huge spreadsheet of links to all the articles he read in 2012. You might also like his longform RSS bundle, which aggregates links from all the best curators around.



Reblogged from The Electric Typewriter.

December 30, 2012, 8:18am

NY Times' list of 100 notable books of 2012

Year end lists time. Where I feel I’ve got a lot of things to do all the sudden, but really I don’t.



Reblogged from kottke.org.

November 28, 2012, 5:29pm

newyorker:

Last night, a group of New Yorker staffers (and one cartoonist) got together and played Beck’s new song “Old Shanghai.” If you like, follow along with the sheet music here, or use it to record your own version of the song.

This is so exciting for some reason.

Everyone should play an instrument.



Reblogged from The New Yorker.

November 15, 2012, 2:56am

The Power of the Image

tetw:

A Tetw reading list

Photography as a Weapon by Errol Morris - What seems to emerge from major events and eras are one or two images that effectively embody the emotion and rage, the happiness and anger.

Seeing Faster by James Gleick - Partway through the millennium, we learned to see, at long last…

The Faux-Vintage Photo by Nathan Jurgenson - How social media increasingly force us to view our present as always a potential documented past.

Double Vision by Lawrence Weschler - How the art of Trevor and Ryan Oakes forces the viewer to take a fresh look at vision.

Mirrors Don’t Lie by Natalie Angier - Mirrors are like pieces of dreams, their images hyper-real and profoundly fake.



Reblogged from The Electric Typewriter.

November 08, 2012, 4:30pm

“It isn’t the movies that are dead, but Thomson who is deadened to movies. He looks back nostalgically to a time before “the self-consciousness of disbelief,” before “undermining the innocence of sincere sentiment.” There’s still plenty of sincere sentiment in movies these days (whether in romantic comedies and melodramas or in ready-for-public-television Oscar bait), but I doubt that there was ever the innocence of his nostalgic fantasy.”

The movies aren’t dying (their not even sick)



September 28, 2012, 10:28pm

The Hustler's MBA

youmightfindyourself:

I’ve been saying that college is obsolete for a very long time. I dropped out in 2000, because even back then I could see that it was a really poor value proposition. I didn’t predict this because I’m some crazy genius, but because I’m willing to discard emotional attachment and stare plainly at the facts.

School is oturageously expensive, leaving graduates with a debt (or net expenditure) of tens of thousands of dollars— sometimes even one or two hundred thousand. There are some things that are worth that amount of money, but for many people school isn’t one of them. In fact, apart from very specific cases, I think that school is a bad thing, not worth doing even if it was free.

That’s not to say that school has no benefits whatsoever. It does, and although I left with zero additional skills after my three semesters there, I had a good time and benefited from the social aspect. The problem is that you can’t just compare college to doing nothing at all. You have to compare it to what you COULD have done.

Let’s say that when you turn eighteen, it’s a good idea to take four years to develop yourself. College is one way to do that. If we were to construct an alternative way to do that, what could it look like? One of the biggest weaknesses of school is how inflexible it is, so one of the greatest benefits of designing your own curriculum is that you could come up with one that uniquely suits you. That said, here’s a plan that I think would benefit many people MORE than school would. Let’s call it the Hustler’s MBA.

1. Learn poker. To an outsider, poker seems like a form of degenerate gambling. It can be, but that’s not its nature. One of the most valuable skills I’ve learned in life is how to assess hundreds of factors, choose the important ones, evaluate them to make a decision quickly, and then execute that decision. Poker teaches this extremely well. So does pickup, incidentally. Poker develops your logic like nothing else I’ve experienced, and it develops your math skills to a lesser degree. It also teaches a skill I can’t quite define, but would best describe as learning how hard you can push. I’ve found all of these skills to be very useful in life.

Poker will cost you money at first. Let’s say $5000 in the first year. After that you’ll be able to make between $45-60 per hour for the rest of your life. That’s about $85,000 per year, which adjusts for inflation because as money is inflated, the stakes to keep the game interesting will go up. You will also receive “raises” because you’ll always improve as a player and be able to play better stakes. If you’re dedicated to poker, getting this good is virtually guaranteed. I’ve been through the process and it’s not particularly hard. Can school guarantee you a job that pays this well?

Besides being able to make $85k/year, you could also play for six months and make $40k a year. Ultimate flexibility. I don’t think that poker is the best career in the world, because it doesn’t give back to society, but I do think that it’s an excellent backup plan. Knowing that I can always support myself playing poker gives me the freedom to work on big projects without fear.

2. Travel a lot. For the first year, learn a foreign language that interests you. Start with three months of Pimsleur tapes, then get a local tutor. That should cost about $1000 for the first year, and will yield results FAR greater than a class in school. After the first year your self-education will be paid for by poker, so start traveling for three months every year. That should cost around $8k at the most, probably more like $5-6k. When traveling, education comes to you in the form of perspective. You understand other cultures and other people, and will get to practice your foreign language in its native setting. I would also combine travel with watching documentaries about the history of that place. I learned a lot about Rome after visiting, and now I’m kicking myself for not educating myself first.

3. Read every single day for at least an hour. Books get lumped in with other reading like magazines and blogs, but they’re actually far more valuable. The amount of value an author compresses into a book is often astounding. There are books I’ve paid $10 for that have completely changed my life. If you read for 1-2 hours on average, you’ll read around a hundred books per year. I do this now and find it to be one of the most valuable uses of my time. Read at least 50% non-fiction, but fiction is good, too. In school you would probably read 12 books a year at most.

4. Write every single day. Write blog posts, work on a book, write how you’re feeling, or write short stories. I don’t think it really matters. Writing every day helps you develop and refine your thoughts, as well as learn to communicate with others. Almost any field you’ll go into will require communication, so you may as well get good at it. After you write, record a video yourself explaining what you wrote. This will help with public speaking and conversation. After the first year at the very latest, start publicly posting your work. This teaches you to ship and to integrate feedback.

5. Learn to program, even if you don’t want to be a programmer. Programming develops logic and efficiency, amongst other things. Even an intermediate understanding of programming will allow you to be a creator. Programming languages are the languages of the future, so even if you aren’t a programmer yourself, there’s a good chance you’ll be working with them. Speaking someone’s language is nice when you’re working with them, right?

6. Do something social. College is really excellent for making people social, and it’s the one aspect in which don’t expect my plan to exceed school. If you’re a guy, consider getting into pickup. If you’re a human, take group art classes, yoga, dance, or go to meetup groups. Social skills are some of the most important skills you can learn, and they can only truly be developed through social interaction. This interaction has to be in person, too… online chatting can be beneficial, but it’s not enough. Traveling will help you be social as well, especially if you stay in hostels.

7. Eat healthy. When you eat healthy, your brain functions better and you’re safeguarding its longevity. Developing yourself is at least as much about good habits as it is about learning skills. And like all habits, the earlier you start, the better. I’d say that the minimum to shoot for here is cutting out all sweeteners and refined grains. Besidses the obvious health benefits, eating healthy will help you build discipline, which is an absolutely essential life skill.

8. Follow curiousity and spend money on it when necessary. These things that I’ve included so far are the baseline— the new liberal arts education. They leave you plenty of time in your day to follow whatever you’re interested in. Don’t force it and try to learn investment banking because you think it would make a good career. If you’re interested in butterflies, learn about butterflies. The rest of the curriculum is enough to make sure that you’ll always be able to provide for yourself and will be a well rounded person, so consider this section your speculative learning. Maybe you’ll find something you’re passionate about, which will become your career, or maybe you’ll just become a really interesting person who knows a lot about a lot of things. Either way is fine. Don’t be afraid to spend money on tutors, classes, equipment, seminars, or travel.

9. Start a business after two years. With a full two years of self-education under your belt, you should have something useful to contribute to society. School makes you go from sheltered learning mode straight into real-world career mode. I think a better way is to have a transition, and to couple productivity with learning. Having that habit will ensure that you continue to perfect your craft as you get older. Your business can be anything— a tech startup, publishing books you’ve written, giving speeches, making clothing and selling it online, whatever you’re into. Read some business books before starting it and try to make money. One of the most common complaints I hear from graduates of traditonal school is that nothing they learned was actually applicable to real ife. Everything you learn from starting a business IS.

This is a modern curriculum that, on average, will produce people better prepared for real life than college. Obviously, it won’t work if you want to be something that requires certification like a doctor or lawyer. The beauty of it is that it has a negative cost (you will make money due to poker, and hopefully your business), and can be funded initially with $5000 for poker. A few months into the second year, you will have paid off the poker debt and begun to self fund your life.

Will this work for you? There’s no guarantee, but I see people work pretty hard at school, and if that same effort were put towards the Hustler’s MBA, I thnk the chance of being self-sufficient and prepared for “real life” is about 90%. I’d estimate that non-laywer/doctor college is somewhere around 50-70%. So, like anything, this plan is not totally foolproof, but I think it’s a lot better and cheaper than the alternative.

There’s a big taboo around telling people not to go to college. I find myself adhering to it, not ever suggesting that younger members of my family should drop out or skip school entirely. But maybe the time has come for us to look at college objectively, really quantify what goes in and what comes out, and evaluate it on its merits alone, rather than its historical value or its societal aura.

Earth is a based hustlers paradise.

But, seriously, I’m all about that last bit. It’s just gotten so expensive to go to college. Think of what you could do with $10,000 a year you’re not spending at a public school. The catch-22 is that you can’t get a free $10,000 from a bank unless you’re going to school. Imagine trying to explaining that you need to take out a loan for $5,000 so you can “learn to play poker” to a bank. So, what’s not mentioned here is the crappy part time job that may slowly corrode your dreams, and the self-prescribed beer and streaming old episodes of ‘Cheers’ with your buddies that may take the rest of your time and money. 

So, if we’re gonna talk about this “objectively” let’s talk about it objectively. I think even if you go to college you should try to do a lot of the things on this list. But if poker’s knocked off the list how’re we gonna fund all this reading and learning and exploring our curiosity with butterflies.

It’s not always a money game, too. Have you considered you may not really need $80,000 a year. Look, if you’re game is being rich, fine. Money is a great incentive. But I have you tried tallying up how much all the things you actually want would really cost. What if you pared that down, especially tech stuff that’s gonna be outdated next year anyway. I mean, you don’t need to get all Herb & Dorthy in here, but maybe you may forget in your “hustling” that money doesn’t have to be an end in itself.

Also, I think something that’s not mentioned here is ambition. Ambition leads to dedication and discipline which are pretty explicit in this article. It takes a hustler’s ambition to get a hustler’s MBA.



Reblogged from YOU MIGHT FIND YOURSELF.

September 27, 2012, 5:41am

“Every one of us is losing something precious to us. Lost opportunities, lost possibilities, feelings we can never get back again. That’s part of what it means to be alive.”

— Haruki Murakami, Kafka on the Shore



Reblogged from (OvO).

September 16, 2012, 10:03pm

26 Beatnik slang words and phrases we should all start using

nevver:

  1. A shape in a drape
    A well-dressed person. “Usually she just wears jeans, but she sure is a shape in a drape in that dress.”
  2. Bright disease
    To know too much. “He has bright disease. Make sure he doesn’t rat us out.”
  3. Claws sharp
    Being well-informed on a number of subjects. “Reading Mental Floss keeps your claws sharp.”
  4. Dixie fried
    Drunk. “It’s Friday and the eagle flies tonight. Let’s go get dixie fried.”
  5. Everything plus
    Better than good-looking. “He wasn’t just built, he was everything plus.”
  6. Focus your audio
    Listen carefully. “Shut your trap and focus your audio. This is important.”
  7. Gin mill cowboy
    A bar regular. (A gin mill is a bar.) “Cliff Clavin was the _flossiest gin mill cowboy of all time.”
  8. Hanging paper
    Paying with forged checks. “I hope that chick who stole my purse last week goes to jail for hanging paper.”
  9. Interviewing your brains
    Thinking. “I can see you’re interviewing your brains, so I’ll leave you alone.”
  10. Jungled up
    Having a place to live, or specific living arrangements. “All I know is that he’s jungled up with that guy he met at the gin mill last month.”
  11. Know your groceries
    To be aware, or to do things well. (Similar to Douglas Adams’ “know where your towel is.”) “You can’t give a TED Talk on something unless you really know your groceries.”
  12. Lead sled
    A car, specifically one that would now be considered a classic model. “His parents gave him their old lead sled for his sixteenth birthday.”
  13. Mason-Dixon line
    Anywhere out of bounds, especially regarding personal space. “Keep your hands above the Mason-Dixon line, thanks.”
  14. Noodle it out
    Think it through. “You don’t have to make a decision right now. Noodle it out and call me back.”
  15. Off the cob
    Corny. “Okay, some of this old Beat slang is kinda off the cob.”
  16. Pearl diver
    A person who washes dishes. “I’m just a pearl diver at a greasy spoon, but it’s a job.”
  17. Quail hunting
    Picking up chicks. “I’m going quail hunting and you’re my wingman.”
  18. Red onion
    A hole in the wall; a really crappy bar. “I thought we were going somewhere nice but he just took me to the red onion on the corner.”
  19. Slated for crashville
    Out of control. “That girl’s been in college for five minutes and is already slated for crashville.”
  20. Threw babies out of the balcony
    A big success; interchangeable with “went down a storm.” “I was afraid the party would suck, but it threw babies out of the balcony.”
  21. Used-to-be
    An ex, a person you used to date. “I ran into my used-to-be in Kroger’s and I looked terrible.”
  22. Varicose alley
    The runway in a strip club. “Stay in school or you’ll be strutting varicose alley, girls.”
  23. Ways like a mowing machine
    An agricultural metaphor for impressive sexual technique, from the song “She’s a Hum Dinger” by Buddy Jones. “She’s long, she’s tall / She’s a handsome queen / She’s got ways like a mowing machine.” (Let us know if any of you ever successfully pull this one off in conversation.)
  24. X-ray eyes
    To understand something, to see through confusion. “That guy is so smart. He’s got x-ray eyes.”
  25. Yard
    A thousand dollars. “Yeah, it’s nice, but rent is half a yard a week. Let’s jungle up somewhere else.”
  26. Zonk on the head
    A bad thing. “It stormed all night and we lost power, but the real zonk on the head was when hail broke the bedroom window.”

More



Reblogged from this isn't happiness..

September 15, 2012, 10:03am