Month: November 2015

“It’s a City that keeps changing, not a museum for one’s own personal nostalgia.”

“…Now it seems, we are going Medici. Reduce public support, create huge pots of wealth, with reduced tax burden. Then those folks who’ve got increased cash because of reduced tax burden hand out cash to medicine and the arts and poor folk…and they are considered philanthropists.”

http://abeastinajungle.com/sf-election-results/

“From 1975-1980 Activist Adam Purple Built a Circular Urban Garden in New York that ‘Knocked Down’ the Surrounding Buildings”


“…Over period of five years, Purple worked continuously to build a concentric garden that would eventually grow to 15,000 square feet. As nearby abandoned structures were torn down the garden continued to grow, a process he metaphorically likened to a garden that knocked down the buildings around it. He physically hauled bricks and building materials away from the site, and hauled in manure from the horses in Central Park.


“The Garden of Eden not only provided safe haven to the community, but also produced food in the form of corn, berries, tomatoes, and cucumbers. By the early 80s it had become a famous and beloved landmark in the Lower East Side.


“Unfortunately the city of New York never officially recognized Purple’s garden. While other local parks were clearly marked on official city maps, the Garden of Eden space was always labeled as ‘vacant’. Despite pleas from the community, the entire garden was razed with bulldozers in just 75 minutes on January 8, 1986 to make way for development.”

http://www.thisiscolossal.com/2015/10/garden-of-eden/

“2015 is the year the old internet finally died”


“…Now, however, our articles increasingly seem to be individual insects trapped in someone else’s web. The internet has the exact opposite problem of every other medium. Instead of going from something for everybody to something for a large series of hyper-specialized niches, we’re navigating the choppy seas where once stood an archipelago and increasingly stands a continent. As TV and music and even publishing become the internet, the internet is becoming everything else — and it’s taking so much of what seemed to make it special with it.”

http://www.vox.com/2015/8/6/9099357/internet-dead-end

“There was a mailbox right outside my door, covered in graffiti. Some of these graffiti guys are amazing artists, but not this one. My neighbor and I must have called the city hot line fifty times. Nothing. So I started thinking, Ask not what your city—I’ll just buy a damn paintbrush, you know?”

http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/09/28/paint-job-facelift-dept-andrew-marantz

Awoke at 2 a m it’s now 3:46…

Awoke at 2 a.m., it’s now 3:46 a.m. And I just figured out what the hell was bothering me about my negative experience at the end of the Artscape CSOC event yesterday.

The same observation I have about Habitat for Humanity locally here in Toronto, is essentially what my gut was warning me about the Artscape model.

Now I can go back to sleep…

“…As one last piece of evidence about the value of stories, there is a grand irony behind the saying that I started this blog post with: “The plural of anecdote is not data.” When Fred Shapiro, editor of the Yale Dictionary of Quotations investigated the origins of the truism, he found an interesting anecdote at its source.”


“Political scientist Raymond Wolfinger first used a variation of the common phrase in a graduate seminar at Stanford. A student in the class dismissed a simple factual statement as “a mere anecdote,” and Wolfinger snapped back, “The plural of anecdote is data.” Somewhere along the line, Wolfinger’s words got twisted into their reverse, and it has been repeated in that form ever since.”


“But of course, statistically speaking, Wolfinger’s the one who got the quotation wrong.”

http://www.nathanstorring.com/2015/05/06/how-stories-clarify-complexity/

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