Community building
One idea I’ve been kicking around lately is what I want to use this site for… not just the blog specifically, but I get unlimited data transfer and storage from Bluehost.com for a pretty low price. Aside from wanting this blog to be popular and rewarding for me, I think it would be great to foster a sort of community of friends, and friends of friends, from all parts of my life. I’d love to have my links section full of people I know, whose thoughts and ideas would be a click away. Part of it is because I’ve grown apart from a lot of my friends. To be honest, I’ve been disappointed with a lot of them and their lack of ability or interest to keep in touch and communicate. Maybe this could help old friends stay close.
Maybe this won’t go anywhere, but I’d like to invite anyone who wants to to host a blog, or website for whatever they want, here, and join in this sort of community I’m thinking about putting together. Who knows, it might take off. And if nothing else, it’ll give me more shit to read and procrastinate from getting any real work done. If you’re interested, drop me a line at drew@riverhed.com. It doesn’t matter if you barely know me; if you want to do it, let me know.
In other news, Ivona and I watched Rushmore tonight. We watched the Darjeeling Limited a couple weeks ago and Ivona decided she wanted to see more Wes Anderson films, and I was happy to oblige. So we’re working our way through them, or at least the ones I’ve seen (all but one; I think his first). I remember watching Rushmore for the first time and absolutely loving it, and the music still stands out to me as one of the great things about it. It’s encouraging to see how Anderson has maintained and developed his sense of style, even to the point that watching this again I just wasn’t as amused and entertained as I had been bef0re. It almost felt like a B-quality performance compared to his newer stuff. Don’t get me wrong, it’s a great movie, but it just didn’t grip me the same way it did before. Maybe I’ve seen it too many times, or because it’s a naturally depressing kind of movie.
Anyone read any good books or seen any good movies lately? I’m craving non-academic culture to balance my 27-credit workload.


I liked a book called Rash by: Pete Hautman, it is short, and not hard to read but i enjoyed it.
MrBig
16 Feb 09 at 9:30 pm