« Posts tagged Culture

State of the Blog: 8-17-10

So, yeah, that was a bit of a snafu wasn’t it?

For one reason or another the database locked in a loop and tried to add about 5000 of the weekly Twitter Roundups. I’m not entirely sure why as of yet, but it may have to do with the plugins we are using and Twitter’s new authentication system.  Again, I apologize to everyone that saw those post come down their feed.

In other news:

  • Brotherhood of the Hand will be late this week as there is still a lot of fixing that needs to be done to the site
  • Principle photography has wrapped on the Brotherhood of the Hand movie! We’ll drop some pics into the feed here at some point.
  • We’re still looking for folks to contribute to bkI, be it reviews, fiction, poetry, art, music, comics, interesting uses of duct tape, etc.  If you’d like to contribute, drop us a line at slushpile@badkarmaink.com

Again, apologies and thanks for putting up with the problems over the weekend.

Free for All: Of Wizards and Copyright

Don’t know if you noticed, but three paragraphs in to Joanna’s post was L. Frank Baum’s intro to the first addition of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz in it’s entirety. The reason we could do that was two-fold. First, it was only three paragraphs, but secondly, and most important, is because of something called Public Domain.

Public domain isn’t something that most people think about in their daily lives. Hell, I’m willing to bet that that most of you don’t think about it at all, yet, without it, we’d probably still be living in caves.

The idea behind public domain is a simple one: no one owns it, therefore everyone owns it. In practice though, it’s far from simple.  In fact, it’s fucking complicated. Hell, lawyers specialize in it, and those bastards only specialize in esoteric complex monstrosities like eating souls, summoning demons, and tax law.

But we’re getting ahead of ourselves.

»Read More

What has it got in its pocketses?

I return! I’m sure you all enjoyed your winter break. I know I enjoyed mine.

I got some great things for Solstice, and that got me to thinking about where our entertainment comes from, and how that’s changed. The changes have a large effect on our culture.

Not that long ago, things could be hard to find. I remember a story about a young Bob Dylan traveling 30 miles to someone’s house (a ‘friend of a friend’) to hear a Robert Johnson album. The music was hard to find.

Now, if you want to hear the newest, hottest, local band someone from a far away place mentions, you hit their web page. Even if they don’t have EP’s for sale on their website, I’ve never contacted one by email with an offer of 10 bucks and some shipping cash and had them deny my request for a mail order.

Scarcity is a crazy thing, and one that doesn’t exist as much in the digital realm as it does in the real world. You can always make more bits. With a printing press and a load of ink, I could possibly get the words I am writing now to a few hundred people, and it would be a lot of work. With the internet, they can be served up to millions of people (as long as they don’t all arrive at the exact same moment. Moving bits from place to place in the internet is the only real scarcity it has to deal with.) with very little relative work.

As much entertainment is no longer done in person, almost anything you want can be found. When I tell someone about the new ifihadahifi EP, they can go to their website and find out how to get it. The same applies to movies, books, stand up comedy…the list is incredible.

Therefore, cultural movements are no longer strictly geographic. You can’t be interested in something you’ve never heard of, of course, but now you can find anything you’ve heard of at the touch of a few buttons. I think that’s a pretty damned cool thing. I believe it may finally allow talent, and not marketing, to play a larger role in what new media we devour.

So, who should we be paying attention to?

I Wanna Be A Mythbuster When I Grow Up

Jamie and Adam as keynote speakers at Symantec...
Image via Wikipedia

If you know me at all, you know that my dream job is to be a Mythbuster.  Who wouldn’t want to be? After all, what other job lets you blow stuff up in the name of science?

Actually, quite a few, like Smash Lab. There have been a slew of other reality shows that have tried and failed to recreate that Mythbusters formula.

You think it’d be simple: Find a premise that lets you destroy things in the name of science, get some good looking geeks, give them resources and watch what happens.

Problem is, these shows, Mythbusters included, have these “experiments” take place over hours or days, not in the 44 minutes allotted for a “one hour” show and cutting it down is where Mythbusters excels. Why? Because they know how to tell a story.

If you’ve seen one of those cheap imitators, you know how bloody boring they can get, but Mythbusters is very adept at cutting all those hours of footage down into an entertaining story. They take the hours and hours of boring testing and build out and those few seconds of payoff and cut it into a show that builds to a crescendo of anticipation that ends with an explosion of  joy and awe and, occasionally, pig parts.

And that’s part of the magic of storytelling. A master storyteller can make even the most mundane events and turn it into something that can entertain and, in the case of Mythbusters, be educational. Imagine that skill in the hands of a teacher? Is there such a thing as a course in Entertaining Education? Can I patent that?

Better Than Twilight – Part 1

The Vampire
Image via Wikipedia

I’m tired, really fucking tired of hearing about Twilight. I mean, I know it’s kind of a Young Adult thing, so I can forgive the shitty writing, etc, but there are somethings that I cannot forgive. Now, I’m not going to give into my instincts and just say “you’re a fucking idiot for being an adult and reading religious propaganda drivel meant for fucking children”.

No, I’m going to take the high road.

As an adult, you really should realize why Twilight is a shitty little story for teenage girls, but, as I’ve learned over the years, folks need to be shown the alternatives. As such, I’m going to tell you about vampire tales that are better than Twilight, and I’m going to give you some background on the vampire, both the old legends and the modern myth, and why, even though these stories are better than Twilight, they are responsible for the environment that allows bullshit like it to be published. »Read More

Welcome to baD kARmA INk

It’s finally launch day! W00t!!!

Sorry about the lack of fanfare and hype, but were hoping the topics, articles, and features will be the draw. Besides, shameless self promotion is coming, we just need stuff to promote first.

Speaking of which, introductions are in order.

My name is Pat and I’m the defacto Content Wrangler here at baD kARmA INk. The site itself started as part of a larger project, namely a different take on publishing. Earlier this year, an old friend of mine, Chris Helton (you’ll see something from him on Friday), approached me with an idea that went something like this: »Read More

Preview Post: Get To The Point

The more I think about it, the more I start to believe that the whole of human culture is based on one thing: Beer.

But under that, there is something older, something simultaneously more primal and sophisticated: Story.

Storytelling is our second oldest art form, but it’s more than just art. For thousands of years, it was how we passed on information, be it the old shaman at the campfire, or the hunter teaching his son the proper way to fell a mammoth, the whole of human collective knowledge owes it’s success to being able to tell a story.

In this day and age, the skills of storytelling have mutated and changed, often becoming specialized within the artist’s medium of choice. Not that this is a bad thing, in fact it’s a very, very good thing, but rarely will you find a storytelling generalist competent to move through all the mediums.

For example, you rarely find anyone who has successfully managed to become a Writer/Director/Musician/Painter/Scuplter/Public Speaker.  In fact, it’s this divergent story telling specialties that give us the glorious storytelling culture as it is today.

Now, I know what you are thinking. “What do you mean painter? That’s not story telling.” Well, there is a simple answer to that: Bullshit.

All art tells a story. Art, be it music, paintings, comics/graphic novels, etc., they are made to convey an idea or emotion and to illicit a response, e.g. telling a story. Take this for example.
GlassArt

Pic courtesy of Robyn Glass

In this picture you can see not only the woman as she is now, but the woman she was when she was young. Her beauty shows through the pain of the wound, and, I don’t know about you, but it gets my mind wondering what happened, what could mar the beauty of this woman? Was it an accident? A moment of passion? Crime? Vampire? Or, god forbid, something more hideous?

Yet her beauty shines through whatever tragedy that caused this pain and, in the end, leaves me with a sense of hope. That is the mark of good storytelling. So what if Robyn’s medium is pencil and ink and paint? In this single picture, she’s told a story of such depth that would take me several thousand words to convey with the same intensity.

So yeah, it’s all story telling, and, when you think about it even more, so are technical manuals, corporate training, teaching, campaigning, sales, customer service…

I can go on, but I think I’ve given enough background. Now, time for the point.

Point is, for thousand of years, story telling itself has changed and changed the way we live. Now, in the 21st Century, technology is making the arts of storytelling easier and more accessible.

baD kARmA INk is dedicated to discussing, developing, deconstructing and disseminating storytelling for a new era.  We are dedicated to providing essays, reviews, and yes, stories in all their forms, to the masses. For we, as a people, are the sum of our knowledge, the sum of our emotions, and the sum of thousands of years of refining our second oldest art form, and it is our duty to add to the Commons of Man.  baD kARmA INk is our little way of doing it.

We are also looking for contributors, both regular and guest, interviewers and interviewees, writers and critics, and people who just want to discuss the stories that they like. If this sounds like you, feel free to submit something or contact us.

Want to become part of the conversation?  Tweet about it, become a fan on Facebook, comment on the articles, call us fools, whatever works for you.  One of the little secrets about storytelling is that, in the end, without other people, storytelling is pointless, so without you, we’re just talking to ourselves, and the doctor that brings the meds thinks that’s a step in the wrong direction.
Official launch date is 12/1. Check back for new and interesting things starting then.