Batfort

Style reveals substance

Tag: crippling youtube addiction (page 3 of 7)

“Mad City” Appreciation Post

It’s rough, but I love this track of Mark and Taeyong from the NCT crew.

I have a fondness for the young, rough, unrefined bits in an artist’s career–when you can just see the first tendrils of talent unfolding but still being explored.

SM Entertainment has made a concerted effort to develop their rap talent, and has taken that seriously in pushing Mark and Taeyong (and I guess now Lucas) to develop and grow.

You can tell that this is a “challenge” song–somebody tasked them to write a song about what makes them angry. Young Nickel Creek used to record a lot of songs from these types of challenges, and I love how transparent they are.

For all its rough edges, I love this verse from Mark:

When I’m in the house, guess what happens at the end it
always turns out to be empty and demolished (I killed it)
I eventually always end up standing at the center of it
Always energetic still clenching a damn mic in my fist now (how)
Could this be possible? Am I that powerful?
Guess that’s why rumors around the world are saying that
“Mark is absolutely fully capable”
No more rules, just dial my number
If you’re ready to have your house blown

 

It me. I don’t rap, but I know this feeling. I know this capability. I know this bewilderment.

If I worked as hard as Mark Lee, I could make some things happen too.

The banality of nihilism

The Faceberg struck gold with this one:

Normies are the real nihilists. They believe in nothing and exist only to exist. They exhibit no passion, no emotion, no yearning for something beyond themselves. They are content to wallow in mud and gorge themselves on gluten free, non GMO, organic slop from the Content Farm.

I don’t mean to say I’m better than these people, but I work with several in their early 30s who are in the same role.

They’ve done nothing with their lives since college. They don’t want to do anything. They collect paychecks, pay rent, and complain.

They’re the walking dead.

And I don’t really care either how they choose to live their lives. If they want to live paycheck to paycheck, smoke weed everyday, and complain about everything…go ahead.

It’s just pitiful to eek out an existence like that without creating, without passion, without living.

I want everyone to create something. Doesn’t matter what it is; everyone has different talents.

Write a book. Make a film. Paint a painting. Build a piece of furniture. Engineer a new tool. Start a business. Compose a song. Develop software. Grow potatoes.

Just make something.

The act of creation defies nihilism because it adds value to a world where value is increasingly abstracted and destroyed.

You as a creator will rise above you as a consumer. Instead of saying “I watched that, I ate that, etc.” you will say “I filmed that, I cooked that, etc.”

 

Do we just assume that other people are normies because we don’t ask about their hopes and dreams and their side gigs? Maybe.

Do we come across ourselves as normies by not leading with what we do in our off time? Perhaps. It’s also a survival strategy. Nobody at a corporate-type job really cares.

But I have talked with quite a few coworkers about what they do after hours, and what they want out of life. I have yet to encounter someone who is as motivated as I am. This goes for multiple jobs, in different circumstances (one in the city, one in a small town), different states, different people in different stages of life.

One described her ideal day as staying home, laying on the couch, and watching TV all day.

I couldn’t do that

I think about this bit from Mad Men a lot:

 

 

Creative Achievement in the wild

Now that I’ve started turning (some of) my thoughts toward creative achievement, I’m seeing awesome confirmation-bias examples of people talking about it. Because I’m interested, I’m going to document what I notice and see if anything interesting shakes out.

Not all of these mention creative “achievement” per se, but I’m going for the spirit of the thing rather than the letter. The last thing I want to be is some stuffy academic who has to use the exact right words.

Japanese Chefs

Simon and Martina, everyone’s favorite kawaii food battle Youtube channel, has been upping their game with visits to higher-end restaurants in Japan. This one, Gion Roiro, is a French-Japanese fusion concept, using techniques from France with (only) local Japanese ingredients.

Simon: I feel like if you come to Japan and you only try traditional food you’re missing out on so much artistry and creative energy that Japanese chefs have–that would be like going to America and saying “I only want burgers.” That wouldn’t be fair. There are so many amazing chefs here who are trying new things.

I like the idea of creative energy, of that ebb and flow, of how energy can build with a group of people to unimaginable heights. “Where are you going to spend your creative energy for the day?” Like the people who wear the exact same outfit every day so they can spend their decision-making power on other things, like creative achievement. (I’ll put Steve Jobs in this category.)

Democrat to Deplorable

Jack Murphy was doxxed recently, but he also published a book. From the sounds of it, it’s a pretty good book, at that. (I haven’t read it yet.)

I would imagine that few things compare because it is so difficult, and especially difficult to do well. I’ve shitposted my way to accomplishment a few times, but I wouldn’t consider that real accomplishment. Not in the same way that I would consider someone who took enough care with his self-published book to get a fantastic cover designed accomplished.

That was a ridiculous sentence but I’m leaving it in.

Gary Vaynerchuk

Everyone’s favorite love-him-or-hate-him one-man motivation squad takes a creative approach to business.

I think my game is very reversed from everybody else’s, creatively. ALL of you is number one. “The market.” I only care about you motherfuckers–as a collective–so I’m just putting out. It’s a creative strategic framework that I have that’s absolutely fucking right.

I love applying the idea of creativity to domains other than artistry. For some reason, it still feels like crossing a boundary–like creativity only “belongs” in the arts. That complete BS, but it feels true.

Sometimes at my day job I pull out phrases like “creative problem solving” and people look at me like I’ve invented some crazy amazing new idea. It’s just problem solving, people. All problem solving is creative.

What Tanacon can teach us about client relationships

I used to watch reality tv to watch how personalities interacted under pressure. Yes, the storylines were fake, and the scenarios were heavily suggested, and the editing was pervasive, but the people and their personalities were real–if a bit exaggerated because of stress and booze and exhibitionism.

It was like watching people I know react under a big ol’ microscope, and I didn’t have to worry about getting splat on by any of the drama.

So it’s been interesting to watch a subgenre of Youtube turn into, essentially, reality tv. Old school style, where you just followed people around with a camera.

Normally I don’t pay much attention to this area of Youtube. I went down the vlog rabbit hole a few years ago until I realized that the payoff in terms if real life application was pretty slim.

Teen Youtube, though, seems to be a big thing. Logan and Jake Paul. Pewdiepie’s army of nine-year-olds. I guess there’s a whole demographic on Youtube who don’t also use it to learn how to troubleshoot the pilot light on their water heaters.

However, Shane Dawson’s latest stuff has really caught my attention. Somewhere along the line, he went from an unknown-to-me comedian loved by the youths to Youtube’s Investigative Psychologist Dad. Seriously, even though he’s personally connected with the two subjects of the pieces I’ve watched, I feel more objectivity from him than from most mainstream journalists these days.

(Major kudos to Shane for being one of those comedy guys who so clearly thinks and feels deeply about the world–I’m not a huge comedy fan but I really respect comedians who are in it for real.)

It started with Bunny, aka Grav3yardgirl, a Texas goth girl with a big personality who somehow amassed a large following of tween girls. At some point, she started playing to the crowd instead making videos for herself, and the lack of joy showed. She closed herself off (IRL MISS HAVISHAM VIBES) and in doing so lost the fans on Youtube who are absolutely ravenous for authentic weirdness. I mean, I myself am Bunny’s age, and I subscribed to her because I secretly want a goth best friend.

Shane came into the picture by showing up at her house, delving into what makes her scared about Youtube (other than hemorrhaging subscribers), and helped her remember what she liked about making Youtube videos in the first place. Since then, Bunny and her videos both have been clearly on an upswing. Good job, Shane.

That put Shane Dawson on my radar (and on my “recommended” feed).

Which brings us to Tanacon.

Now, I don’t care about the convention itself. Essentially, what happened was two unseasoned kids teamed up to throw a convention up against Vidcon, decided to milk it, and oversold tickets like crazy because apparently people like “being oppressed outside” standing in the rain (or in this case, getting hella sunburned) waiting to get into a convention that’s at capacity.

Shane, doing the Youtube Dad thing that he does now, tried to console all parties involved (who are convinced that they’ll be ruined forever) and also to get to the bottom of all the lies and blame. He had a fine line to walk, since apparently he is good friends with Tana, but ultimately let the footage speak for itself. Bless Youtube vloggers and their need to film everything.

Without getting too much into the he-said-she-said of it all (and trust me, there is a lot), what strikes me is the lessons that we can learn from young, bold personalities getting in an argument over a badly managed conference: the client/provider relationship takes as much work as the event itself.

It’s interesting to watch the two of them interact, because they both clearly felt wronged, and they both clearly do not have the experience to know what they could have done better.

Don’t be a bad client

Tana, it seems, didn’t know what she wanted other than a lot of “nots.” Basically an event that was not Vidcon that was also somehow cooler than Vidcon. It is very difficult to develop an event (or a marketing campaign or any other thing) for a client who doesn’t know what they want. If you’re a client, try to figure out what it is that you’re looking for before you start planning.

Also: if your name is on the thing, you might want to take a little bit more care with it than going on vacation to Hawaii the week before your event is scheduled. Be around to answer questions during the prep phases. Usually by the time you’re asking questions day-of (or when things are about to launch), it’s way way way too late. Think about your reputation and what you want your name to stand for each step of the way as you’re selecting vendors, venues, and signing contracts.

 

Know your limitations. Know your budget. Know your physical constraints. Know your market. Start small and scale. (ie, start with a meet and greet, not by planning a convention). The person you hire for events is an expert in events, not in your particular area of expertise or what you personally want to get out of this event. You have to bring knowledge and research to the table, as well. You can’t rely on them.

Learn how to say no

Then we have Michael, the kid who was in charge of the convention, and apparently his own talent management company. He is a “yes” man, clearly wanting to always project the best possible facade for himself, his company, and his event. It is difficult to tell the exact sequence of events because of all the disparate footage, but he seems unable to put up boundaries between what is ideal, what could potentially be done on an indefinite time frame, and what is realistic within the constraints.

Being able to push back on a client when they are being unreasonable is one of the most important parts of dealing with a client (or a boss or anyone, really). Managing expectations to a realistic level is just as much about protecting yourself as it is creating the smallest possible gap between expectations and reality. When there is a big gap, there is big disappointment.

Another difficult thing you have to do when managing an event for someone else is behing honest about what’s going on. It can be really hard not to put a good face on things, especially when you want them to go well and your own ego is riding on them. But false information makes it impossible to make good contingency plans, which will absolutely tank your plans.

You always need a contingency plan. Always always always. It will make your life 90% less stressful, trust me on this.

And for everybody

Making decisions based on what’s good for your ego is usually a terrible idea. Sure, it might make you feel good in the moment, and it might make you look good on Youtube for a hot minute (at least until Shane Dawson goes digging), but ego-deep decisions rarely hold up in real life. Take your time, think things through, and be brutally realistic with yourself about what you can accomplish with your available resources. Then once you get your first success, leverage that momentum into something bigger.

 

Based on Michael’s past trajectory, and the fact that he got started with this stuff in high school, I have no doubt that he’ll figure out how to bounce back.

I hope that Tana will use this as a lesson in what she can realistically expect out of herself, and that she should play to her strengths.

And I hope that all the kids watching on Youtube, and the ones who were stuck in the parking lot, see this as a lesson on risk. There are things that are great to get from young people–like fresh perspectives and boundless energy–but there’s a reason why you have to be 35 before you can run to become president of the United States. There is a lot of learning that you have to do before you can be great at anything.

And kids, always read contracts before you sign them. If you die in the contract, you die in real life.

Eating Beef in Japan

That sounds like a new goal? Eh?

I, like many people, had this vision of people in Japan (and Korea and wherever) eating a TON of rice and vegetables and very little meat and fat. Something like the complete opposite of how I eat: high carb, low fat.

I thought that it would be difficult to travel in Japan because of the prevalence of rice and soy in the food culture.

When I saw Koreans or Japanese on YouTube talking about how much they loved beef, I figured it was because they didn’t eat that much of it unless they were out at a restaurant.

Apparently that is dead wrong. We have been fed food lies once again.

Not only do Japanese people love to eat meat, it is difficult to be a vegetarian or vegan while visiting Japan because so much of the traditional and modern foods contain meat or fish.

I’m really impressed with what I’ve seen so far from the Food Lies film. The video production is high quality. The filmmakers have answered questions I never even thought to ask. So even though I’ve read books and listened to podcasts with many of the speakers listed in the film, I’m pretty sure I’ll learn something new.

I’ll be backing Food Lies on IndieGoGo soon, as well, since they are doing the work that needs to be done in the world.

 


I was never really into travel much in the past (maybe because I had no energy) but now it’s becoming more and more appealing. Asia travels with Batfort in 2020: y/n?

Want to learn about processed meat?

You know you do.

Despite being thirsty, overproduced, and a sign that the Portland hipster vibe is becoming too mainstream to function, these “ask an expert” style Epicurious vids are an interesting way to learn about food.

I just wish they would make the challenge a bit more obvious. Pedantic doesn’t belong on YouTube.

Excuse me, I just looked at the thumbnail again. If you put Buzzfeed in a blender with Bon Appetit.

ANYWAY.

I like the cured meats episode because the expert explains a lot of things. We learn how cured meats are made, and what are details to look for in each style of curing. We learn what goes into a high-end/traditional product, and what goes into a mass produced product.

After watching this, I never want to eat a supermarket processed meat product again. No wonder our bodies hate us.

Nitrates. Nitrites. Liquid smoke. Collagen casings. Fake mold made out of rice flour (!). Laquer’d sugar. All sorts of weird stuff that goes into hot dogs, or salami, or ham.

The more I go without all that stuff (I had to quit eating cured meats, with the exception of the occasional prosciutto, after I realized that the microbes in things like salami were contributing to my health problems) the more I realize that all those curing agents and stabilizers make digestion more difficult. They might even make living more difficult.

(Certainly it would be difficult to live if you’re prematurely cured, amirite.)

This won’t scare me off of cured meats forever–they are delicious and I hope to add them back to my diet someday–but it does make me more motivated to purchase only high-quality cured meats.

In fact, now I want to plan a trip to Spain to eat my bodyweight in jamón ibérico. Maybe in 5 years.

Dahyun appreciation post

Is this a blog post in praise of one particular member of the K-pop group Twice?

Yes, yes it is.

Dahyun is the kind of girl I wish we had more of in the United States. A celebrity with a really offbeat sense of humor, who is allowed to use her offbeat sense of humor as part of her brand. In fact, Dahyun first gained notoriety by going viral (in Korea). This girl is a literal meme.

(Thank God she signed with JYP, the personality-focused Korean entertainment company, which lets her be herself.)

I mean, in Twice’s recent comeback, where they all played both male and female leads of famous movies, Dahyun not only dressed as the titular assassin-for-hire in Leon: The Professional, but she went all-out with the beard and everything.

This is not an Elle Fanning type who is afraid to get her hands dirty and thinks of her image above all. This is someone who genuinely puts her heart into what she’s doing.

There isn’t enough of that in the world, so Dahyun needs appreciating.

(She even dressed as Leon in a livestage of “What is Love?” even though she could have dressed as her elegant infomercial character.)

 

And in addition to singing and rapping, she plays the piano.

 

More Dahyuns, please.

In praise of the k-pop dance practice video

My favorite genre of k-pop videos is the dance practice.

“Why is this?” I can hear you asking. “Why would you watch the practice video when you could watch the polished video?”

Well, my friend, I am glad you asked. There are so many reasons.

  1. Since it’s a practice, everyone’s wearing casual clothes and I don’t get distracted looking at the styling. Since k-pop costumes have a lot going on, it can take a lot of focus to sort out the individual and group dynamics going on in any given stage.
  2. The camera may zoom in and out, but in general it keeps to the same angle, with no cuts. This lets me see the choreography as it was intended by God, nature, and Kasper. I can see the full formation changes that you cannot in the frenetic jumpcuts that plague the live music shows.
  3. Since it’s a dance-focused video, there’s a better chance of watching the group dance full-out. K-pop groups don’t always dance full-out in performances because they have to sing, too, so if you want to truly appreciate their dance abilities, watch the dance practice.

I particularly like EXO-CBX’s “Blooming Day” dance practice, mostly because the choreo is so good. The formations trade off between three sets of three and many variations of the dancers flanking Chen, Baekhyun and Xiumin. The chreo is a mix of legit dancing and jokey dance moves that suit the song and the group.

Unlike some of EXO’s choreography that runs counterpoint to the main melody of the song (see the “Monster” dance practice below), this choreo reinforces all the main sections and rhythms of the song – but it works with the theme.

Another dance practice I particularly enjoy is EXO’s “Monster.” If I’m being honest, I prefer the dance practice to the actual m/v, although I do like the dance performance video as well.

This one is a little more produced, with the heavy backlighting and the camerawork, but it’s still pretty simple. What makes it special is that it lets the choreography shine.

To finish this post off, we’ll turn to something cute: Twice. The “TT” dance practice is how I learned all of their names, so it has a special place in my heart. And if we’re going to go for girlgroup choreography, Twice is one of the better groups. They’re the least self-conscious.

And the “TT” choreography is just as catchy as the song.

Binging with Babish makes me want to add garnish to my steak

As a carnivore, I loves me some steak. You may not be a carnivore, but I’m sure you loves you some steak, too.

Most of the time, I’m quite content to eat nothing but the steak. It’s delicious. You really don’t need much else. Maybe a pat of butter on top if you’re getting fancy.

But every so often, I’m reminded of all the delicious things you can put on top of a steak, and I get food envy.

Behold:

  • Red wine pan sauce
  • Roasted Cipollini onions
  • Sauteed mushrooms with thyme and garlic
  • Gremolata

None of these steak accoutrement are incompatible with a paleo, keto, or LCHF diet. Onions, mushrooms, fresh greens, garlic, wine, bone broth. Richness or brightness of flavor and sumptuous texture that play off the steak and contribute to a spectacular eating experience. I used to think that cooking paleo was a challenge; now all I see are delicious choices.

For now, my body insists that we remain strict carnivore. (By “we” I mean myself and the Leviathan that lives in my gut. Most people call it Crohn’s disease.) Any carb stronger than the faintest whisper of the lactose in cheese or sour cream gets a resounding “NO” from the inflammation markers in my body.

But a girl can dream.

Someday, I will eat mushrooms and onions and thyme with my steak, and it will be beautiful.

Someday, I will actually deglaze a pan with something other than water.

Someday, I will not pick the garlic out of the cooking pot.

NCT Dream grew up

But the dirty grotty basslines that characterize NCT title tracks will never die.

I’m definitely not complaining.

We all thought Mark was ‘graduating’ from Dream because he’s an adult now. I guess that was before SM rethought the entire concept of NCT.

And yet he’s back and rapping better than ever.

There’s a reason he’s my ultimate NCT bias.

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