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February 25, 2006

i know that train station

who knew my hometown was such a hotbed of parkour?

i know i should embed the youtube player thing in here but i'm just not ready for that kind of blogging yet.

here's the link.

http://www.youtube.com/?v=ZwTSKsF1qFk

February 20, 2006

podcast #18 is online

For the past month I've wanted to do an audio comments podcast. That show is now online. There's some audio comment goodness in this one. And I talk about a weird personal health issue.

download the mp3
subscribe to the feed
podcast archives

Audio Comment Line - 206.666.2726. Call now to leave an audio comment for me to use on the show! That number again is 206.66-MARC-6.

February 17, 2006

Sometimes Internet Publishing is Too Easy

I know it's ridiculous, but my bocce team, COFFEE FLATS TERRORS, has a blog. So do the folks in If You Want My Bocce.

Both teams play Saturday at Floyd, but not against each other.

February 11, 2006

podcast #17 is online

The podcast from day two of the Fall 2005 Bocce Tournament is now online! Click the link below to download the audio. It features plenty of interviews, strategy talk and a few live calls from various games as the Coffe Flats Terrors march toward the finals.

download the mp3
subscribe to the feed
podcast archives

Audio Comment Line - 206.666.2726. Call now to leave an audio comment for me to use on the show! That number again is 206.66-MARC-6.

*FYI, the podcast file has been updated. It now includes the 6 minutes that didn't exist in the download between midnight and noon. Please check your podcast engine and make sure you've got the newest version!

February 10, 2006

On Vacations & Relaxation

Recently DF posted his thoughts about his stay at a fake lodge on the outskirts of Kansas City. Experiencing a made up retreat filled with sanitized notions of fun, relaxation and vacation scarred him. And he can't stop thinking about it. Since reading his post, I can't stop thinking about it, either. And thinking about it just makes me ask more questions.

Is DF overreacting? I don't think so. The conflict he brings up is very real. And it's one that a lot of us face in this format or one that's similar. What makes for a real experience? How does one deal with the guilt of spending extravagant amounts of money for the same "manufactured" experience that hundreds of others experience every weekend? Do some people even confront this issue?

I think I've seen a Great Wolf Lodge, or something similar to it. Two years ago while traveling across Michigan, some friends and I pulled into a chain restaurant for a late breakfast / early lunch. Across the street, and right off the highway, was a massive hotel structure with a giant water park. It was strange. We'd been traveling for hours, surrounded by trees and other aspects of "nature." Out of the blue, a "destination" spot appeared. How close were we to The Dells, a more traditional Michigan vacation spot?

I should be upfront about my biases. A trip to a museum is not my idea of a vacation. I don't have children and I'm not sure I'm currently capable of handling that lifestyle. I can't imagine what it would be like to spend my time planning how those children are going to use their time. I expect I'd become one of those parents who takes his child to museums, but the hand-on touch-the-horseshoe crab-type museums. I'm okay with that. I went to those types of museums as a kid. But I also spent two summers working at a theme park. I still have memories of receiving a plastic wallet card and being told to memorize the corporation's "mission statement." I read websites about the newest technologies and I wonder how I can incorporate those items into my life. I like shopping for and buying expensive toys.

I also want to mention a trip last summer in which a few friends and I found ourselves in Las Vegas for twenty-four hours. DF compares the fake lodge with its indoor, climate-controlled water park to Vegas. I couldn't wait to get to "sin city." I craved the gambling. I wanted to face my reaction to such a manufactured environment. The idea of giant hotels created for the express concern of taking me "out of my day to day reality" (as my Kings Dominion mission statement used to put it) was as exciting as it was repulsive. Was it going to be a day of "forced fun" or were there moments of real joy and entertainment to be had? Were those feelings going to be the result of the environment or the result of interacting with good friends?

After three hours in the big hotel casinos, the urge to visit the seedier, older casinos took hold. And from there, I wanted to see the low-rent casinos, the casinos where the Vegas regulars play. Driving from the strip to the outskirts of town was a quiet thrill. How is the very recently constructed Las Vegas just like the rest of our "fast food nation?" And what are the tiny things that make it different? Besides the glitz and glamour of our very expensive hotel, which was designed to look like a fake New York City, what made Vegas Vegas? I don't have the answers to those questions. I was also interested in playing craps, and my urge to gamble usually wins out over my urge to pretend at being an "urban explorer."

I could go on at length about my interest in towns and what I want to see and the oddities of what makes those small towns or large cities tick, but I want to get back to the bigger questions DF's post has me asking. None of these questions are original. Most of them have been discussed in books and on the internet ad infinitum. I guess this is why blogs are here, so that each of us can join in on "the conversation."

DF alludes to this, but I'm not sure it came through as loud and clear as it could have, "what sort of culture do we want from out lives?"

How does the notion of spending time with our families play into that?

How has our relationship as individuals and nuclear families changed with the increasing geographic distance between extended families?

Do individuals have too much free time on their hands or not enough?

How has global connectivity and shared knowledge changed our perception of ourselves and our "rank" with the others in our lives?

What role does technology play?

Besides identifying these issues, when do we start asking questions that change our habits? How can we go about changing our habits (if we do, indeed, need to make changes)? What other options are out there? Is a vacation to a "real" mountain lodge, nestled by a lake an option for everyone?

How does the sheer number of people in the country alter destination choices?

Is the need to spend vacation time in cramped, artificial spaces an inherent need to reconnect with humanity because we spend so much of our day-to-day private time within the confines of our McMansions?

With regards to parenting, how have priorities changed over the last half-century? Twenty-five years? Decade? Is there too much structure? Too much parenting? Too many options? How does that alter the way parents, and consequently children, perceive relaxation and vacation?

And that's where I start on the topic. What comes next? Do I want to try to answer these questions in subsequent blog entries? Have I had so much exposure to TGIFridays and the like that I feel hopeless about the answers to many of these questions?

UPDATE (2/14/06): Matt Zoller Seitz's take on Disney World. It adds to the conversation in an interesting way, suggesting the merits of large scale productions being personal and conforming to childhood visions.

February 07, 2006

Mildly Recent Del.icio.us Links

If you're not plugged into the feed of my del.icio.us links, you're missing out. Of course, you're not missing much sense I happily re-post most of those links below:

New York City Parks/Parks and Recreation: NYC Bocce Courts
a note for spring
I did some searching around on Google maps. We're going to have to travel around a bit to get to some of these. I'd like to figure out how a bunch of us can go and really get some playing time to ourselves. Maybe we should go soon during a warm-ish weekend.

ESPN.com - MLB - New skipper Girardi: No facial hair for Marlins
I am 100% against this policy. And what's with the shaving of Quarterback Ben's beard on Letterman? Can't people chill out about facial hair?

Strange New Products
i'm finding tiny little bits of happiness from this website

It was a boojum: Curling like me
One of the guys from Off The Wall (a local bocce team) tries his hand at curling.

TheMirl.com - "Enter Sandman" - Wagner & Rivera!!!
(via Ducksnorts) New Mets closer Billy Wagner uses the same intro music as Yankee Mariano Rivera! Spring's going to be interesting.

(BW) ``BUBBLE'' Grosses Estimated $5 Million in Opening Weekend with Day-and-Date Strategy | Chron.com - Houston Chronicle
"$2,250 per screen average" - that sounds very low. i would love to see more info about how the simultaneous platforms affected theater-going.

Kansas City Star | 01/15/2006 | The passion’s out there
A few Royals go on a road show. "Affeldt and Brown look exhausted...One thing that does impress everyone is that the trash containers in the mall all have automatic doors that open when you walk up." via Bad Altitude

Popular Transit (Diana Eng's blog)
scroll down to Jan 11 and read "Project Runway Reflections Some thoughts on how Project Runway has changed my life"

TVgasm - The OC: If You Love Something, Set It Free
i can't read this many words. i doubt you can. just scroll down for the "'hey!' count."
I've been loving The OC quite a bit lately. My DVR went all wonky during the last five minutes of last week's episode. Those were the five minutes promoted by Fox as THE FIVE MINUTES YOU CAN'T MISS. I missed them. My friend and I went online looking for a recap. Where do you go when you need a recap of a TV show one hour after it airs on the east coast? I wanted full details involving quoted lines and expressions and a fair level of observation by a group of people just like me. No dice. Perhaps it's time to resume the meetings of the post-OC club?

file : the collection - commuter 02
a plainly gorgeous photo

AaronGleeman.com - Weight Loss (Day 1)
Looks like Aaron Gleeman (of The Hardball Times and elsewhere) is getting a few week jump on Will Carroll. Is there something in the baseball writing air?

The Year of Living Chemically: Part One
Will Carroll of Baseball Prospectus starts a weight-loss blog. I'll admit to being intrigued. I like his writing and it will be an interesting follow-up to THE JUICE. I imagine there's a whole slew of other weight-loss blogs out there, right? And they always start in Jan.

And that's what the internet looked like to me this past January.

February 06, 2006

New Look

A few things are being update around here. During the next few days my blog will have a look evolved a tiny bit from this current look and all the links, etc. will be restored.

In the meantime, I've updated my DVR Blog (Regarding Recording Television). In it, I list some of the shows I plan to record this upcoming week, including SIMON AND SIMON on SleuthTV!