Wednesday, October 26, 2011

10/26 Lab Assignment

Prompt: Think of three different ways—other than print—to tell a story. (We’ll assume that your piece has a print component.) Give a descriptive one-paragraph summary for each. Post idea by the end of class.



Three different ways of telling what story?? How can you tell a story in an atypical way? I ended up thinking of stories in my life that loaned themselves to different mediums of expression in the first place. Phone conversation, prayer, chat/email.


Phone-based

1) My friend from Kazakhstan was arrested in May for an expired visa, and it took her international friends - an Indian, a Syrian, a Russian, and I, the American, a month to find her and get her out. I can consider it a story because it was a confusing situation, with a lot of quirky detail in spite of the seriousness, and it has elements to it that lend themselves to narrative. There was a strict chronology of things: the day of arrest, the day of release, the day I learned where she was, the days I met her in prison, the days I met the lawyer, the day we finally paid the bail bond amount, etc.


What strikes me most about that story is that most of the affair was directed by phone calls. The day she was arrested, I couldn't reach her by phone, and a few days later, another friend confirmed she wasn't answering her phone - since the past week.

-I called her employers (one revealed to me that he learned she was arrested)

-I called local prisons

-I called immigration lawyers, to whom I yelled, hysterically, because they couldn't tell me where she was

-I called an immigration service line (the proper name escapes me at the moment)

-I called the prison phone lines again and again to learn that she was there, the visiting hours, etc.

-I needed to purchase an account with a service that would enable me to receive calls from my friend - installments of $25, to receive precious few minutes of her telling me important information like her registered alien number.

-I called the lawyers

-I called her friends,


It became necessary for me to contact a Russian friend of a friend, because my detained friend's family in Kazakhstan began messaging me through Facebook out of concern, and they couldn't be satisfied with my adjusted English. I asked this Russian girl to interpret between us.


But if it were to be told in an atypical format, I would definitely make use of the phone numbers. The prison phone numbers, the immigration service hotline - those are definitely public. Unfortunately and obviously, I don't have exact transcripts, except for perhaps the Facebook messages in Russian and English. As a non-fiction writer, could I reimagine the phone conversations, if, theoretically, I could get the right people to approve? As time goes by, I'm starting to forget details.

Nevertheless, would I tell the story like a series of phone transcripts, like the recordings of police transcripts? Could I reinvent those conversations by recording audio? Even with spoken Russian.


BUT

I don't usually tell this story, it's kind of personal, it's not a conversation that's easily introduced or told. And it's not something that should be so dramatic. There was no hero, we all just had to work together to get her out, and painfully, we made her wait for us to figure it out. And I don't think it's something I could or should sell in any sense.


Prayer-based

2) I could definitely arrange a diary of different stories. When I was younger, I used to be a zealous Christian, and I wrote in a prayer journal, as some Christian institutions encourage - desperate prayers that were always miserable. I suppose a story could be told as a series of prayers that tell the story of someone's struggle with faith, even if it ends in atheism (how would one illustrate that?? Prayers getting progressively shorter, or angrier). I still have zealous Christian friends who could make their own project of it. And on the subject of prayer as a story, there are all the archaic visuals of prayer beads, stained glass, statues, pews, Latin chanting/singing, ringing bells. Such a story could be audible.. But I suppose that this route of a story has already been done to death - visit a Christian bookstore. But if there's the right level of skepticism, doubt, and denial, that might be more compelling, I think, at least in my own worldview. Besides this, prayer is done differently in different countries.



Chat/Email-based

3) I know full well that most of my communication is definitely text based. I know there are other published works that are arranged as chat transcripts and emails. To build on this, perhaps one would have to really make a collage of various things.

Can you narrate a relationship with a person as more than chat conversations - the emails someone couldn't send because it was too personal how they felt, letters you scribbled in a notebook, pictures you saved on a computer, pictures of social network account profiles. I suppose this has all been done before.


No, this is unoriginal. And dumb.




I guess what this exercise encouraged most was for me to consider the idea of portraying correspondence, with others and or with oneself. Perhaps that's also the nature of social media world: People go back and forth between each other so quickly while so far apart. This is not a new idea. But, it's probably good I considered it for a lab.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

What Organizations I am Following on Facebook and Why

This is a late assignment..

Because of this class, I am now learning how to use Facebook as a business and news tool rather than as low level intelligence gathering about (stalking) personal friends. And that's definitely the more forward-thinking way of using it.

At first, I became rather upset by my disenchantment with Facebook. But I've also realized that Facebook has even more opportunities for me. Instead of using it as a personal microphone - I no longer feel the urge to share personal pictures and status messages into an impersonal feed which resembles Twitter - I'm learning how to use Facebook as a personal device for collecting information that extends beyond my immediate communities.

This is especially true if I'm putting myself into communities of writers'.

Here's the list of Nonfiction-related "Likes" I've made on Facebook:


-I previously expressed an appreciation for the magazine as something I grew up with, and how famous it is for publishing articles on science and world cultures. I'm particularly impressed with how National Geographic uses Facebook to throw out hooks for readers by posting links to their articles within the website.

-I was told explicitly to subscribe to this account. However it has become interesting and valuable as a tool to discover literary events in the writing communities at my college and in Pittsburgh. I'll have to make better use of it somehow.

-This was Frank Warren's project to collect anonymous postcards of personal secrets and compile them into books (see www.postsecret.com). It's sickeningly intimate and interesting.
I used to follow the website religiously, like a Christian too, considering that it updates every Sunday. But now I can better access their upcoming events and activities through Facebook.

-I subscribed to this because I was trying to look for a basic tool and basic collective of people trying to promote writers and writing. It boasts of a reputation for networking writers, and I'll try to pay attention to their feed of suggestions, if I might find some good ones.

-A literary journal I read for a non-fiction class at Pitt. I particularly recall how Tin House was famed for organizing writing workshops and presenting new writers and poets in their magazine. Perhaps this would be a good literary journal to follow for a student like me.


-This is a nonprofit online magazine sponsored by City of Asylum/Pittsburgh, a nonprofit organization that gives refuge to certain exiled writers. I also intern there. Honestly, though, I don't actually read the magazine as much as I should, although this Facebook account will make it more convenient to do so.

As with Twitter, I need to build my account with more sources like these..
I ought to continue finding and subscribing to more pages..

In Class Lab: 48 Hour Magazine, with class group


Made with Zachary, Quinn, Sam., and I :

Our 48-hour Magazine

What I've Learned

Cover:
It will be styled to look like a notebook with handwritten font.

Content:
Some smaller articles to begin coupled with essays about a wide range of topics dealing with lessons learned (ex: 'What I Learned in College').
Classrooms
Teaching
Personal stories
Talents
Family/Traditions/Crafts

Feature Article (sponsored?) - in-depth piece on the educational climate in Homewood Neighborhood, Pittsburgh, PA.
Commentary on schools in Pittsburgh ('Did you know: Barack Obama Elementary School')

Art: for an article such as the Homewood piece, it would be more aesthetically pleasing to have graphics of the neighborhood (gritty, raw photography). And for the lighter articles a mixture of cartoons, photography, and assorted quotes about what they have learned.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Studying Social Media: Slate Magazine, Grantland.com

Task: Find as many social-media pages for Slate Magazine and Grantland.com as you can find.

This assignment was definitely a bit of a learning experience for the definition and uses of "social media." For me the assignment became less straight-forward as I went. I realize that there are so many ways of transmitting and sharing information besides broadcasting through industrial media, a term I learned just recently.

And every time I go down this rabbit hole and however familiar I might come to be with Internet Wonderland (that metaphor was a little forced, and a little cliche wasn't it?) it's still overwhelming.

I suppose there's also an interesting contradiction between the immediacy of accessing and posting information, and the long term interests of identity, intimacy, and relationships that people seek through sharing comments and making profiles. Perhaps that is what is tiring. Trust is something developed, you don't express it with

Or perhaps I lack the proper perspective.

It helps to think that social media is not a new phenomenon, just a new way of doing old phenomenon - communication. Nikola Tesla predicted the advent of cell phones (My new habit - because of this class and my internship - is to look for a citation, but I won't. If you haven't heard the fact before, you're just going to have to trust me.) I respect the integrity value of journalists, but do we really have to cite everything? Where do reporters or bloggers draw that line? I suppose it's to do with common sense.

Enough rambling.

Honestly, professor, I'm trying to find a balance between writing out my thoughts, and being obnoxious, which is actually something I strive not to be. "Language is a stream that is sure to smack of a mingled soil." ~ George Eliot

THE ASSIGNMENT

For the assignment, I first visited the main pages of the websites, and the definition of "social media" on Wikipedia. And here are the lists:

SLATE MAGAZINE

-Official Website: www.slate.comLink-Official Twitter: twitter.com/#!/Slate
-Official Facebook: www.facebook.com/slate

Now that we've covered the basics:

Social media for audio:
-www.slate.com/podcasts.html
-www.lastfm/music/Slate+Magazine
-www.podbean.com/provider?id=37

Social media for video:
-www.slatetv.com
-www.youtube.com/user/slatester
-www.slate.com/articles/video.htmlLink

Social media for mobile devices:
Slate can be available through iTunes, Kindle, Blackberry, iPad, and iPhone:
Links to all of these can be taken through here, under "Get Slate":
http://www.slate.com/id/85223

Social media for home subscription:
RSS feed:
-feeds.slate.com/slate
(and through this assignment I learned what an RSS is..)
-Newsletter signup:
-synd.slategrouptech.com/signup/
-http://mobile.slate.com


GRANTLAND.COM

-Official Website: www.grantland.com
-Official Twitter: www.twitter.com/#!/Grantland33
-Official Facebook: www.facebook.com/grantland33

Now that we've covered the basics:

-Social media for audio:
-www.grandland.com/podcasts
-www.last.fm/music/Grantland+Network

-Social media for video:
-I found a video advertisement here:


Intimidating, isn't it?

-Social media for mobile devices:
-I wasn't able to find any direct mention.. I don't own any Apple products either..

-Social media for home subscription:
-www.grantland.com/feed
-www.mcsweeneys.net/grantland

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Who I Am Following on Twitter and Why

I realized in class that I had neglected to make a post about my following list on Twitter, and that I still have more people and organizations to add. I thought I must make this kind of post.

Currently I am following 20 accounts.

1. NYTimesThomasFriedman -Thomas L. Friedman
A New York Times columnist and three time Pulitzer prize winning author, Thomas Friedman
specializes in foreign correspondence, especially regarding the Middle East. My father read his
work extensively and once loaned me his book From Beirut to Jerusalem, the story of his time
as a journalist in both cities in the 90s. I subscribe to him because he is so reputable and
because I was interested in his work of foreign correspondence. I am not so ambitious, but
I would like to know once in a while of what he might inform me.

2. RSF_RWB - Reporters Without Borders (Reporters Sans Frontiรจres)
An NGO dedicated to preserving freedom of the press by reporting on journalists who have
been threatened, imprisoned, or even killed because of their work in countries all over the
world. I was told to subscribe to this organization because of my internship for Sampsonia
Way, an online magazine which exists for the same purpose (www.sampsoniaway.org).

3. Ramy Raoof
Apparently he's the editor for the Egyptian Blog for Human Rights, and as such tweets about
human rights violations, particularly regarding the Middle East, and other related topics.
Again, I was told to subscribe to him by of my internship.

4. PittWriters
A Twitter account made for the writers and writing programs from the University of
Pittsburgh, which I attend, and which I was told to subscribe to by my English class.

5. lolrebear - Reba
Former classmate, current housemate, distant friend.

6. Colson Whitehead
Nonfiction author who wrote an article that my English class read. I liked the article very
much and he's amusing to follow anyway.

7. NDTV - New Delhi Television Limited
I have a few Indian friends, and I sometimes think I should hear the Indian news.
I really have not paid any attention at all, but I still keep the subscriptions nearby..

8. The Daily Beast
A news reporting organization that seems determined to post on what's hot, interesting, and
amusing. I found this source through my professor's account and have since enjoyed my
subscription to it.

9. deviantArt
An online community of professional and amateur artists posting their work. I have an
account there too, although to my discredit I haven't posted anything in a long while.

10. dailyzen
Basically, I wanted to subscribe to pithy quotes on which to "meditate." Zen Buddhism
is interesting, but I'm not sure how many actual monastic Zen Buddhists have actual Twitter
accounts.

11. lacuna_coil
Lacuna Coil is one my favorite metal bands.


12. cnnbrk - CNN Breaking News
CNN is my first go-to news source. Funny story: Although I was encouraged to keep up with
the news as a good habit, particularly for writing, I made CNN.com my homepage because
a personal contact made me feel guilty. He works as a pizza delivery driver who listens to
NPR on the radio, and then he used to lecture me for not keeping up with the media.
I'll show him!

13. NatGeo - National Geographic Society
The famous non-profit educational institution that publishes primarily on science and world
cultures. Honestly, I haven't been someone who loyally reads the magazine, but my father
had a subscription to it for as long as I remember, so I was used to flipping through it,
at least, and found it fascinating.

14. GPLC - Greater Pittsburgh Literacy Council
A non-profit agency for adult and young-adult education in Pittsburgh. Since March 2011,
I have been volunteering as a tutor of English as a second language. Unfortunately, I don't
work as hard as I should, and I am not involved with the GPLC community, but I should
keep trying.

15. AdeliaMohan
Classmate. I don't know her very well, but she's cool.

16. pen_int - International PEN
An international association of writers (Poets, Essayists, and Novelists, originally) that aims
to promote literature, freedom of expression, and Wikipedia says that it's the world's oldest
human rights organization and literary organization, which I might believe to an extent.
At any rate, I learned of this organization because of my internship at Sampsonia Way,
speaking of which -

17. Sampsonia_Way
An online magazine dedicated to the protection and promotion of persecuted writers around
the world, sponsored by City of Asylum/Pittsburgh, an exiled writer-residency program.
I am an intern for the magazine, and I'm very impressed with their work and aims, but I
need to improve very much in my tasks there.

18. DAVIDDRAMAN
Lead singer and frontman of Disturbed, another favorite metal band.

19. miss_batgirl - Randi Alu
Classmate. I don't know her very well, but she's cool.

20. williams_page
My current English Writing professor!

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

October 5 Lab Assignments, pt. 3 of 3

Lab 2:

Find Facebook pages and Twitter streams for one credible nonfiction site and one credible nonfiction writer of your choice. How do the publications/writers interact with readers? Does it work? Why or why not? How much is too much? What is effective and what is noise? Write a short post.

Credible NonFiction Site: National Geographic

Facebook: National Geographic's Facebook page works quite well. There is a photo album of
some of the famed photography, and then on the Wall are posts referring to articles
with a eye-catching thumbnail picture. It works like a magazine, actually. You can
choose articles to read just by scrolling rather than skimming. It also neatly posts its mission statement on the Info section, which I think becomes lost in the serial
publication. As a serial, one infers what National Geographic is about, but on Facebook
there is another opportunity for NatGeo to identify itself.

http://www.facebook.com/natgeo

Twitter: I think National Geographic uses Twitter quite cleverly for the vision of its enterprise.
There is a steady stream of photograph links which sends the reader to the National
Geographic website rather than just an isolated image. This not only highlights the
prestigious photography of National Geographic, but it also encourages the reader to
check out the website and learn something besides gaze at the pretty picture.
National Geographic's Twitter feed also sends multiple messages regarding a single
study or featured article.

http://twitter.com/#!/NatGeo


Credible NonFiction Author: Thomas Friedman, NYTimes correspondent, three-time Pulitzer Prize winner, specializes in foreign affairs, especially the Middle East.

My father read from him extensively and loaned me "From Beirut to Jerusalem" of which I am halfway through, and I have been halfway through for months.. >_<; It is very interesting, and very dense.

Facebook: The Info section is little more than a brief introduction to what he does and what
he has written. There are a few nice photographs of him at speaking events.
The Wall is used to post his published articles and speaking events, which would be
very convenient for his fans. There are also audio and video files linked there.
It seems this page is maintained quite nicely, although I'm not sure if Friedman
maintains it himself or not.

http://www.facebook.com/thomaslfriedman


Twitter: Thomas Friedman's Twitter feed is a simple stream of his contributions to
The New York Times. I suppose this is a useful tool for his regular subscribers and fans.
I suppose that here Twitter is used simply as a list for collecting and keeping up with the author. There's no time or reason for personal glitter here.

http://twitter.com/#!/NYTimesFriedman


I conclude that Twitter and Facebook are more useful for larger media franchises because they attract readers with smaller, bite-sized hooks. For authors, it seems that someone would have to already be a fan to have interest, at least in the case of Thomas Friedman, I think. Although these tools do a good job giving an order to the author's works and events, it's interesting how impersonal these social media sites might be for the professional.

October 5 Lab Assignments, pt. 2 of 3

LATER THAT NIGHT:


3. Where and when did the five deadliest hurricanes in U.S. history occur?

According to the chart on http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0778120.html, which I doublechecked/verified here,
and was in too much of a hurry to copy from anywhere else, so I copied this by hand.

1. Galveston TX / Year 1900 / Category 4 / 8,000 (possibly 10-12,000) deaths
2. Lake Okeechobee, FL / Year 1928 / Category 4/ 2,500 deaths
3. Katrina (LA/Miss.) / Year 2005 / Category 3 / 1, 800 deaths
4. Florida Keys/S. Texas / 1919 / Category 4 / 500 lost at sea, total est. 600-900 deaths
5. New England 1938 / 1938 / Category 3 / 600 deaths

4. A blueprint for Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fallingwater.



Taken from here, icollector.com, which seems to be an auctions website. The blueprints were priced at $15,000, apparently
sold Oct. 13, 2006. I had my initial doubts, but this picture kept appearing as I browsed through Google..

5. Ernest Hemingway’s 1923 passport photograph. Make five factual observations about the document.


I was running out of MB space, so I am simply going to include the link

Taken from National Archives website, which presents the photo with extensive citation and a short summary of information regarding the photograph and its housing at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library.

5 Observations:

1. His signature is over the picture in black ink, which makes it kind of hard to read, but kind of aesthetically pleasing.
2. The picture has been stamped with a stamp declaring that the picture has been impressed.
3. The picture has been impressed twice with the seal of the Department of State. The caption stated that Hemingway used this picture on his return to Europe. Could it be that it was impressed at each crossing?
4. Perhaps the identifying information is elsewhere on the passport, but I still find it strange that such information is not right beside the picture as it is nowadays.
5. The picture has not been placed straightly on the outlined box (labled "Photograph of (illegible)". It was arranged by hand, not by machine.