Hopkin Explained

Where to start?

As I noted here previously, sometime around September of 2003 some fliers appeared in Seattle, proclaiming the loss of what appeared to be a small boy’s frog. “Who took my frog?” the author asked, plaintively. Concluding with a determined “P.S. I’ll find my frog,” the fliers were noted and remarked upon by at least a couple of Seattle-based bloggers, Jeff Sharman and Samantha, whose last name I do not know at present.

As Jeff notes, sometime in September 2004 the flier was introduced to an online image sharing community, where it quickly became the subject of a still-growing set of visual riffs. An enterprising individual soon registered the domain lostfrog.org, where new contributions continue to be posted. Around this time, another high-traffic community website, MetaFilter, hosted two different threads concerning the frog flier and subsequent images. This image of the flier comes from the lostfrog.org site.

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In one of the MetaFilter threads, an enterprising researcher established that Hopkin was a toy distributed as a freebie by the McDonalds corporation. Others noted that someone had called the family and verified that the frog was indeed a toy. Intrigued, I went back and looked at the initial postings that Jeff and Samantha had made, and realized that there was a high likelihood that the person who made the fliers lived in my neighborhood.

I did my own research then, and quickly found one of the toys on eBay for about $5.00. Having purchased it and established where the flier artist lived, I cast about for my next step. As it happened, I received a call from an editor of mine, who was establishing a new relationship with a community paper that covers the neighborhood where the family lived. I ran it by her, and was given the go-ahead to pitch a story to the editor-in-chief of the neighborhood paper. We got in touch, and she green-lighted the idea.

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I’m in the middle of working on a big pile of stories for another publication, so I added the family to my list of calls each day. Initially, I spoke with a female child, and requested a call back from her father; then I spoke with an elderly woman, and then an adult female. In no case did I ever get a call back; this didn’t greatly concern me.

Finally, Sunday afternoon, I picked up the phone and dialed the family’s number; to my surprise, the father was there. Here is more or less what he told me.

First, he was not interested in appearing in a neighborhood newspaper story about his son’s lost frog and the internet. He gave me permission to write about it here, however. Out of consideration for his concerns, I have chosen not to explicitly identify the family.

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The person who drew the flier is a sixteen-year-old boy who suffers from autism. His father was unaware that his son may have made more than one batch of fliers (it appears that new fliers were hung in May of 2004). He did know about the loss of the frog and I believe that he knew about the first batch of fliers.

He also did not want me to give the frog to his son. He’s forgotten it, he told me. Bringing it up again will probably only bring up a bunch of bad memories.

He was quite unaware of the interest in the frog and the flier on the internet. He reiterated that he did not think it would be a good idea to show the sites to his son.

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He was pleasant throughout our conversation. But he was quite clear and firm in his opinion that reminding the child of his lost frog, even to the point of restoring it to him, would be inadvisable for the boy. On his behalf, he asks that no-one send other Hopkins to the child. I was happy to hear that apparently I have been the only person calling them about the frog. Left unstated was the suggestion that future calls will be unnecessary.

So, then, that’s the resolution. Hopkin was lost by an autistic adolescent; this explains something of the sense of determination that comes through the initial flier. His family requests that no Hopkins be sent and that people seeing the Hopkin flier should not call with frog news, or, as I did, to find out what the story behind the flier is.

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It’s a different ending to the story than I expected or had hoped for, certainly; but on another level, it means that Hopkin will remain forever lost, justifying and extending the mounting need for Hopkin-related photoshop tomfoolery. Perhaps someday the flier’s author will stumble upon lostfrog.org, or the tee shirt. I simply cannot imagine what that moment of perception might be like.

I hope this blog post satisfies some curious people. I am glad to know the backstory now, and hope this data proves useful to you as well.

UPDATE, July 1, 2005: Seven months later, this post is still generating interest and links from large collaborative sites. Every other month, on average, someone links to it from a high-traffic link-collector, and I get another day of several thousand site visits to the page. Just today, MetaFilter, a site in which I actively participate, linked to this page again. A commenter there chucklingly suggested I should link to the thread, and so I have.

Another commenter in the MeFi thread is curious about a link in a comment posted here after the initial publication. In that link, citizenkafka recounts calling Terry’s mom about two weeks before I did, and mentions a) Terry’s mom knew about lostfrog.org and b) that Terry has a new frog.

I did not speak to Terry’s mom, but to his dad. The family is of an ethnicity that often emphasizes patriarchy and the adults clearly speak English as a second language. I didn’t want to step on toes by grilling Mom or Sis or Granny.

Terry’s dad told me what I recount – he was unaware of the web’s interest, and so was Terry, and that was a good thing as far as he was concerned. I specifically asked if other people had been calling, and he indicated that no-one had.

However, not mentioned in the thread comments is yet another story of someone calling Terry’s family. In this story, a forum participant (possibly affiliated with the very first site to post the image) called and spoke with Terry’s sister. I can’t recall the details of that interaction, but the poster noted that he was ecouraged not to locate and give a new frog to Terry.

Finally, Terry’s dad did tell me that he has a new frog. Although I don’t recall this explicitly, I believe I must have asked if the frog was called Hopkins. Terry’s dad emphasized that the frog was different. I was surprised on reviewing this post that I did not mention it directly. Presumably I didn’t think it had bearing on Hopkin.

I believe that in all probability the other members of the family just never mentioned the calls regarding the appearance of the flyer on the web – remember that Terry was actively posting these flyers for at least six months, and that they included a phone number. Others must have called before the web got hold of it.

So in my mind, the different narratives associated with Terry’s family boil down to internally consistent perspectives, despite the apparent contradictions. It’s possible, of course, that Terry’s dad actually was aware of the internet hubbub but chose to deny it in order to keep our converation brief. Of course, over time it becomes more likely that the family will become aware of it, as well.

Sets

You know, I have only ever visited one live movie set while work was going on, and it makes a huge difference in visualizing what my film people are talking about when I’m doing quote work with them. I can only assume this holds true for journalists without development experience when interviewing computer people.

I think, though, there’s more to be learned regarding what goes on in shooting. I need to arrange for more time on set. For that matter, I need to arrange for fly-on-the-wall time in a dev group working on stuff substantially different than the sorts of projects I’ve burned the midnight candle over. Hm.

CMStuff

Adam asked me to think about helping a friend of his blogify their extant small business website. He suggested considering TypePad or WordPress; I probably would lean to suggesting TypePad to minimize administrative overhead. However, I hadn’t looked at WordPress closely yet and so this afternoon I went and grabbed it. As advertised, the setup was nice and smooth. I also downloaded Mambo to take a look at; while blog-oriented CMS apps can sure be tweaked and hacked to provide small-scale site publication and maintenance features in a number of ways, sometimes a less bloggy CMS provides greater site-publication flexibility.

This reminds me that I have a partially-deployed Folklore codebase on the server that I have yet to finish setting up (there were some heinous pathing errors that I lacked the will to battle).

I’m also reminded that I should actually write down my many persuasive ideas about why it’s probably important for small business people to blog their business life. Last night I was discussing this with a friend who creates wedding invitation packages. She was telling me that she “couldn’t bear” to pimp out her stuff on other people’s blogs. She’s right, of course; that’s comment spam, or very close to it. I started to explain why it would be a better strategy for her to blog the business activity itself, to write about buying the paper, about helping her customers make their product selections and so forth. But I was unable to coherently lay this out, since I have really only mused on it privately.

She had a basic misunderstanding of the methodology and business reasons that a small-business owner might find blogs a useful customer-communication and retention tool. I think this is because if you’re not a blog reader (which is most people), the idea and purpose of blogging remains unclear.

Additionally, the primary concern of mom-and-pop shops on the web is visibility. Therefore the initial conclusion many mom-and-pops reach is that they must engage in search-engine optimization strategies, whether simply building their sites to conform to spidering’s needs or going so far as to buy a linkfarm. This has a lot of pitfalls, of course.

So, uh, note to self: write about this.

Veteran

I don’t think I mentioned it here yet, but I’ve started writing professionally again. I’m finding it fun. It’s hard to squeeze the phone interviews in between work and blogging and cooking et al, however.

I’m also chasing down a project which I think the blogging community at large will find interesting but since I don’t know if it’s gonna be a blog-oriented piece or one for publication, mum’s the word. That’s a part of the professional writing stuff that kinda sucks, keeping the trap shut until press time.

Mefi Mofi Etsee

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Last night was the MeFi MoFi Blog windingdangdoodle at the Elysian. I didn’t realize that the brewpub took reservations, and should have made one.

I parked at the bar until folks started showing up a bit after seven. Mars Saxman was first and we chatted about the improbable appearance that night of Psychic TV at a nearby club. Erika from MonkeyFilter showed up next, and then Jerry Kindall and Tom Harpel.

In the end about 12 or so people showed up and we parked at pair of tables comfortably enough. After beering, Jerry Kindal, Tom Harpel, and our new acquaintance Mark, whole last name and user name I did not catch (he’s an architect, though, and he was funny) went to Caffe Vitta for a cuppa and closed down the place at the late hour of eleven o’clock.

The big news at Caffe Vitta happened when I gave the counter-girl a ten for my latte and she smiled at me real big and said, “Oooh, I love tens,” which amused me but also left me speechless, as a happily married man.

Attendees, I think:

Mark (Mefi user skyscraper)

Stacey Lester (Mefi user black8)

Stacey’s lovely and charming roomie whose name I did not catch

Amy (Mefi user tristeza)

Mars Saxman (Mefi user Mars Saxman)

Jerry Kindall (Mefi user kindall)

Oscar Bartos, (Mefi user O9scar and Mofi user el wombato)

Michael H. (mk1gti)

Tom Harpel (Mefi user tomharpel)

Erika (Mofi user mechagrue)

Steven (Mefi user Vito90), who says we should hie on down to the Virginia Inn next time, which is where he currently pursues the pouring arts. He also shouted out to SportsFilter!

My photos can be found here, and Tom Harpel’s can be found here. MeTa wrapup here (I think – the server went for a JRun just as I went to link to the thread), and MoFi wrapup here.

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PNWned

A reminder. Monkeyfilter / MetaFilter / Bloggish thing at the Elysian, 7p on Saturday. Open invites, no signup, just come on down if you want to! Contrary to the rumors, there will be no free beer.

Feel the power!

Hello Mac land!

I’m trying to track down a second power adapter for my 15“ aluminum series Powerbook. I’m having a hard time tracking down the scuttlebutt on the available adapters.

Small Dog apparently only carries the Apple OEM variety, and hoo-boy, people hate it. The MacAlly PS-AC4 looks as though it should work (the marketing pic shows it connected to a 15” aluminium PB), but I’m having a hard time determining from the copy if this is accurate. Additionally, while the price is right (about $35), the form factor is clunky. I’d much prefer the iadaptor2, but it looks like it’s been out for at least a couple of years. This concerns me because that means it was released before my model of Powerbook came out.

I should note that the only problem I have experienced with the Apple adaptor is that one of the little flip-up ears for cord-management has a broken pin, from me dropping it. The reason I’m looking for an adaptor is that as a part of my accelerated senility program, I keep forgetting to bring the adaptor with me when I leave the house. So I want a small one to just leave in my bag.

So sock it to me, Mac web! What’s the scoop on third-party adapters for current gen PBs?