eve of eve

Well, you see.

A) My beloved Chloe cat has found that she can move the cursor by pawing the trackpad. This is more distracting than disturbing, but may prove dangerous if she recalls my passwords.

B) LAN woes continue, driving me quite batty.

C) Retail hell is concluded for the year.

D) I took my folks out to dinner at Canlis tonight, and on returning, heard from a neighbor about a moderately serious medical procedure he’s set to undergo next week.

E) We are catsitting.

Holiday Notes

A note from an old mentor and certified musical mad genius included the following bit, which is too good not to share:

REDACTED had another very successful year developing new toys for the U.S. military using cutting-edge space-age-type technologies.  It’s all hush-hush top-secret kind of stuff; hip sci-fi style survival gear that LOOKS as cool as it sounds.  Supposedly the 5-Box Brass want our enemies to be intimidated by our soldiers’ prêt-à-porter as much as by our swift and absolute destructive power, but you didn’t hear that from me…..  Anyway, there’s truly NO ONE like REDACTED for making hella-cool shit that also actually works.  So throughout the year he received a series of promotions and raises from The Brotherhood of Bosses, and now he’s chompin’ on a fat see-gar, hob-knobbing defense contracts like a big-time baron of business.  (as if…)

Redacted, I gather, is the offspring of my correspondent.

Shipping

Next to last day of retail hell. We are finally catching up.

Attempted to attend a planning meeting via IM for a Seattle-based blogventure. Alas, dsl and privacy-setting issues limited my interaction. A participant promised to forward a transcript.

My folks were scheduled to fly in at 3:30 yesterday but snow delays on the east coast held them until 9:30, preventing them from driving to Yakima last night. It was nice to see them, and I look forward to seeing them later in the week when they come back.

fully packed

Okay, last stretch. Order volume has dropped slightly. We’re doing one more death march on Tuesday to try to zero any backorders out – that shift starts at midnight and ends when we have shipped the last item we have that is in stock and ordered.

Our order volume over the past thirty days was more than two times the prior thirty, possibly as much as three.

In other news, I’m closing in on the LAN problem; by New Year’s everything should be hunky-dory.

Last night, we were able to spend a couple of pleasant hours chez Sabrina and Chris, which was lovely!

Xmas among the Bloggy

… and several days later, I have some pictures to share!

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Ms. Dayment, our hostess.

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Manuel and Hopkin, together at last…

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…at least until Tara got her priorities straight.

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Samantha started out with the most amazingly hideous holiday nutcracker of all time (a tugboat captain garishly highlighted with sparklies). In the end, though, she wound up with a different sparkly thing, and Heather made off with the good captain.

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And for whatever reason, my camera (well, Viv’s camera) was selected for the ritual group flipping of the bird.

If you have a fast line (Or you have some affiliation with the Tiny Plastic Hut Empire) please raid my video vault. I don’t know why the streaming/preload isn’t happening. I’m just pleased I figured out how to rotate the shots. Hint: “john laughs” is good.

Retail Selection

Man, I’m getting frazzled.

Item one: Last night we attended Daymented’s annual Blogger White Elephant party. I am too pooped to post the pitchas. I will state for the record that I have very, very entertaining footage of a certain photoblogger enjoying a particular sort of endorphin stimulation. Tara ended up with Hopkin, which she stole from Manuel. I chatted with Samantha, was sorry Jeff couldn’t make it, and confirmed that Heather is indeed moving to New Jack central.

It was lovely to see these folks and others, whose lives I keep up with wholly online; I should make a point of arranging for non-group interactions with many. But, oh, the time.

Item two: Please note, the following item has been edited pursuant to a call from Chris Strompolos on the evening of December 22, 2004. Use of the ‘s’ tag indicates original post wording.

Speaking of time, we hadda duck out early so’s I could catch Raiders of the Lost Ark: The Adaptation at the new Northwest Film Forum location near my house. As I noted earlier this week, I interviewed project creator Chris Strompolos for a piece that appeared in The Stranger this week and was happy to meet him. I will be staying in touch with him as the Scott Rudin movie project progresses.

The video was, as advertised, a low-budget, lo-fi work with numerous technical flaws. But, again as advertised, the wit and ingenuity of the filmmakers in the bloom of their adolescence – substituting a boat for a floatplane, and a dog for a monkey, let alone the less visibly obvious bits of on-the-fly solutions – appealed directly to the capacity audience. Indiana Jones himself won America’s heart for his improvisational combination of ability and reflexive, post-modern wit. It’s a fair cop to say that these kids from Biloxi give Indy a run for his money.

An unexpected critical subtext cropped up for me during the film. After a cursory investigation into the circumstances under which this ur-fan-film was made, it’s clear that economic advantages pertained to one or more of the families of the kids that made the film. Chris’s mom was a TV news anchor who eventually married the owner of the TV station that she worked at. His partner (and the film’s director), Eric Zala, lived in a coastal Mississippi mansion. Today, when asked, Strompolos notes that the film cost between $5000 and $8000, over the period from 1982 to 1988. The filmmakers were eleven when they started shooting. The film includes footage shot both on a real airplane and a real World War II submarine. they started shooting on betamax and moved to VHS when the format was discontinued. The film was final-edited on the broadcast facilities of the local television station where Strompolos’ mom worked.


In short, while the film is justly celebrated for its’ improbability and accomplishment, many of the very things about it that amaze and baffle us on first viewing it are equally evidence of wealth and privilege.

AN UPDATE, 12/22: Chris Strompolos called wanting a chance to clarify and share a different perspective on these matters. He – and his partners – were concerned that my remarks above unfairly depict the filmmakers as well-to-do. This is a fair concern. I wrote a post about Chris’s call to me which I encourage you, dear reader, to consult. To summarize, my reference to economic advantages pertains to advantages of class rather than to the (non-existent) wealth of specific families. As Chris has made clear to me in our conversations, all three filmmakers grew up in female-headed divorced families, with all the privation that implies. For example, while I cite the use of an airplane and access to the submarine as evidence of privilege, from his perspective it’s evidence of childhood persistence, creativity, and ingenuity. He points out that in both instances, the shoots occurred without fee, and due to his persistence. Three years’ worth, in the case of the boats. It’s a fair clarification, and my fault for not clearly outlining the parameters I referred to. With those parameters understood, however, I don’t see that my view and Chris’s view are necessarily in conflict. I see things his way, but also in my own.

I must note, however, that not all of these things display the wealth gap. The use of Strompolos’ pet dog in place of the monkey, for example, or the amazingly successful, if not authentically persuasive, use of back-alley Biloxi to reimagine the mid-eastern souk of the original pretty clearly argue for the imaginativeness and determination of the child filmmakers.

There’s another subtext to this most pomo of all films. The kids were shooting in Mississippi, with the tacit – and sometimes financial logistical – support of what I’ll term, for the sake of poesie, the tidewater aristocracy.

To my knowledge, the film contains onscreen appearances of two one persons of African descent: the freighter captain near the end of the film., and one other I’ll discuss in a moment.

The freighter captain role was originally written from a post-modern perspective – and it’s not a half bad part, using presumptive prejudices on the part of an American audience to poke at us about white women and sexual desire. It’s clearly written to tease on the subject. In the original, the part is delivered knowingly, slyly, an object lesson for right-thinking hipsters. In the kids film, the actor is stiff, clearly not comfortable with his innocently salacious lines. It actually leaches a layer of cynicism from the film.

The only other appearance of a person of obviously African descent comes at the end of The Adaptation. The crate apparently containing the Ark of the Covenant is wheeled into a vast warehouse. In the theatrical film, the worker who wheels the ark to its, um, current resting place, is not clearly racially identifiable, as he’s seen in longshot. In The Adaptation, the worker is clearly black, and while his warehouse is impressively huge, the credits thank a Biloxi area storage company in a way that makes me suspect that the end of the kids’ film is roughly documentary in nature.

UPDATE, 12/22: I was completely wrong about this. The warehouse worker was played by Chris. Which kinda deflates my whole conclusion here.

Why am I harping on this? Well, race is clearly not central to the original film, but colonial relations are. By the same token, the film that the children shot in an intended duplication is not about race. But significant amounts of time were dedicated to depicting the flower of Biloxi’s children as Nazi villians, with the apparent blessing of the region’s television station.

In light of this, I think it’s interesting that the only adult I observed on screen, unambiguously, was the warehouse worker wheeling the Ark into storage. I have many hours of entertaining rants upon this subject, all just beyond my reach this evening, as an exhaustion sufferer.

UPDATE, 12/22: I did, in fact, write this immediately after seeing the film, at around 3 in the morning. After talking to Chris I think this whole riff is just wrong, though. I could still probably find interesting race-and-class material in the film to write about. The blond forest savages in the film’s opening sequence, for example, provoked a chuckle in the audience which could well reflect the unexpected juuxtaposition of light hair and loincloths. But based on the material in the film, the argument I sketched out here is based wholly on my own perceptions, not on what the children shot. So, as I promised, Chris: I got this wrong. Mea culpa, and thanks for calling.

Other readers, feel free to post more-specific critiques. Folks who get a chance to see the film are particularly encouraged to post!

There’s one more showing in Seattle, at 11pm tonight. If I were you, I’d start lining up right now.

Speaking of The Stranger, they paid me for the article already! That’s a surefire way to win admirers in the freelancing community, no doubt about it.

Item three: Last but not least, I have been insanely busy at work, something which has also cut into blogging. I’ve heard that mainline retailers expect to do between a third and half of their annual revenue during the month between Thanksgiving and Christmas. While I don’t know that those percentages hold up for our revenue numbers, this is certainly accurate for our gross orders. The week before Thanksgiving, our daily order rate was just about fifty discrete orders, concatenating about sixty-five items.

Starting immediately before Thanksgiving, our average daily order count shot up to about two hundred, often totaling 265 or more items. One product alone has sold about 500 units in the past six days. We are working our asses off to try to keep up.

Late night update: I actually passed out from exhaustion while editing this this afternoon. Happily, I recalled my changes this evening and was able to complete them.

DSLember Seventh

Holy cow, you’d think that ten years after the rise of IP networking it wouldn’t take TWO FREAKING DAYS to troubleshoot a router configuration anymore.

Argh. And I’m still not done, it seems.

Superpolymesh

Viv and I just got back from seeing The Incredibles (finally), and I won’t bore you with predictable rantings about its’ excellence. I will say, however, that word on a certain Randian subtext is clearly correct. Part of the film’s triumph is the remarkable fact that this did not provoke sneering on my part.

I certainly cannot wait for the DVD to begin savoring both the delicious production detail and the depth of interesting referents (such as Syndrome’s clear precursor, Heat Miser). The Parrs’ living room made me miss relatives and older friends who lived their lives in such mid-century modern homes.

I have only heard one brief comment that compared the film to Watchmen, but it seems clear that the relationship of the two stories should be closely examined. At a minimum, I would speculate that The Incredibles has made it that much harder to get a good version of Watchmen made as a film, if anyone is even trying anymore.

Oh, and apparently, I have a thing for lady superhero pilots. Hearing her issuing callsign update after callsign update somehow involved me in the jeopardy of that scene like no other aviation scene I’ve ever watched. And brother, I have watched some aviaton movies, let me tell you. The hell with Top Gun’s testosterone-addled nincompoops, I’ll take The Incredibles any day.