reileen: (TONIGHT WE BLOG IN HELL)
Gonna start off with the Serious Business stuff this time before I babble about fannish things.

I found this interesting article about Michelle Obama's efforts to reach out to the poor and disenfranchised in the DC area.

I also recently discovered the work of Jay Smooth on YouTube, who posts short vlogs about pop culture and sociopolitical issues. He has a direct style that is not too "in-your-face" and is easy to follow and understand. "Asher Roth and the Racial Crossroads" is an excellent rebuttal to the idea "that racist/homophobic/bigoted jokes were a sign of a progressive population and therefore anyone who called him on his racist, homophobic, sexist, bigoted jokes is against an egalitarian society" (quoted from this comment over at JF's UnfunnyBusiness comm, where I found the video link). There's also a transcript of this particular video here at [livejournal.com profile] racism_101.

Also by Jay Smooth is "How To Tell People They Sound Racist", which should be required viewing for anyone interested in anti-oppression work of any sort, not just racism. No transcript that I've seen yet, unfortunately, but as I said before, he's easy to follow.

At Racialicious, Ay-leen the Peacemaker analyzes two potential colonial visions of America in steampunk, the "nostalgic" and the "melancholic". [livejournal.com profile] vyctori, you should probably take a look at this.

It's from that Racialicious linke that I think I stumbled upon Blue Corn Comics, which is a blog focusing on First Nations culture, from history to traditions to modern portrayals and stereotypes, and also branches out into wider implications for anti-racism work and race in America. There's some stuff like Video Games Featuring Indians and Indiana Jones and the Stereotypes of Doom, and then there's also his rebuttal against the notion of "equal opportunity offending".

From that site, I also found "21st-Century Warrior":

In the Sun Dance, I learned what the warrior path was truly about. It had nothing to do with what I had seen in movies, heard in music, or read in books. It wasn't about being destructive, being the toughest person in the neighborhood, or any media-stained image. I realized in my moments of terror, pain, and loneliness that this ceremony wasn't about me but about the people I can serve in my life. The warrior concept is simply taking our own talent and ability and developing it so we can serve and defend others. The warrior's goal was to become an asset to the village they served. The warriors of the past like Pontiac, Crazy Horse, Chief Joseph, and Osceola were warriors not only because of their exploits in battle, but because they served their people the best way they knew how and spent their lifetimes becoming assets to their village. Today, your "village" could be your family, community, country, clients, or any other group you serve.

I first stumbled across this piece during RaceFail'09, but it was quoted in one of the Blue Corn Comics pages as well, so I figured now's a good a time as any to point readers here - The Unexamined Propaganda of "Political Correctness".

Underlying every complaint of "PC" is the absurd notion that members of dominant mainstream society have been victimized by an arbitrarily hypersensitive prohibition against linguistic and cultural constructions that are considered historical manifestations of bigotry. It's no coincidence that "PC"-snivelers are for the most part white men who are essentially saying, "Who the hell do these marginalized groups think they are to tell me how I should or shouldn't portray them? I'm not going to say 'mentally challenged' when it's my right to say 'retard', goshdarnit there's only so much abuse I'll take!"*

In this context, the conceit that "political correctness" constitutes a violation of free speech is particularly zany; as though society's marginalized groups wield oppressive power over the dominant mainstream. Actually, as far as I'm concerned you're free to call me "chink" and I'm free to call you "moronic racist loser" (and more if necessary, but I'll leave that aside for now in the interest of false civility). Free speech is the straw man of choice for intellectual bums of all stripes too fragile and vacuous for critical engagement. Calling someone who says or does bigoted things "a bigot" isn't censorious, it's descriptively accurate, like calling a bad movie "a bad movie", even if the bigot didn't intend to come off as bigoted and the movie didn't intend to come off as bad.

Randomly, The Straight Dope discusses Chicago's Anti-Ugliness Ordinance, which thankfully has since been repealed.

So, yeah, I got some serious stuff going on up there in the links. And I didn't even post some of the other ones I found because I need to take time like millennia to think about them. In the meantime, we can take a break and start mixin' us some Avatar: The Last Airbender-themed booze. Drink each of the Four Nations drinks and enter the "Avatar State"! Sporfletini. Relatedly, you can find a recipe for "fire flakes" over at the [livejournal.com profile] fan_foods community. [livejournal.com profile] lysis_to_kill, we should get together and make the butterbeer!

[livejournal.com profile] eyecatching_art had this epic picture of Wolfwood!Hobbes and Vash!Calvin.

Hallelujah, It's Rainin' 300 Men!

Best of the Worst: Twilight Tattoos. Yes, that is as bad as it sounds.

The Angry Asian Man posts about this excellent stop-motion animation piece done by Bang-yao Liu as his senior project at the Savannah College of Art and Design.

File this under "bzuh?": Michael Jackson considered releasing his next album as a video game. H-how was that even going to work? Not that I'm not interested in the results, but the logistics of it are...interesting, to say the least.

***

*glances over link-o-llection* ...rawr. I swear I need to get back to organizing my bookmarks. I've had stuff tagged over at my Delicious account, but I think when I upgraded Firefox I brokinated the extension I had that let me easily add bookmarks to Delicious, and I never bothered to upgrade. So lately I've just been filing stuff under one huge folder in my Firefox bookmarks. But if I'm going to get anywhere in my informal self-education, I need to actually remember where I've been so that I can better map out where I'm going.

Anyway, I deleted my original MySpace account because something got borked with the layout editing feature and apparently MySpace couldn't fix it. I signed up for a new account, then realized from clicking through MySpace Help that, hey, I should've actually signed up specifically for a musician profile from the start, because MySpace can't convert profiles from one to the other! So I clicked on the link in the help page that was supposed to help you "get started", only to get an error message that MySpace had taken the feature down temporarily for some-reason-or-other and that I'd have to wait for an unspecified period of time before I could use it. LE SIGH. So much for trying to pretty up my profile like [livejournal.com profile] mia_noire suggested to me. I guess I should just work on my YouTube profile instead.

In the meantime, I'm also going to continue working on a friend's commission and on a piece of original art featuring the two main characters from my NaNoWriMo2008 novel Daemonsong. I'd originally intended it as a quick painting piece, but as soon as I got to Kira's fur I was like pfffffft that is so not going to work. So I'm taking my time on it.

-Reileen
he promises to you, no more tears to cry



*Can also be summarized as: "Oh, God, respecting each other's humanity is such a pain in the ass! Do we really have to do this forever? Can't you all just lighten up so that I don't have to respect you any more? Isn't the whole point of coming together as one that I don't have to care what you think?" (Thank you, Jay Smooth.)
reileen: (art - paint jars)
It is, instead, going to an audition for an art instructional DVD on using colored pencils to enhance marker colors laid down on a drawing...only to get to the studio and realize that, hey, you left those colored pencils of yours at home!

Thank the Gods the studio happened to have a set of colored pencils that was apparently on loan to them from Prismacolor. Otherwise I wouldn't have been able to do much of anything besides hide in a corner. As it was, it appears that the audition went well - I wasn't nervous, and the director seemed really impressed with the fact that I possessed the ability to draw and talk at the same time. (lol.) I think I should hear back from the studio some time next week - they'll be meeting with Prismacolor reps on Monday and show them the demo footage they took of me and the other artists using their stuff. It was kind of odd - this was the first time I've actually gone out in real life under my Reileen nomer, as opposed to my real name. I did warn the director on the phone the other day that Reileen wasn't actually my real name, but I wonder if she remembers.

And, because I haven't posted too many links in a while, here's one that should appeal to the Greek mythology geeks out there. It might be hard to believe, but someone actually managed to take the tragic tale of Prometheus and turn it into the basis for a gag comic strip. Oh, yeah, I lol'd. Be sure to click on the title at the top of the page to get more comics. And then, of course, there's "advanced divine intervention"...

Also, the giant pink rabbit that can be seen from space. I imagine that this might baffle any aliens that are keeping an eye on the third stone from the sun.

October is Filipino-American Heritage Month! I wanted to do a big-ass link-o-llection about this, but now I'm tired and the month is halfway finished anyway. :( Maybe if I find some Rex Navarrete stuff...

In unhappier news, the banks are sinking in the land of the Rising Sun. "Origami Bank has folded, Sumo Bank has gone belly up and Bonsai Bank announced plans to cut some of its branches..."

I have a slightly unhealthy urge to re-organize my tags on this LJ.

-Reileen
but a-one step, two step, you fall behind
reileen: (art - paint jars)
(Slightly continued from this entry.)

Over the past few days, I've been e-mailing the director of this entire thing, bombarding her with questions galore about this thing. She eventually told me to just call her in the office on Monday afternoon. Which I did.

Things I've found out either today or over the course of e-mailing her:

-I'll be provided with a set of markers and colored pencils, etc., to use and practice with should I be chosen for the DVD. Although I'll still have to bring my own supplies for the casting call.

-Speaking of which, I've got an audition slot (for lack of a better term) on Thursday the 16th at 11:00am at their studio, which is apparently a block and a half east of the Chicago Brown Line stop. This works nicely, since my archaeology class gets out at 10:00am, so I can just head on over to the studio early and sit there and read until it's time for me to strut my stuff.

-The director suggested that I bring a half-finished drawing or something to work with for my audition so that I can show off and explain how I use Prismacolor products to achieve a desired effect. So now I should probably figure out what it is that I want to draw. Awesome - I've got exactly two days to remember how the fuck I use markers and colored pencils, since I haven't really used those media in, like, a year! *spazflail*

-Compensation is still up in the air because they're not sure how many artists they're going to be using, but the director said that it might be in the range between $1000-$2000. YES PLZ.

-I'm apparently the only student auditioning. Mwee? Is everyone else, like, 30-year-olds+ that already have an established arts career? Oh dear.

-The director is apparently having a really hard time finding professional American manga-style artists that are local to the Chicago area and who work in marker. (Seems like the artists she was finding were all Photoshop junkies? Looks like no one was doing original manga work in marker, lulz.) Furthermore, she's not overly familiar with the style, and she admitted to me over the phone that she didn't really know whether my stuff was close to animanga standards or not.

THINGS TO DO OVER THE NEXT FEW DAYS
Tonight: Archaeology lab report. Gonna be a bit tedious, but it's gotta be done.
Tomorrow: Japanese stuff. Trying to remember how to color and draw. Have to help my brother set up an online account at Chase.
Wednesday: Art history paper analyzing a work of art from our chosen period that's not in our textbook. Doing more art stuff.

-Reileen
I am an indestructible master of war
reileen: (writing - pen and notebook)
This Song Sucks

This song sucks
Oh, yeah, this song sucks
This song sucks
Oh, yeah, this song sucks

Well, I'm just your average girl
Giving this songwriting thing a whirl
But I know I'm not that good at it
And you think that it's a
Masterpiece of shit
And you're probably damn right about that

Yeah, so you're the biggest jackass I ever did see
But that won't change the fact that

This song sucks
Oh, yeah, this song sucks
It's full of cliched rhymes
And a dying frog could sing this better
Without even knowing all the lines
Seriously, that is how much
This song sucks

Now we're halfway through my crappy-ass song
I know I'm totally doing it wrong
Aren't you glad it's almost done?
It's just a test of the emergency
Broadcasting system of fun
But it looks like I failed this one

Even William Hung is better at this than me
And any old dumbass can plainly see that

This song sucks
Oh, yeah, this song sucks
It's full of cliched chords
That'll merge you with the Borg
I know that last line makes no sense
But I've already warned you that
This song sucks
This song sucks

Oh, yeah, this song sucks

***

An old high school classmate of mine recently tipped me off to this possible paying art gig:

Call for Artists – On-camera Video Demonstration

Angle Park is producing a series of three DVDs for our client, Prismacolor, a
leading purveyor of artist-quality products. Each DVD will feature a professional
artist demonstrating tips and techniques for using colored pencils, art markers,
and/or soft pastels.

Artists will be selected both on the strength of their portfolio and their ability to
demonstrate their own process and techniques using Prismacolor products. All
styles, genres, and subject matter are welcome, and in the case of works
produced with art markers, special consideration will be given to manga-styled
work.

Previous on-camera experience is not required, but to be considered for this
role, you must be available to provide a portfolio of your work and to attend an
initial casting session scheduled between Oct 15 – Oct 18, 2008. Upon
selection, you must also be available for several content development meetings
and a single full day shoot scheduled between Oct 27 – Nov 7, 2008, in the
Chicago area.

Selected artists will be compensated for their time, attention and genius. The
content of each video will be developed in cooperation between the artist,
Prismacolor, and Angle Park. The on-camera performances will be
extemporaneous, not require extensive scripting, and be focused entirely on
artistic technique, so “selling” will not be required.

Two minor problems:

1) I haven't drawn anything substantial in forever, never mind doing anything with traditional media;

2) I do use Prismacolor colored pencils, but I use Tria brand markers. Assuming I get chosen, will they lend me a set of Prismacolors to use on camera, or do I have to buy my own, or can I use my Trias and just demonstrate that I use the Prismacolor colored pencils to apply smooth shading gradients and textures to the drawing...?

But what the hey, it can't hurt to try. The Gods know I'm too much of a slacker to try and get a job where I have to do Real Live Work, so...

-Reileen
daylight is waiting, consciously fraying

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Reileen van Kaile

April 2010

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