Fan Ukrop's Bites the Dust

According to Jon Baliles on River City Rapids, the Ukrop's grocery store at Grace and Harrison by VCU is shutting down. I have mixed feelings about this.

On one hand, students and nearby residents are losing access to a Richmond business and now have to either shop at Kroger (blech) or drive (if they can) to Carytown to shop Ukrop's. On the other hand, while the Grace Street location was a dramatic improvement over Community Pride, the store was never quite up to snuff compared to other Ukrop's stores. In fact, even though I live on the south end of Seminary Ave., I typically drive to the Carytown location because of the better selection (especially produce).

Ah well, it was a grand experiment while it lasted, and an alternative to the cold confines of Kroger.

Registered

Photography class: confirmed.

Booyah.

Chatty Cathy

The Almighty Network Administrative Overreactors for my company have seen fit to block the chat portion of Gmail. Now I feel like I'm missing a life line to the outside world.

That's right, Corporate America. Keep showing your employees that you don't trust them to simply get their work done, and cover it up with the weak blanket response of "it's in the name of security."

Death By Chocolate

http://widgets.nbc.com/o/4727a250e66f9723/48020f0410eb0313

I guess Ashton Kutcher CAN be funny...when he keeps his mouth shut.

Tankathlon

olympic tank

The New York Times has a rather interesting slideshow featuring clever re-imaginings of the Olympic symbol for the sake of protest.

Dot's Back Inn

sign for dot's back inn
(image via Adam Currell on Flickr)


Tonight Valerie wanted to try something new for dinner, so we skipped our usual haunts and drove to Dot's Back Inn on MacArthur Ave., in the Bellevue area.

This place typifies the neighborhood hangout restaurant with its low roar of patrons, low lighting, and low prices for food. The requisite tin ceiling so prevalent in Richmond eateries was there, too, along with a well chosen and balanced selection of kitschy decorations. Since Dot's seemed to be a "regular place" I decided to try some "regular food": the steak and cheese sub plus an extra fifty cents to eat fries instead of potato chips.

I was well rewarded.

The steak was indeed steak - sirloin pounded thin and tender with real cheese melted over it on a lightly toasted sub roll. It was one of the tastiest steak sandwiches I've eaten in ages. And the fries! They were a fine surprise. These were no sticks-o-starch. No, these were thin slices of potato cut in half before deep frying. Crispy, tasty, and clearly made today. I finished off my dining with a slice of homemade (from a nearby bakery, I'm guessing) chocolate pie. Capital!

This is just the sort of restaurant that makes me happy to live and eat in Richmond.

Sean Wood

isolation

Ever since I got Dave into Flickr he's been digging through all the pictures he can find. Several days ago he discovered Sean Wood, an Aussie living in Tokyo, Japan. This guy is incredible.

The earliest of his posted work on Flickr comes from his DSLR, but the vast majority of his work lately is made up of film shots taken with medium format, rangefinder, and panoramic cameras. I've never been so inspired by what's possible with film as I have after looking at these. Additionally, with both film and digital, Wood has exceptional talent for capturing candid moments of genuine human expression.

He's highlighted a subset of his work on his beautifully simple (yet unfortunately slow) website, 50mm, where you can see the images much larger than allowed on Flickr.

Rookie Mistake

Wow...you'd think I've never done this before...

My earlier attempt at farting out a post for the sake of it backfired. It turns out I created a "page" rather than a post. And only just now realized it. So it's gone.

Good riddance, too, since I finally got my act together so late at night to deliver a real post (the one prior to this) anyway.

The Melloman

I can't recall for the life of me where I originally saw this, but this gentleman built his own Mellotron from the carcasses of old Sony Walkmen. He has sound samples, and a link to a "making of" page as well.

Kick their baby teeth in.

How many fiver-year-olds could YOU take in a fight?

28

The A.V. Club Interviews The MythBusters

That most excellent website, The A.V. Club, has an interview with original MythBusters Jamie Hyneman and Adam Savage. It's interesting to see how little they expected of the show at the time the the filmed the pilots. The whole thing is well worth the read.

Jake's Getting Married!

One of my best friends, Jacob Kelly, is getting married in September! Congratulations, home slice. I think I owe you a brew. Or several.

The fact that he's asked me to be his best man (a grand honor indeed) means this will be the TWELFTH wedding other than my own where I'm in the wedding party. I'm pretty well practiced at this point :-)

Video on Flickr

Well, well, well. Flickr now has video.

While the interface, on the surface, seems to borrow heavily from Vimeo I must say that their implementation concept is pretty interesting. They only allow clips up to 90 seconds so as to maintain the idea of "long photos" or "slices of life." I'm not too happy with the default auto-playing behavior (which CAN be switched off) or how long it takes to make the clip full screen, but it DID just launch. As a Pro member, I'll be keeping my eye on this...

There Will Be DVD

After work, I'll head straight to Best Buy to purchase There Will Be Blood since it's released to DVD today. I can't recommend this movie enough if you haven't seen it already.

Schnitzel on Rails (metal ones, at least)

Apparently the Germans aren't known for good service in restaurants, but it looks like 's Baggers restaurant in Nuremberg has solved that problem by removing the wait staff entirely.

This clever eatery provides touchscreen ordering and service via steel rails. You really have to check out the video at the top of this BBC article to get an idea of how cool this looks.

"Autobots on aisle five..."

optimus prime made out of cans

Matt Boulton put the above picture of this righteous creation on Flickr. He has, in fact, an entire set devoted to objects made from dry goods, commissioned by the Vancouver Food Bank as part of an event called Canstruction.
(via Serious Eats)

Little Donuts of Light

donut shaped bokeh

You familiar with a reflector telescope? You know, mirrors and lenses instead of simply lenses? That sort of system is called catadioptric, and several manufacturers also build camera lenses in this fashion. The methodology allows for long focal lengths at significant size reduction than traditional all-lens assemblies.

A really interesting side effect, however, is the donut-shaped bokeh visible on out-of-focus portions of resulting photographs. This is because of the secondary mirror in the center of the front portion of the lens. While the Wikipedia entry claims it's unpleasant, several photographers on Flickr seem quite adept at using this "flaw" as an advantage, as in the above picture from Julio Jiménez. Just run a search for "catadioptric bokeh" to find some other cool examples.

Pigeon John on La Blogotheque

http://www.dailymotion.com/swf/x4q3t9


Patrick, Trey, this one's for you guys (assuming you didn't already know about it).  One of my favorite music websites, La Blogotheque, has a feature up on their Take Away Shows page on Pigeon John, and he was gracious enough to do four videos with them.

A Film Less Interesting

It's Saturday and I'm still sick, so while my mother-in-law went out with Valerie to look at bathroom furnishings I decided to finally try out Hulu. Now enough has already been said about this video service that I don't wish to dilute the stream any further. I'd rather talk about the first film I watched: A Life Less Ordinary.

I have to be honest - the only two reasons I decided to check this film out before hand were because I knew Beck had a song on the soundtrack ("Deadweight") and I had a vague notion that it was some non-mainstream movie when it was released. I've since found out it was directed by Danny Boyle, of Trainspotting and 28 Days Later fame. While A Life Less Ordinary certainly reflects Boyle's good direction, the story ends up feeling flat.

A love story at its core, the movie features two angels tasked with setting up two humans to fall in love on earth. There are some rather surreal and strange events along the way that make the movie feel as if it's trying to channel Raising Arizona, but ultimately the ending feels too predictable and the story too thin to warrant high praise.

3/5

On a side note, I hope Hulu can expand its full-length film offerings. This was a great way for me to check out a movie that I was on the fence about without wasting a slot on my Netflix queue.

99

Married To The Sea

I guess everybody's gotta post about a comic from Married to the Sea, so here's one of my favorites in a long time.

My Autumn's Done Come


My Autumn's Done Come from Philip Bloom on Vimeo.

Excepting an unfortunate choice to use Eccentric Std for the typeface of the titles, this short makes me smile in a melancholy way.

Logo Study: The Momentum Group

Maybe it's a bit pretentious of me to call it a "logo study" since I'm no designer, but I AM analyzing a logo (in my own way, for what it's worth).

Anyway, Valerie was perusing furniture upholstery choices on the website for The Momentum Group yesterday, and I couldn't help but notice how pleasant their logo and brand name are:

momentum group logo

The two things that stand out most are perhaps the most obvious. First the symbol, shaped as a modernistic line drawing of a ball of yarn, contains a subtle "M" within its confines. Second, the brand name is rendered in one of my favorite typefaces, Gill Sans.

Quite a nice effort, I think, though I can't seem to find anything about who designed it (I'll assume for now it was internal).

Weasel Stomping Day

When you know that Weird Al Yankovic wrote the song, do you really need further explanation?

http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docId=8710797866388017148&hl=en

Ill Communication

This is the second day that I'm staying home sick. Yesterday I went in to the office but left around 9:30. I've got some vicious cough that's loud enough to be heard in a 30 foot radius, and my voice is going.

I think the only place I'm going today is Walgreens to pick up some Mucinex.

Shooting Film in Paris

accordian player on the metro

I finally have my film pictures from Paris, and let me tell you...I still can't shoot to save my life in overcast weather. I only uploaded 14 of 246 pictures. Sure, there are some other okay ones, but either Valerie took a better digital version, or my picture was just too boring.

I must say, the anxiety of shooting that many rolls without knowing how they're going to turn out is tremendous. This makes me want to take that class (and eventually get a DSLR) all the more.