Recently in Challenge 02 Category

Challenge 2 Trivia Answers!

| | Comments (2)

Congrats to Hubs for correctly answering all the blogging trivia questions! He is a internet nerd extraordinaire. We love it.

1. One of the best-known personal bloggers, this woman is famous for having been one of the first people fired for writing negatively about work on her blog. The name of her blog is now commonly used as a term to reference when this happens to others. Name the blogger or the blog. Dooce

2. Julie Powell got a lucrative book deal after blogging for a year about her attempts to cook every recipe out of a famous chef's cookbook. Whose cookbook was she using? Julia Childs

3. What is the name of the political blog, published by Gawker Media, that may be most notoriously known for publicizing the blog of Jessica Cutler, who worked on the hill and wrote about accepting money for sexual favors from a Republican senator. Wonkette

4. Which award-winning group blog's tagline is "a directory of wonderful things"? Boing Boing

5. What celebrity gossip blogger made news for outing Doogie Houser and Lance Bass? He also recently appeared on MTV's Celebrity Rap Superstar. Perez Hilton

6. This awesomely cool internet cartoon character has a blog-like page where he answers emails sent in by fans on his Lappy 486 computer. Strong Bad

7. What legendary musician and artist has a blog, but is insulted if you refer to it as such, insisting - don't call it a blog, call it a journal. David Byrne

8. This Denver "scenester" blog recently changed its name when it became too popular. Name the original and new name of this blog. (2 points) Elitist Hipster Snob/Donnybrook Writing Academy



Dear UB3: The Den,
TEAM G-RAD is pleased to announce the release of its first UB3-related book POST-LOG: An Experiment in Paper Blogging - Available at a The Den near you. This text compiles the results of a participatory physical blogging experiment conducted simultaneously between September 16 and 17 in Grand Rapids, MI and Philadelphia, PA. First editions include an exclusive forward by internationally renown cultural critic Suzanne Dimanche and is freely available in the following Adobe .PDF format. Please follow the directions below:


Part One (.PDF - 18.9 Mb)


Part Two (.PDF - 16.3 Mb)



PRINTING
(DISCLAIMER: Exact methods may vary from printer to printer, but for us...)
1. Print Part One PDF
2. Feed back into printer by reversing order turning upside down and flipping
3. Print Part Two PDF
4. Reverse order and check page numeration
5. Fold in half

BINDING
You basically have three options here...



Option A: Handsewing
1. Make a Jig with one half of an 8 1/2 x 11 paper
2. mark 8 lines one inch apart at 3/4 inch from the left
3. use the jig to poke 8 holes
4. thread your needle with heavy linen thread and knot one end
5. sew across binding
6. when all the way through, knot the thread



Option B: Sewing Machine
1. Sew along the fold approx 1/4in. from the spine (we used a zig-zag stitch)

Option C: Staple
We recommend sewing

If you would like to check out the paper posts without printing your own book, feel free to peruse the ub3paperblog tag on flickr.

♥ TEAM G-RAD

PS: we encourage you to upload a picture of yourself with your copy of POST-LOG to flickr and tag it "ub3paperblog."

the wikidance!

| | Comments (18)



The Wikidance from bodycity on Vimeo.

This challenge was serious fun for us. Our mission as a dance troupe is about collaboration and creative democracy so, in a way, we were on familiar territory. But we found ourselves so impressed and inspired and grateful each time new moves were submitted by willing friends and strangers alike. Our process mutated from conceptual couch conversations to obsessive internet stimulus digestion sessions. bodycity came to life in a crazy way because of this challenge. we were required to operate on such a pleasant and frenzied new level that we are really hoping to do it again. So, thank you to everyone who joined the troupe for this project. And welcome to bodycity.

Participation Squared

| | Comments (12)



Participation: Three Ono Actions from TJ Norris on Vimeo.


Big thanks to Scott Cummins of Riverscape Pictures for his expert handling of an abstract idea. Though they both came out to the Willamette River for the 'scoop' the Portland Tribune and The Oregonian only got a glimpse of the full picture here on the Ultimate Blogger. See you on the Net!




This was my ad on Craigslist.



Time Began: 10:00p.m. EST
Time Ended: 12:15p.m. EST
Total Number of Chatters: 24


Obviously we will not be posting a 2 hour chat in its entirety, as that would be tiring. So, instead, we present to you a summarized recap of the highlights.


Note: Names, and screennames have been blurred to protect individuals from internet abuse. Although, one celebrity remains uncensored, and a few slips...





The night began slowly with just a few of us, and a mild discussion about blogging.





Things then started to "blow up". We all talked about a certain someone and their whereabouts.


(There are 17 of these, so in respect to other Ultimate Bloggers this will be extended so we don't hog ALL of the space. Click the link below, or here)

We lay, sprawled in a radial effect on the floor, faces illuminated by a familiar LCD glow. Within that tiny apartment in Portland, a revelation was born, a participatory event that did not require paralyzing creativity. We were tired, but we needed each other. So rather than watching a movie or dispersing throughout the room we read the entire screenplay of Hard Rain aloud, including almost all of the stage directions. None of us had seen the movie, we entered it's (web)pages blind and hopeful. Level, we took our best shot at the characters (first noting the actors on imdb). We were gripped by a flat story and mediocre script, why? Was it the beer?

Yes and no. It was the interdependence, the possibility, and innocence.

And it was with this small, glowing coal that we took on our participation challenge. We resolved to reenact a scene, something touching and awkward, some thing the experience would inevitably be.

There is something terribly important about reenactment.

"[Re-enactment] provides a ready-made means of externalizing human plight by embodying and representing them in storied plot and characters. What is the significance of this externalizing tendency in [re-enactment]? It provides, in the first instance, a basis for communion among men. What is 'out there' can be named and shared in a manner beyond the sharing of subjectivity. By the subjectifying of our worlds through externalization we are able, paradoxically enough, to share communally in the nature of internal experience....Fate, the full of the moon, the aether--these and not our unique fears are what join us in common reaction....Sharing, then, and the containment of impulse in beauty--these are possibilities offered by externalization."

--Jerome Bruner


1. Why did you agree to participate in our project?
tristan1.jpg Mostly, I was curious about the project. But I also thought the message I received asking me to participate was a mistake. So obviously I said yes.
jaime1.jpg because the kind fellow who asked me is a friend of a friend of a friend of a friend who since my visit in portland has been elevated to straight up friend. this made us closer.

2. How did you feel while we were reenacting the scene?
tristan1.jpg I felt awkward and a bit tipsy, but less uncomfortable than usual.
jaime1.jpg like gena rowlands in the film 'opening night'.
steve1.jpg A little strange due to the role reversal and because I was doing it in front of people I don't know. But it's kind of, uh.. neat how I get to be posted even though nobody knows who I am.

3. How comfortable do you feel using the internet? Do you participate in any online communities or networks in any way?
marlo1.jpg i love the internets! I like to read blogs, and occasionally post in online forums about stuff i like (threadless.com for example)
tristan1.jpg I am fine with the internet. I don't know it very well but I have a myspace, an email and I frequent an online banking resource.
jaime1.jpg you know, i've often thought about getting one of those foot leaning devices that improves posture but the wrist cushion just seems ostentatious to my mind. i regularly troll the forum for northampton town football club ( thehotelend.cjb.net) and "i cannot tell a lie": i am myspace legit. recently, ijustfindtheinternetboring.com. this is due to my own limitations in e-creativity, though.

steve1.jpg I really don't use the internet. Basically just for what I absolutely need, or sometimes for looking up Harley dealerships.

4. What would make you more comfortable and more likely to participate?
marlo1.jpg having the extra time, and as far as blogging, having a friend to do it with.
tristan1.jpg It was fun and I would do it again, so probably some sort of good or service.
jaime1.jpg hallucinogens. or immense personal praise.
steve1.jpg If I knew how to use it.

5. What do you wish you could read or find online?
marlo1.jpg every book in the world!
tristan1.jpg Ice cream delivery services, or intergalactic travel simulators
steve1.jpgI would love to get the advance copies of a lot of the authors I read!

6. Did you learn anything from this experience?
tristan1.jpg I am really bad at pretending to be people pretending to be people, and writing a bio is difficult.
jaime1.jpg dignity, always dignity.
steve1.jpg I learned I can play a girl...my feminine side just came out.

But this was no at all like the transcendent night in Portland. There was no level playing field. We chose a scene that we loved and none of our participants had the same context, and perhaps this was both our downfall and our success.

We learned that true participation--the kind that results in shared meaning--requires a shared context and understanding. We wondered if we might be imposing our meaning on others; we sought reciprocity and learned that it is not a one sided attempt. Essentially, this challenge asked us to depend upon people outside our own sphere. This vulnerability pushed us to explore how humans create and share meaning in the first place. We had to trust that, eventually, our acts of participation would at least inspire thought. It might not be meaningful for every person, but we hope that something more than just discomfort will linger. Perhaps some wonder at the blind lengths we will go to for another person--even a person we barely know.

okay, ready for you to participate

| | Comments (4)

This post has been removed pending investigation by the site administrator. For more information please email interminable.duration@unspecified.name reference: "Matthew Stadler, post #3."

Becoming the Event

| | Comments (7)

Denver is nothing if not a city of city of participation. And we, being residents of Denver, had a full weekend of activities planned. However, given the nature of the challenge of participation we decided to turn things on their head. Instead of just going to these events, as we would have normally, we decided to become part of the events themselves.

We got a theater full of midnight movie goers to play games, we drank absinthe with patrons during an art opening, and hosted a round of trivia at one of Denver's most popular bars.

We integrated ourselves into each event and made it something larger than it originally was intended to be, therefore enhancing the community's experience and our own.

It was fun.



The NeverEnding Story

It began with a lot of bunched up faces and empty thought bubbles, so we did what any self-respecting team on a mission would do. We went out for pizza. It was good, plain with a wheat crust. It filled our bellies, but didn't fill our heads with a great idea, so we headed home to stare at each other for a bit longer. We bounced around a lot of ideas: perhaps we should set up a booth in town and challenge people to thumb wrestling; maybe we should try to break a world record, a world record that would need a lot of people to finish it. We thought about creating a group play, written by the participants and then acted out by us. Each idea was thrown out for one reason or another. Reasons like, our thumbs would get tired and world records are for sissies.

J, our resident Oh Don Piano assistant, thought that maybe we should go learn from the kids who play Yugioh at the local comic book store, but we are pretty sure he was angling for a few hours of uninterrupted browsing time while we talked with the kids. However, we thought he might be on to something with that one. It made us think about other events going on over the weekend. Events that we were already planning to attend.

The NeverEnding Story was playing at the midnight movies on Saturday. Being adults who were once kids who loved a good fantasy movie about dragons and shit, we couldn't resist going to see the movie once again on the big screen. So considering the challenge of participation, we wondered how we could take a simple night at the movies and morph it into something that we actively participated in. Since none of us have projectionist experience we thought perhaps the key would be trying to interact with the audience before or after the movie.

Step 1: Penetrate the Perimeter

We called the theater and were told a guy named Matt ran the midnight movie and he would be the one to talk to. However, since he slept most of the day (he is, afterall, the midnight movie guy) we had to wait until he woke up to call us back. So we had to continue with the plan without the guarantee we would be able to get into the theater for our plan.

Step 2: Sweeten the Deal

After some thinking we decided most people would be more apt to interact with us if we offered some sweet sweet goodies. Being good theme party hosts from way back we knew there was only one way to go when offering up snacks - they had to be themed. So after some quick thinking we came up with Swamp of Sorrow cookies, rock biter candy, and some awesome DVDs snagged from an undisclosed source.

Step 3: Wait for the Signal

While we were standing in line at Big Lots we finally got the call from midnight movie Matt. He had just woken up; it was 4 PM. He sounded a bit muddled, but after we explained what we wanted to do he agreed to let us take over hosting the event since it would let him take care of other things during the day. We assume he needed some more sleep.

Step 4: Learn as Much About the NeverEnding Story as Possible

Thank goodness for IMDB.

Step 5: Action

We arrived at the Esquire Theatre at 11:30 PM. We met with Matt and discussed our plan, shook off our nerves, and then waited. At 12:00 AM Matt introduced us to the audience and then we were on. We introduced ourselves and the crowd couldn't have been more awesome. They were totally into it. We asked trivia questions and then got one very brave girl to come up and sing The NeverEnding Story theme song with us in front of the entire crowd. At one point most of the crowd was singing along. We achieved our goal of turning the passive movie watching experience into something where people actively participated and had an enhanced experience. Not to mention we got to see a kickass 80s movie for free.

Shopping list

You might have noticed absinthe on that list...

Komar and Melamid Gallery Opening: The Absinthe Drinkers

Being fans of the artists Komar and Melamid, we had already planned to go to their art opening - American Dreams - at the Mizel Center here in Denver, but knowing our plan was to somehow actively participate in the event, we were almost afraid of what that would mean in terms of the quiet observational atmosphere of an art gallery.

Step 1: Get Outfitted

We go to the liquor store on a mission to buy absinthe. Now, we love to get stinkin' drunk just like most crazy hoes, but we usually stick with the vodka, whiskey, tequila route. We don't know anything about absinthe other than it used to get people crazy addicted. We didn't even know if a regular liquor store would carry it. Luckily, the sprawling Argonaut Liquors carried one brand and we went to pick it up. All of a sudden a black clad, gauge-eared Goth guy was standing behind us. "Don't even think of picking that up," he warned. "That stuff is crap. Not even close to the real thing." Well. Apparently, we needed to get the good stuff online right from the Czech Republic. We told him we didn't have time to wait for anything, but if he wanted to sell us some (very black market of Team Oh Don Piano) we would take it. Unfortunately, he didn't have any (er, maybe that was a good thing) and we made do with the non-hallucinogenic American version.

We also picked up some sugar cubes and plastic cups. This show was going on the road.

Step 2: Get In There

We enter the gallery at 4 PM, our canvas bag of supplies tucked safely under our arm and did some recon. There were a lot of people milling around, but no sign of Vitaly Komar, who was supposed to be speaking later that afternoon. The crowd was big, but subdued. Suddenly, the probability of our plan happening this Sunday, in a sophisticated gallery housed in a Jewish community center, seemed to diminish before our eyes.

Step 3: Just Do It

We bided our time for awhile, but then we decided it was do or die. We worked up our nerves and went to speak with a man in the corner, who had an air of authority about him. It might have been the fact that he was standing in front of a giant portrait of himself. We explained our plan to him and he amazingly didn't see anything wrong with it, but told us we really needed to speak with Simon, the gallery director. So that's what we did. We walked over to Simon and told him our plan. You could have knocked us over with a feather when he seemed intrigued and said, "Sure - go ahead!" Yeah!

Step 4: Make It So

We walked over to a nearby bench and started breaking out our booty. We opened our absinthe, cups, sugar cubes, and started pouring. The patrons might have been quiet, but our impromptu absinthe bar caught their attention. We poured the strong liquor over sugar cubes and started handing them out, explaining that we were offering absinthe, historically a drink of the art community in the 19th century France, and a beverage that Komar and Melamid used to bring to their events. We told the gallery patrons we wanted to bring them into the experience; instead of submissively viewing art, they were participating in an experience that artists had partook in for centuries. They were into the idea, and at one point during the evening, almost everyone there had our offering in their hand.

Circles began to develop between strangers, all discussing the drink. Then slowly, they began discussing themselves. The absinthe drinking broke down barriers between strangers. We met so many interesting people who we would have never spoken to if we hadn't asked them to participate. It turned out that Komar was unable to come as planned, and our absinthe drinking became the activity of the evening.

Quizmasters

We love a god pub quiz. Denver is rife with them, as the Geeks Who Drink brand of quiz night infiltrates a local bar at least once a night somewhere in the city, and other independent ones have been popping up. Usually, Oh Don Piano's participation is limited to sipping on beer and cider and wracking our collective brains for any remnants of knowledge linked to 80s hair bands, women's history, or comic book characters, but of course that wouldn't do during our weekend of participation. Naw, man: we had to become the quizmasters.

Step one: Appeal to the Master

The first task was to convince Marc Hughes, who hosts a pub quiz at the local hipster hangout, Sputnik to let us steal a round for the evening. While we worried that he would be hesitant to release the reigns for an entire round, he actually agreed readily. Man, everyone in Denver LOVES our participation! We promised we would provide glorious prizes and a fun round of trivia.

Step two: Find Glorious Prizes and Create a Fun Round of Trivia

Once again, we turned to our undisclosed source of dvd greatness and put together what could possibly amount to the best movie package ever. Hits like, Baywatch: Season 2, Alligator ("A vicious alligator named Ramon, who was flushed into the city sewer as a baby..."), and the Westminister Dog Show were included. And since Big Lots was practically giving away the "White 'n' Fluffy" popcorn and Mike & Ikes, we threw those in there, too. At this point, we were ready to win the prize ourselves.

Next up, the quiz. We batted around a few ideas for the theme before landing on the obvious: blogging! It was a risk, because not everyone is a huge internet nerd with lots of bloggy "friends" and "community members" they've never met. But we decided we'd go with it. We came up with an array of questions covering blogs in the music, political, techy, personal, and local realms.

Step three: Quiz Time, Yo.

We showed up at Sputnik feeling good. Our battles with group singing and absinthe distribution had left us pretty worn out, but we knew this participation project would be fun. It was a whole different world behind the microphone. Suddenly, instead of sitting quietly in a booth with just our friends, we were thrust into the spotlight, literally, and all eyes and ears were on us. And for good reason: they were hungry for our sweet ass movie package prize. We launched into the quiz, a little shaky. With Marc's guidance we slowed the questions down and learned to repeat when necessary.

And even though we were behind the DJ booth, this was some killer participation. You get it from all sides: teams yell questions and funny remarks at you, they leave little notes for you on the answer sheets, they come up to talk between rounds. While ostensibly about teams' interactions with each other, pub quiz is really a lot more about teams' interactions with the host.

Step four: Crown a Round Winner

Here's where the real world community differs most from the online community: nerdy blog knowledge. While you'd be hard up to find an active blogger who doesn't know who [answer to #1] is or read [answer to #4] or gather friends around to watch [answer to #6] every once in a while, this real world crowd was a little less blog-literate. But nonetheless, one team pulled right ahead and answered over half the questions correctly.

An excited team member ran up to claim the prize and brought it back to the table for sorting.

All in all our weekend of participation was a big success. Of course, we had to refuel after all that "outside" time with a couple episodes of "The Hills" and some "Rock of Love." We're all better now.

To continue the participation theme and bestow the quiz upon the true nerds, we offer here the questions from our foray into the world of pub trivia. The first person who is able to email us all the correct answers will win a dvd chosen randomly from our undisclosed source, and if they're lucky, some candy. Of course there's no way to monitor this, but the answers should come from your knowledge base, not Google's (except for the last one, which is a local-knowledge thing. We'll allow research on that one). Good luck!

All About Blogging Trivia

1. One of the best-known personal bloggers, this woman is famous for having been one of the first people fired for writing negatively about work on her blog. The name of her blog is now commonly used as a term to reference when this happens to others. Name the blogger or the blog.

2. Julie Powell got a lucrative book deal after blogging for a year about her attempts to cook every recipe out of a famous chef's cookbook. Whose cookbook was she using?

3. What is the name of the political blog, published by Gawker Media, that may be most notoriously known for publicizing the blog of Jessica Cutler, who worked on the hill and wrote about accepting money for sexual favors from a Republican senator.

4. Which award-winning group blog's tagline is "a directory of wonderful things"?

5. What celebrity gossip blogger made news for outing Doogie Houser and Lance Bass? He also recently appeared on MTV's Celebrity Rap Superstar.

6. This awesomely cool internet cartoon character has a blog-like page where he answers emails sent in by fans on his Lappy 486 computer.

7. What legendary musician and artist has a blog, but is insulted if you refer to it as such, insisting - don't call it a blog, call it a journal.

8. This Denver "scenester" blog recently changed its name when it became too popular. Name the original and new name of this blog. (2 points)

So Many Moves!

| | Comments (2)

feet.jpg
YOU GUYS! Mondo thanks to everyone who posted their moves!



Check 'em out here and here



We'll be working through the night to put everything together.
some of us are still sitting at our work desks right now and are really having a hard time staying seated.
this is VERY exciting.
oh man.









OXONOX

| | Comments (0)

flashmob.jpg