Dog Eating Contest

Dog Eating Contest
Click picture to see movie

On Independence Day I sat in a bar watching a hot dog eating contest on T.V. Today, July 5, I read the following op-ed in the Washington Post by F. John Duresky, an Air Force captain stationed in Iraq. This is the U.S.A today. God help us.

Forgotten Sacrifice

By F. John Duresky

A few days ago, as I do every day in Iraq, I listened to the commander’s battle update. The briefer calmly and professionally described the day’s events. Somewhere in Iraq, on some forgotten, dusty road, an insurgent fighting an occupying army detonated an improvised explosive device (IED) under a Humvee, killing an American soldier. The briefer fielded a question from the general and moved to the next item in the update.

The day before that, in America, a 15-year-old’s incredibly rich parents planned the biggest sweet 16 party ever. They will spend more than $200,000 on an opulent event marking a single year in an otherwise unremarkable life. The soon-to-be-16 girl doesn’t know where Iraq is and doesn’t care. That same day an American soldier died in Iraq.

Two days earlier, a 35-year-old man went shopping for home entertainment equipment. He had the toughest time selecting the correct plasma screen; he could afford the biggest and best of everything. In the end, he had it installed by a specialty store. He spent about $50,000 on the whole system. He has never met anybody serving in the military nor served himself, but thinks we should “turn the whole place into a parking lot.” That day, another American soldier died in Iraq.

Three days earlier, some college students had a great kegger. There were tons of babes at the party, the music was awesome. Everybody got totally blitzed, and many missed class the next day. The young men all registered for the draft when they were 18, but even though our nation is at war, they aren’t the least bit worried about the draft. It is politically impossible to conscript young people today, we are told. That day, another American “volunteer” died in Iraq.

Four days earlier, a harried housewife looked all over town for the perfect accessory for her daughter’s upcoming recital. Her numerous chores wore her out, but she still found herself preoccupied. Her oldest son is having trouble in his first year of college, and he has been talking of enlisting in the Army. She is terrified that her child will go off to that horrible war she sees on TV. She and her husband decide to give their son more money so he doesn’t have to work part-time; maybe that will help with his studies. That day, another soldier died.

Yesterday millions of Americans celebrated Independence Day. They attended parties and barbecues. Families came together from all across the country to celebrate the big day. Millions of dollars were spent on fireworks. At public events, there were speeches honoring the people who served and those who made the ultimate sacrifice. These words mostly fell on bored ears. While the country celebrated its own greatness, other Americans were still fighting in Iraq.

Today Americans go back to their normal business. The politicians in Washington have made sure the sacrifices of the war are borne by the very smallest percentage of Americans. They won’t even change the tax rates to prevent deficits from running out of control. Future generations will pay the cost of this war.

Many Americans feel strongly about the war one way or another, but they aren’t signing up their children for service or taking the protest to the streets. What can they do? It is they whom we in the military trust to influence our leaders in Washington.

Today, as on every other day in Iraq, American servicemen are in very real danger. Our country is at war. Mothers, fathers, wives, husbands and children are worrying about their loved ones in a faraway land. They all hope he or she isn’t the one whose luck runs out today.

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The Face of Dow

The Face of Dow
Click picture to see movie

During the Undiscovered Country session at Vloggercon I noted that vlogging has changed the type of videos I make. This video is a good example of my mutated work process. I call a video like this a “quick hit” — I try to go from idea to finished product very quickly. This one sets a record – it was conceived after seeing a Dow Chemical Compay Advertisement on way home from work and completed in a few hours. In the past, I would have mulled over a video about Dow for weeks or longer, even after the idea for the attached video was secure in my head. With vlogging, I figure why wait. Make it, post it – maybe I’ll make a big important Dow video later, or maybe I won’t. In the meantime, this video is out there and, hopefully, it will encourage conversation.

Here are links for more information regarding the Dow Chemical Company.

Dow Site
Dow in Wikipedia
The Truth About Dow
Know More Dow Entry

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HVIC: California Sun Drop

HVIC: California Sun Drop
Click the picture to see the sun drop.

We had the wonderful pleasure of staying with dear friends in Oakland, California prior to Vloggercon. This video documents a delightfully drunken sunset in the Oakland hills. The groovy music in the video is straight from the mic on my camera. We were playing the great music site Dublab — Dublab is my late-afternoon-drinking stream of choice – check it out! I’d love to give the actual musicians credit, but I was far too over the bend to go check out the play list. So, drop me a comment or e-mail if you know the artists.

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Vloggercon Duet – Blakk/Olsen

Vloggercon Duet - Blakk/Olsen

I could scarcely believe my eyes — two of my favorite vloggers performing an unexpected duet: Lukas Blakk of Backinblakk and Chuck Olsen of Minnesota Stories doing karaoke – Lukas singing and Chuck doing an odd interpretive dance. This performance alone guaranteed that I will be back for Vloggercon 2007 . . . too bad it was only a dream. Click the picture to live the dream.

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HVIC: Take The Power (Vloggercon 2006)

HVIC: Take The Power (Vloggercon 2006)
Click the picture to see the movie.

This movie is an excerpt from the Net Neutrality Session at Vloggercon 2006. Adriana Cronin-Lukas of samizdata.net and bigblogcompany.net speaks to the changing attitude of big media toward bloggers and vloggers. Big Media is afraid because vloggers/podcasters/bloggers are new, powerful, agile, and hungry viruses on the media landscape. We are the future and big media is the past. Allowed to compete, new media will find a vast audience. The issue, of course, is whether the corporate elites will rig the game, snuffing out fair competition between independent Internet media and corporate media. The fight is beginning.

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Hopper Video In California (HVIC): June Snow Cabin

Hopper Video In California (HVIC): June Snow Cabin
Hello! I’m back from California and Vloggercon. Both were wonderful. We now embark on the journey of sorting through 5 hours of video to pull together 10 or 15 minuets of posts for you. Obviously, I like to edit. This post is a quick one about our entry to a really cool cabin near Lake Tahoe in which we spent the first weekend in June. Thanks to our dear friends Candice and Doug for getting the cabin for us. Click on the picture to play the movie.

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Hopper Video In California (HVIC): June Snow Cabin

Muhammad Ali Bug Killing Spray

Muhammad Ali Bug Killing Spray

My niece Sara is back! This time we are in search of archeological treasure . . . Muhammad Ali Bug Killing Spray. Will we find it? Click the picture to find out. Also, you can check out Sara’s other appearances on Hopper Video here and here.

Miss Gringa

Miss Gringa
(WARRNING VIDEO CONTAINS A PENIS)
Last night I read the sexism/objectification of women discussion on the yahoo vloggers group (just search “golf” if you are unfamiliar with the discussion). I thought I would join the discussion by sharing a video I made in the late 1990s. It chronicles an experience a friend of mine had involving sexual harassment in Venezuela. I juxtaposed her experiences with imagery from one of America’s “great” celebrations of sexism, the Miss America Pageant.

I believe that human beings inherently love beauty. The problem with our culture today is that we have fetishised a particular version of female beauty and elevated it above all other versions of beauty. So the fact that a person seeking a large audience attempts to recruit a mouthpiece that satisfies the current cultural fetish is not surprising. The question for all of us, as makers of media, is whether we want to be part of an effort to expand society’s conception of beauty or do we simply want to “play it as it lays” and cater to the current state of our cultural development.

This video pre-dates my vlogging days and is therefore longish (about 5 min./30 mb). So click the picture to see it and then busy yourself elsewhere during the lengthy download.

Peace,
Rob