More fun……..
thanks for sending me that link Amy
Posted in creativity, from the viewing room, video on August 21, 2007| Leave a Comment »
Posted in from the viewing room, life, movies, personal growth, psychology, video on August 14, 2007| 3 Comments »
Daniel Gilbert says in his book, Stumbling on Happiness, that research shows us that people regret the things they DON’T do much more than they regret the things that they do.
Do you agree? Do you think you’re more likely to regret what you DON’T do…..maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow, but soon and for the rest of your life?
Posted in education, from the viewing room, science, video on August 14, 2007| Leave a Comment »
If you like nature programmes, or enjoy bird-watching, this site – birdcinema.com will be a treat for you.
It’s kind of a Youtube for videos of and about birds!
Posted in from the viewing room, movies, video on August 13, 2007| Leave a Comment »
I used to struggle to get a VHS recorder to record a movie using the timer. Oh, I won’t go into the details. It was just often a pain. When I got a dvd recorder with my new big screen I thought it’d be better. Well it was. But only kind of. Still quite a pain. So I swapped it for a hard disk recorder. Oh joy! It’s so EASY! In fact it’s so easy, there are now lots of movies on there that I haven’t watched yet! But that in its own way can be such a serendipitous delight. Came home from work today and browsed the hard drive. Pressed play when I got to An Ideal Husband. What a treat!
This is such a great movie. It delighted me. I loved the humour, I loved the wit, and I loved the acting. Great cast. I don’t think I’ve seen Minnie Driver do anything better (well, at least as good as her role in Good Will Hunting) Julianne Moore is tremendous in it but Rupert Everett is just the best!
There are so many great lines. Here’s a couple of my favourites
To love oneself is the beginning of a lifelong romance.
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To look at a thing is quite different from seeing a thing, and one does not see anything until one sees its beauty
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Lord Arthur Goring: I am glad you have called. I am going to give you some advice.
Laura: Oh pray, don’t. One should never give a woman something that she can’t wear in the evening.
This is one of those movies that lifts your heart. You know, sometimes we need a movie like that does that. But more than that this a movie where, due to the brilliance of Oscar Wilde, portrays rich and complex characters. There’s nobody two-dimensional here. Even the characters which seem like caricatures at first meeting are revealed to be much more complex than they first appear. I like that. It reminds me why it’s important not to judge – everyone who rushes to judgement in this story discovers how wrong they’ve been once they see a little more. There is a great little video trailer of the movie here
Posted in creativity, from the viewing room, video on August 12, 2007| 2 Comments »
This is quite the funniest and most original and creative video I’ve ever seen on youtube.
If you’re feeling in need of a good laugh, watch this…….
Posted in creativity, from the music room, from the reading room, health, life, video on August 11, 2007| 2 Comments »
Last weekend’s Sunday Herald carried an article about Edwyn Collins. The headline spread over two pages was “I’m happy basically….but before my stroke, I wasn’t really”. Well, as you might imagine, that caught my attention.
Edwyn Collins is a singer. You maybe remember his 1994 hit “A girl like you”
Just over couple of years ago, aged 44, he suffered a stroke. A serious stroke, paralysing his right side and taking away his speech. But here’s a man who doesn’t give up. Through determined rehab with incredible loving support from his wife he’s not only singing again but is about to release a new album. Although right handed he’s also taught himself how to draw again using his left hand! It’s an amazing interview.
I have a stroke to deal with. But I’m feeling positive. And feeling relaxed, and generally focussed on things. I’m relaxed and dreaming all the time. So my life is happy at the moment. I feel connected. I feel alive again.
His wife adds
I think you’re a better tempered person. You cope. And you have patience. And you’re not self-pitying at all. You’re not even depressed………We’ve got so much to feel…….
and Edwyn finishes her sentence
…..to feel grateful for.
Well, what do you think? Health and the absence of disease are not the same. It’s wrong of us to write people off who have a chronic illness or disability. You can experience “health” in both the absence and the presence of disease.
This is a story of someone who believes their life got better through the experience of recovery from illness (same kind of story Lance Armstrong tells in his autobiography, It’s Not About the Bike). Notice the elements of Edwyn’s story. All of these were involved, sorry, are involved in his recovery –
Worth thinking about?
Finally, when I searched for him on youtube I first found A Girl Like You but then I found this – I’m sorry I can’t show that video clip here, the person who posted it to youtube has disabled embedding but please follow that link and listen to the lyrics. “Make Me Feel Again” was recorded in 1993. Don’t you think that’s amazing?
Posted in from the music room, from the viewing room, music, video on August 4, 2007| Leave a Comment »
Now the trombone is not an instrument I have much affection for but this little animation I found on youtube is immensely pleasing and the music is by the Voodoo Trombones – on this track they sound like a Carribean flavoured variety of Lemonjelly
Makes you want to dance, lifts your heart……
Posted in creativity, from the viewing room, movies, science, video on August 2, 2007| 4 Comments »
The movie {Proof} starring Gwyneth Paltrow, Anthony Hopkins and Jake Gyllenhaal got me thinking (well, there’s a surprise you might say!) It got me thinking about a number of issues. Here’s a couple of them.
How do you prove anything? The basis of the scientific method is (according to Popper) falsification. He meant that nothing can be proven but testing can reveal a hypothesis to be false – and so science progresses, coming up with more and more robust hypotheses which are harder to disprove. Of course, in mathematics, advances are made by writing “proofs” which are solutions to puzzles or dilemmas I suppose (don’t ask me, I’m not a mathematician!). A key part of this movie is how to show who actually wrote the groundbreaking “proof” – the father (Robert), or the daughter (Catherine)? What’s the solution? Well, can it be shown that the daughter could NOT have written the proof? If that can’t be shown, then her claim to have written it can gain strength.
OK, I know, that all sounds pretty convoluted. Don’t let that put you off. This is an intriguing and engaging movie, and not at all hard work!
So that’s the first theme – how do we know what we know? How can we ever be sure of anything?
The second one is the theme of how our traits, skills, and qualities come from our roots, from our origins. We can see qualities in ourselves that seem inherited and we can see some of our qualities in our children. We don’t start with a blank sheet, but neither do we start with a fully written script. We make our lives our own and each and every one of us is unique and different but there are threads that run through us which trail way, way back into other people’s pasts. Catherine seems destined to carry forward her father’s work having inherited his mathematical genius but she hopes she has not also inherited his madness. When her father dies, her challenge is to become herself in her own right. This reminded me of Kieslowski’s Blue.
In “Blue” Kieslowski considers how loss creates the possibility of new beginnings. The main character, Julie, loses her husband and her daughter in a car crash in the opening scenes of the movie and her way of dealing with her grief is to try to rid herself of all memories and connections with them. She tries to start again. But there’s no such thing as a clean sheet. Deleuze showed that we are in a continuous process of becoming and that in every present there is the past and the future. Interestingly, in “Blue” there is also the question of exactly who created a work. In this case, who composed the great music – Julie, or her husband? How can we know?
{Proof} also made me think about what it’s like for two people to create together and how, when it works well, what is created can NOT be attributed solely to one person. Yes, sure, an individual can sit alone and create, but something different manifests itself when the creative process is shared. I think that’s a good example of why its important to know a person within the contexts and connections of their life.
Here’s a fanvid of {Proof} – clips set to “I think I’m Paranoid”, by Garbage
And here are the last few scenes of Trois Couleurs; Bleu
Posted in creativity, from the music room, music, video on August 1, 2007| 1 Comment »
To become the hero of your own life you need to express your uniqueness and your creativity. Without uniqueness you disappear as one of the many. Without creativity you don’t express yourself and you don’t give to the world.
Here are two of my most favourite music videos. Both of them have uniqueness and creativity by the bucketload!
(just in case you are wondering, the first one is Around the World by Daft Punk, and the second one is OK Now with their amazing dance to Here It Goes Again)
Posted in from the viewing room, video on July 14, 2007| 2 Comments »
Tonight I went to see the firework display over La Cite, Carcassonne.
Here’s the closing sequence captured on my K800i mobile phone
The display is known as L’Embrasement
Some of the photos I took are here