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Michele Tepper

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Quotation of the day

Ultimately, the meaning of a tool is inseparable from the stories that surround it.  Consider the similarity between what is involved in creating and using a tool and the sequence of narrative.  Even the chimpanzee picking up and peeling a twig to "fish" for termites requires the mental projection of a sequence, including an initial desire, several actions, and successful feeding.  The sequence becomes more complex where more tools are involved, or when the same tool is used in several ways.  Composing a narrative and using a tool are not identical processes, but they have affinities.  Each requires the imagination of altered circumstances, and in each case beings must see themselves to be living in time.  Making a tool immediately implies a succession of events in which one exercises some control over outcomes.  Either to tell a story or to make a tool is to adopt an imaginary position outside immediate sensory experience.  In each case, one imagines how present circumstances might be made different.

-- David E. Nye, Technology Matters: Questions to Live With

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categories: Culture, Technology
Monday 07.10.06
Posted by Michele Tepper
 

My only World Cup post

Proof of Clive's theory that history now happens twice, the first time as tragedy, the second as videogame: the Zidane headbutt game. Created, of course, by someone at an Italian address. I was heartbroken by the awful end of Zidane's game, and career. But even I have to admit that it's a pretty amusing piece of Flash.

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categories: Culture, Technology
Monday 07.10.06
Posted by Michele Tepper
 

Lorraine Hunt Lieberson

I listen to less classical music these days than I ever did, and it was never my primary music love. But I listen to and read enough about it that sometimes, an extraordinary artist still catches my attention. I was introduced to Lorraine Hunt Lieberson's work through a rave review by Alex Ross of the New Yorker. So it's apt in a way that I should learn of her untimely death from cancer at 52 from his blog as well. One of the first things I bonded with Turi over was Lieberson's work -- I lent her my copy of Lieberson's Handel arias shortly after we started working together. She invited me in turn to what was supposed to be a performance by Lieberson of a new work by her husband, composer Peter Lieberson, as part of a series of quasi-educational concerts by the New York Philharmonic. The Liebersons cancelled that concert, and we saw Elliott Carter speak to a performance of a recent work instead -- wonderful, and inspiring to see a man so engaged with his art in his late 90s -- but we were both hoping that next season, we might get to hear what we'd missed.

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categories: Culture
Tuesday 07.04.06
Posted by Michele Tepper
 

Art school confidential

The Internet doesn’t destroy the boundaries between the professional and the amateur: it just complicates them. You see that in the way Markos Moulitsas is getting depicted in the mainstream press as DailyKos becomes a political force to reckon with in Democratic politics, and you see it in the complex knots the networks are tying themselves into trying to figure out what they stand for in the age of YouTube and Rocketboom. You also see it in the rise of perhaps the first true YouTube stars: the Two Chinese Boys. When I was doing research about online video earlier in the spring, everyone I talked to who had used YouTube recognized these boys immediately: their dorm room lip-synching to American pop hits is ridiculously endearing and, especially given their fondness for Yao Ming jerseys, globalizationalicious. It’s not surprising that they’ve already been tapped for a “viral ad” by Moto . I was, however, surprised to learn that they’d recently graduated from art school, with sculptures of themselves mid-performance submitted as their final projects. Maybe I’m imposing my own ideas of what it means to be an art school student, but it does change my sense of what their videos are about when I know they were made by two people already spending all their time thinking about artistic production. What had previously seemed adorably naive now seems no less adorable, but more thought out and more pointed. My sense of them as amateurs-gone-pro has changed to one of pros-in-training-gone-pro. Which is a rather different thing, you will admit. I’m also, I’ll admit, really tickled by the sculptures, which seem simultaneously to be a celebration of their bizarre pop-cultural achievement and a send-up of it. Are these boys the next generation Gilbert & George? We shall see.

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categories: Culture, Technology
Saturday 06.24.06
Posted by Michele Tepper
 

Mad, I tell you, mad!

Mad Lit Professor Puts Finishing Touches on Bloomsday Device (Sadly, the title’s the best part. But after that title, do you really need more?)

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categories: Culture
Friday 06.16.06
Posted by Michele Tepper
 
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Michele Tepper • User Experience Design & Strategy • Brooklyn, NY