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20 Questions Tuesday: 370 - Ask me anything

December 6, 2016 Scott Ryan-Hart

I have no interest in having a topic to guide today’s questions, so instead, it is an “Ask me anything” day.  Much like redit’s AMA’s… this will amount to nothing, not even a net positive for goodwill.

So without further ado… questions are form Lsig, Bruce, the MiL, Brett, Nadolny, the wife, Some Other Guy, and Maj McArmypants.


Onto the questions!

1. If you had to leave the USA, say for work or to escape a repressive regime, what country would you choose to settle in?
I do love me some Canada, and I have already gotten some notification that some people might be willing to adopt me.

2. Read any good books lately?
Chuck Wendig’s second in the Star Wars: Aftermath series, Life Debt.


3. You are a connoisseur of podcasts. Which do you most highly recommend for a daily 25 minute commute?
Daily 25 minutes are difficult.  I do highly recommend a 3 time a week 20-ish minute podcast called “We have concerns.”  

4. How is parenting treating you? Do you feel like you're doing a good job? Do you like it?
I feel like I am okay at it, but sometimes good and sometimes bad. I do think I like it.

5. Do you still enjoy the 20-questioning?
I really do, although I enjoy the interviews a bit more than the usual question and answers with me.  IT turns out other people are much more interesting than me.

6. If you could go anywhere, where would you like to visit?
I was just chatting about this with someone else for a 20 Questions interview I am doing right now and I think I would like to go to Antarctica.

7. Everyone has "a brush with greatness" story, what's yours?
Hmmm… It depends on who people consider to be “greatness.” Okay in the comedy field I got to hang out with Greg Behrendt a couple times this year. In the soccer community, I very possibly lined up against David Beckham when were were both pre-teens.  This I have tried to substantiate to no avail.  In comic books, I have chatted up multiple a-list comic book artists.  They know who they are.

8. What/who got you into playing RPGs?
The first time I ever played D&D was when I was a kid and my brother and 2 second cousins played a game while my family visited the 2nd cousins.  It was a blast and my brother and I decided to find people to play with when we got home.  That started my playing with Austin Boyd, Marshal Boyd, Todd Morrow, Edwin Hocutt (sp?), my brother and Marcus… (his last name started with a D, maybe it was Dunlap?) as the DM.  Good Times.

9. What first attracted you to your wife?
In all honesty… Her smile and then her eyes. Those were the physical feature that stood out.  As far as personality, she is quick to laugh and crazily intelligent.

10. When’s the world gonna end?
It will be consumed by the sun when the sun expands to be a red giant in 5 billion years.  I think you meant to ask, when our time on the earth was going to be over.  Well, for anyone reading this blog in our around the year 2016, its will all be over for us in around 200 years.  Some earlier and some later.

11. How did you woo the lovely wife? I know you used to be funny when you were young, but any other tips for the up and coming would be wooers?
I am not giving anyone else tips on how to woo my wife.  The up and coming wooers can go straight to Hell.  Bring your a-game, son, ‘cause she doesn’t like people.  I barely snuck in under the wire.

12. Best book you have ever read?
The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss

13. What’s your favorite thing to cook?
I think I actually like cooking meatloaf.  It is a chore to do, but everyone likes it so much that there is joy in that.

14. What makes your heart sing?
Getting my wife to laugh so hard she cries.  One of those events happened at Thanksgiving this yearand it was joyous.

15. What is one thing that you are “okay” at, but wish you were great at? (don’t say “drawing” you false-modesty self-deprecating jerk)
That is an interesting one. I am “okay” (or at least was at one point) at speaking and understanding French.  I wish that were a skill set and knowledgeabase that I still could access.

16. What’s the dumbest thing that gets under your skin?
Hmmm… what just irks me? I feel compelled to say that it bothers the hell out of me when the kids try watching their respective tablets while trying to do something else.  It is infuriating to watch my bumbling 13 year old try to empty the dishwasher while holding his tablet in one hand and trying to watch his YouTube vids while carrying one plate at a time to the cupboard.  PUT THE DAMN TABLET DOWN AND CARRY PLATES WITH AN “S” TO THE CUPBOARD…. goddamnit it takes him 30 minutes to empty the dishwasher.  Sometimes he asks for help because he cannot carry something one handed.

17. What is your favorite Bugs Bunny episode?
“What’s Opera Doc?” is one the best animated works ever. I could have that and “The Rabbit of Seville” running on loop and never get tired of it. I like those so much I bought a CD in the 90’s of the Warner Brother’s cartoon symphonies and would just listen to it.  I can sing the whole of the “Rabbit of Seville.”

18. What is the best corporate speak item at the moment?
I really like “Boil all the oceans” as a metaphor for “fruitless task.” I was in a meeting last week where the speaker said “Even if you boiled all the oceans on all the planets around all the stars…” I had to keep myself from laughing.

19. Best Burger in Ohio?
Well, I will stick with the Columbus area.  I am going to go with Bareburger.  They are pricey as hell.  It cost me almost 20 smackers for a lunch there and all I had was a cheeseburger, fries, and a lemonade.  They have the absolute best GF buns though, and that made it worth it to at least try.

20. China now has the fastest computer in the world. Glory in humanity or shame as an American?
There will always be someone faster, stronger, and hungrier.  The Chinese have the fastest today, but India, South Korea, and even the US are not far behind.

To Recap:
Lin Manuel Miranda and Patrick Rothfuss are in production for a Kingkiller Chronicles series/movie
“What’s your name, man?”
I am currently watching “For the Love of Spock”
Pretty sure the night will be ending with tears
I have four interviews going right now in various stages of production
That makes me happy
I have a hard time believing it is this late in December already
I mean, seriously, where has the year gone
The year has been consequential to say the least
I need to finish this up
I’m going to listen to The Ballad of Bilbo Baggins by Leonard Nimoy and go to bed
Live long and prosper
Live long and prosper
Have a great week everyone

 

20 Questions Tuesday: 369 - Distractions

November 29, 2016 Scott Ryan-Hart

So… It has been a while.  Anything happen while I was not posting? 

Here’s the deal.  I have attempted to write about this Trump presidency thing a few times and each time I ended up sweating and hyper-ventilating into a bag.  I would get about 12 questions in and the answers would be the literary equivalents to grunts and sighs (which happen to be grunts and sighs). So this week’s topic is going to be appropriately… “Distractions.”

Thanks this week go to Dr B-Dawg, Chris Ring, Lsig, the Lovely Wife, Sandy, Erin, Nadolny, Peter, Bruce, Ballpoint, and Larock. No links today kiddos.  I need to post and be done.

Now to keep the sense of impending doom at bay, let’s get to some questions.

1. Will Felicity Jones' character survive Rogue One?
I believe so.  If it were a Chinese tale, everyone would die, but this is a Western story and will require some level of “happy ending.”

2. Have untangled your Christmas lights yet?
Pre-Lit trees, FTW!!

3. Has your Christmas shopping started?
It will be in high level production this week.  I hope you like things we can get from an OfficeMax store closing sale.

4. What is the top item on your wish list?
Time (not the magazine)

5. Klinnsman was a truly terrible coach. Comments?
Klinnsman is a very good generator.  He is good at getting programs moving and motivated.  He did a great job “modernizing” the USMNT thinking and expectations. He is not a sustaining presence though.  He should have been a one World Cup rotation coach.  He did great moving us out of the stagnating Bradley era, much like he did great with Germany for a cycle as well. He just cannot stay for more than 4 years.

6. Kitten videos or dog, who brings the cuteness? Who brings the distraction?
For videos?  I have to go with dogs.  They are much more interactive and willing to do their thing for the camera.

7. Best work distraction? (I could do this all day)
Twitter and texting my lovely wife.

8. Worst work distraction? (Why do I even bother)
Facebook

9. Most addictive distraction? (Can’t . . help . . myself)
Twitter.. there is always another tweet.  I think I need to cull my feed a bit again.

10.  This 20 Questions Tuesday: 370- Distraction? Or Mental, Emotional and Spiritual Catharsis?
Exactly.

11. Do you multi-task while watching television, or do find doing other stuff too distracting?
I do some multi-tasking, but sometimes I just watch the tv… usually when I am watching some kind of documentary or science/history show that takes attention.


12. What do you do to distract yourself when you're on the treadmill? I watch Netflix shows on my iPad (almost done with Stranger Things!).
I have not been on the treadmill in a long time.  I need to get back on it.  I distracted myself with the CW super-hero shows and crappy actions movies like “Olympus has Fallen” and “Jack Reacher.”  Low stakes action movies are the best for the treadmill.

13. When your daughter started learning how to ride a bike, she had to say “Focus, focus, focus!” to herself.  What was she being distracted by?
I think just about anything.  She is constantly distracted by the world at large.

14. What's more distracting? Kids in a car yelling at one another or repeatedly getting text alerts that you know you shouldn't read while driving?
I have Siri read my text alerts, so I go with yelling kids who when yelling keep me from hearing my Siri read texts.

15. Squirrel!
WHERE?!?!

If you aren't reading the Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, you are doing yourself a disservice

If you aren't reading the Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, you are doing yourself a disservice

16. The media seems to be going back and forth on whether Trump is a master
Manipulator of the media by distracting them from some of his awful cabinet picks by tweeting seemingly insane and random things, to he's just unfit and acting unconsciously. Do you fall on one of these sides, or a third.

I was really hoping this would stay Trumpless, but here we go. Okay, Trump is not a master manipulator.  His intention for his tweets are not to intentionally distract us from more pressing matters of racism or the fact that every one of his suggested cabinet positions is diametrically opposed to the station they would actually occupy.  Suggesting someone blatantly racist as the AG in charge of voters rights, suggesting someone who does not believe in the usefulness of public education as the Sec of Education, suggesting a climate change denier as the head of environmental policy, etc… not to mention housing a bona-fide Neo-nazi as his chief of staff.  He is not manipulating people and Machiavellingly distracting people.  No, his de-facto chief of staff, the aforementioned white supremacist, is giving Trump access to his phone when he sees the need for distraction.  Flag burning? is this 1998 again? But don’t audit his finances or point out his myriad of conflicts of interest or the fact that he wants a man who actually gave away state secrets so he could achieve an extra-marital affair with some heat (worse than the very same thing he complained that his previous opponent potentially did).  Is it Machiavellian? Yes.  Is it Trump pulling those strings? I don’t think so. Notice that when something bad about Trump comes up in the press, he suddenly is given access to his Twitter account again.

17. Distracted driving is apparently a moving violation.
In what other forms of movement should it be a legal offense. Biking? Walking (I think not), etc

I think potentially distracted biking could be something, but it really has to do with relative momentum.  Speed plus weight factors into those laws. Bikes are not heavy enough nor typically go fast enough to warrant laws against them.

18. Is that Merv Griffin lurking over there?
Nope.  Merry has been dead for years and years and years.  If his lurking over there, we have bigger problems, Dr Hfuhruhurr. (Had to look up that spelling)

19. Does the media work for the government as a tool of distraction so we are less likely to notice what actually does (or does not) do?
Nope, the media works for itself to get ratings.  It just so happened that we as a people want to be distracted from distasteful things that take thinking.

20. What is Trump distracting us from by retweeting 16 year old kids, and, bringing up flag burning without cause?....
Bannon is distracting us from the massive corruption that Trump is putting into place. This will be worse than Harding and the Teapot Dome.  Look it up kids.


and 2 to grow on.

21. How do I keep myself from being distracted from drawing by asking distracting questions on Facebook?
This seems kind of meta… the answer is ask them quickly and check on the answers tomorrow.

22. Why did I buy a PS4 when I was also starting work on a new comic? What the hell was I thinking? What is your #1 distraction from getting art work done?
There is a tie for number 1.  That tie is my actual job, and the needs of my family.  Stupid work and dumb family keeping me from drawing.  I have pencils done for an Arrow sketch card, Miracle and Barda, Spiderman, Black Panther, Wonder Woman, Hawkgirl, Starfire, and I have inks done for a handful as well, but I colors on nothing.  


To recap:

From left to right, Ginger, Carrol, and Cocoa

From left to right, Ginger, Carrol, and Cocoa

The 2014 Great Rattie Experiment is over
Today we had to put our darling little Ginger Snap to sleep
She was a Dumbo-eared cinnamon sugar colored rat who was very loving and adventurous

Oh, she is a French sailor

Oh, she is a French sailor

She was preceded in death by her two sisters, Cocoa Puff and Carrol Channing a few months ago
They were really sweet pets that did not stick around long enough
My daughter has decided that my office, where their cage was shall now be christened “The Ladies’ Room”
There is something off on the phrasing, but I cannot argue the sentiment
And it is kind of funny calling my office “The Ladies Room”
Might actually make a sign
That office needs painted so badly
It is a horrid gun-metal blue/grey color
Thanksgiving was delightful
Thanks for asking
Have a great week everyone

 

 

20 Questions Tuesday: 368 - the US Election

November 8, 2016 Scott Ryan-Hart

So today is election day in the US.  This election has been a shit show for months if not over a year now. It has been difficult to deal with and hard to exist within. I live in Ohio which is a battleground state and as of Monday predicted to go Trump.  I am ashamed to be a part of a state that might actually swing towards the bloviating stack of rotten pumpkin muffins. So I guess everyone knows how I voted, but I hope that the predictions are wrong because the voting landscape has shifted.

Anyhoo… It has been a horrible election and now I am answering 20 Questions about it.  Thanks to Chris Corrigan, Lisa Sigler, Some Other Guy, and Scott LeMien. Now, let’s get to some questions!

1. Your election system for head of state is the longest, most expensive and most cumbersome in the world.  What would it take to shift it?
Hopefully this election. Campaigns are now lasting almost 2 years for a four year position. It is insane. There are so many things that need to be done to overhaul the system.


2. What is the advantage of having each of the states run it’s own version of a federal election vs. having a single, national, non-partisan elections commission like we do in the rest of the world?
Well, if we had a national election system the states would all be in a tizzy because of state’s rights and all that jazz.
It honestly confuses the hell out of me.


3. Isn’t Veep a great show?
I have only heard good things about it, but since we are cableless… there is not HBO in the house to view Veep.


4. I've seen speculation that, because both candidates are so unpopular, that voter turnout might be very low, while others assume that it will be high because everybody is very concerned. What's your gut feeling on it?
High voter turn-out. My gut says there will be lines upon lines.


5. One of the many points of difference between to two major-party presidential candidates is experience-- career politician vs. Washington outsider. Can any Washington outsider really be effective? I mean, even if he or she were rational, morally upstanding, and well-liked, isn't it automatically an uphill battle?
No Washington outsider can be as effective as they attempt to advertise. That was one of the problems many people had Obama at the beginning.  He filled his staff with known people instead of outsiders.  He was not the “Change” people expected.  His changes have been more slowly burning, that required him to be a lame duck to get anything done.


6. Are we over-inflating the role of President in the economy and other areas? I'm always bemused by the candidate's grand pronouncements about tax plans, since the executive branch doesn't actually have that much to do with taxes.
The president often sets the table for the way things will be directed.  They do not have ultimate power over how things get implemented, but they do have a bully pulpit (old school term, not associated with the modern understanding of bullies) to push a generalized direction for policies.


7. Is America great?  Has it been great, and we've fallen away from that greatness somehow?
America is great.  It has been great. It will be great.  It is not as great nor ever has been as great as we have thought it to be. Is America the best evar, kthnxbye?  Hell’s no. America is great but not the best.


8. Should everyone vote, really?
Sadly, yes.  Even the uneducated and easily manipulated.


9. Do you think the US will ever have a viable 3rd party?
Unless the GOP is lambasted by the Dems this election, there will be no real change to the political landscape.  If the race is even remotely close on a state by state basis, then the existing power structure for the GOP will think the system they have created is salvageable… continuing to lump the fiscal conservatives and moderates in with the alt-right.  As long as the existing system seems like it could be viable, they will continue to try and viable it.


10. What is the biggest democracy on the planet?
India.  


11. Speaking of Indian voting… How far is the maximum distance ANY VOTER OF THE 814.5 MILLION PEOPLE ELIGIBLE TO VOTE IN INDIA HAS TO TRAVEL TO GET A POLLING PLACE IN INDIA?
1 mile. Just 1 mile… because they want everyone to be able to vote.  Everyone.  Let that sink in.


12. What are the ways that the actual election day process of elections could be made more friendly in the US?
Move the day to Wednesday and make it a federal holiday.  Increase the preliminary voting time and open the preliminary voting centers for longer hours.  Or we could do it like India and make it so EVERY VOTER DOES NOT HAVE TO TRAVEL MORE THAN 1 MILE TO VOTE.


13. What do you think about the heightened presence of the green and libertarian party this election?
I think it is overall a good thing.  The problem is that the system is so entrenched in the 2 party mode that national position seeking Libertarian candidates tend to slough off over to the GOP and the Green party tends to migrate to the Dems at the national level.  There are many reasons for this. The 3rd and 4th parties are not strong enough in a national sense to make a dent in the big races.  They really should focus on grass rootsing it.  Focus on some key regional positions and start making differences there.  Johnson and Weld did (supposedly) good jobs with their states as governors, maybe they could run for the US Senate in their respective states and really throw a wrench in the balance of power for the Senate.  3rd party will never be able to go from 0 to 60.  It has to be a slow burn.


14. Does it give you hope for more choices in the future?
Hopefully the GOP realizes that they have gone to bed with a snake and will try to divest itself of that snake.  That party does not run itself as reasonable conservatism any more.  They campaign on crazy wing-nut alt right platforms and then wonder how they have alienated over half the voting population. They have primarily allied themselves with an ever shrinking white voting bloc and are afraid of the rest of the country.  It needs to break apart and let the more rational conservatives reform as a different party.


15. Do you have any political New Year’s resolutions you plan to spring on us?
Nope.


16. Why don't more people eat poutine?
Tabarnak!  That is a good question. I would say that many people are afraid either gravy or cheese curds.


17. “Election Day” is a song, do you like it?
Anything that is an offshoot of Duran Duran is good in my books.


18. Who is your favorite currently serving politician?
Al Franken, because he's good enough, smart enough, and gosh darnit, people like him.


19. Who is your all time favorite president?
As far as for getting shit done? FDR.  As far as being a straight up bad-ass handler of the haters? Barack Obama.


20. Somehow, we decide we need new president faces on dollar bills. Who do you put on the 1, 5, 10, 20, 50 and 100 and why?
Okay… I am not limiting it to Presidents, because it should not be limited (that being said many will be), and I am assuming that this is a “must be changed” for all bills.
On the $1: William Henry Harrison - since the $1 dollar bill is becoming a coin, the president depicted on the bill should be a shortest serving president.
On the $5: Barack Obama - His presidency is directly related to the previous face on the 5
On the $10: Harriet Tubman - She is a badass of the highest order.
On the $20: FDR - Got us through the depression, and the $20 is called the Yuppie Food Stamp and it is fun to have FDR on the face of something that refers to one off his New Deal programs
On the $50: Albert Einstein - The $50 is a relatively high denomination bill
On the $100: Ronald Reagan - Trickle Down… trickle down.


To recap:
Voted early this morning
In and out in 30 minutes
7 screens of voting options
History is happening
It has been happening
It is always happening
Progress cannot be stopped overall
Because things keep moving forward
Happy election day, everyone!
Now I just have to wait to see how this all falls out
I think it will be a much stronger showing than what the predictions have been saying
It needs to be
I think there has been a very quiet majority of people who have just been waiting to vote and get it over with
The US plays Mexico on Friday for a World Cup Qualifier
Let’s get another Dos a cero!
Have a great week everyone

 

20 Questions Tuesday: 367 - Potpourri

October 18, 2016 Scott Ryan-Hart

There is no topic this week, or rather a myriad of topics.  One might say a potpourri of topics.  A melange of topics . Why isn’t there a coherent topic for today’s post?  Shut up, that’s why.

Thanks this week go to Lsig, pfmDesigner, Grapes, Little Man asked a question, the Wife and then there is some other guy chiming in.  Let’s stop wasting your and my time and answer some questions.

1. What TV shows are you watching?
I am catching up on Supergirl now that the series is on Netflix, I am slowly catching up on the end of the seasons for the Flash, Arrow, and Legends of Tomorrow.  I am watching Agents of SHIELD and @Midnight as well.  We just subscribed to Curiosity Stream so I am eating up everything Professor Ian Stewart has created for the BBC and Discovery, and I am always on the lookout for good documentaries.

2. Any vacations planned?
Some ideas of vacations, but no concrete vacations planned.

3. Do the kids like school this year?
A little yes and a little no.  Little Man is unhappy with the amount of work he has to do in 7th grade and Q is having some trouble with one of her teachers.  It is not great.

4. How are the dogs?
Dogs are good. They are growing like weeds.  I feel terrible for saying this, but one thing having dogs has made me realize, is that I really am not a dog person.  I love my pups and will love them for the long term, but I don’t want no more doggies after them.

5. How is the job going?
It is going really well… I really do love it. Some laws have changed recently that might change how I am working, but I will cross that bridge when I get there.

6. What’s your favorite “That’s what she said” moment?

No such thing... Not sure why there is this weird extra spacing here... CSS?  Why in God's name is this happening to me? (That's what she said)

7.  Would you be willing to live in a sealab-type habitat for one year?
Maybe, I would need it to be incentivized somehow.  We can talk prices later.

8.  If you were invited to appear on the Jerry Springer Show without being told why, would you go?
Nope.  No way in hell.

9.  What classic movie would you like to see remade with modern techniques and cast?
That Darn Cat and the Christina Ricci / Doug E Doug doesn't count... I want a real remake that isn't so crappy.

10. Smooth or crunchy (you may assume I’m talking about peanut butter)?
Extra crunchy.

11.  How are you celebrating the good Captain's 40th birthday?
I will try and do something very British.  It may involve bangers and mash and some upstairs/downstairs type TV viewing.

12. Do you own his first appearance in Marvel Team-Up or the Captain Britain mask that came with issue 1 of Captain Britain weekly?
Nope, I became aware of him as they introduced him in the X-Men prior to launching Excalibur.

13. What is your favorite iteration of the character?
I love the original character design.  It is insane.  So many elements all over the place.  

14. What British writer would you most like to see pen a story of the Captain?
Maybe Grant Morrison.  I don’t think he has ever touched that character.

15. When did the Ottoman Empire exist and why did it fall apart?
Okay the empire was stated to have had its inception in 1299 and it fell apart into multiple nation states.  The fall of the Ottoman Empire was preceded by their loss in World War I… the concessions the Empire had to make made it internally weak and the susceptible to ethnic break-up.

16.  Do you watch any of the YouTubes?
I am going to just list the channels I personally have subscribed to. Ali Spagnola, AWEme, Brian Brushwood, Chainsaw Suit Original, Cordkillers, Corridor Digital, Creative Station, Daly ShowTV, Epic LLOYD, Epic Rap Battles, Feminist Frequency, Film Riot, Geek & Sundry, Heather Rooney, Jeremy Colwell, Jonathan Roberts, LEGO, Major League Soccer, Marcello Barenghi, Marvel Entertainment, Nerdist, Postmodern Jukebox, Punished Props, Scam School, Science Show, Scott Johnson, Star Wars, Studio C, The Modern Rogue, Tim Merry, Tom Merritt, Universe Today, and the Van Vuuren Brothers... I don't watch all of these all the time, but I touch in with them often.

Wow… that is more channels than I think I actually watch.

17. What is your favorite thing to cook and why?
I really enjoy cooking in general and all that, but I think my favorite thing is the America’s Test Kitchen version of Maque Choux.  It is so good!

18.  What is your least favorite thing to cook and why?
Octopus… and duh...

19.  What is the most endearing thing the dogs do? What is the most annoying?
Endearing… they are huggers.  Cesca does it more so than Chewie, but they are huggers.
Annoying… they bark waaay too much

20.  What is the one thing that you absolutely do not understand about your wife?
One thing? Pashaw… I cannot narrow it down.  

To recap:
The wife was sick today
I am grumpy
And a little burpie
Not like the exercise burpees
Those are tiring
I do need to exercise though
And I have a map commission that I need to finish up this weekend
It is a doozy
I’m gonna need to break out some old skool skilz
It is late
I need to make the cover image
I need to format the post
And I need to get to bed
Enough of this re-capping
Have a great week everyone

20 Questions Tuesday: 366 - Autumn

October 11, 2016 Scott Ryan-Hart

Okay, I know that it is past the official beginning of Autumn, but the weather has finally caught up with our place in the orbit around the sun.  It has gotten a little brisk as of late, and the leaves, they are a changin. The mornings are brisk and the afternoons are warm.  There is a crispness and a small little bite, some might call it a nip, in the air.  

So today I will answer 20 questions concerning the delightful topic of “Autumn.” Thanks go to Dr B Dawg, Chris Corrigan, Pat Francis, Doug Hills, Alesha, Bruce, and some other guy… On to the questions!

1. Any advice on the best way to hammer leaves so their color transfers to paper?
Rubber mallet, and you cover the leaves with wax paper. It works best with a weaker paper that will allow the carotins into the weave of the paper.

2. Favorite flavor of autumn - apple cider, pumpkin spice, pecan,...
Mulled apple cider… so good.

3. Do you tend to carve pumpkins as scary, funny, or traditional?
Yes… a little of column a, column b, and column c.

4. When was your last good roll in a pile of leaves?
I was 10.

5. Favorite fall activity?
Staring at the gorgeous cleansing power of fire...

6. How was your Thanksgiving?
My Canadian Thanksgiving was great.  My US Thanksgiving will be great.

7. With a chill in the air which do you prefer… a sweater or a jacket?
Jacket.  Sweaters are harder to get out of.

8. Rake leaves or shoveling snow which do you enjoy most?
I am allergic to leaf mold, so snow all the way.

9. Hot Chocolate… with or without marshmallows?
With marshmallows… however if you add whipped cream to non-marshmallowy hot chocolate, I choose that.

10. Are you affected by autumn-related allergies?
Leaf mold is my bane.

11. So any thoughts on spring/autumn relationships?
As long as no one is using the other in an un-fair way, I find no issue with them. The problem comes when there is a fairness differential or there is a lack of fairness associated with the expectations for the relationship. (For example, if there is some gold hunting for inheritance, or trophy/sex-toy reasons happening, that would be bad.)

12. Are you an autumn color type? Do rusts and browns work for you?
As long as I stay away from yellows and stay in the rustier or orange colors, I do pretty well with an autumnal color scheme, but I would not say that I am an Autumn color type.

13. Do you even Halloween, bro?
Not especially.  The kids tend to get dressed up, but we don’t decorate the house or play spooky music, but the kids get candy and all of that.

14. Favorite thing about Autumn ? – for me it’s sweaters and pie
The chillness in the air, but pie is a close second.

15. Girls named Autumn, know any? Is she “an Autumn”? The Autumn I know is a lovely blonde – much more a “Spring” than an “Autumn”
I grew up with a girl named April in the first elementary school I went to and there was a girl named Summer at my church.  I did not know any girl named Autumn personally.

16.Pie!  Pumpkin, Apple, and Mom’s homemade pecan – have never had another pecan pie like my mom’s. Do you like pecan pie? Most people make it too gelatinous… mom’s had very little gel and LOTS of nuts
I am not a fan of pecan pie.  My childhood home did have two pecan trees though and in the fall I was known to shell some pecans and eat them.
 
17. Leaves turning – one of the things I dislike about southern cal is that we have very little color changing… unless you count the drought – but that’s just turning stuff brown. Can you ship autumn leaves to southern cal? Will they survive the transport?
You can press a leaf in a book… I cannot see why you couldn’t then transport said book.  It would get rather cumbersome to ship a bunch, but one would not be a problem.
 
18. Spiders! I love spiders (really, I do) Do you? Spiders are abundant in the autumn (they like fallen leaves) What’s your favorite spider? I am partial to the funnel web weaver and the wolf spider. I like funnels because of their waaaaaay cool webs. I like the wolf because they carry their babies piggy back. I’m full of lots o’spider facts. Ask me something.
I… I don’t even… I’m not sure we can be friends anymore.
 
19. Orange October! Who’s your pick for the World Series? I’m BeliEven! Go Giants! They won in 2014 and I was in the hotel room in Kent trying not to cheer so loud that the guest on the other side of the way too thin wall was awaken. Does it suck that games don’t start until almost 9 PM Eastern? 6 PM Pacific makes me stay up past my bedtime.
I am trying hard not to go with the underdog card and call it for the Cubs.  The Cubbies are still looking really strong and their pitching is sharp.  The problem is that it is hard to go against the Giants on an even year.  Odd years, you can go against the Giants, but evens?  That is a different story.  It could go either way.  No pick from me. As to the timing of the games... I haven't watched baseball in nearly 20 years, so it could be on at 3 in the morning and I would not care.

20. For all the Floridians transplanted north ... Why oh why do all the trees have to die?
Everything dies, Timmy.  Death is the only inevitability… and on that cheery note.

Dead_Tree_Silhouette_with_Sunset.JPG

To recap:
All my current interviews have stalled
All the people I have asked recently want to postpone a bit
This is the frustrating part of this blog
I enjoy the writing
I enjoy answering people’s questions
I really enjoy asking people questions
The format of asking questions is a really different format because it allows for there to be change over time
Buuuut… the format also allows for interviews to potentially die
I am doing what I can to keep this from dying
Anyone want me to do a 20 Questions with you?
Everyone is interesting for at least 20 Questions
Right?
Anyway… I had meetings and conference calls today
Got some good work done during those
Sometimes concerning the meetings I was in and sometimes in regards to other topics entirely
Bought a homeless dude lunch today
His name is Robert and he used to be a welder in Norfolk for Navy boats
Now he is homeless in Columbus, Ohio
I am not this soft every day, but today he got pasta with meatballs and some garlic bread
Have a great week everyone

 

20 Questions Tuesday: 365 - Annually, Yearly, Year in Review, or whatever

September 28, 2016 Scott Ryan-Hart

A day late and a dollar short could be the name of this blog’s autobiography… not really… A blog cannot have an autobiography.  That would be silly.  Anyway…

This week is the 365th 20 Questions Tuesday since I started numbering them.  I have been doing this for a good bit.  I need to get the consistency thing back where it needs to be, but other than that, I now have a post a day calendar that you could read.  Like a daily devotional that teaches you nothing.  Soooo… if any of you yahoos out there decide to read a post a day, let me know and I will do something for you to help with the trauma.

Thanks this week go to Chris Ring, The Lovely Wife, Tom Merritt, Aunt Linda, BWood, and Some Other Guy…  On to the questions!

1. Just how many puns fly around the proctologist's office when they discuss getting a check-up annually.
All the puns… every single one... even the one that doesn't seem all that funny.

2. What’s your favorite time of year?
3:30 PM… That’s what you were asking, right?

3. What annual event (not counting holidays) that you look forward to?
First snow… it always seems invigorating.

4. Do you tend to live more in the past, present or future?
I try to be present, but I find myself worrying about the future more than I should.

5. Favorite movie this year (so far)?
It is a toss-up between Captain America: Civil War, Deadpool, and Ghostbusters…. But I think Rogue One: A Star Wars Tale might win out.

6. Do you have an annual physical? why or why not?
I have not recently.  Partially it is because of our current horrible insurance and how expensive it will be to go and partially because I know what changes the doctor is going to say I need to do.  I already am avoiding gluten, but I am sure the doc will tell me that I need to reduce sugar and salt massively… Ugh, getting old sucks.

7. 365 reviews...ever had one?  are they just a horrid idea?  or are they the opportunity to grow after your co-workers have dragged you through the mud?
I have had all kinds of reviews work-wise.  As a cartographer and now and interaction designer people reviewing my work was/is absolutely necessary.  I have not had anyone seriously review my posts for the blog though…. If anyone wants to review my shit, lemme know.

8. Years and Years - your wife loves them.  How do you feel about them?  
I have never heard of them because I am old and only like grunge music from the 90’s.  Not really true… but I definitely have been in a musical rut… listening to them right now and trying not to chair dance at work, so I would I say they are good.

9. What things do you schedule on a calendar and what things do you just "remember" to do?
My dad was a very calendar and to-do list focused person, so I find myself actively not making calendars or lists just out of oppositional spite.  I should be running a calendar so I don’t miss so much stuff.  I am terrible about it right now.  So… I would say that I try to remember more than use a calendar.  One of the few reasons that I still like Facebook is that it reminds me when people’s birthdays occur.  

10. Do the years seem to go faster the older you get?. Why do you suppose that is?
There are a few theories about this… I am going to spout off the one that makes the most sense to me.  Your brain encodes new experiences as more impactful than routine ones.  When you are younger things are more new and memorable.  As you age the routine falls back into the background and is less noticeable to your conscious brain, so it seems that time starts accelerating because your brain, to reduce processing effort ignores the mundane.  Do something new and different and time will slow down.

11. Do you believe in horoscopes?
In their existence?  Of course.  Are they accurate?  Hell’s no.  They are crazy vague to the point of being incapable of being correct or incorrect.

12. What is one thing you have learned in the last year?
Switching careers is a seriously difficult process.  Everyone wants experience, and when you jump from one career to another you have none.

13. Where were you one year ago?
September 28, 2015 I was dying a slow death at my old job. Dying. A. Slow. Death.

14. What was your favorite place that you visited in 2014?
Zion National Park.

15. What experience would you love to do all over again for this blog?
I would love to get Greg Behrendt for another 20 Questions.

16. What topics/interviews did you most enjoy learning about?
Rain… actually Mikey Neumann was amazing and Per Axbom was sharp as well.  

17. How would you change this past year’s worth of posts?
I would love to have done more interviews.

18. You have been doing this blog in this format for 10 years or so… it should have taken only 7 years to post 365 weekly posts… what gives?
Okay… there were hiatuses and some missed weeks here and there.  Get off my back, okay?!? This is not my job.  I would love for it to be my job (not really), but there is no money to be made in blogging.  Shut up, that’s why…

19. What or who has had the biggest impact on you with this blog?
The lovely wife is an ever-present influence so besides her, I would say Tom Merritt, Andrew Mayne, and Mikey Nuemann. Each of them in different ways.  Tom helped me to make this a thing. Andrew challenged me to change my circumstances. Mikey made me think about this more and more deeply.

20. Will there be 365 more 20 Questions Tuesday posts?
Maybe?  I know there will be more, but 7 more years worth? That is a tall order to commit to.

To recap
The weather, it is a changing
Work just had cake to celebrate a coworker’s impending baby
I cannot have cake
Turns out I can have many people saying “Ohhhh, This cake is great.  I’m going to eat it for lunch” near me though
So, I at least have that going for me
I guess I am planning on working at this job for a good long while now
I just got a parking permit for a surface lot nearby
So, I guess that is a level of commitment I did not know I was not quite ready to make
I really do like this job
It is only a surface lot though
I will have to walk a few blocks like some kind of vagabond
Might as well put my laptop in a bindle as I read the hobo signs to get to my job
It is odd though… my work throws my blog behind a firewall
Weird
I need to sleep more
And consume less sugar
And salt
And get rid of the caffeine
Working on the caffeine one right now
By Friday I will be decaffeinated
Then comes a reduction in sugar
Then salt
Baby steps people, baby steps
Have a great week everyone

 

20 Questions Tuesday: 364 - JP Sears

September 20, 2016 Scott Ryan-Hart

This week I have something unusual in store for the 20 Questions.  Usually I have to go begging people for questions or I approach people I think will be interesting and beg them to answer my 20 dumb questions.  This week, as a change in plans, I have been approached by someone wanting to be asked my 20 Questions.

This week I am asking JP Sears 20 Questions.  I know very little about Mr Sears.  He has a YouTube channel (Awaken with JP) and you can schedule some personal sessions with JP through his website AwakenWithJP.com.  He is a mindfulness spirituality practitioner and teacher.  But other than that, I don't know much about him.  I guess this is what the 20 Questions will be for.  

As my very few consistent readers know, my first career was as a cartographer.  I have always loved maps and mapping things out.  When I was studying geography, I really enjoyed the concept of a "geographic story."  Let me share with you my personal geographic story. I was born just outside of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma at Tinker AFB.  As an Air Force Brat my family moved to Montgomery, Alabama and stayed there a few years before moving 2 hrs north to just to the Birmingham, Alabama area, more specifically, in a smallish town called Center Point.  I went off to Kent State University in Northeastern Ohio where I met my college sweetheart.  We both went to grad school in Columbus, Ohio at Ohio State, and have lived in the Greater Columbus Area for almost 20 years now.  Question 1: What is your geographic story?

I grew up in northwestern Ohio and then moved to Southern California when I was 23 because Ohio wasn’t spiritual enough for me.  Two years ago I moved to the east coast of the US because I got too spiritual for Southern California, it couldn’t handle me.  More recently, I’ve moved from practicing hardcore presence in the Now to being present in the Soon.  It’s a much more progressive place for me to reside.

I am not certain that Northwestern Ohio is spiritual enough for anyone.  It is kind of a spiritual void, ask any of the dead-eyed drones living there.

So, with your level of enlightenment, Question 2: Where would you most like to live?

I’d like to find a place with the spiritual pretension-ness of Santa Monica, the organic-ness of Ashland, OR, the unkept armpit hair of Boulder, CO, and the Ayahuasca-ness of Peru.  So, in other words, I’m still looking for real estate.

I'm not sure that Shangri-La exists.  Maybe it is like that old maxim of you can choose 2 of the 3: good, fast, or cheap.  I would suggest the armpit hair and pretension-ness... That's got to exist, right? (Not a question, only rhetorical.  We all know that is Berkley.)

To steal a bit from Paul F Tompkins. Question 3: cake or pie? Which specific kind, and why?

Definitely pi. The sacred geometry behind it is simply far more sacred AND geometrical than the glutenous filled boring poison that is the wet dream of any child's birthday party. Always pumpkin. And always exactly 3.14159 ounces of it.


Oh, the ratio of diameter to circumference wins again. It really is irrational how many people enjoy pie. Measuring to the hundred thousandth place is difficult.  I commend your precision.

Question 4: If you had to choose between precision and accuracy, which do you go for?

Accuracy.  It’s always way more precise.

Interesting.  Accuracy without precision can be an issue, and accuracy does not presuppose precision... and vice versa. These can be mutually exclusive properties. One can be accurate without being precise, and one can be precise without being accurate. It is like the yin and yang of targeting.

My favorite yoga position to say is "chaturanga dandasana." It is great to say in an announcer's voice. Question 5: Do you have a favorite yoga posture that you just enjoy saying? Not necessarily doing, but saying.

Yes, a cliff side Anjali Mudra is my favorite pose to say that I do.  Speaking of the dangerous location in which I say that I do the pose adds more mystique, which obviously gives me better results from the yoga session that I talk about doing.
JP

P.S. Check out “What I Love About The Olympics” my latest Ultra Spiritual video. 

Ookaay… Interesting that you want me to look at your video.  Not quite germane to our discussion, But I will give it a view.Anyway… dangerous locations do add mystique to everything.  My favorite is cliffside milkshake making.  The milkshakes are just better when there is some risk.  Everything is more vibrant when one's fear of heights is engaged.  I am quite the milkshake maker. Really I am a bit of a milkshake marvel. Most people do not know of my amazing capability to make milkshakes. It is one of my best hidden talents.

Question 6: Do you have a hidden talent that people would be surprised about?

Yes, I’m exquisitely talented in having the inability to pay attention when someone is going on and on about milkshakes.

That is not nearly hidden enough. Your loss anyway.  I have been perfecting a cookie butter milkshake that I can never eat.  It is very much a “the sound of one-hand clapping” thing.  I am perfecting something of which I cannot experience.  How do you like them apples? Rhetorical question not the actual question...

So, I unfortunately have to be gluten free.  It is under much duress and gnashing of teeth that I am no longer allowed to eat any breads or grains that actually stay together when chewing... I have watched your gluten video... Question 7: why must you mock my pain?

First of all, congratulations for achieving gluten intolerance status. It's true, I do not people who can still tolerate gluten. It's my way of helping wake those people up so that they can live a good life of progressive intolerance to gluten. One of the main purposes of my life is to democratize gluten intolerance for all. Your next step on your path of progression will be to become intolerant to those who can tolerate gluten.

You.. you seem to have turned that on me somehow… I am only intolerant of them because I want to eat a doughnut so badly.  A nice yeasty doughnut that has been deep fried and glazed with some type of confection.  Those were the days, my friend.  I could eat doughnuts with wild abandon.  I miss them so much.  

Question 8: "Doughnut" or "Donut?"

Donut. The simplicity in its spelling bleeds Taoism.

Question 9: Aside from any "free Tibet" arguments, does Taoism actually bleed?

It bleeds more than Confucius bleeds confusion.

You have not read Confucius lately then.  His witticisms are confusing and sometimes just outright wrong

"Everything has beauty, but not everyone sees it."

All I have to say is SPIDERS

"Choose a job you love, and you will never have to work a day in your life."

Even the best jobs have drudgery.

"I hear and forget. I see and I remember. I do and I understand."

Ugh... I get it.  Confucius is a visual and kinesthetic learner.

Any hoo...

Question 10: Fill in the blanks.  I find that I am mostly _______. Others find that I am mostly _______.

Humble.  Amazingly humble.

It is really nice that you are on message with yourself.  

Now I am going to ask a deceptively simple question that has nearly infinite levels of complexity underneath it's simple form.  Contemplate the complexity before answering it because it requires a surprising amount of introspection.

Question 11: Are you happy?

No, I don't do emotions. They're too damn human for me. The feelings that I am into are very non-human emotional feelings such as bliss, ecstasy, euphoric, unconditional love, and abundance. I'm all of these things and an abundant amount of more than them too.

That makes so much more sense.  I understand you on a much deeper level now.  Question 12: Transcendence can be an emotion, right?

Transcendence is a dimension of enlightenment where you end the trance of having emotions.  Trans-END-ence.  I don’t know exactly why the word has the “ence” on the end.  But I do know that you can’t spell transcendence without “end.” And that’s exactly what you should do to all of your non-spiritual emotions, which is all of them by the way… End them.
JP
 
P.S. Check out “Flat Earth Theory” my latest Ultra Spiritual video. 

I am starting to think that you are only using my blog for some kind of marketing thing.  Weird segue since I am a geographer at heart and a cartographer by training.  Anyway… Back at it…

"Ence" just shows that it is a noun and sounds better than "transcendosity."

Oh, unlucky 13... Question 13: do you have any superstitions or rituals?

I don't believe in superstitions because I think they're bad luck. I do have rituals though, big time. Who do you think put the ritual in spiRITUAL?

The same people who put the "GLAD in gladiator?"

Anyhoo... I figured you would be against superstitions, but full of ritual.  That seems to be how you roll.

Question 14:  What ritual do you find yourself doing the most? What does it do for you? (2 questions at the same time? my dojo, my rules)

Posting yoga photos of myself to Instagram.  What does it do??? Scientifically speaking, I’ve documented that posting a photo from your yoga session makes your yoga session 50% more effective.  And if there’s a 50% chance that you’re gonna die in your yoga photo set up, then your yoga photo is 50% more effective at making your yoga session 50% more effective.  Cliff side Anjali Mudras and Downward Dogs at high tide are my favorite.

Question 15: Do you really think that risk increases reward?

No.  But it definitely increases the effectiveness of your yoga session.  And there’s significant reward in that.  The only alternative is to increase your risk of being unrewarded.

That is some convoluted risk assessment.  It seems almost circular.  Well we are on the downward slope of the 20 Questions now.  Question 16: is there a question you were expecting me to ask you that I have not?

Funny, because I was expecting you to ask that question. I do anticipate you asking me what my hair care beauty secrets are.

So, you have lustrous silky smooth copper colored hair that seems to always be amazingly coifed.  Question 17: what are your hair care beauty secrets?

Look at that hair!!!

Look at that hair!!!

I'm not telling, because they are secrets.

Fair point, but it is so lustrous... It is like copper silk. Oh well.

It is time to turn the tables. I am a little afraid to ask this, but Question 18: do you have any questions for me?

Yes. How intimidated does your higher self feel by me?

My higher self is beyond simple concepts like intimidation.  To be intimidated implies inferiority and superiority.  My higher self is beyond such base concepts because my higher self understands that aspiration for superiority is hope and that hope only leads to pain because it is the acknowledgement of something better that is missing.  My higher self is beyond the trifles of this mortal concept of "better."

That being said, I have never accessed my higher self and have been quivering in your inimitable shadow for 18 questions.  

Question 19: what are you taking from these 20 questions that you did not bring in with you?

I'm definitely taking a new ray of enlightenment. I've learned so much reading my own answers to your questions.

Well, I am glad to have supplied a platform for you to inspire yourself.  I am the mirror and you are the bird calling itself "pretty."

Question 20: What's next? Be as vague or concrete, as close term or long-term, as philosophical or grounded as you want.

Next I'm going to the Symbiosis Gathering where thousands of people are coming to see me. I think they might have some other speakers and performers too... In addition to my speaking, I'll be practicing some hard-core being as well as aggressive compassion while I'm there.

Okay everyone… that was a thing.  Not sure I know any more about JP now than I did beforehand, but I did enjoy my conversation with him.  Give JP a follow on Twitter, subscribe to his YouTube channel, give his Instagram a looksie, and check out his website and his Facebook page.  

The Symbiosis Gathering is this week, so if you want to see him, that is where you need to go.

To recap:
That was odd
The line blurs between what is and what is portrayed pretty strongly
CincyComicCon was a bunch of fun the weekend of the 9th
I drew these whilst there


I am happy with them
Our dishwasher is broken
And the kids are useless when it comes to dishes
I have 2 other interviews going on right now
They are going slowly
I need a couple more
Anyone want to answer 20 Questions?
Even if you have done it before
I have at least 20 more questions I can ask anyone
Have a great week everyone

 

In Internet Personalities Tags interview

20 Questions Tuesday: 363 - Marriage

September 6, 2016 Scott Ryan-Hart

Today is my 19th Anniversary.  I have been married for 19 years… WHAT?!?! 19 YEARS?  WHERE DID THE TIME GO?  Crap, I am old.  Old and happily in love with my wife of 19 years.  It is pretty darn awesome.

Anyhoo… I opened up the question bag on Facebook to get some questions for today’s topic of Marriage.  Thanks this week go to Erin, Kallie, Jon, Lsig, Scott, Bruce, Sandy, the Wife, my darling Daughter, and some other guy.  Let’s do this!

1. What's different about marriage than you thought going into it?
It can be happy.  I only really had my parents’ marriage to work from and Mom was depressed and Dad was emotionally unavailable/distant.  When we were married for 5 years or so, my loving wife asked me this question and then after hearing my answer asked me “Why would you want to do that to me?!?”  

My response was, “I want you to be miserable with me, Love.  I want you to be miserable.”

2. Do you believe in the 7 year itch?
In a way, sure.  I don’t think it has to be precisely 7 years, but I do think there is a point in most relationships where the people in it wonder what color the grass is on the other side of the fence.  It doesn’t mean that you have to jump the fence, but I think it is only realistic to havepoint when people question things.

3. If you could change one thing about how you are a husband to your wife, what would it be and why?
I would be more physically affectionate.  I just haven’t been able to beat some of the physical and mental intimacy barriers that I have to deal with in my life.

4. In hindsight, how do you feel about getting married so relatively young? Has it made it easier or harder? (As someone who married the same age and the same summer as you two, I'm now constantly amazed that we were allowed to go through with it!).
It was a crazy and foolish thing to get married as a child. A. CHILD.  I do not know it has been easier or if it has been harder, because it is all I know.  That being said, there are positives and negatives associated with getting married at 23.  The biggest positive is that what we have is truly ours.  We could not rub two nickels together when we first got married.  Everything from that point on has been gained due to the marriage.  The biggest negative is that we were not really fully formed as adults when we got married.  

5. What are your strongest memories of your actual wedding day?
Everyone loved the food, I was allergic to my boutineer, and my wife danced the entire night.

6. Whose marriages, besides your own, do you draw strength from?
Honestly, in many ways, no one’s, and with the converse of that, everyone’s. No one’s: All relationships are different and there is no one true path to happiness and success in a relationships.  No one else’s relationship really informs mine.  Everyone’s: I watch how things don’t work and try not to do that. You can often learn more from relationships that are faltering than from ones that are working well.

7. If you could give your children only one piece of advice each for a successful marriage, catered to their particular personalities, what would the advice be?
Little Man: Learn to bend in your thinking and stop being lazy.
Little Lady: Sometimes the answer lies outside of yourself.

8. Pick a random friend who never married or married much later than you. What advice would you give them if they were getting married on the same day you did?
Figure out your communication style and know that not everything is personal.

9. What advice would you tell them to please share with the younger version of you?
Save up and buy a nice couch not the 3 crappy ones your waded through in the 2000’s.

10. Do arranged marriages have a place in our era?
Sure.  Marriages can take the form of all sorts of constellations.

11. Thoughts on multi-marriage: more than just 2 people in the joining.
I think it becomes insanely more difficult when you jump from 2 to more than 2 because of property law.  It is very easy to dissolve a bivariate partnership, but when you add another person into the equation property transference rights and rights of attorney become seriously muddied.

12. Renewal of vows? - What point in the marriage? Maybe for a specific anniversary?
No need to renew vows.  That is silly.  Just throw a party where you say you are happy to still be married.

13. How long does The Representative schtick around at the beginning of the relationship stay before they slip into sweats and gaming every day (i.e., finally comfortable that there's no need to impress anymore)?
Get married at 23.  All you have is sweatpants, farts, and love.

14.  Does marriage really work anymore?
It can, but I don’t think it is a good fit for everybody.  I especially don’t think that marriage is necessarily meant to always be a forever thing.  It has worked so far for me and my wife, but I have seen some very successful marriages that do not exist any longer.  That does not remove their success or their usefulness as an institution.  I have a whole theory about this that I could wax eloquent about, but I won’t.  Ask me about it and I will email you my treatise on the broken institution of marriage, but it would bore the pants off of everyone here.

15. What is the gift for 19 years?
Aquamarine or bronze.  I say, go with both...specifically this. 

It can be bought here: "http://www.reneetaylorgallery.com/Vanderveen.html" and is honestly pretty stunning.

16.  Why does the bride have to walk down the aisle? (from my daughter)
Because she was traditionally property.  When/if you get married this may have changed.

17. Why does the groom wait in front of the alter? (from my daughter as well)
Because traditionally the groom receives the property, and that property should be brought to him to inspect.

18. What did you learn from your parent’s marriage? (For realsies, No snark).
I learned that you can work through most problems, and that marriage is work.  It is not a fairy-tale where everyone lives happily ever after.  

19. Do you believe in marriage?
I do, but I believe in marriage like a believe in medicine.  Not all medicine works for all people.  Think of clinical trials with medicine.  If medicine only works on 50 out of 100 people in a trial they say it is 50% effective, but what if the medicine is 100% effective for half the people.  Therein lies marriage.  It works really well for some, but not all.  The stigma associated with the 50% where this institution does not work needs to go away.

20. What’s the biggest compromise you’ve made in your marriage? (I know it’s the puppies.  God.  Get over it.)  
Truthfully the puppies are a big one.  I love my pups, but I really am a cat person.  However having puppies has reinforced the understanding that I do not like dogs.  The biggest compromise that I think I have made is that I no longer watch boatloads of sports.  I don’t miss it much, but I do miss watching soccer as much as I would like to. I used to be knowledgeable about the NFL, NBA, NHL and NCAA sports.  Alas and alack that knowledge has left my bailiwick.

To recap:
Marriage isn’t for everyone
I will be at CincyComiCon this weekend
Table D-14
Come get a crappy sketch card from me
They are crappy! they are sketchy, and they are cardy!
All at the same time
Seriously, come by the table and buy some cards
If you say you came because of my blog, I will give you a discount
That’s how I roll
The wife and I have decided to go for 19 more years and then reassess
I think that is wise
Have a great week everyone

 

20 Questions Tuesday: 362 - Mikey Neumann

August 30, 2016 Scott Ryan-Hart

Today I get the pleasure of asking Mikey Neumann 20 Questions.  I became aware of Mikey's existence because of his Movies with Mikey series on the YouTubes with his Chainsaw Suit Original channel. He now houses these fine pieces of art at his website newly launched MoviesWithMikey.com website.  The first of his Movies with Mikey I greedily consumed was his treatise on "The Force Awakens," but I came to love this Mikey Neumann fellow with his critically acclaimed review of "The Iron Giant." Good goddamn that was beautiful.  Mikey is more than just a film critic/analyst (he gives more than mere critiques).  Mikey also creates a boatload of content as well. So enough of my waxing eloquent.  Let's get to some questions.

My first career was as a cartographer.  When I was studying geography, I really enjoyed the concept of a "geographic story."  For example, I was born just outside of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.  As an Air Force Brat my family moved to Montgomery, Alabama and stayed there a few years before moving 2 hrs north to just to the northeast of Birmingham, Alabama in a town called Center Point.  I went off to Kent State University in Northeastern Ohio where I met my college sweetheart.  We both went to grad school in Columbus, Ohio at Ohio State, and have lived in the Greater Columbus Area for almost 20 years now.  Question 1: What is your geographic story?

I would say my geographic story is quite bland, possibly even boring. I was born in Tulsa, Oklahoma and lived in a small town called Broken Arrow until it was unceremoniously and completely destroyed by a tornado. It was by all accounts, a one street down culminating in the town's church on a tall hear near the end of the street. The tornado landed on one end of main street, destroyed practically every business on the strip, and dissipated because it couldn't get up the hill to the church upon it. It was a Little House on the Prairie-esque moment as the church was just about the only thing still standing in the town (and if you don't get that film reference, you are understandably off the hook).

From there, I lived in Norman, OK for a bit before heading off to Texas when I was in 4th grade. I went to a lot of schools as a kid, not really finding a place I really fit in until high school. I went to college in Austin, but moved to Plano to work at Gearbox Software, 15 years ago, where I still currently work on the daily.

I've seen a great variety of states in our union, but unfortunately, have only lived in two of them. I think I want to live in Hawaii at some point. Outside of the exorbitant price of cheese, I do quite think I would enjoy it there.

Or maybe Vermont. I always wanted to say I have a "summer home in Vermont." That's not a thing I will afford in my life team, but a kid's gotta have a dream, right?

Oh, that is not a boring story at all.  I think you may be the only other Okie that I have talked with for this humble blog.  I find it interesting that you would like a home in Hawaii and a summer home in Vermont.  Those are very different climates to gravitate towards.  I like it, but it is different.

Question 2: Do you see yourself moving anytime soon (not necessarily to Hawaii)?

I work a full-time job at Gearbox. I love my job and what I do so, no, I don't see myself moving anywhere else anytime soon. Having said that, my dream is to someday live in Seattle. I love too many people up there and I love the area too much. Everything about Seattle is beautiful to me.

I can completely understand that.  Gearbox is the real deal.  Everyone loves at least one Gearbox game.  Seattle is an interesting place. No haven't been there in years, but it was a fairly enjoyable time.  I went there to present a paper about the Emergency Broadcast System and tornado risk in Ohio. I'm great at parties.

Now to my usual third question.  Question 3: Cake or pie?  Which specific kind and why?

Pie. Cake is just sugar-bread with sugar-milk on top. Pie is an art form; an exercise in discipline. If I had to choose a pie, which I will freely admit is unfair, I think I'll go with a somewhat classical choice: French Crumb Apple Pie. The mix of textures and layers makes it the most exciting pie-eating experience (ranked solely against other pie-eating experiences ... not, like ... ranking it against fighting 200 zebras to the death in a cage match). That's cooler than all pie by a comfortable margin.

I love doing these with people who have opinions.  Interesting that you went with the French Apple Pie since it sounds eerily like a Dutch Apple Pie (which is what I would go for since I live on the outskirts of Amish Country).

Your Movies with Mikey pieces run the gamut of genre, Question 4: do you have a particular favorite movie genre?

Oh, wow. Are we too early in the process for me to reply: "I disagree with the premise of your question?"

It implies a few things, haha. I'm such a dick, but at the same time, I honestly disagree with the premise of the question. If I have a Movies with Mikey crusade it's that, it's okay to like all kinds of things and you shouldn't endlessly rank and choose favorites. This is what the blogosphere has done to us. We believe that everything must be ranked, filed, and sorted--that something's value is derived from how it stacks up against others.

What's your favorite genre of painting?

Oh, that's weird when it's paintings, right? Paintings hang in museums because the volume of experience is important. We need to be exposed to things we both already appreciate and things we are not even aware of. At the end of the day I like film as an art form, and I want to keep myself as open to all experiences within that medium as I can. Music is like that too. "What's your favorite type of music?" As we learned in high school, once we classify a genre, we immediately start pigeon-holing ourselves into it.

Apologies for that brief sidebox (it's like a soapbox, but it's one as delivered as a side conversation).

To truly answer you, I would say the genre I have derived the most joy out of over time: The Action-Comedy.

We are never too early in the process to question the premises of any of my questions. Always question.  I guess a better way to phrase the question would have been "what genre of movie are you always compelled to consume regardless of the perceived quality or popular and critical review?" Kind of a proxy for what's your fav.  

Anyhow...I used to make maps for a living, and now it is hard for me to look at what people call maps. I peer at them in disgust and wonder at the state of the world. Question 5: Since you work for a computer gaming company, can you play games objectively or are you constantly critical of the product in front of you?

In short: no. I've been working on games for almost 20 years at this point. I've worked with practically every aspect of game creation and it does start to disincentive you from playing certain types of games. I tend to stick to "gamier" stuff at this point. Games like Civ V make no attempt to hide their game behind the ruse of an "experience." That's where I run into trouble and cannot be objective in a slightest. When a character shouts "You're our last hope, Johnson! Follow me to victory and tell my wife I love he--" and is insta-murdered. That's where I cease to see a game at all and can only focus on the facade of what the developer is trying to create.

At some point, you reach a point where games can no longer lie to you, so to speak. In the last 10 years, honestly only Naughty Dog has succeeded in allowing me to believe in a scripted universe again. They create experiences so flawlessly that I can silence that aspect of myself and just enjoy it.

I like clean rules. INSIDE does not disguise what it is. Sure, some of the moments in that game cheat a little timing here or there, but if you "test" the limits of that game (for lack of a better term,) it will kill you. That's where game design is the most fun. INSIDE is never afraid to show you how dangerous the universe is and kill you. I think that's important in game design: intellectual honesty with the player.

I hope that answer wasn't too rambly. I could probably talk about this for 50 more pages or so.

Not too rambly at all, but I thought I that it might be the case that you could no longer easily just enjoy a game.  Once you know how some things are made it makes it difficult to remove yourself from that equation. It is always interesting to see something you love become something you make and the become something you cannot do anymore.  

So considering your time in the gaming industry, Question 6: what do you uniquely know because of your time in that industry?

I know that truly great games are made by a team of dedicated people. This myth of the 'visionary' is kind of bullshit. I mean, our industry certainly has them, and some of them are even really that good, but without a team of dedicated, exceptional individuals behind you, all the good ideas in the world don't mean a hill of shit.

And game design isn't really that much having good ideas, it's being able to neatly and directly convey ideas to programmers, artists, designers, etc. in a way that builds of a deeper working relationship. In all honesty, I've been in the creative director seat and made a lot of mistakes. Being right doesn't mean damaging a relationship to prove so. In fact, acting in this way ensures that you are sort of automatically wrong the next time around, because it will be near impossible for a line of communication to exist that would facilitate a winning result.

To quote Wheaton's Law: Don't be a dick.

I think people see those indy game developer documentaries and think that fewer people are necessary to make a good game, and sometimes but rarely that's true.  I think people underestimate the effort necessary to make a good game and how many specialized people are necessary to make something good.

You bring up Wheaton's Law, and you cohost a podcast with the aforementioned esteemed Mr Wheaton called TV Crimes. Question 7: how did you hook up with the guy who played Joey Trotta in Toy Soldiers?

In short: I make really good chili.

It's a bit of a dismissive way to describe our friendship, but it's also kinda true. We had met at PAX Prime one year, and we hit it off okay. I was in LA for a game recording, and I wasn't too far away from his house. I offered to make chili (just something I do) and the rest is kind of history. I remember when I was making it thinking "if Anne and Wil don't like this, at least you have the story that you made chili they hated."

We were playing Wits and Wagers when I served the chili and I remember Wil took 2 bites, looked up at me and said "This is the best chili I've ever had." It's sort of its own legend at this point, the "Mikey Chili." It's all very silly but it's also kind of hilarious. It was big with the Desert Bus crowd too. We raised $1000 in 15 minutes once for DB because I agreed to talk about my chili secrets.

The reality is I just really enjoy cooking and food and learning. What makes my chili kind of an experience is that I 1) never make the same chili twice and 2) will do everything in my power to incorporate things you love into it. I've made a garam masala indian chili (with fresh naan bread,) I've made vegan chili that fooled an entire room of people, I mean--I've made a lot of chili, haha. There's a Gearbox chili competition every year and I have my name on the wall plagues quite a few times.

It sounds very boastful--a trait I usually try to avoid--but it's a porridge-like meat sauce you scoop onto hot dogs. It has very little value to the human story at large, chili. I'm okay being a little boastful about it.

Anyway, to pull that back around. I made chili so good that we became really good friends and now we make a podcast where we beef on silly old tv shows and it's kind of awesome.

Sometimes you just gotta take stock of the things in your life that are like "how the eff did this happen? How is this my real life?" and just bask in it. Be thankful for the miracles in your life. You'll enjoy it more.

Interesting.  I would not have guessed chili as the glue between you and Wil. I love that you do not make the same chili twice.  That is great.  I also dig that you incorporate your philosophy into everything you do.  I do not dig that I just used the word "dig" twice in that way.  Ugh... I hate myself a little for that, ya dig?

Question 8: is there a word/phrase you find yourself using in spite of yourself?

Hm. That's a tough one. I think I've reached that mid-30s age where no matter how I talk, whether sarcastically or not, there are certain things I will not get away with uttering in front of other, breathing humans. I cannot walk into a room and proclaim something is on 'fleek' without appearing sarcastic, or worse, like an idiot screaming at a wayward family of clouds.

Lately, I think I quote random Youtube things, even if the people I'm talking to haven't seen it. In true honesty as it pertains to the question, the thing I keep saying and should probably stop based solely on the confusion of it, is Griffin McElroy from the golf episode of Monster Factory. I cannot (and seemingly will not) stop saying "The King's Game: Ball Chess" when I'm playing Rocket League. I don't know why I do this. It makes no sense that I do this. But I do this.

The King's Game.

Ball Chess.

I am not super up on the YouTube stuffs, so a bunch of what you just typed seemed a bit confusing to me. I am old and out of touch.

That being said, I think "on fleek" was only non-ironic for about 3.4 seconds.  The rate with which things go from hip and with it to "hip and with it" is alarmingly fast. By the time the mainstream picks up a trend the trend has been passed over by the avaunt guard.  

Question 9: do you think with how trends are becoming increasingly ephemeral that eventually trends will end up becoming meaningless to pop culture and people will only deal with micro-climates of coolness?

Well, trends and pop culture are sort of synonymous in real time. Lots of trends cease to be popular culture after their moment in the sun has diminished. YouTube was like a 20x multiplier on this particular topic. Example: We're going to remember Duran Duran forever. They are part of history from the time period they evolved music from the inside. However, Leave Brittany Alone, David at the Dentist, Chocolate Rain--the memetic offerings of popular culture today, don't live the same life cycle. None of these YouTube blips will live on in our collective historical record of culture. Even if all of those things, for about a week, were as 'known' as Duran Duran. On the internet, you can be Duran Duran famous for one day, but history will not remember you.

I think to look at it from a different way, popular culture today is very different because our number of inputs has increased so exponentially, that we can ride from wave to wave on the success of people rising to the top of the internet pile for a day or a week. With that in mind, what kind of YouTube examples have elevated above the 'one and done' mentality and actually earned a spot in our cultural, historical record? In simpler terms, who are the Spielbergs and Scorseses of this generation, if there even are any?

Or have we become too addicted to the quick fixes that it's now completely about the disposability of entertainment. ie. We now have so much access to whatever we want, that it's all kind of disposable now. We simply never run out, so it's value, by sheer volume, is diminished?

Hey, I ask the questions around here... But to your point, I think we are seeing a flattening of trend setting.  Trends are now significantly shorter in time span but more widely hitting.  It is very much a deep and narrow trend setting of the past vs the broad and shallow trends of the present.  In this regards I don't want to say that the "shallow" trends hold no significance culturally, but that they are so fleeting that there is little chance for their significance to transcend multiple cultures into a larger cultural significance.  "Fleek" really meant something to some group of people.  For them it really was "on fleek," or "OG fire," or whatever else those damn kids are saying today with their beep beep and their boop boops...

As for will there be some larger trend setter personalities or content creators? Time will separate the wheat from the chaff.

Question 10: Fill in the blanks.  I find that I am mostly ________. Others find that I am mostly _______.

I find that I am mostly curious. Others find that I am mostly WHERE THE FUCK IS HIS OFF SWITCH?

Well, those are really two sides of the same coin, aren't they? (Rhetorical questions don't count for the 20)

When I asked French blogger extraordinaire Patrick Beja 20 questions he stumbled into this absolute gem of a question.  The question's simplicity belies its depth and meaning. Question 11: are you happy?

Yes, correct. That is a deviously insightful question to ask someone because it forces them to hold up a mirror to their own woefully inadequate lives as juxtaposed against the trajectory they envisioned for themselves.

I don't think there's a true answer to the question, just perspectives on it. To answer differently--I am at my most happy when I am creating things and putting them out into the world. It doesn't really matter if I'm writing a major project like a Borderlands game, or making new episodes of Movies with Mikey, or doing silly music projects just for the reward of doing them ... I am at my most happy when I am creating. Like anything, happiness is not a binary. You are not all-the-way-happy and then another time all-the-way-not-happy.

Sometimes we are more happy.

Sometimes we are less happy.

I can go to Hawaii and sit on a beach sipping on a Mai Tai and be really damn happy, but I can also get bored in Hawaii. You can go to Hawaii and be reminded of a painful memory and then you might even be sad in Hawaii. It's all relative. Similarly, being around family can run a gamut of emotions across the entire spectrum. Family can make you the most happy, the most frustrated, the most angry, the most saddened, and the most perplexed of pretty much anyone in our lives. So, in the simplest terms, 'are you happy?' has but one answer: no, because the question is an impossible and ultimately myopic way to view existence. But I am at a point in my life where happiness is a pursuit I can afford myself with less effort to achieve it. When you are younger, this is less possible due to circumstance.

I am at a point in my life that grants me a lot of times to make things and a full-time job that I am provided a fountain of happiness by working at.

What a strikingly introspective back-and-forth this has turned into.

Right... so you are happy.  Got it.

You actually bring up an interesting point (damn you and your interesting). The "sometimes" piece is really important, because overall I am relatively happy right now, but there are moments when I am crazy happy or not-so-happy.  Those moments matter and are valid.

Question 12:  Do you have any mottos, credos, sayings etc... that get you through life?  

I do. It's probably silly but it's something I honestly believe because you can measure the success of any day with it.

"Leave the world a better place tonight than the one you woke up in this morning."

It's pretty simple but you can use it to gauge interactions and events in your life. A lot of the time, you can go a little out of your way to do something nice for someone else. Like, I can go to the Rocket Fizz by work to buy a bottle of root beer, but if I buy 2, I can give the extra bottle away to someone at work. Surprise bottle of artisanal root beer? Generally, this improves someone's day every time. It's silly and small, but it works.

That's just a silly example but I think it illustrates my point. Think about this in every interaction. And if you piss someone off or hurt someone's feelings, you know you have to work extra hard to make sure you didn't make the world a worse place (collectively speaking). Though, and this is the simplest advice I can give, do not allow whatever mistake you've made to fester. If you wrong someone, apologize as quickly and as earnestly as you can. Pride is a dangerous thing as it applies to human interaction.

I probably sound like a hippie but that's my creed, if you will.

That is not bad at all.  I really like the simplicity and effectiveness of it. And who doesn't want artisanal root beer? I know I want one right now.

The motto I typically gravitate towards is "Don't let the fuckers get you down."  This one hails from my Mother-in-law and is all about not letting haters win.

Oooh, it's spooky Question 13: Do you have any superstitions or rituals in your life?

Not that I am aware of. Though, I certainly notice them in the day-to-day. Right now, it is 2016. And yet, pretty much every building built today does not have a 13th floor listed. Generally, floors in buildings go from 12 to 14.

Today. In 2016. The fear of superstition is so great that the people building our structures believe that people will simply refuse to stay or work on the 13th floor of something (despite it actually being the 13th floor and simply labeled as the 14th).

I find that silly. Actually, I find any infrastructure that exists to hold up long-held superstitions to be quite reckless.

Superstitions are dumb. Don't rub the slot machine, you look like a whack-job.

Superstitions are silly, but I see tons of ritual that make a certain level of sense.  Ritual is often useful for getting into the right frame of mind.  I do not have any ritual in my life at the moment, and I find that is a bit of a loss.  I should add some mindfulness rituals or meditation rituals to my life.  Ritual, it seems, is important for focus and such.

I have never understood how 13 was "unlucky."  But that is relatively understood.  I would love for architects to just give the 13th floor a letter distinction or just a blank button and for all of us to refer to it as "the floor with no name" like it was Voldemort or something.

So you podcast, your create videos, you animate things, your job is to create video games... Question 14: is there a media platform out there that you want to produce content for, but have not yet?

Yeah, film. Obviously, film is something that is very important to me.

I think my dream currently (as these things change) would be to be a script doctor for a while. I romanticize it in my mind a bit, the idea of rewriting scripts to help get them to where they need to be before they film (and sometimes during). Joss Whedon did a lot of this back in the day. Speed comes to mind. He was brought in at the last minute and they were like: "Rewrite all of the dialogue but don't change anything that happens in the film." I really like the challenge level of that. It's probably a nightmare, but I'd like to give a try.

The platform is film but I have a pretty specific way I'd like to get into it. I feel like films lens too early as of late. We, as the audience, care about characters. I want to help take part in that.

Is that cheating? Am I attempting to divine my own trajectory a little too much here?

I should have guessed film, and no, you are not cheating.  You should try to drive your own trajectory.  That is something that I need to be doing more of.  I feel like my fear of failure takes precedent too often and hampers me from even attempting to drive my personal or professional trajectory as much as I should.

Okay, I might be pushing a bit here, so feel free to tell me to mind my own business and buzz off. You know a boatload of creatives on the Interwebs. You already work and co-create with many of those people on the regular. Question 15: Have you ever plotted out a trajectory that involved that cadre of people in getting you creating film shorts to get moving in that direction?

Not really. I'm thinking more in the long-term. As of right now, I have a full-time job I adore at a game company that makes amazing shit, so, I don't want to be throwing any of those darts right now.

Having said that, I have been making some short films and stuff on the side. I got some short film side-piece action in the pipe (Did I use any of that terminology correct, fellow kids?) In a perfect world, some film director that is already into my stuff would just email me out of the blue and be like "Yo. Rewrite this." And then I'd be cagey at first, instilling our conversation with a feelingof uncertainty. This is all a ruse. Then I'd say yes and the rest is Star Wars history.

(Please call me, Star Wars, okay thank you.)

It really is great that you clearly enjoy the job you have and the fact that you feel part of them making some really amazing games with very compelling interactive story-telling.  If I were not now doing something I enjoy, I would be incredibly jealous of that statement, but I luckily changed my career 5 months ago and am now really energized by and no longer dreading my job.

You have gone in depth about aspects of the gaming industry with some of the previous questions, and they were very insightful.  In your answer above you reference that you "adore" your job.  Question 16: what is one thing about your specific job at your specific company that you absolutely love?

This is pretty easy to answer.
Making trailers for Borderlands games.

(Disclaimer: When I use statements like "I made" and the like, I am not attempting to take any much-deserved credit away from audio design, animation, cinematic design, the marketing dept., and all the other departments supporting our efforts on the trailers. I'm just talking about conceptualizing something and editing it.)

It's only one (much smaller) aspect of my job that comes up every few years. It's actually informed a lot of who I am now in surprising ways. Back in 2009, I'd never edited a trailer before. I'd never really edited anything that wasn't silly high school and college short films before. I imagine there are not a lot of game companies where you can just fall into something like that. I guess I'd done those Claptrap shorts before this, but there's a pretty large difference between ancillary content where a robot swears at food and an actual worldwide marketing campaign. I would say both Gearbox and 2K have been admirably patient with me in that respect. On this side of it, I see how big of a risk it was.

The first trailer is so tame, comparatively, looking back. It was the first trailer (and certainly not last) trailer to feature the tagline "87 bazillion guns" (a tagline coined by Randy Pitchford). I had the real number of guns on there and Randy wanted to make it funny and he saw an opportunity to make up a sort-of slogan for the game. Genius.) We did quite a few Borderlands 1 trailers and I remember, going into BL2, having some conversations in marketing about how we were going to steer a much larger ship this time around. But the trust was the same going into the 'Doomsday' trailer. Only this time I pushed it with the stuff like "Get ready to Joy Puke your face off" and whatever other asinine word-chocuterie that--and this is true--ended up on official Borderlands merchandise at Hot Topic. Oh yeah. There's a JOY PUKE hat. I have it.

I have a weird job sometimes.

I created a trailer for BL:The Pre-Sequel where I called in an assist from the Dance Central team at Harmonix so that I could have a dance break in the trailer about Vault Hunters fighting on the moon. There were many phone calls.

"You want to put another company, that is unrelated to the game in any way, in the trailer?"

(Harmonix is amazing.)

The mission with Borderlands trailers was always very simple: make a piece of entertainment that people will like and tell them about the game. So, characters and phrases from the trailers sort of bled into the overall Borderlands universe. I've learned so much on this sort-of side journey I've taken with all the lovely people involved in Borderlands marketing and PR.

Epilogue: Movies with Mikey obviously wouldn't exist without my experiences in that space, with those people. Every person along the way is making you better, sharpening your toolset, even if you're not aware of it at the time.

I absolutely love everything about that aspect of my job.

Good goddamn, that is amazing.  I want to work at Gearbox now (truthfully, I wanted to work there before).  They sound great and willing to take chances.  That is honestly amazing, do you know if they are looking forUX guy willing to tele-commute from Ohio?

So Question 17:  Is there a question you were expecting me to ask that I haven't?

There is not. Oof. Looks like you wasted one!

Well, crap.  I only have a finite number of questions and I just whiffed on one, and I will never get it back.

It is now the time of the blog where I turn the tables on myself and give you the opportunity to ask me something. It is always a trepidatious time for me, but Question 18: do you have a question or questions you would like to ask me?

What are two movies you would remake and why? I will point that the necessity of the film for a remake is important to the question.

This is an incredibly difficult question.  The reasons are many-fold.  One: the movies need to be ones that can actually be told well. Two: the movies being re-made need to be poorly made movies or almost good movies.  Otherwise the movies wouldn't need remaking. This is something I think the industry misses sometimes.  They remake good movies when those movies are already good.  A remake should fix something that is broken.

Okay.  So here goes.  Movie The First: GI Joe.  How did they mess this one up? Good guys v bad guys with a world beating macguffin in play.  Simple really... Except to throw a left hook to it, go old school and make it make it the original GI Joe (he has to have a beard and a six wheeled vehicle) and make the first movie a singular commando (kind of a non-espionage James Bond) who has to take care of some kind of macguffin from an unknown terrorist organization that is show to be the seed of COBRA in a post credits scene. Then the franchise is in play.

Movie the Second: Flash Gordon.  That movie was incoherent.  It would be difficult to make this movie, but it could be great.  This is a pulp icon that could use some love.

So... Question 19:  what are you taking from these 20 Questions that you did not bring with you?

I have discovered that interviews can be a lot more than just a fluff piece about a particular piece of content.

This was fun. I would definitely do more stuff like this.

Well, thank you kindly.  This is a very different format of interviewing to be sure.  I find the fact that it happens over a longer period of time and that it allows both me and the person answering the 20 questions to really think about the answers and the questions makes for an interesting read.  The amount of thought you have put in has been amazing.  Thank you for that amount of effort.

The last question, sadly.  I have had a blast getting to know you better and slowly but surely consuming every bit of content you have been creating.  Question 20: What's next? Be as vague or concrete, as close term or long-term, as philosophical or grounded as you want.

More of the same things I'm doing. New videogames coming out over the next few years, more Movies with Mikey, more TV Crimes, more shorts, more of all of the things people know me for, I guess.

And hopefully some bigger surprises. I always have too many side projects going on at any one time. I've been trying to get better at this and say no to more things, concentrating on fewer, bigger things. Not a lot of ways for me to get more concrete that that. I love what I do and I hope I continue to have the opportunity to get to do it. For whatever reason, people wanna hear me talk about stuff and be a little silly. That's a pretty great way to make a living, I do believe.

Everyone should be awarded the opportunity to bring more silliness in their lives.

I agree, everyone should be a bit sillier in their lives, and that is a great sentiment to end this on.  Well, this has been an absolute delight.  Everyone should give you a follow on the Twitter, and check out the Chainsawsuit Original channel on YouTube.  Check out his new website MoviesWithMikey.com and make sure you watch Every. Single. Moves with Mikey. Ever. He published his Movies With Mikey on Interstellar, and it is stellar. Now I need to carve out time to listen to TV Crimes and shoot myself for the Stellar/Interstellar pun.  Ugh.

To recap:
Mikey is amazing
Next weekend I will be at CincyComiCon... I will be at Table D-14
I got an artists table and everything
Selling my Crappy Notecard Sketches™
Our house is a mess at the moment
I blame the puppies
They take soooo much effort
And are just messy
I love my pups, but I don’t think I like dogs
If they were not my dogs, I am not sure I would like them much
The wife has started converting herself to a dog person
She even listens to the “Can I Pet Your Dog” podcast
She is also a morning person now
I am not sure what the Universe has done with my wife
The King's Game... Ball Chess
Have a great week everyone

In Internet Personalities Tags interview

20 Questions Tuesday: 361 - The Olympics

August 23, 2016 Scott Ryan-Hart

Can I write a post about the Olympics?  Will the IOC shut this down?  I mean, the event is over, I cannot be detracting from it.  Fair Use should come to play here in some way, right? Okay… here it goes.

The family used rabbit ears to watch the Olympics on the local NBC affiliate. Which means that I was not able to do any of the on demand programming or other NBC channels like MSNBC or USA, etc… IT was terrible. I was only able to watch the tape delayed crap that was oddly not doctored.  Here is something you can do for me, tape delayed and edited prime-time US Olympics coverage… If you are going to tape delay and edit, you should get rid of some of the down time.  Why am I watching a gymnast remove tape from her hands after her uneven bars routine when there is someone doing the vault at the same time?  Why?  You suck, that’s why.

Anyway… This week, thanks go to pfmDesigner, Chris Ring, Lsig, Dr B-Dawg, and Chris Corrigan for the questions.  Here we go!

1. The Olympics only continue support of the idea of artificial boundaries in a world that is shrinking toward a global community. Is it time to just showcase the athletes and forget about flags?
Nope, even though there is a greater sense of global community it is good to have a healthy sense of national pride.

2.  Give me one good reason why the arts shouldn’t be reintroduced into the events.
One good reason? Hmmm… The issue is that art is incredibly subjective in a way that it wasn’t in the 1800’s.  

3.  When the aliens land, will they be invited to join in the competition, or will this be an earth-only event?
They will initially be left out, but eventually they will able to enter into contests that they cannot possibly win.  

4.  Where would you like to see the Olympics held?
Louisville, KY… close enough to go to, but far enough away to not feel the negative effects. Suck it Chicago

5.  (Visual) Can you redesign the Olympic flag so it better reflects the modern era?
(textual) No

6. What’s your favorite Olympic Event/Why?
I love fencing.  I fenced epee in college and I love the sport… even though it is a terrible sport to watch.

7. What event do you not consider a Sport?
The listing of events currently is pretty good.  I would say the modern pentathlon if I had to choose though.

8. Ryan Lochte, asshat or asshat? More villainous, Lochte or well, he pretty much takes that one in a runaway. So, Tonya Harding and Ryan Lochte - who is worse?
Lochte is an asshat who is worse than Tonya Harding.  Tonya Harding, most likely did not want Jeff Gillooly to take out Kerrigan… Lochte orchestrated.

9. Skateboarding soon in the Olympics good/bad/indifferent?
Good… the x-games is slowly being subsumed by the Olympics. X-games are no longer x-treme, they are now just a sport.  That is kind of funny.

10. Usain Bolt, honorary member of the Justice League (not really a question, just sayin’)
Nope.  I don’t think that, even though he is peak humanly fast, he is not Justice League fast.

11. How much of the Olympics did you watch?
I tried to get as much in as possible, but we were on vacation for a good portion of the events.  I would say the days we were at home I saw at least an hour or two a day.

12. Were your kids into it? What are their favorite events?
The kids were into it.  Little Man watched the swimming voraciously and Q wanted to watch the equestrian events as much as possible.

13. On a scale of 1-10, how great is this picture? (Hint: The answer is infinity. It is infinitely great).
It is pretty infinite

14. How effective is random stripping as a form of protest? (I'm asking for a friend who coaches Mongolian wrestling).
It is not effective at all, but it was very interesting.

15. Favorite Olympic moment from Rio?
Hmmmm… Brazil winning the gold for Men’s Volleyball.

16. What was the mascot for these Olympics? I never saw it.
It was a dead jaguar

17. More impressive, Phelps, Biles or Bolt?
Bolt… With a strong second to Ledecky.

18. Why has the decathlon become so unimportant? That used to be the maker of legends. Is this because of Dan and Dave. Ashton is a two- time gold medalist - that seems really under the radar.
They made a mistake with the Dan/Dave marketing campaign… and strategically that stopped people paying attention to the decathlon.

19. Do we even need these games anymore?  USA always wins, who cares?  The rest of us grab a few stray bronze and silver medals lying around the rowing and fencing venues.
That is very pessimistic.  This was not always the case.  It will not always be the case.

20. Which is more corrupt: FIFA or IOC?
FIFA… easily.

To recap:
Olympics, woooo!
I was pleasantly surprised by how well Rio 2016 went
All indicators pointed to it being a disaster
Way to go Brasil!
Interview is ready to publish next week
It is a great one
Super great
I loved it
You will love it too
I hereby decree that you will love next week’s post
Did you like today’s?
No really?  Didja?
Congrats to all the Olympic competitors
And congrats to the Olympic competitors who got rid of the Olympic Village condom surplus
Well done athletes
Have a great week everyone

 

20 Questions Tuesday: 360 - Vacation

August 16, 2016 Scott Ryan-Hart

Last week we were on vacation… It was amazing.  We went to Bryce Canyon, the Grand Canyon, and Zion for hiking and biking in the parks with Backroads.  Backroads is great.  It was the equivalent of a cruise on land.  They cooked, cleaned, set-up, and broke-down camp so the fam and I did not have to.  It was delightful.  Anyway, this vacation made me realize that this week’s topic should be, well… “vacation.”

So without further ado… this week’s questions.  Thanks to Lsig, Nadolny, Erin, Bruce, and Sandy for the questions.

1. Why do the Go-Gos do synchronized water skiing in their "Vacation" video? Do people do that on vacation? Ever?

You mean, you do not? Every vacation near a body of water ends up with a water skiing pyramid after a day or two.  

2. How long is the ideal vacation?
9 days or so.

3. Which of your kids is the best traveler?
Little Man

4. If money were no object, where would you travel to next?
New Zealand.

5. I read a funny article at one time arguing that without kids, it's a "vacation," -- with kids, it's just a "trip."  Agree or disagree?
Disagree.  You can, indeed, have a vacation with kids.  It does not have to be merely a trip.  

6. Is it a vacation if u go to a cottage and have tons of projects to do?
Nope.

7. National Lampoons vacation: One of the best movies ever? Best quote from the movie?
Does it really hold up?  I have not watched it recently.  It might now hold up, and if that is the case I would say “no.” If it does hold up, let’s call it a modern classic.  Quote: “We’re from out of town.”

8. How bad were the vacation sequels?
Christmas Vacation wasn’t too bad, if I remember correctly (haven't seen it recently either), but European Vacation was terrible.  I have not seen the newest one.

9. Which "ball of string" type attractions have u stopped at?
I don’t remember anything specifically, so I don’t think I have been to many, if any of the roadside attractions.

10. Been to Disney?
Yup, Disney World in Florida.  Once as a kid and once as an adult with my own kiddos.

11. Should Ohio get a Disney?
Sure, why not? Not sure it could be a year round place though, and Disney isn't known to be only seasonal.... The cold doesn't bother me anyway.

12. In my family there are "vacation", "visits" and "trips". What makes the difference between these for you? (Or, what defines a vacation different than the other two?) When is a vacation with the family different than a trip?
I am not sure what the difference between “visits” and “trips” but I can tell you that there is a difference between a “trip/visit” and a “vacation.”
A “trip/visit” is something that is done by a family because of some level of requirement or obligation.  In the end that trip/visit can be enjoyable, but it does not absolutely have to be.
A “vacation” is a chosen time that a family unit decides to travel for the sole purpose of some kind of enjoyment out.

13. Favorite ocean beach?
Ocean? Gonna go with Southern Shores in the Outer Banks of North Carolina.

14. Farthest from home you've gotten on a vacation?
Munich, Germany

15. Best vacation as a kid?
Gonna go with Colorado when I was a youngun.

16. Does a "stay-cation" count as a vacation?
Nope. Vacation has “vacate” as a root, which means “to leave.” You gotta go to have a vacation. Consider a "stay-cation

17. What did you do on your last vacation?
We went to the aforementioned Bryce Canyon, Grand Canyon, and Zion.

18. What is your "dream" vacation? - provided the money & time, what would you do? where would you go?
Something in the mountains with a sous chef who does the dishes.

19. “Vacay?” Yes or no?
Sadly I have used it, so “Yes,” but it should be a “No.”

20. Next vacation?
Not sure.  We need to get our finances in order and try to do something this upcoming summer.

To recap
I am exhausted
Home Monday morning at 2am
Finally asleep by 2:30
At work by 8:30
Showered and shaved and ready to go
Except I was dragging because I was soooo tired
Dragging today as well
I need to gets some sleep tonight
Got a couple of interviews a going right now
Yep, right now
Even as I type this
Yeah!
Getting the kids some dinner because the stove is done broke
Girl wants wings and the boy wants New York style pizza
Stupid stove being done broke
Little Man starts up his schooling tomorrow
Have a great week everyone

 

20 Questions Tuesday: 359 - William Grapes

July 26, 2016 Scott Ryan-Hart

This week I get the pleasure of asking a friend of mine 20 Questions.  Bill Grapes, aside from having one of the best last names ever, is an incredible artist.  Bill's style is a incredibly detailed.  he enjoys flowing arcs and curves that define the shapes of his work.  The thing about Bill's work that is frustrating to see, is just how much better his impeccable linework is when he immaculately inks it... and that is when he is not creating tonal work which is a different level of superb. He currently lives in Cincinnati and I don't get to hang out with him as often as I would like.

On to the questions...

As you know, I like making maps and I like people's personal geographic stories... This is not your first rodeo, you know how the geographic story goes...  Question 1: What is your personal geographic story.

I'm going to do this fast to get the most honest answers (I'm already lying). My geographic story starts in Northern Ohio. Within an hour of Cleveland. We moved to Cincinnati when I hit middle school. Pretty boring stuff. Right out of school I got the travel bug. Spent a good amount of time in Blighty and a very small amount of time in Finland, Sweden, and Germany. Almost sounds like I was in the military. Great experiences that helped me grow as a person and an artist. If it wasn't for those crazy Fins I probably would have had any idea how to decorate my house

Interesting.  Since I have been to you house, I have seen your decor style... I would classify it more as mod than Finnish minimal, but I will entertain that thought. So, since you have lived in so many places, Question 2: Where would you want to live if there were nothing to hold you back?

If this was a few years ago, I would have said San Francisco, but I've heard it's been overrun by the San Jose crowd. If money were no object (if that is what we are saying here) I would say London. I speak the language mostly. It's not that far to the US or Europe. Also, some pretty great curry can be found there.

I cannot stand the smell of the spice curry.  It is difficult for me to be near Indian food for long. I know that this is a personal issue and has nothing to do with the overall quality or enjoyment of others for Indian food.  Please, dear readers (or deer readers, I don’t know if you are corvine quadrupeds who have learned to read and connect to the internet) do not send me comments about how I may not have had the right Indian food.  It is just not my game.

Okay, the long awaited Question 3: Cake or Pie? Which kind specifically, and why?

Now the hard questions. Is this some sort of psych eval? Tough choice. I have favorites from each category. My grandmother's coffee cake recipe is pretty unstoppable but I my great aunt made a deadly butterscotch pie. I will go with pie though. I can't fight something that you can put sweet potatoes or cherries into. Also, I don't care what the name implies, cheesecake can be considered a pie to me.

It only gets more difficult from here.  I am sure we will get into boxers or briefs... that came out wrong.  Anyhoo... I like how you think.  Cheesecake is a custard pie.  Mmmmm cheesecake.

I want to hear more of this butterscotch pie you speak of Question 4: How does a butterscotch pie come into existence and how can I get a gluten free version of that?

It's pretty simple to make and if you can have a gluten free crust it should be easy. It's best with a whipped top (like a chocolate creme pie). It's an old southern thing. I'm surprised you didn't run into it down south.

I was in pecan country.  If there was a sugary pie, it was pecan.  I had two pecan trees in my backyard.  In fact, I shelled soo many pecans in my childhood, I am pretty sure my family broke some child labor laws.  If anyone else in the family liked butterscotch, I would make this.

So, you are a comic book artist guy, and can do the drawing really well.  Question 5: When did you realize that you were good at drawing?

I'm not going to say I'm good, yet. That sounds like I'm faking humility but I'm not. I have a level of quality that I want to see consistently and I have yet to get there. I'm close but not there yet. Hopefully, it is a sliding scale that gets harder the better I get. The biggest challenge recently was figuring out how to draw women.

I think you may be parsing things a bit critically.  There is a difference between being good and seeing where improvements could be made.  There are always improvements that can be made, but, you, good sir, are good good at the drawings, and don't let anyone tell you otherwise.  Question 6: What specifically are you working on right now to get yourself drawing women better (I need to do facial studies... I need to do that soooo badly).

I'm a harsh critic, what can I tell ya? For drawing women, just like anything else, you just have to draw. For me, it takes me seeing something that makes me realize how something is constructed. I usually see a geometric shape and I realize I can use that to make the drawing process easier.

There was a visual organization class that i did when I was an undergrad at Kent State.  For that class we had to take panels from Golden Era comic strips and abstract them into a minimalist geometric expression... to do this we had to do 50 studies of each of the 3 panels.  It was an interesting exercise in finding the internal geometry of the images.  It was surprisingly interesting. Everything falls back into geometry.

Question 7: Do you default to angular shapes like triangles, rectangles, trapezoids, etc... or more rounded shapes like circles, arcs, ellipsoids, etc...?

Yes. I'm big on the George Bridgeman technique for figures. Also, I'm also a big fan of Russian Suprematist art. That is about as geometric as I go.

Cheeky, oh so cheeky. Ellipsoids for me, just because it is fun to type and say ellipsoid.

Question 8: So when you are not drawing, what fills your down-time?

When I'm not drawing? There is a time I'm not drawing? I waste time watching TV. But I try and draw while doing that. Daredevil is soooo good though. I also enjoyed Man in the High Castle. Also, family stuff and volunteering.  

The second season was excellent.  Netflix's Marvel properties have been killing it.  I think they need to be doing more to integrate them into the greater Marvel Cinematic Universe.  There doesn't need to be major interactions, but some Hawkeye time might be interesting. The Netflix series should also be a bit more connected beyond the Night Nurse.  If nothing they should mention events in each of the series.  Something like in Daredevil Season 2, a news item saying radio host Patsy Walker was involved in a mob action down by the docks, or in Jessica Jones, some reference to the multiple explosions in Hell's Kitchen from DD season 1.  There just isn't enough cross pollination between the series.

Question 9: What Marvel B/C-list property is ripe for the Netflix series treatment?

Agree. A simple mention doesn't do it. I liked seeing Carrie-Anne Moss in DD season 2. I would settle for characters passing each other on the street. It might be a cool Tarantino moment. Say in DD Jessica Jones passes Matt Murdock on the street. No interaction. An Easter egg. Then in Jessica Jones the same scene is shot and you get to see where Jessica was, etc when it happened. No big cross series tie up needed.

As for B/C list titles? Any X or FF-related connection is right out. So no Wyatt Wingfoot. I see the Punisher easily spinning off. Werewolf by Night might be cool. If they did a Chambers of Secrets deal it could be an anthology/series testing ground. Might be cool.

I think a Moon Knight series could be fun and I would be interested in seeing a Nighthawk series... That one could go crazy dark and be the first series that ended with the main character's death.  There's your dark and gritty.  

Question 10: fill in the blanks.  I find that I am mostly ______. Others find that I am mostly ______.

I find that I am mostly a pie man. Others find that I am mostly a cake man.

People do not know you at all then

Question 11: do you have any mottos, credos, mantras, or personal philosophies?

Several. "Gotta Eat," means I do what I have to (legally) to feed my family. "It's not about me," helps me try and keep balance in my existence. "Don't put that in your mouth, you don't know where it's been," is a good one that needs little explaining.

The ones I typically trot out are "Don't let the fuckers get you down" and "funny over nice," but those are a little glib.  The one I am dealing with right now "It is hard to change because change is hard."

Question 12: Why are there 12 inches in a foot?  That makes no sense to me at all.

For the same reason there were 240 pence in a Pound until 1970. Old English shit. Crazy.

English/Imperial weights and measures are completely loony (different than the 1 Canadian Dollar coin though)

Question 13:  Do you have any superstitions or rituals in your life right now?

Other than going to church? : )

Church rituals will do.  I kind of miss the ritual of religion... I don't miss the dogma though.

You are a musically knowledgeable dude.  With the recent losses of Bowie and Prince, Question 14: What are your favorite Bowie and Prince songs?

For Bowie songs, there are a couple. You've Got a Habit of Leaving and Can't Help Thinking About Me are great early tracks. Far better than his first album. Hunky Dory is my favorite Bowie LP. Prince is a bit more elusive for me. He is like Morrissey. Great ideas and a few brilliant lines then a few terrible throw away thoughts. I liked how he combined Little Richard, Hendrix, and New Romanticism (long after Duran Duran/Spandau Ballet left it). When You Were Mine is my favorite Prince song. The Color Purple cast tribute version of Purple Rain was pretty stunning.  

Interesting.  I would have thought that Prince would have been a bit more in your wheelhouse.  I knew that Bowie would be in your catalog, but I thought that the funk that exudes off of Prince would be within your milieu.

I just realized that I love the word "milieu."  Question 15: Is there a word that you absolutely love that is a bit outside the norm?

I am fond of "Habib". I love that it usually is used in a racist way to make fun of Arabic people but its meaning is "darling" or "Sweetheart". Stupid racists.

I think, by definition, racists are stupid.  Dumb racists.  Anytime a person places that much power and attention into something that cannot be changed, dumbification happens.  I think were are in the midst of The Dumbification of America, but I wonder if everywhere is constantly in a state of apparent dumbification.

Question 16:  Where and when do you consider to be the dumbest moment in history?  

Dumbest moment in history is tough. It's like any goal, the bar is continually getting raised. Possibly the First Nations allowing European's in the Americas.

Well... If the archeological evidence in Newfoundland is any indication, the first time the First Nations saw a European they did not exactly welcome them with open arms.  The Skraelings put their foot down and kicked the Norse out, according to some sagas.

Question 17: We sitting near each other at Cincy Comicon this year?

If the past couple of year are any indication, yes.

Time for the student to become the master... Question 18: What question/s do you have for me?

For your wedding you chose to reflect your ethnic heritage. Did you go full Scottish?

By full Scottish, of course you mean I got totally pissed and unintelligibly cursed at everyone, right?  Then the answer is "No."  If you mean "Did I wear a kilt without my skivvies?" Then the answer is also "No."  I wore a respectable blue boxer brief.... and the garter, like a boss.

Question 19:  What did you take from these 20 Questions that you did not bring with you?

I never considered that I was bi-desert. While picky, I can be happy with either pies or cakes.

I bet you would even eat a pie baked into a cake... fence sitter.

Question 20: So what's next for you? Be as literal or figurative, as short or long term, as concrete or vague as you want to be.

Currently I've got freelance and commission projects that keep rolling through. In addition, I'm still working on the next installment of Fyre-Dragon.

Well, that was certainly fun.  Will, you are the best.  Please follow Mr Grapes on twitter, Instagram,  and his art blog as well as his Deviant Art account.  You should also buy his book The Infernal Fyre-Dragon.  It is stupid amounts of fun.

To recap:
Little Man is 13
Sweet God Almighty, Little Man is 13
How the hell did that happen?
For his birthday he decided to celebrate by having an asthma flare up
He hasn’t had one of those for about 5 years
Well, Sunday night/Monday morning was spent at the ER awaiting a steroid script
Not the best way of welcoming in his teen years
Got home from the ER at 7 am and then was at work by 10 am
I think it would have been great to sleep
Alas and alack that was not to be
So, Little Man is 13
Wow
I feel old now
Have a great week everyone

 

 

In Comic Book Tags interview

20 Questions Tuesday: 358 - Random Q's

July 19, 2016 Scott Ryan-Hart

It is late tonight to be starting a post, but I am a late night guy, so everything is okay, right?  Right?!?!  Q is having a friend over for a sleepover tonight and Little Man is at another sleep away camp.  The pups are are out of their minds.  They were fixed last week and now they are going stir crazy in the house.  They are zooming around in a manner that is decidedly not “calm and recuperative” as the vet outlined.  They are puppies… it’s what they do.

I sent out the clarion call to Facebook asking for random questions and lsig, Bruce, Tracey, the wife, and Linda answered.  Thanks for the q’s.

1. Are you as exhausted by this presidential election as I am?
Is incredulous a synonym of exhausted? I honestly cannot believe this shit show.

2. Have you seen the Lego: Droid Tales mini-series and do you love it?
I have not seen it, but I have heard good things.

3. What did you have for lunch?
I had teppanyaki shrimp with onions and mushrooms.

4. How much is enough?
The amount that is just before too much.

5. Who put the bop in the bop-shoo-bop-shoo-bop?
Oddly Jacques Cousteau… I know, I would not have guessed that as well.

6. Why do fools fall in love?
Because they are fools.  It is a question that answers itself.

7. What difference does a day make?
24 Hours

8.  Who put that doggy in the window?
It got up there itself.  Nobody puts puppy in the window.

9. Who let the dogs out?
Oddly enough, and you would be very surprised by this, but Jane Goodall.  I know you are thinking, “but she’s all about apes.”  She can still let the dogs out… and did.

10. Who you gonna call?
My wife.  Who are you going to call?

11. Why did the chicken cross the road?
Chickens are mercurial, fickle fowl.  The reason had changed by the time the chicken got across the road.

12. How can you have any pudding if you don't eat your meat?
Because I am a GD adult, and I will eat some fucking pudding even if I did not make any meat. Pink Floyd ain’t the boss of me.

13. Who's that girl?
That one? Kelsey.

14. Where's the beef?
I believe it is between Yeezy and TS, amIright? Up top!  Yeah.

15. What's my line?
"Horatio, I knew him well."

16. Whose line is it anyway?
Greg Proops

17. Are we there yet?
Nope, and I’m not sure we will get there.  It’s the journey, not the destination.

18. Who put the ram in the ram a lama ding dong?
It is an imperative sentence, where the speaker is addressing someone they do not like and thinks poorly of. “Ram a llama, Ding-Dong.”  In this case there is no “ram.” It is an active voice imperative statement to an understood second person.

19. How are dogs like toddlers?
The bark at their reflections in the mirror and don’t always like being put in a crate.

20. Have these answers driven you crazy yet?
Not yet, to my knowledge, but that answer is probably best answered by others.

To recap:
Q got her hairs cut
She looks awesome
I need to trim the grey goat
It sounds dirty, but I mean that I need to trim my gen x required goatee
It really is late, isn’t it
I still need to go out and get some bagels and cream cheese for the sleepover breakfast
I was going to make waffles, but they specifically asked for bagels and cream cheese
I am like water
I follow the path of least resistance
I also slowly erode my surroundings
I have an interview in the can for next week
It’s an artist, so get ready for art
Have a great week everyone

 

20 Questions Tuesday: 357 - Planets

July 12, 2016 Scott Ryan-Hart

This past week it has been surprisingly clear in the middle of the night when I have had to take the pups out to pee before settling in for the night.  The clear night sky is delightful.  I wish there were not as much visual clutter as there is because I love looking at the stars.  Anyway… as of late I have been watching Mars slowly wind its way across the sky.  It is amazing to see a little bright red spot in the sky.  Anyway… we just put a satellite in orbit around Jupiter and we have man-made satellites in orbit around Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Saturn, and Jupiter.  We have had probes do flyby’s of all the planets and even our weird dwarf planet, Pluto.  Therefore this week’s topic is the planets.

Now that I am looking at the numbering... this one should have been about guns.  357 Magnum, baby!

Thanks this week go to Bruce, Kallie, Lsig, Some Other Guy, Little Man, and Q… onto the questions:

1. Thoughts on us getting a space elevator operational?
With SpaceX and Blue Origin basically democratizing space, I think the insane cost to get a space elevator constructed will make it infeasible in the near future.  As long as re-usable rockets are in play, it will be difficult to make a space elevator fiscally viable.  That being said, I could easily see a space elevator being used for Mars or Titan.

2. Going back to our moon any time soon or ever?
We will need to use the Moon as a layover for other solar system travel at some point.  The raw materials there will help to construct the first mining colonies in the belt.

3. Manned mission to other planets or other planets' moons?
Yes. With current thrust and human habitability requirements it would take at least 150-ish days but more likely 300 days to get to Mars from the Earth.  That time frame is narrowing every time there is an advance in rocket propulsion.  Eventually the time frame will be about 3 to 4 months and that is what the sea voyage from Europe to the New World cost timewise in the 1500’s… at that point, we are actively colonizing.

4. Mining in space? - moons, planets, asteroids?
Yes.  It only makes sense to mine asteroids.  There is more platinum in 2 or three asteroids than there is in all of the Earth, and who knows about the quantity of rare earth metals.

5. Life on other (local) planets &/or moons?
I find that highly unlikely that we will find any life currently anyplace in our solar system. I think we might find evidence of life having died out on Mars eventually though.

6. Now that we know there is water on Pluto, what sort of creatures do you imagine live there?
Frozen fish

7. Why do people from other planets all speak English, often with a British accent?
Because other planets are hoity-toity…

8. Why do Tattooine and Jakku look so much alike?
Because while the Goldilocks Zone around stars allow for life, some planets are like Papa Bear’s porridge, “Too hot.”  Hoth is like Mama Bear’s porridge. There is no baby bear porridge planet in star wars that I can think of.  Maybe that place that Maz was on.

9. Has there ever been a planet Janet hasn't seen?
And there’s never been a planet Janet hasn’t seen.

10. Are there any planets in our solar system you would like to visit?
Of the all, I would say Mars. Mercury and Venus are too hot and it is questionable if the rest have any way of “visiting.”

11. Do you think there is any intelligent life out there?
Yes.  The Universe is too vast for the possibility of intelligent life only occurring in one small instance.  Do I think we will ever meet up with an intelligent lifeform?  Nope, I also think the Universe’s vastness will preclude any contact with others.

12. How do planets keep spinning?
Planets are dizzy, yo. It has to do with non-Newtonian physics, which is different than non-Newtonian liquids like ketchup.

13. Why is Pluto considered a dwarf planet?
Because it has an elliptical orbit and is just plain weird and small.

14. How many miles is it to go around the Sun on the Earth? How long is our orbit?
940,000,000 km or 584,000,000 mi.  Potentially it is πAu², right?

15.  How far is from Saturn to Titan?
1,221,870 km or 759,235 mi.

16.  Why in the Star Wars universe to planets have only one biome?
Lazy writing, and poor world building.

17.  If you had your own planet what would it be called?
Gormalaithe

18.  Planet X, is it real?
I think so.  I imagine it is in the Kuiper Belt, and may not, by definition be an actual planet because its orbit is not clear. Recently there was some article about how astrophysicists were narrowing down the area that it could be.  I tried googling the article, but almost all the returns were some weird conspiracy theory about Planet X causing a mass extinction in April. Spoiler alert: It didn't.

19. Is there a mysterious planet exactly opposite of us in our orbit around the sun?
Oooh, 2 planetary conspiracies back to back.  These questions must be from the lizardmen. Nope.  That is a doofy idea. It is honestly a science fiction idea that an author proposed because it would be an interesting idea.

20. Why do some planets go faster than others?
Some planets feel the need… the need for speed.

To recap:
I guess the kiddos know about this thing now
So… I have that going for me?
Ugh… I guess they will find out how I really feel now
It could be worse, I still love them
Even though they can be incredibly annoying
In fact, I love them in spite of the fact that they are incredibly annoying
Really filth flarning annoying
The pups go into get fixed tomorrow
I did not know they were broken
#DadJoke
I have to draw more
I need to carve out the time and just make myself draw
I have a bunch of pencils done that I need to ink
I have a Cyborg, and Adam Strange, a Dishonored Thor Odinson, and a few others
I also need to clean the ratties cage out... its stinky in there and I can't clean the office and use the treadmill until that thing is clean
These puppies make it difficult to do things around here... can't let the ratties run around when the pups could snack on them
Have a great week everyone

 

20 Questions Tuesday: 356 - Day after July 4th

July 5, 2016 Scott Ryan-Hart

Yesterday was July 4th and in the US it is a time of fireworks and eating barbequed meat (we had ribs and wings.  The wife said they were too sweet, but she has never been a fan of sweet.  It is kind of a knock against her).  There are fireworks and the required listening to weird patriotic songs and the general overbearingness associated with the concept of American Exceptionalism.  U S A! U S A!

Anyway… since it is the day after America went into a sticky sweet meat coma and alarmed all small animals everywhere with festive incendiaries, I asked my non-US friends (and foreign nationals living in the US) to send me some questions concerning July 5th.  The day after.

Thanks this week go to TheMikeStand (Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada), Justin Render (Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa), Chris Corrigan (Bowen Island, British Columbia, Canada), and Lars Hinrichs (currently lives in Austin, Texas, USA now but grew up in Bonn, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany).
Here come the questions!

1. The Oatmeal reminds everyone in the USA every year to be careful about scaring their pets. How did your dogs do with the fireworks?
We went out to see the local fireworks and left my Mother-in-Law with the pups for the explosive festivities.  So, by her report, the pups did really well.  They were curious as to what the booms were, but were not afraid of them.

2. What is your personal record for number of hotdogs eaten in one day?
I am not much of a hotdog guy.  When I was a kid I think I had like six or something like that.

3. Boating, Monster Trucking, or blowing things up. Which is the BEST?
Blowing up monster trucks. It's a twofer.

4. We can't give $17.76 in change anymore because we phased out the penny. Should the US do that as well?
Very possibly, but I’m not sure we ever will.  We still use imperial units of measure, for goodness sakes, there is very little that could make us stop quoting prices of $19.99.

5. What, if any piece of clothing / decoration is the biggest abomination of the American Flag? (Excuse the grammar).
That jacket that Axl Rose used to wear… ugh

6. Does the 5th of July actually have any significance in the calendar, or is it just a day that's used to recover from the 4th?
It is just a day that follows the 4th.  Nothing special there.

7. Now that all the fireworks are over, what do you do?
I just came to work, like a true patriot.  I am feeding this economy! Now if I could just purchase a house at an insanely inflated cost and go more in debt so the banks can survive one more year.

8. After the US declared independence, do you think the Leave leaders had a plan?
Ooh, a misdirect.  Number 1: Cameron started down this path to get the far right people to shut up and stop grousing about being part of the EU.  He never expected the vote to go the way of Leave.  A single up/down straight majority vote for something that significant should never have been proposed.  That was idiocy. He should have made the referendum about whether or not the UK should do a longitudinal economic impact study for X millions of Pounds to investigate if the UK should leave.  That would have taken the temperature of the populace and outlined both the positive and the negatives associated with leaving.  It would have provided hard numbers to use as decision making tool.  Of course, that would only work if the Uk were not “tired of experts.” Number 2: the people who orchestrated the Leave campaign did not have a plan in place or we woud be seeing one of them attempting to step into the power vacuum that Cameron left.

9. If yes, what the hell happened? Was THIS the plan?
There was no plan, because their campaign was one not of conviction but of mere opposition.

10. Why do Americans fawn over the Royal Family so much?
I. Do. Not. Know. Or. Think. I . Ever. Will.

11. What do you think are the biggest issues the USA has that the rest of the world just can’t understand?
Just how deep seated the whole racism thing is here. Slavery leaves very long and deep scars.

12. What was the most interesting July 5th in American history (other than Arthur Ashe becoming the first black man to win Wimbledon)?
That is kind of the biggest societal deal other than that, the voting age being lowered to 18 the year before.

13. Were fireworks safe in 1776 or was there a lot of cleanup you had to do on July 5th?
Fireworks were not safe… turns out they have never been safe, but in 1776 they were so unsafe that they had to be set off by 3/5th of a person (if you know what I mean.) 

14. In Germany, a frequently used hangover cure is pickled herring. How were pickled herring sales in the USA on 07/05/1776?
Thyme and soot sales were up, but pickled herring sales were even.

15. How long did it take until people in Virginia knew that they were independent?
There are pockets of 1700’s redcoats to this day in Virginia… they propose laws concerning bathrooms.

16. Did Americans cry about being independent? Did they ask for a do-over of the referendum? Did the leaders of the independence movement resign right away on 07/05/1776?
There were a good portion of people in the Americas who cried pretty significantly about it.  They didn’t really even ask for the first referendum, and the leaders of the colonial “Leave” party actually stuck around.

17. How were pets and cattle affected by independence?
They no longer had to pay the “ass, grass, or gas” tax.

18. What day of the week was July 5th, 1776?
Friday.

19. How many Americans mentioned the topic of slavery on July 5th, 1776?
Around 690,000+

20. How did mapmakers feel about independence? Was July 5th a bad day for them because they had to re-label or re-draw stuff?
Only the map-makers who were in the middle of making a world map, or map of North America thought it was a bad day.  All the other cartographers were ecstatic because they had job security for a bit longer.

… and one to grow on


21. Did Bruce Springsteen write his excellent song “Independence Day” on the day that we are talking about?
Nope.  It was when he paid off his student loans.

To recap:
This past weekend there were sparklers
Here’s a slo-mo vid of Q with some sparklers


Brexit is messed up
Super messed up
The hypocrisy of the Leave party claiming that their victory was an independence day is alarming
The independence day sequel looks terrible
More terrible than the first one
It is late
Have a great week everyone.

 

20 Questions Tuesday: 355 - Jeff Cannata

June 28, 2016 Scott Ryan-Hart

Today we get to read the 20 Questions of one Jeff Cannata... One Jeff Cannata? I mean THE Jeff Cannata.  I became aware of the exuberant Mr Cannata is ages ago because of The Totally Rad Show.  After that podcast called it quits I lightly followed Jeff around.  He would guest and interact with people and shows that I followed.  His content creation orbit intersected my content consumption orbit and it was always enjoyable when our arcs intersected. Then I found myself following him actively again with his podcast, We Have Concerns.  That podcast is a combination of improv comedy and odd tech news.  It really does defy description.  Now I am a fan and supporter of that podcast.

So without further ado, my 20 Questions with Jeff Cannata.

I have always enjoyed maps, and that is why my first career has been as a cartographer.  When I was studying geography, I really enjoyed the concept of a "geographic story."  For example, I was born just outside of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.  As an Air Force Brat my family moved to Montgomery, Alabama and stayed there a few years before moving 2 hrs north to just to the northeast of Birmingham, Alabama in a town called Center Point.  I went off to Kent State University in Northeastern Ohio where I met my college sweetheart.  We both went to grad school in Columbus, Ohio at Ohio State, and have lived in the Greater Columbus Area for almost 20 years now.  Question 1: What is your geographic story?

My geographic story isn't nearly as varied.  I lived in one house my entire life, until moving away for college,  My father still lives in that very house, in Antioch, California, up in the East Bay Area.  I went to college in Santa Barbara at U.C.S.B., then moved down to Los Angeles, where I've lived ever since.

That is surprising.  You seem not especially California centric... Question 2: Do you travel much? If so, what would b your "go to" travel spot?

Absolutely!  My wife and I love to travel.  In fact, this year for Christmas, instead of physical gifts to each other, we decided to just take a small trip.  It really is our favorite thing to do.  We got engaged in Australia, and married in Italy.  Last year, we traveled to Portugal and France.  If I had to pick a favorite, it would be difficult to choose between Tuscany and Provence.  Both are magical places.  But rather than returning to spots we love, we both still have so many new locations we dream of visiting.  So, it is much more likely that our next "go to" trip won't be someplace we've already been.

I love traveling, but I haven't been able to as much since the kids have come along.  I am a bit jealous of your travels though.  All of that traveling sounds amazing.

So, here comes my typical and extremely important Question 3: Cake or pie? Which specific kind and why?

This is perhaps my favorite question in the known universe... and I have a definitive answer: PIE.  A thousand times, pie.  Even bad pie is better than most cake.  Now, I've had some extremely impressive cakes.  There is a place here in Los Angeles called Susie Cakes that makes an amazing marble cake.  And the Nothing Bundt Cakes chain serves up stellar cakes, too.  But the very best pies?  They obliterate the very best cakes.  The perfect pie crust, flaky and delicious, with any number of wonderful fillings - I'm a sucker for Pecan, Blueberry, Peach, Key Lime, Pumpkin, you name it.  There is a place near my house called Simple Things that makes a Salted Caramel pie that is to die for!  Inside the lid to their pie box they stamp the words, "You Make Good Decisions".  I couldn't agree more.  My own mother's Chocolate Pie is simple and perfect and one of my favorite things in the universe.  You have hit upon one of my favorite topics: sweets.  And pie in particular brings no end of joy to my life.  I'm not gonna turn down a good cake, but pie is almost never bad and frequently divine.

Simple Things Restaurant: Salted Caramel pie

Simple Things Restaurant: Salted Caramel pie

I love enthusiastic answers for this question. You are the first person to have ever been vehemently on team pie.  Most of my pie choosers always say "Of the two, I prefer pie" and the people who choose cake would hip-check a 3 yr old out of the way to get some cake.  I love the enthusiasm.  

I think many people who choose cake are really choosing frosting. Question 4: Do you think frosting would take pie to the next level or ruin the delicate balance of flavors and textures found within pie?

Man, I don't know.  I do love frosting, but I'm not sure it has a place on most pies.  Cookies, on the other hand, benefit greatly from frosting.  A nice frosted sugar cookie is pretty great!

I have some thoughts in regards to cream cheese frosting helping out on an apple pie, and some other flavor combinations I have been ruminating on.  I could flip some of the cake-eaters to the side of pie.  I've got ideas.  

You clearly have multiple interests in pop culture, science, technology, and gaming. Question 5: Is there a specific topic that you cannot help yourself but to consume it? What topic above all others calls to you?

Boy that's a tough one.  I find myself pulled in so many directions.  I think I'm naturally curious, and have a genuine love of learning.  I think I might be more successful in my career if I wasn't interested in so many diverse topics.  I find myself wanting to do everything, and would probably do better to focus on one thing.  Politics fascinates me, and I love sports, travel and culture, as well as all the things you mentioned.  I think perhaps if I had to choose one, gaming might be the closest to my heart.  My lifetime is pretty much the lifetime of video games, and it has been so interesting to mature alongside an entire industry, to grow up and see pong turn into arcades, turn into home consoles, turn into mainstream entertainment media experiences. And with real virtual reality at our doorstep, the future is bright.  I think that interactive experiences have the potential to change the world as well as provide entertainment, and I'm so fascinated by what is possible.  But in just the last 10 years I've become obsessed with analog gaming, too.  The way in which learning systems can inform you of how things inter-operate from the inside, and the way simple rule sets can engender deep strategy.  I love board games, and it has been irresistible to deep dive into the hobby tabletop explosion that is occurring now.

Oh, the questions only get tougher from here. Get some paper, this is going to take calculations. A train leaves from Chicago at 11:13AM while in Cincinnati...

I have to say that I was expecting "video games" as your pop culture item of note, but I did not expect the turn to the tabletop experience.  That was surprising.  Question 6: What was the last tabletop game you purchased and what was the last one you played?

I purchase entirely too many Tabletop Games, entirely too often.  I'm sure I have well over a hundred designer board games now, and the collection continues to grow.  It's a problem.  I think the most recent purchase was a Kickstarter game called Roll Player, although I also have a new expansion for my favorite game of last year (T.I.M.E. Stories) on pre-order to pick up this Thursday.  The last one I played was last night - it is called Loop, Inc, another time travel game, actually. I try to play at least one board game per week, and often many more.  I love the tabletop experience.

I would think the coordination aspect of tabletop gaming would be the most limiting factor.  I love that you are able to make that kind of event happen weekly.  Question 7: Do you have a regular weekly gaming group, do you force your wife into playing tabletop games with you and any neighbors who make eye contact, or is this weekly "game" one you play with yourself to ensure your winning?  How are you able to wrangle at least a board game a week with the complicated schedules of modern life?

You're right, that part is tough. And the answer is all of the above, mostly. The only thing I don't ever really do is play board games solo. There are solo variants for many of these games, I'm just not particularly interested in that experience. I enjoy the social aspect of tabletop the most. But yes, I have several regular game groups, I wrangle my wife into 2 player games all the time, forcing her to try the new game that just arrived on my doorstep, and anyone who expresses even a passing interest in venturing beyond Monopoly or Clue has me throwing all kinds of strange and complicated games at them.  Anyone who visits my apartment inevitably sees the massive shelves full of games and probably wonders about my sanity.

Question 8: Do you think that the "massive shelves full of games" is the primary red flag for your sanity? Or is there something else that would tip people off? What other outward manifestations of your idiosyncrasies might puzzle people?

Oh man, I think red flags to my sanity might be a Pandora's box you might regret opening. :) There are probably quite a few idiosyncrasies that would come off as odd to others. Thankfully, my wife is getting used to them.  I tend to sing little songs about whatever I'm doing. I am obsessed with words and grammar, to the constant annoyance of others. I run marathons - I'm sure that is a red flag for my sanity for some too. Doubtless, there are many I'm not thinking of now. It really is a question better directed at my wife

Everyone has things that are red flags.  When I was younger and non-parenting a philosophy of mine was "funny over nice." That is quite a red flag.  Quite a red flag indeed.

My wife is a runner.  She has a handful of marathons under her belt and a 50k trail race as well.  She is definitely insane in a wonderful way... Wonderful in that way that made her want to marry me, but I am pretty sure she runs to create some time just to herself.

Question 9: Aside from the physical fitness aspects, why do you run?

I fell in love with running for a number of reasons. I like the alone time. It's fun to get outdoors, to be in nature, and turn on a podcast or audio book and just go. I also became enamored by the concept of doing something I didn't think I could do. Finishing a race is thrilling, and there is such a sense of community from everyone doing it, who all understand how difficult it is. Good people, good feelings, and healthy living. It's pretty great. Now, if it just wasn't so hard in the knees.

Running on roads is crazy hard on knees.  My wife only wants to do trail runs now.  Otherwise he knew swells up and she aches for days. Plus it seems the trail running scene seems nicer.

Question 10: fill in the blanks: I find that I am mostly ________. Others find that I am mostly ________.

I find that I am mostly looking for new projects. Others find that I am mostly busy. It always surprises me when people describe me as being so busy, because the t doesn't feel like I'm doing enough things.

Even from the outside, I can tell you are doing things.  I think you may be dealing with the curse of the self employed person,  constantly on the look out for more work. Your free time will evaporate right in front of you soon enough.  Babies tend to have that effect on people.

So, recently I have noticed that you have been getting into openings of marquee movies such as Star Wars Ep VII, Batman vs Superman, and (most recently) Captain America:Civil War... Question 11: How have you gotten this super power? And how can I get it? Have you been doing this for a long time and I just did not realize it?
Haha, well, I review movies for a living, so I'm fortunate to be able to attend early press screenings. Been doing so for 9 years now. It is certainly a perk of the job. :)

I noticed that you deftly avoided the "how can I get it?" Portion of the question.  A high tide raises all boats, Jeff. A high tide raises all boats...

So you are a movie critic, you host multiple web shows, host a traditional TV show, and you have multiple podcasts... Question 12: is there a type media that you would like to do that you haven't done yet?

Well, as an actor, I'd still very much like to do a big, mainstream theatrical film. I'm also really interested in doing more voice work. I've done some animation for the web, but a voice on an animated series would be a dream.

I would love for you to break into voice work as well, but from what I have heard out here in Ohio drifting in on the easterly breezes is that VO and voice acting are incredibly hard to break into.

Here we are at the dreaded Question 13: Do you have any superstitions or rituals?  For example when I was fencing in college I would practice toe touches by flicking a piece of athletic tape off the floor with my epee.  That in and of itself was not ritualistic, but the rhythm I would get into would be both calming and help me to clear my brain of non-fencing stuff.

You know, for as much of a skeptic as I am about nearly every kind of "supernatural" thing, it's pretty odd how many little habits and rules I have for myself. Especially when I'm doing a play. If a performance goes well, I tend to do the exact same pre-show rituals the next night, down to touching things and wearing things. It's like I'm a baseball player on a hitting streak. I know it's silly but I do it anyway.

It is very interesting when people decide on replicating those small little details.  I know I used to do that back when I played soccer as a kid.  In many ways I miss having that kind of ritual in my life.

You call yourself a skeptic.  I have heard that skeptics are pessimists with the hope that something is real.  Of all the supernatural things that are out there, Question 14: is there a supernatural concept/idea/creature that you would absolutely be overjoyed to find out is real?

I suppose I'd have to say alien life. It seems wildly improbable that there aren't countless other forms of life in the galaxy and the Fermi Paradox (which I'm fascinated by) tells us that the fact that we haven’t seen any evidence of them should worry us. It would change so much in the world to discover life out in the galaxy - I hope it happens and I hope it happens in my lifetime. But I'm certainly a skeptic about any theories that posit it has already happened and the government is covering it up. As far as other supernatural stuff goes, an afterlife would be nice, too. I ain't getting any younger. :)

I have always wanted Bigfoot/Sasquatch/yeti to be real. I love the whole idea of a large primate out there.  That idea is super enthralling.  Plus, the underground lizardmenare going to make sure we never find out about the illuminati's contact with alien life. All hail the underground lizardmen.

You are quite the proponent of Virtual Reality.   Question 15: which VR platform do you think will take hold of the popular culture?

That's a tough one.  I think we are still in early days.  At this point, Playstation VR seems to be in a strong position, simply because it will have low lowest price and fewest barriers to entry.  I think Facebook/Oculus is in it for the long haul, though, and I wouldn't bet against their resources.  Of the 3, I think Vive offers the most interesting play experience at this moment, but has the weakest corporate structure behind it.  Hopefully we will know more at E3 in a few weeks.  Ultimately, I have no doubt that our kids and their kids will think of these kinds of experiences as the norm rather than the exception.  Being present in the digital world rather than staring at it is just too compelling not to take over at some point.  I suspect they will laugh at flat computer screens with bafflement.

I am not sure our kids will make fun of most the tech that we have currently. I remember the tech my parents had as a kid and think about it fondly and am always impressed with how far we have come as a technological society.  Our kids will make fun of our parents' tech.  I think it skips a generation.  The rocks my grandparents smashed together to entertain themselves as kids make me giggle whereas thoughts of the blinking 12:00 on my parents' top loading VCR bring a wistful sigh to times gone by.

I think I might jump on the VR train after a few generations of the tech have come out.  By that time the systems should have miniaturized enough and the bugs should have been worked out.  I wish I was typically an early adopter, but it seems that I am much more a bandwagon jumper.

Question 16: Is there a question you were expecting me to ask that I haven't?

Ha!  Boy, I wasn't sure what this was going to be, so no, I don't think there was a question I expected.  As we've gone through, I've enjoyed not knowing where you were headed :)

I would love to say I know where I was headed, but that is categorically not true.  These 20 Questions often end up going all over the place.  I have found the more I try to force the direction on a conversation, the more boring that conversation becomes.  I have about 7 questions that I ask everyone, but beyond that it is anyone's guess where this will go.

Since we started this questioning process, it came to light(at least to me) that you are about to have your first baby.  One thing that I enjoy finding out about is how people decide on what to name their child.  I understand that you may not want to divulge the little one's name, because that is insanely private and people have weird comfort levels in telling others that the think the name they have chosen for their child is terrible.  I honestly do not need to know the kid's soon to be name, but I love hearing how a couple decides on a name.  My wife and I poured over baby-name books for years and had a bevy of options on hand prior to our wee ones being born.  Just before the birthing time, we had the names narrowed doing to 2 each time.  The first go round, we waited to meet the baby to give him his name, and just prior to the birth of our second tootsa we decided on her name. Question 17: How are/did you and your wife choose your impending progeny's name? (how's that for out of left field?)

Naming a child is such a formidable process!  Of course, everyone has an opinion, and I tend to feel the pressure of setting up a path for his entire life.  Names are powerful things.  We both have a desire to honor our family traditions, and would like to connect him to a relative somehow.  It is a lot to manage.  We've got several frontrunners for names, but we've made a decision not to settle on one until we've met the little guy.

Naming a kid is incredibly daunting, because it really can be a bit of self fulfilling prophecy. We are dealing with that just because of naming one of our pups Chewie... He chews on everything.  So I suggest you do not end up naming your child Chewie or Poopy or Farty regardless of whether or not it is a family name.

Now it is time to turn the tables.  Question 18: are there any questions you would like to ask me?

What has the experience of doing this 20 questions with people taught you?

First is that the people who agree to do these 20 Questions are by and large nice, patient people.  It seems like I am being a bit a bit pandering here, but this process is not a trivial task.  You and everyone else who has spent the considerable amount of time are saints.  You are the best.

Second, everyone is very complex.  Sometimes it takes a bit to get to the complexity, but everyone has layers like a layered thing such as shale.

Third, Cake eaters will shoot their neighbor in the head for more cake.

Question 19:  What are you taking from these 20 Questions that you did not bring in with you?

I guess I would say an appreciation of having a conversation like this over an extended period of time. It is an interesting way to do it!

It is a very interesting process. I have started this 20 Questions process with people who have gone through some serious life changes over the course of the conversation.  There have been a few people who have found out they were going to have kids.  There has been an interview where the person I was conversing with had a family emergency and had to return to Australia.  It is really fun to read back through the conversation and see how life has changed over the course of the conversation.

This has been wonderful. I have really enjoyed it, and I hope you have as well. Question 20: What's next? Be as vague or concrete, as close term or long-term, as philosophical or grounded as you want.

Well, the most significant what's next for me is becoming a father for the first time. My son is expected Sept 8th, and that will obviously be a huge lifestyle change. I'm excited and nervous and not quite sure how it will affect all of the other things in my life. From a career perspective, I'm always looking for new projects, and hoping to do new and interesting things as both an actor and a host. I love the shows I'm doing now, but part of what makes my living so fun is that it is always shifting. I'm hoping the next few years bring lots of cool new challenges.

You have taken your first step into a larger world....

Having a child automatically re-prioritizes much of your life.  Parenthood brings many things that did not need to be clear before into a stark clarity that was previously impossible and inaccessible.  I am sure with how thoughtful you seem to be that fatherhood will be a good match for you.  Congrats, things only speed up from here.

I am also positive that you will continue to create very enjoyable content for everyone to consume to their heart's desire.

This has been an absolute delight for me, and I hope that you were able to enjoy this process as well.  Everyone should follow Jeff on the twitters, instagrams, and his website.   Jeff is an amazingly nice man, and I am grateful to have had this long and intimate an interaction with him.

Thanks Jeff!  Listen to his myriad of podcasts and consume the media he is creating.  If I can suggest any one of his properties that he has put his name on, I would suggest the podcast “We Have Concerns.” It drops a couple of times a week and is only around 20 minutes in length.  Every episode gets at least 4 solid laughs out of me and a derisive snort.  So worth your time.

To recap:
I made cassoulet last night in my new badass Dutch oven

It was really good
Later this week, I am making Skimpy Shrimpy
I don’t really know what that is
But imma gonna make it
The pups love doggie daycare
Sometimes I think they love doggie daycare more than us
The new job is going really well
I dig it
It has been a bit on the hotside lately
Nope, don’t like that at all
Brexit is a terrible portmanteau
Have a great week everyone

 

In Internet Personalities Tags interview

20 Questions Tuesday: 354 - Birthdays

June 21, 2016 Scott Ryan-Hart

Today is my birthday.  I am now a venerable 42 years old.  The topic today is clearly “Birthdays.”  Not only have a wizened in the past few years, I have also become more decrepit.  My left wrist is hurting, and my hip is a little sore.  These are in addition to my knees aching and having a bad ankle and a worse ankle.  All things I did not have 10 years ago.  Getting old sucks.  

Thanks this week go to Brett Wood, Chris Ring, Dr JHP, pfmDesigner, and Chris Corrigan.  Onto the questions.

1.  You suck why are you a year younger than me?
My parents waited a year long to go to the bone zone.  Good goddamnit, I love the phrase “the bone zone.”

2.  Do you like the Beatles Birthday song?
It’s fine. I would love if Dr Teeth and the Electric Mayhem did a cover.

3.  How do you feel about Chuck E. Cheese on your birthday?
I dislike Chuck E Cheese on every day.  It does not matter if it is a birthday or not, it is an inner ring of Hell and you cannot convince me otherwise.

4.  How many birthdays do you think you'll have in your lifetime?
Well, there are 4 births every second of every day which equates to around 360,000 births every day.  So I have been alive 15330 days (give or take), which means that there have been around 5,518,800,000 birthdays in my lifetime so far.  I believe the correct answer is a shit-ton.

5.  Best childhood B-day present?
Interesting question.  I will extend my childhood into college and say the Bugs Bunny chess set.

6.  Best Birthday Cake?
My mom was a professional cake decorator as a side job growing up, so I had tons of cakes that were really good.  My mother’s frosting is to die for.  I would have to say of all the cakes it was an Oscar the Grouch cake when I was 5 or 6.

7.  Birthday wish?
I got them.  Wish snitches get stitches though, so theys staying secret. I'll cut you.

8.  Favorite Birthday dinner?
Benihana's Splashing Meadows with extra shrimp. Teppanyaki FTW!

9.  Best Birthday toast?
Sourdough with tons of butter and Concord grape jam.

10. Best or worst birthday present ever?
Best: This week we bought our plane tickets for a family vacation to Bryce Canyon
Worst: Something that my Grandma Gave me… there are so much to choose from.

11. Are you excited about birthdays still or just another day?
I am moderately excited, but not overly so.

12. How old are you in Jupiter years? I'm curious.
3.5… I’m just a toddler

13. What does the family have planned for your birthday or is it a super secret surprise?
Not much.  The wife is making me some Lemon Curd Doughnuts that are to die for, and I got a cast iron enamel Dutch oven to cook the holy hell out of some food.  Cassoulet this week, aw yeah!

14. Back in the gluten days of your youth, what was your favorite flavor of birthday cake?
I am a simple man of simple pleasures.  White cake with white frosting.

15. What has been, to date, the most selfish birthday wish you ever made?
Interesting… I don’t think I have ever categorized my wishes as such.  Hmmm… I wished for a new job for ages. I think that would be it.

16. What has been the most selfless?
Little Man’s asthma to get better.

17. Have you reached the point yet where birthdays really are just another day?
Nope… they do seem to happen with far too frequent frequency though.

18. What are some birthday traditions you’ve carried from your own childhood on to the next generation?
I do not really have any birthday traditions that I can think of.  The birthday meal is really about it. Birthday person gets to choose and no one gets to whine about it.

19. Obvious Hitchhiker’s Guide Question: What’s the meaning of life the universe and everything?
The answer to the question is, of course, 42

(Yes I know, follow up…)
20. But YOU’RE 42…what say you?

I am the answer to life the universe and everything… at least for a year.

To recap:
Also gonna make something called “Skimpy Shrimpy” in the new Dutch oven
And we are going to have “chicken ‘tatos pot” soon too
This thing is going to get USED
Thanks to my mother-in-law for the Dutch oven
An actual Dutch oven, not something to do with farting and blankets
Father’s Day was pretty awesome
I got a new bag for work
I retired the bag that I had been using since grad school round 1 that started in 1997
I do not think I could find a cheap-ass bag these days that would last, with everyday usage, for 19 years
I could find and expensive one, but not a cheap-ass one
The pups are doing great
I think I might like the streaming service that goes by “CuriosityStream”
Science/Nature/History all the time… epic
Follow me on the tweets, the grams, and the snaps with @mmmmmpig and mmmmmpig and mmmmmpig (my snapchat handle)
Have a great week everyone… I am definitely having one

 

20 Questions Tuesday: 353 - I begged for questions

June 7, 2016 Scott Ryan-Hart

Last week we were at the Outer Banks in North CarolinaIt is our third year in a row for making the trip to Southern Shores, North Carolina… The outer Banks are lovely.  High Cotton’s Brunswick Stew is amazing.  Donutz on a Stick’s peanut butter milkshake is divine (I hear that the donuts were glorious, but I cannot have those).  The ocean is awesome and powerful. Cheap peel-n-eat shrimp are simply amazing.  All of that beings said…. It has been a long time since I seriously noticed people looking and clearly judging our interracial family for its very existence.  Y’all… NC’s transgender stance isn’t the only backwards looking issue the state has to deal with.  

This week I gave out the clarion call to my Facebook peeps to ask me some questions.  So far, Lsig, Scott LeMien have busted out a few questions. So here are their q’s.  Hopefully more will come in. Ooh, the wife just brought the heat with some questions and Dr B Dawg finished things out.

On to the Questions!

1. Why don't you have questions yet?
I lazily did not ask for questions earlier this week.  I have 2 interviews that are near done, and I was hoping they would have finished up by now.

2. How was vacation?
It was delightful.  I outlined a bit about the vacation earlier, but it was delightful even considering the oddness of the looks we were getting on the odd occasion.  The food was great.  Shrimp and Grits is the real thing.  

3. How's the new(ish) gig?
I really enjoy it.  It is going well and I have built up some confidence and feel like I have some competence.  So that is odd. I was not dreading Monday morning going back to work after the vacation was done… er… yesterday, I mean.

4. What good books have you read lately?
I am currently reading “Storytelling for User Experience” by Whitney Quesenbery for work reasons and “Star Wars: Aftermath” by Chuck Wendig for non-work reasons. I haven’t made much progress on either book.

5. Doing any gaming?
Nope.  I play Two Dots and Words with Friends on iOS, but that is about it.

6. How is life with dogs going?
The dogs are great.  They are still wee little babbies, but they are loving.  Between 7 and 8 at night they tend to pee where they are not supposed to, but otherwise they are pretty good for not having accidents in the house.

7. Where are you ticklish?
After a good amount of time and effort, the bottom of my feet and my underarms.

8. How do porcupines grow back their quills?
Quills are modified hair, so as quills are shed and pulled out, they grow back much like hair.

9. What are some foods that could be combined with potato chips but aren't?
That could be?  Not that should be.  Hmmm.. Cucumber, cake, pudding, and asparagus

10. When will I feel like an adult?
If having a kid doesn’t make you feel all adultish, I am not sure what will.  That being said, I often stare at my kids and wonder when the adult is going to come and help me out.  That is usually when my wife comes by and adults things up.

11. If a safe was falling and you were trapped inside it, then opened the door 5 feet from the ground and jumped out, why wouldn't you be fine like in cartoons?
It is all about relativity.  You are still traveling at a high rate of speed that your upward inertia cannot overcome.

12. If we can't talk to whales, dolphins, apes and elephants yet, what makes us think we can talk to aliens?
I have often wondered that myself.  I think the key will be mathematics.  The language of math and physics/chemistry will need to be the common ground that eventually leads to opennng up the rest of the lexicon.

13. Why do you keep going back to the Outer Banks?
My wife has a friend who owns a house there and we get to go to her house before the vacation season really gets going.

14.  What is your favorite part of summer?
That is an interesting question, because I have been working full-time for a good long time now.  That kind of bites into the separation ofSummer as a significantly distinct part of the year.  I would have to say, I enjoy the lack of lunch making in the mornings for the kiddos.  I hate when I have to make their lunches during the school year. It is just a continuation of the rest of the year.  That being said, mornings aren’t as early and the kids’ bedtimes are significantly later.

15. What’s the most unexpected thing about your new job?
How much of the work I do is actually on my own.  It is a team environment and there is a good bit of collaboration, but a significant portion of the day is spent head down just getting chit done.

16. Does your Mother-in-Law still live with you? When’s that going to be over?
She does still live with us in our guest bedroom.  She has been here for a good long while, but hopefully that will change in a few weeks.  I can honestly say that ithas been great having her here, but 5 people and 2 dogs in the house is a bit much.

17.  What’s something your wife loves that you just don’t understand?
Some of the podcasts she listens to.  She listens to one that is basically just called “Listen to some relationships that will make you cry” and another called “Love stories that make you weep.”  I don’t get it.

18. What is something you love that your wife just doesn’t understand?
Cheesecake… seriously, what’s not to get?

19.  Any thoughts on simulation theory?
I think whether or not we are in a simulation is immaterial.  The fact that we at least think we have independent thought should motivate us to make our world, simulation or not, a better place.

20.  How do Inhumans differ from mutants?
Simple answer.  Terrigen Mists as a catalyst for powers versus weird mutations.


To recap:
I have 2 interviews on the brink of being done
I only have a handful of interviews that never completed
We are trying to figure out if we can squeeze in a third vacation this summer
We had this one to the Outer Banks and then we go to the boonies of North Carolina for my parents’ 50th anniversary
That is an awful long time to be married
If a vacation destination like the Outer Banks is a bit frosty for our interracial marriage, I cannot wait to go to the boonies
50th Anniversary or we would have fought more about the location
Back woods in a socially backwards state… no thank you
Adding a third vaca might be a bridge too far though
That vacation will not be to North Carolina though
Have a great week everyone.

 

20 Questions Tuesday: 352 - Per Axbom

May 17, 2016 Scott Ryan-Hart

This week’s 20 Questions is with Per Axbom… oddly enough from Sweden (Much like a certain Breki Tomasson).  So Per is my second 20 Questions with someone from Sweden.  That is surprising… I would not have guessed that I would find another Swede willing to answer my inane questions in so little time, but who doesn’t love Sweden?

I became aware of Per through his podcast, UX Podcast, that he hosts with James Royal-Lawson.  It is a great podcast that covers many aspects of User Experience.  Per and James will interview people within the UX community or chat about articles they have encountered concerning those different aspects of UXD. Since I am currently looking for a career jump into the UX field, this podcast is very germane to my professional endeavors.

I am incredibly interested in learning more about Per and sharing these 20 Questions with him. Now without further ado… onto the questions.

I started out my professional life as a cartographer, and one of the things I have always enjoyed is people’s personal geographic stories.  For example, I was born outside of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.  The family moved to Montgomery, Alabama when I turned 3.  A few years later we moved just to the northeast of Birmingham, Alabama where I lived until going off the college.  I went to college 12 hours drive away from home at Kent State University in Northeast Ohio.  There I met my wife and we settled in Columbus, Ohio smack dab in the center of Ohio.  We have been in the Columbus area for the last 19 years.  Question 1: What is your geographic story?   

Ha, I wish I had a map to draw on right now. It’s true that I am from Sweden in the sense that I have Swedish parents and I live here now but my background is quite diverse. I was born in northern Liberia, in a town named Yekepa where the Liberian American-Swedish Mining Company (LAMCO) had operations. As a 5-year old we moved to Ludvika in Sweden and spent a couple of years there before moving to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia where I attended an American International school. After four years there it was back to Africa, living in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania attending grades 8-11 getting my GCSE at International School of Tanganyika. I have since lived in Sweden, completing the IB Programme at a boarding school north of Stockholm and then studying Communication Science at Jönköping University. I have moved numerous times throughout my life… my own calculations say I have moved 21 times in total, and most of that was before the age of 23. I’ve now lived a whopping 18 years in the same city, which is Solna in Stockholm county. I’m settled in here with my wife and two kids, who are all looking forward to a new, canine family member later this year.

We are in the process of acquiring two puppies ourselves.  They have been born and will be a part of the family in early March.  

That is one of the broadest geographic stories that I have had.  I have seen that the people I have done this with who currently live in Europe have lived many places elsewhere.  Most Americans have lived in America.  Africa to Scandinavia to the Middle East to Africa and finally back to Sweden…  That is quite a trip.  Question 2: Are there aspects of you that reflect each of the different places you have lived? How have those varied cultures invested themselves in you?

That’s a really good question. I firmly believe that my background makes me better at my job. Having empathy and an understanding of different ways of looking at life is paramount to having an open mind, not jumping to conclusions, and being able to really listen to people’s stories in order to design products and services that assist rather than obstruct.

Working in many different teams I believe my experiences also allow me to mediate between different viewpoints and allow me to have the patience to always explain my thoughts and ideas from the beginning, never judging or looking down on anyone for not sharing the same knowledge or asking me to repeat myself. There are many benefits to knowing, and accepting, the people I work with as people first and professionals second.

On a more personal level my experience of these different cultures also guide me in more philosophical reflections on happiness and meaning. In many of the countries I have visited, at least nine in Africa alone and more than twenty worldwide, the tendency to greet people with a smile, singing in public, and high-spirited chatter on the bus is profoundly more abundant in financially inferior countries. The connectedness between people and the ability to let people close is much more prominent in environments where there is less to lose. More than anything, I see how much we can - and must - learn from these countries, when many in the west tend to proclaim how much we need to help and teach “them” to become like us. That can make me sad because that is far from what I would call integration.

I am also at point in life right now where I am discovering the healing powers of one-on-one talks, and moving into the coaching profession I’ve been blown away by how energized I can feel after engaging intensely with a person for ninety minutes. I now realize that this connectedness is exactly what many non-western cultures are trying to teach us.

Connectedness is something that the digital space says that it offers people, but the connectedness from online interactions is often a false one.  I have met and befriended some great people on the internet, but that is sometimes a shallow imitation of face-to-face connections.  We might need to chat more about this later but for now it is my prescribed third question.

Question 3: Cake or pie? Which specific kind and why?

Off the bat I want to say pecan pie. I only have good memories of pecan pie. If it’s on the menu I get it. I’m also just crazy about nuts - it’s my preference over any other snack. The question itself though brings out mixed emotions in me. Since last summer I only eat vegetarian food and I’m striving towards going vegan. The main difference between those preferences of course is exactly this: cake and pie. Whilst vegetarians easily eat these desserts as a vegan you would have to double-check the ingredients. It’s that extra level of detail that makes it harder in social environments. You seem overly picky and it’s one of those moments when you find people judging or questioning you. Now though it makes me want to go and find a recipe for vegan pecan pie. That actually has a nice ring to it!

I have recently (within the last 2 years, so not exactly recently) had to become gluten free.  That has seriously caused me to read ingredients and labels more rigorously and caused me to turn away perfectly good desserts.  Honestly it has been a bit painful. That being said, the house I grew up in had two pecan trees in the back yard.  One can tire of pecans.  I can shell pecans like a boss though.

I like the philosophy behind the vegan diet, but find the clarion call of meat too strong to go far down that path.  

Let's touch back to the idea of connectedness.  Question 4: Do you think there is a vehicle that can help for more authentic connectedness in the digital space even in digital environments that are more transactional? For example, there is a point of sale interaction that can be made with a sales associate in a retail store that can be a genuine connection between the associate and the customer that is extremely difficult to replicate in the digital space. Is there a way to have more interpersonal interaction in digital transactions?

Wow, I’d love to have a pecan tree! I can really feel for your dilemma of going gluten-free, and can attest to an experience of people with allergies having a more open mindset towards dietary deviances.

It actually blows my mind that you would ask this question about a retail store as just the other day I was revisiting a blog post I wrote fifteen years ago (!) about customer interaction in a retail store and the importance of trying to replicate this online. I called the post “Talk to me, web site”. (http://axbom.com/talk-web-site/). In essence I was calling for websites to create better connections with their customers.

But if I wrote this blog post today, I would instead title it: “Listen to me, website.”

Let me tell you what I know today. The past three years I’ve been working on a national online platform for cognitive behavioral therapy, as well as other types of treatment and patient instruction. For people who hear about this the gut reaction is to question how a proper patient-doctor relationship can be formed when all communication is online, they have not met and there is also no video or voice calling involved.

To be honest I was hearing reports about the success of these online treatments but I was a also a bit skeptical about how much trust could be built up under these circumstances. My role in digital projects is to perform regular interviews with all stakeholders, and I’m of course especially interested in the patients’ experience. Note that I’m not a medical professional and hence I’m not evaluating the effectiveness of the treatment, but I am looking at how people are using the service and how they are feeling before, during and after what is typically a 10-week period.

It has not been uncommon for patients to offer information about how well they connected with their doctor - before I even request it - using phrases like “he/she really understands me” and “I could really feel how much he/she cared about me”.

My conclusion from all of this is that connectedness is not reliant on face-to-face meetings or hearing someone’s voice, although different people will of course feel more or less comfortable with technology, which in turn will impact its effectiveness. I believe even someone who has corresponded via postal mail with a penpal across the world can attest to this.

No, connectedness is reliant on two things: good listening skills and a non-judgmental mindset. If the person you are talking to – however you are talking – makes the effort to understand you as a unique individual and does not make you feel uncomfortable about who you are, chances are you are willing to interact more with that person.

So I would argue that your question actually has the wrong premise from the outset. A genuine connection between an associate and a customer is NOT difficult to replicate in the digital space. The question is how much time someone is willing to spend to make that connection. To actually listen.

Yesterday I contacted KLM on Twitter to book a vegan meal for my transatlantic flight to Michigan. First, they responded within 10 minutes. Second, they apologized for this option not being available when I booked online. Third, they offered information about how this worked, making it easier for me to understand the best way to do this in future bookings. Fourth, they fixed it immediately for me. Fifth, they offered to tend to any further dietary requirements of my travel companions.

So KLM was not pointing me towards some self-service URL, form or phone number. They listened, they fixed it, and they did not judge my inability to have done this some other way. They gave me the impression they wanted to listen more. Does this make me want to keep flying KLM? Hell yeah.

Caring. It’s a thing humans seem to appreciate. The most common obstacle to caring is not a technology, it’s profit maximization. But in no way do I believe that caring is bad for profits.

That’s brilliant.  I think the other piece that you are teasing around the edges in your examples above is that the online experience should not be rushed.  I think too often customers, clients, users etc… are looking for the most expedient method to accomplish a task online.  Expedience may be preferred when ordering pizza, but for other online transactions maybe a slower more conversational transaction may feel more genuine and authentic than some face-to-face interactions.  Instead of trumpeting expedience and efficiency, some places should focus more on creating an online experience.

I belong to an artistic community online.  Most of the people in that community I have never met in person.  That being said, I would consider a handful of people from that community to be relatively close friends.  Our friendship is due to open communication is a relatively non-judgmental space, but it is rooted in the fact that all of us love comic books and telling stories through sequential art.  Question 5: do you have any niche online communities that you belong to? and what is the subject matter that brings that community together?

I think I’d enjoy that community. At one point in life I wanted to become the next Scott Adams. At the same time, communities are time-consuming and I find myself seeking comfort in ever-smaller groupings, actively enjoying people I know give me energy rather than steal it. I can really understand how commitment to a community, also ones online, makes you feel close to other people, especially within niche subjects. They are often arenas where you can be yourself and where you can use words and vocabulary that other people in your close environment perhaps don’t even understand.

Three years ago I started becoming involved in politics in my municipality. I live in a town of 50,000 people called Solna. It is surrounded geographically by Stockholm but still has its own city council. Long story short I was upset and wanted more insight into how the city is being run. Among other things I started an online group on Facebook which now has more than 1,000 members. In this forum anyone interested in local politics can participate and make their voice heard. The awesome part is that many of the active politicians on the council also hang out there, all seven different parties are represented. This creates an environment where anyone can start talking to local representatives in a heartbeat, but also in front of an interested audience. It’s a forum where there is a lot of emotion and commotion, as there usually is in politics, but three years in it is still very active and doing its job well. I believe it’s a unique composition of members, also aided by the reality of the town’s small population.

The interesting thing about this community is of course that people are not members because they believe the same things or strive towards a common goal. On the contrary, what brings the discussion forward are opposing views and the urge to find weaknesses in the other person’s logic and reasoning. It’s very much NOT a non-judgmental space. It’s all about judging and jumping to conclusions. Haha.

But I truly believe that this has created a more open environment between representatives of different parties as well, who air their views with each other a lot more than would otherwise be the case, and of course in front of a huge audience, which benefits everyone.

It’s not true of course though that forum members don’t have anything in common. The common trait is that of wanting change and development, and always better circumstances, even though there is disagreement on the best way to get there. So it’s also not entirely uncommon for people with opposing views to find agreement in issues here and there… small moments and glimpses of camaraderie that I believe would not be as common had there not be an online community for more chance encounters.

It’s a small pond in the larger workings of government, but it really does make me understand and appreciate ever more this quote by graphic novelist Marjane Satrapi:

If I have one message to give to the secular American people, it’s that the world is not divided into countries. The world is not divided between East and West. You are American, I am Iranian, we don’t know each other, but we talk together and we understand each other perfectly. The difference between you and your government is much bigger than the difference between you and me. And the difference between me and my government is much bigger than the difference between me and you. And our governments are very much the same...

I love that the an online political community exists where things have not devolved into a chaotic maelstrom of public name-calling and combative argument. Even in the comic book forum to which I belong can devolve into nastiness from time to time, and we mostly agree on things.  I cannot imagine how your local governmental group functions overall without a large number of people either trolling the group or the discussions becoming pedantic hate fests.

Previously, you said that you were “actively enjoying people I know give me energy rather than steal it.”  So if you take the definition of an introvert as someone who recharges and recenters themselves when they are alone and an extrovert as someone who gains energy by interacting with others, Question 6: would you consider yourself more of an introvert or an extrovert?

I am definitely towards the far end of the introvert scale. This can surprise people since I do talks, lead workshops, participate in panels, and am an active podcaster. But the key is actually how you phrased it, which I agree is one of the best ways to help people understand the core difference between intro- and extroversion: how you restore energy. Growing up I was very shy and struggling with a sense of belonging. Socializing was difficult for me as I felt so much was fake and I couldn’t understand the rules. I still wince when people start talking about the weather but I do understand how important that ritual can be in relating to others and creating an air of assurance. Being shy, though, was mostly a result of feeling different, awkward and unattractive.

I say this to stress that being shy, a trait I am mostly rid of today, has little to do with being an introvert - which is one of the more common misconceptions and one I myself believed for a long time. I am glad there has been so much written about introversion over the past years as it has helped me understand myself better. I still need a lot of downtime and recovery periods after meeting a lot of people. Or, let’s not call it recovery… call it digestion. I need to process and reflect. But again, being an introvert does not mean I can not enjoy parties or social events - I am probably just a bit more picky and less inclined to take the initiative - something I do consider a weakness in myself. I have noted that I can more easily pinpoint people who give me energy rather than drain it, and I’d much rather spend time with a handful of people discussing interesting topics for short periods of time on a regular basis, than attend larger gatherings and talk about the weather with strangers. Sometimes strangers are awesome though and I can wish I would more readily approach more of them.

It’s quite awe-inspiring actually. Imagine all these introverted geeks in the 80s in their rooms attached to their computers for hours on end. All of a sudden internet explodes and these geeks can start talking to each other like never before. Introverts can talk to other introverts without any pressure, and with complete understanding when you need your quiet time. What a liberating experience to understand there were so many others like you.

I’ve actually been, on multiple occasions, to a huge geek camp unconference on a remote island in Sweden where hundreds of social media practitioners live in tents for three days. It becomes like an otherworldly experience because you can walk around in a community where everybody just gets you, and you don’t have to make any excuses for participating on your own terms, moving back and forth between downtime and giving a 30 minute talk under an oak tree. I guess it’s like a micro-version of Burning Man.

So how do I find time to recharge when I have a family with two kids and a dog on the way? Well, I ride a motorcycle - one of the best parts being completely in my own world, with no distractions.

There needs to be a stronger cultural distinction between being out-going and being an extrovert and being shy and being an introvert. For example, my wife absolutely needs time to herself to recharge, but she is a very outgoing host and facilitator for strategic organizational change.  She talks to people all day long, but has to recharge at night on her own.  I also know some people who need to be in a group of people to feed off their group energy even when they are not directly interacting with anyone within that group.

I have heard with motorcycles, it is not a matter of “if” you will crash, but one of “when” you will crash.  Question 7: When was the last time you had to dump your bike?

Haha, what an unexpected question. I think it is three years ago now that I stopped outside our local grocery store and stepped off to go inside. The bike came crashing down on its left side as I, startled, jumped to the side. I had forgotten to put the kickstand down so gravity just took over. Boy did I feel stupid… thankfully I had an engine guard on that bike so no real damages done. The challenge then of course is to get a 300kg bike back on its wheels again. After a couple of failed attempts a man who was walking by saw me struggle and stopped to help me.

I’ve never dumped the bike in traffic but I’m no stranger to crashing. I competed in motocross as a young teen in Saudi Arabia. There was almost a crash of some sort every race, especially in the sand pits. It helped me realize that if you make sure to have the right protection gear then your body can handle the beating.

In traffic I always assume I’m invisible to others. This means I have to take into consideration all traffic around me and be ready to react to sudden lane changes and turns. I actually like how this keeps my mind occupied. The most common cause of accidents by far is a car that makes a sudden left turn without indicator lights just as a motorcycle is overtaking the car. In these cases I actually do not blame the car failing to indicate. It’s my responsibility as a motorcyclist to understand that this can happen, always be prepared for the eventuality and plan around it.

This is always an issue with motorcycles and other traffic.  The visual profile of a motorcycle is so small that it is difficult to pick up.  Motorcycles are very quick and agile as well, so I think many drivers do not have a strong mental model as to where to accurately predict a bike’s path.  I would imagine the best drivers for a motorcyclist to be around are other motorcyclists that just happen to be in cars that day.  I would not know since, last summer, at the tender age of 41 I finally learned how to ride a bicycle.

Question 8: Is there anything that is typically learned as a child that you would like to learn as an adult?

Cartwheels.

I think that should be an attainable goal. You should go for it.

I know that you are transitioning your career a bit from being a UX practitioner to being more of a personal coach. Question 9: How is that transition going and what do you enjoy most about coaching?

The challenge for me is that my brand is extremely tied to the world of UX and I am constantly receiving new work opportunities. I could probably just sit back and keep working with UX for many years to come. I personally want to evolve more though, which of course is why I attended a coaching programme to begin with. A driving force for me has always been helping people perform better. The glow in people’s eyes when they learn something new is like a drug for me. Coaching allows me to expand on that skill. As a consultant I can help people by doing work for them - or sharing knowledge, but as a coach I can also help people by advancing their growth as individuals and human beings.

What I really enjoy about coaching is making all these powerful and intimate connections with people I have never met before. I am amazed by how people open up when someone is sincerely listening to them and being present, and how the coaching process truly helps people overcome personal obstacles - large and small. A coaching session is often 90 minutes and one might think assume this would be exhausting but I am always energized by these encounters.

Already of course the coaching course has proven immensely valuable in my everyday work. For example, user interviews I perform now are of much higher quality than previously - I am able to go much further, dig deeper, into the real frustrations and problems people are experiencing. And that’s something I can admit to after having performed user interviews for almost 20 years prior with seemingly good results!

And most definitely everyday encounters in work meetings and with my family are positively affected by newly acquired skills as well.

What I feel I need to pursue now is finding the best possible overlap between UX and coaching, and repackage my offerings to something more unique. I know that people need and will benefit from what I am offering – communicating and helping people understand this is key to changing direction.

My first step, that I will hopefully start within a month, is offering 45-minute coaching walks at immensely discounted prices. These will be early morning walks or post-lunch strolls tackling a problem of the client’s choice. Showcasing this within current clients’ premises will bring new light to the value I bring and, I believe, in itself give birth to new project compositions. Just exploring new paths is exciting!

I love the excitement you have for making this jump.  It is contagious.  Like I stated earlier, I am currently looking for a User Experience/Content Strategy position, and it is not going as well as I hoped.  It is difficult to make a career shift after spending many years working as a cartographer/geographic information systems specialist.  Finding the correct employer who is willing to look at the transferable information synthesis skills is proving to be more difficult than expected.  Maybe a chat with a coach would be helpful.  I could use a few morning contemplative conversational walks. (EDITOR'S NOTE: I am now a UX practitioner for a large company and it is great)

Question 10: Fill in the blanks;  I find that I am mostly ______. Others find that I am mostly ______. (Feel free to ask others for help with the second part)

I find that I am mostly privileged. Others find that I am mostly helpful and innovative.

I did what you proposed and asked on Twitter and Facebook for help in filling in the second blank. On Twitter I got zero responses in 12 hours. On Facebook there was a stream of comments. It sort of felt like I was asking people to compliment me - which made me feel awkward and self-conscious - but it certainly is an ego boost nevertheless. I boiled all these comments down to “helpful and innovative” as I felt most of them could fit in one of these themes.

There is a sub-reason for this exercise, and it completely has to do with an additional level of self-reflection.  That being said, there is a bit of a divide between privileged and helpful and innovative.

Question 11: Why do you think that your perception of yourself has to do with privilege (which could be considered a bit critical while still being self-reflective) while others tend to drift towards the positive traits of helpful and innovative? Do you feel that you are harder on yourself than others?

Well, it’s hard to summarize a person in a word or two. I am confident that I do good, useful work and I have few doubts that I am creating valuable content and connections in my everyday doings. I know I am appreciated in many social contexts as well. Because of this I don’t believe I am being hard on myself. A year or two back I may have answered something along the lines of creative and curious. It has however become increasingly important for me to recognize why and how I have come this far, and for me it has everything to do with privilege; I have had access to computers since 1982, top-notch healthcare and an excellent education system. Being white and male hasn’t really stood in my way either. Understanding this helps me more often stay humble in the face of success. I get a lot of positive feedback and am extremely thankful for that, but I never want to start taking it for granted.

The interesting thing about privilege, is that it truly is transparent to the person who has it.  I am a white male middle class middle-aged guy in the US, so for most of my life I was not really aware of the level of privilege I truly have.  That being said my family is an interracial family and since I got married in 1997, I have become insanely more aware of just how privileged I truly am.  I am actually impressed that your response was “privileged.” It is a very self-assessed view.  I am constantly dealing with my own unique brand of imposter’s syndrome.  I imagine after I get on top of my imposter’s issues, I will run up against my intrinsic feeling of privilege and my own overwrought sense of guilt due to that.

I had the occasion to ask podcaster extraordinaire, Patrick Beja, 20 Questions not long ago.  He asked a relatively simple question that had magnitudes of meaning behind it.  So since then, I have been asking this question.  Question 12: Are you happy?

It would be easy now to get into a long discussion about what happiness is… but yes, I am happy. I strongly believe that happiness is a human attribute that we all can choose to bring more of into our lives. It’s in our control. There are certainly factors that can assist happiness: such as purpose, flow and pleasure; you have to realize though that these bring out and enhance something that is already within us. At the same time you certainly should not be afraid to ask for assistance from others in uncovering your happiness if you are having trouble finding it.

Often in the western world we have extreme expectations of what happiness should be and look like, as if it’s about smiling or giggling constantly or always having a warm, fuzzy feeling inside. With that presumption I can understand why so many feel they are not happy.

This does not mean I don’t get angry or frustrated or disproportionately emotional. But I know that the only one who can take responsibility for those emotions is me. I choose how to react and respond in different situations, and when I take time to reflect I find myself wasting less energy, and returning to a balanced breathing faster.

In fact, taking the time to relax and reflect is one of the most important takeaways I have adopted from the many books I’ve read about curiosity, neuroscience, coaching, leadership and decision-making.

Sometimes I feel like I am wrong to say I am happy. So many people are distraught and upset about things they read in the news and bring this to heart in a way that makes them feel heavy with distress and they frown at other people who do not also share in this ongoing condemnation of misery reported on our news outlets.

Choosing happiness is not about being unsympathetic, it’s about choosing to be the best version of myself when it comes to being someone who can be of support, of use, to others. To quote Gandhi: “Be the change you want to see in the world.”

The best way of boosting happiness, in my experience, is by giving more of yourself to others. Happiness happens in connections between people and in accepting others as they are. I can sit now and smile in front of my computer and feel rather pleased, but I also know that if I had someone sitting opposite me, smiling with me, that feeling would intensify.

I believe this is a good time to repeat that which I mentioned in my response to question 2:

“In many of the countries I have visited, at least nine in Africa alone and more than twenty worldwide, the tendency to greet people with a smile, singing in public, and high-spirited chatter on the bus is profoundly more abundant in financially inferior countries. The connectedness between people and the ability to let people close is much more prominent in environments where there is less to lose.”

I also think that happiness is heavily influenced by choice.  Many people do not realize just how much of their outlook on life is tempered by their actual outlook on life.  It is interesting mainly because it is a bit of a chicken/egg issue. I, for one, am very happy that you are happy.  These 20 Questions Tuesday interviews help me to take stock in my life and realize how good it is.  So, I too am happy.  

Now we are onto unlucky Question 13.  So when I was a kid playing soccer, I had a specific sequence of actions to get dressed for a match.  At the time I considered it unlucky to not get myself prepared in that sequence.  I made a superstition out of when I should put on my shin guards.  As I have matured, I realize now that I did not really believe in the superstitious “luck” but was using the prep time as a kind of ritual to get into the correct headspace for playing soccer.  Question 13: do you have any superstitions or rituals?

I think I was more superstitious as a kid as well. At the same time there are certain things I know I still do, like knock on wood when I’m hoping for something bad not to happen. It’s just so extremely habitual that I do it without much thought. I have to say also that if I am walking down a street with the option of going under a ladder, or not, then I probably will not choose to go under the ladder. BUT If someone calls me out, calling me superstitious, I would go under the ladder and not really care much about it. I think the type of rituals that you describe can be helpful in the sense that they are meditative and help you get into focus for a game. The superstitious part, and the irrational behavior I am describing, are things that often limit behavior and bring fear. In that sense those rituals in themselves are what cause harm, which of course is rather ironic.

From a behavioral science perspective superstitions are really interesting. In essence they are the product of our human weakness of always trying to see patterns in everything and then choosing to only see the few phenomena that confirm our belief, blissfully ignoring the many instances when our beliefs are disproved.

I wish we didn’t have them but as long as our superstitions are alive and kicking we may as well try to understand this common human reasoning. One of my favorite superstition scientists is Richard Wiseman and I can truly recommend reading one of his many books on the subject: The Luck Factor.

I think some superstitions started out safety related.  That not going under ladders is pure safety related.  It is an interesting turn when something switches from being a ritual that shifts something internally into a superstition that tries to effect something externally.

Question 14: Do you have any mottos, credos, personal philosophies, or mantras that you try and adhere to in your day to day life?

Well, I guess being kind, patient, humble and understanding are something of a philosophy for me. Thinking about it I realized that for my company I also put together a manifesto with principles and guidelines I strive to abide by. Things like not criticizing, sharing and being human are all concepts I bring into my personal life as well.

Doing some research around the notion of compassion the other day I’ve come across the Buddhist teaching of Metta. For me this really appeals to me as it helps me articulate one of the reasons I am striving towards a diet free from animal products.

Empathy has always been important to me. I have always noticed my own capacity of feeling empathy - actually triggering emotions of others within myself. I am certain it has been key for my career in UX. Metta takes this one step further and encourages an attitude of friendliness towards all sentient beings.

As with most things in my life I realize I am always re-evaluating and reconsidering my reasoning. I really don’t want to accept anything as constant. On the topic of philosophies I am certainly now curious to learn more about Metta.

I am unfamiliar with Metta and will need to investigate that philosophy more.  When I was younger and was without the kids, I ascribed to a rather acerbic philosophy of “funny over nice” because everything could be made funny.  It turns out kids are not very facile with facetiousness and sarcasm.  I needed to re-evaluate that pretty significantly.  I have also tried to take into account my Mother-in-Law’s philosophy of “Don’t let the fuckers get you down.”  Since I have recently switched jobs I am living in “it is hard to change because change is hard” and “fake it til you make it.”

Since you are both a personal coach and a UX practitioner, and since I recently started my new career within the UXD umbrella, Question 15: Is there one bit of advice you would impart on anyone just stepping foot into the UX field?

Take time to listen. Take time to learn how to listen. Be present in the moment when listening. Don’t be afraid of silence when you are talking to users and stakeholders. Silence means a person is thinking – you don’t want to interrupt that. Listen with your whole body - your body language and your eyes will show how much you in fact are listening. Verify your understanding by rephrasing. Never judge, with your eyes, your body or your words. Make questions open-ended as often as possible, not closed. When you show that kind of dedication to listening to someone two important things happen:

One, you build trust. The person will appreciate your listening skills to the extent that they will be prepared to offer information they may not otherwise feel comfortable giving you.

Two, you will hear things that you wouldn’t normally hear. Words that are repeated, slight vibrations or intonations that give clues about how a person really feels, giving you understanding that lets you pursue more paths of inquiry.

Your goal should never be to verify something you already believe to be true, it should always be to find out what you do not already know.  Really, you should try to disprove what you already think.

Without a doubt, listening is one of the most rewarding skills I have practiced. Solutions become so much more clear when you receive the kind of insight that only true listening can give you.

Well… that response was worth the price of admission on its own.  I think listening is an amazingly underdeveloped skill in many people.  It is not something that is taught in school, it is not something that parents necessarily instill in their children.  Listening is something that all relationships require.  Honestly, listening is the biggest reason that my relationship with my wife is as good as it is.  Thanks for that.

We are starting to round out of the 20 Questions, so, Question 16: is there a questions you were expecting me to ask you that I did not?

Hmmm, not really. I didn’t really know what to expect, which means I did not build up much of an expectation. Some questions have surprised me, as I’ve mentioned, and I have really enjoyed that. Perhaps I may have expected more of a distinct focus around UX but that sort of vanished with your first few questions. Then I was looking forward to them, and the idea of searching for relevant answers within myself. With the developments and choices that have taken place in my life over the past year I actually think your timing with these questions has been spot on. Answering them has been therapeutic for me. So thank you for that.

Okay then… surprise me.

I am really happy that you have enjoyed this process, and it really is the best compliment to hear that this little blog has been even remotely therapeutic..  I love it.  So, let’s round these out.  

I am currently reading “Storytelling for User Experience” by Whitney Quesenbery for work reasons and “Star Wars: Aftermath” by Chuck Wendig for non-work reasons.  Question 17: What books are you currently reading?

Ah, fantastic. A question I can’t go crazy with… haha.

I’m reading “Steal the Show” by Michael Port. The subtitle is “How to guarantee a standing ovation for all the performances in your life”. I’m always looking for advice on doing better stage performances at events, something I really enjoy but can always improve on.

I also recently finished “10% Happier” by Dan Harris - I really enjoyed that one. And next in my reading list is “F*ck feelings” by Michael Bennett, MD and Sarah Bennett.

Ooh, that one by Michael and Sarah Bennett sounds fun.

Well, it is time to turn the tables.  Question 18: What question or questions would you like to ask me?


Well, I’m kind of blown away by your effort, and obvious interest in human state of mind, in doing all these interviews. Seeing as you are transitioning more distinctly into UX, although I’m sure UX has been a part of you all along, let me ask you this:

Doing these interviews, what is the experience you are looking to create? Also, how have you grown since you started this? What has surprised you?

18A: What experience am I looking to create?
I am looking to create a level of intimate conversation with someone that I find interesting.  Sometimes the person is someone I know from my life, sometimes it is someone I simply find interesting on the internet, and sometimes it is a celebrity that I try not to fanboy about.  It is a bit of a way to trick some people into being friends with me. The trick has worked occasionally.  I am friends with about a handful of the people that I did not know beforehand solely due to the 20 Questions back and forth.

18B: How have I grown since I started this?
Interesting question.  I have tried to slow down my reactions and been more intentional in serious conversations.  The ability to ask someone a questions and read/re-read their answer before coming in with a follow up question has made me slow down during serious conversations so I can attempt to create a genuine interaction.

18C: What has surprised you?
I have been floored by how giving people are with their time and energy.  These 20 Questions are no slight endeavor.  

So, here we are at the penultimate question.  Question 19:  What are you taking from these 20 Questions that you did not bring in with you?

I am now much more aware of the journey I have made over the past year or so and how the different aspects of my life contribute to helping me feel confident and assured that I am on a path I am quite happy to be on. Articulating my thoughts has really really helped me understand myself better, which is a really awesome experience. I’ve always felt writing can be healing, but these questions have also helped strengthen the insight that being open to new experiences and new people (and feeding their curiosity about you) reflects back on yourself and gives you immense value in return.

And cartwheels. I really have to start practicing cartwheels.

I am sure you will be doing cartwheels in no time.

I have to say that this 20 Questions has been amazing.  You are wonderfully insightful and I feel better having known you in the small way that I know you now.  You are an absolute delight.

Last question.  Question 20:  What’s next?  Be as concrete or vague, as short or long term, and/or as philosophical or grounded as you want.

I’ll keep moving forward and I’ll keep to my habit of allowing myself to slow down, think, and make sure I’m on a path that is aligned with my values and goals. This slowing down I believe will actually help me move faster. Let me explain.

Since I believe in the power of coaching I’ve also hired my own coach who challenges me and helps me build habits to focus on tasks that I want to do more of. One of my goals this year for example has been to write a book about UX. I’ve set clear writing goals for the coming months, especially for the autumn, and I’ve sometimes been in doubt and felt a bit overwhelmed by this task. Then, in just one recent session with my coach I realized I have already written, on my blog, enough material for two books on specific subjects.

So, after first feeling overwhelmed by writing just one book, as it turns out I’m releasing two books and writing a third within the year! These first two, smaller books will play a great role in promoting the third one.

Important to realize here is that my coach does not know me, this was our third session together and he had no idea about stuff I’d written before. This was him guiding me in my thoughts and asking powerful questions that challenged me and helped me come to important insights about myself, my accomplishments and long-term goals. But also cheering me on and making me feel valued and seen.

In some sense I think this will also be a life mission for me: to help others realize that for real change to happen you do not tell people what to do, you do not command, point or push. You ask powerful questions. And you celebrate with people when they make progress.

Thank you Scott, your questions have been truly great.

I really enjoyed the heck out of this.  You have made me think through some things that I had not thought about very much.

Everyone, please follow Per on Twitter and give his website a looksee. He is crazy insightful and a delight.  Everyone should.

To recap:
I am working a jobby job with joblike stuff
I have a crapton of things that need to be done before 9 AM tomorrow
So much to do, so little time
(I am actively hoping the second project closes shop… it could)
*fingers crossed*
Everyone should hope that the project slinks away in shame at its terribleness
Putting lipstick on a pig doesn’t make it not a pig
Only a slightly more attractive pig
Some people find pigs sexay
Those people are weird
I am not one to judge
Wait a second, I am one to judge
And that is weird
And just wrong
Read Per’s Medium posts as well
Very insightful
Have a great week everyone

 

Tags interview

20 Questions Tuesday: 351 - Travel

May 10, 2016 Scott Ryan-Hart

This week, my lovely wife wrote a piece about being a working and traveling mom.  It is a very well thought out article and it explains some of the difficulties of being a traveling parent from her particular perspective.  She was gone the week before in gorgeous Newark, New Jersey and then immediately had to go to Burlington, Vermont.  Bottom line: my wife is awesome, and all of you should be jealous that I get to be in a deepfulfilling relationship with her.  Deep and fulfilling!

This week, I suggested the topic to be travel because well, that’s what her job has her do.  Thanks this week goes to Andrew Miller, PFMdesigner, LSig, Nadolny, and Ring.  Onto the questions.

1. What's your favorite mode of transportation when you're traveling and why?
I love me some airplane travel.

2. How has travel changed for you as the kids have grown (relatively) older?
We don’t have to take as much crap.  Now we pack a couple of screens and the kids are fine.

3. Why do you think people are attracted to (or repelled by) traveling?
Going to new places is both fun and scary.  

4. Where was the worst bathroom you've ever been forced to use or other hilarious anecdote about the call of nature when traveling?
Ugly bathroom in a rural Alabama gas station in the 1980's… ugh...

5. Will you buy me a plane ticket to Ireland?
Nope.
 
6. If you could tour any location (past, present, future, real, fictitious), where would you go?
I would love to go to Ireland… preferably without you
 
7. If you had to go to that location with me, would you select a different place?
Nope, probably not, but you would need to be quiet like a church mouse and willing to carry my luggage.
 
8. Will you please buy me a plane ticket to Ireland?
Nope… still.  Are you 5?  You cannot keep asking the same question expecting a different answer.

9. Do you happen to have read any interesting and insightful blog posts about travel lately?
Yes, yes I have.  Funny you should mention that.

10. What's your favorite part of the traveling process?
The part where I get there.  I am nervous all the way up to arriving at the destination.

11. Do you enjoy work travel or do you dread it? (Or somewhere in between?)
I do not mind work travel, but I don’t travel for work much.

12. Why don't NBA refs call traveling more often? It's sooo common in the paint.
The NBA is rigged… that’s why

13. If I'm to believe Ricky Nelson, "Traveling Man" is a euphemism for a serial philanderer. True or False?


My bet is he would (and probably does) have multiple girlfriends in his home city, but that doesn’t sound as good as a song. Let’s make up some local lyrics
I’ve got a honey on High Street, a skirt on 1st Avenue, a desperate housewife in the suburbs, a broad on Broad Street, A sweerheart on Cedar, A partner on Park Place, A flame on 4th…

14. How many States have you visited and how many countries?
Maybe around 37 states, and 10 countries.

15. Favorite family trip?
Last year’s trip to the Redwoods.  So good.

16. Trip you and wifey will take once the kiddos are gone?
I think maybe New Zealand. We could get our Hobbit on

17. Any travel in the future with the new job?
Not that I know of, but maybe a little.

18. Farthest point you traveled to?
Munich, Germany.

19. Buy a new book to travel?
Sometimes... but sometimes I just want to draw

20. GPS or Who needs directions?
I can swing either way.  I have been known to read a map or 2, but I do love me some turn by turn.

To recap:
This new job still has that new job smell
My time being able to play the “I’m new here, talk to me like I am 5” will be coming to an end in a few weeks
They do not seem to want to extend that much beyond a month
Even though I am hearing from 7 year veterans of the company that they don’t understand what’s going on
A little over a month to get my bearings completely
Pups did not sleep well last night
That means that I did not sleep well last night
I think I need a shower as well (editor's note:  Shower has been taken)
We go on vacation at the end of the month
That will be here before I know it
The wife got home tonight
And that is awesome
Have a great week everyone

 

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