Wednesday, October 13, 2010

"Mathlete's Revenge: A bike race for your brain and body"

From The Examiner's Web Site
Story by Will Metcalf:

On May 15th, 2010, 45 local Richmond riders assembled together at Holly Street Park in the historic Oregon Hill neighborhood. After the customary milling period of about 30 minutes, everyone registered for the race, and, surprisingly, sat down on a sunny summer day with a temperature in the mid-80s...to complete their multiplication tables.

The Mathlete's Revenge, a bike race hosted and organized by the Saddle Sores Bicycle Club, would not be considered a typical event by any stretch of imagination. Before each rider, or team, as the case may be, could leave Holly Street Park and begin the first heat of the 18-and-a-half-mile race, they were required to finish a set of times tables beginning with one times one, all the way through the twelves. Each stop presented on the manifest was encoded into a math problem for the riders to solve, so they could determine the address of the stop. One brave soul even showed up in traditional nerd garb, including pocket protector and thick-rimmed glasses taped at the bridge.

The stops included activities riders could choose to participate in for extra points to shave time off their total for the race. Noteworthy stops involved being sprayed in the face with a Super-Soaker full of Faygo - or, leaping from a U-haul truck to a crash pad eleven feet below - and a grueling climb up the infamous Main Street hill carrying a case of Red Bull either in a backpack, underarm, or balanced on handle bars. Of the 30 entrants who finished the race: Stu L. received first place, Daga won second, Andrew A. in third, and Aaron L. won Dead Last...for which the prize consisted of a bedazzled TI-83 Calculator and a self-help book.

Sponsored by Red Bull, Chrome bags, and local businesses: Bunny-Hop Bike Shop, Carytown Bikes, Pibby's Bike Repair, Crossroads Coffee and Ice Cream, Lamplighter Coffee, Balliceaux Restaurant and Bar, Chop-Suey Books, and Legend Brewing Company. The race was a charity event organized by the Saddle Sores to benefit Safe Harbor - a shelter for women and children - and it raised $267 for the shelter. Allen G, a founding member of Saddle Sores said, "I thought it went surprisingly well. I really didn't expect 46 people to show up. It was awesome, because the whole purpose of the race was to have fun, do math, promote bike events, and raise money Safe Harbor."

The Saddle Sores' next race, titled 'The Fall of Richmond,' a civil war themed race, take place October 16th. All proceeds of the Fall of Richmond race will also go to benefit Safe Harbor.

http://www.examiner.com/progressive-cycling-in-richmond/mathlete-s-revenge-a-bike-race-for-your-brain-and-body


Saturday, September 25, 2010

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Want!

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

The Bookworms October Pick!

Created by Marleigh Culver

Monday, September 13, 2010

CINEMA TALK

IN THE PROCESS OF REGISTERING THE CLUB AT VCU! INTEREST MEETING/ FIRST SCREENING COMING VERY VERY SOON! KEEP AN EYE OUT AND TELL YOUR FRIENDS!

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Woody Allen by Al Hirschfeld

Two of my favorites!

Saturday, July 31, 2010

More Ryan Adams (Photos by Danny Clinch)




Great desk shots from Ryan Adam's LA Sessions (NEW ALBUM SOON!)

Thursday, July 29, 2010

"Up you go, little smoke"

Watched this in my American Independent Directors course the other day. Nothing like Kerouac's voice early in the morning. Early morning in the Universe.

Pull My Daisy, 1959


And here are my thoughts immediately after watching the short film:

Up you go little smoke
Up you go little smoke
Up you go little smoke
Up you go little smoke
Up you go little smoke
Kiss my daisy, mornin' goofin'
Thanks Jackie.

Sunday, July 18, 2010

A poem written on my 21st Birthday, drunk around 1 PM

21
Thank God for friends
Thank God for music
Thank God for beautiful
Women in the morning.
For great guitar tone.
For staying drunk all day.
For 21st Birthdays.
For good coffee.
For conversations in the rain.
For Legend Brewery.
For sweatless bike rides.
Thank you God
For days that make sense.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Invisible Cities

Perhaps everything lies in knowing what words to speak, what actions to perform, and in what order and rhythm; or else someone's gaze, answer, gesture is enough; it is enough for someone to do something for the sheer pleasure of doing it, and for his pleasure to become the pleasure of others: at that moment, all spaces change, all heights, distances; the city is transfigured, becomes crystalline, transparent as a dragonfly. But everything must happen as if by chance, without attaching too much importance to it, without insisting that you are performing a decisive operation, remembering clearly that at any moment the old will return and solder its ceiling of stone, cobwebs, and mold over all heads.

From Italo Calvino's "Invisible Cities"

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Richmond artist McLennan finds his voice through animals | Richmond Times-Dispatch

Richmond artist McLennan finds his voice through animals | Richmond Times-Dispatch
I know Ryan somewhat from when he used to work at Chop Suey books. He's a very friendly guy and his artwork is really great! I've got a few prints (pull outs from his interview in RVA Mag) hanging up in my room. Keep up the great work, Ryan!


Here's a link to his web page

Monday, June 14, 2010

Reading Hemingway by the pool

"I had gone to no such place but to the smoke of cafes and nights when the room whirled and you needed to look at the wall to make it stop, nights in bed, drunk, when you knew that that was all there was, and the strange excitement of waking and not knowing who it was with you, and the world all unreal in the dark and so exciting that you must resume again unknowing and not caring in the night, sure that this was all and all and all and not caring."

A Farewell to Arms

Friday, June 11, 2010

This Will Destroy You


Seeing This Will Destroy You tomorrow night in Charlottesville. They have been my favorite band for quite some time now. I've gone to see them three times, but the first time, I got lost in DC and the other two times, they didn't show up. So, hopefully tomorrow will be my lucky day!

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Dave Eggers on San Francisco

From A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius
... but of course there is no logic to San Francisco generally, a city built with putty and pipe cleaners, rubber cement and colored construction paper. it's the work of fairies, elves, happy children with new crayons. why not pink, purple, rainbow, gold? what color for a biker bar on 16th, near the highway? plum. plum. the light that is so strong and right that corners are clear, crisp, all glass blinding- stilts and buttresses and turrets- the remains of various highways- rainbow windsocks- a sexual sort of lushness to the foliage. only intermittently does it seem like an actual place of residence and commerce, with functional roads and sensible buildings. all other times it's just whimsy and faith. just driving to and from marny's, in the castro, is epic, this hill and that hill- oh, the sorrow of flat, straight illinois!- this vista and that, always the hills, the curves, the maybe our brakes will fail- it's always a kind of adventure in faded technicolor, starring a vast cast of brightly dressed losers."

Monday, June 7, 2010

Ryan Adams by Annie Leibowitz



Mother Sea design

Your thoughts?

Please find this for me

I'd wear this to the grave, be fresh to death.

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Summer Reading








Woody Allen & Jazz


I can genuinely say that Woody Allen's films are a driving force behind my love for jazz. This article is great! I hope to see him and his band at the Cafe Carlyle sometime real soon. Check it out.

Friday, May 28, 2010

Anne Consigny in "The Diving the Bell and the Butterfly"

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Neon



SADDLE UP, RVA


SADDLE SORES bicycle club present MATHLETE'S REVENGE

May 15th - 2:30pm meet, 3pm race - $3 entry

Prizes for 1st, 2nd, 3rd, DFL... cash, gear, parts

Bring a bike, bag, pen (and calculator)

Afterparty to follow!

Sponsors:
Balliceaux (http://balliceauxrva.com)
Bunnyhop Bicycle Shop (http://bunnyhoprva.wordpress.com)
Carytown Bicycle Company (http://carytownbicyclecompany.com)
Chop Suey Books! (http://chopsueybooks.com/)
Chrome Bags (http://chromebagsstore.com)
City Dogs
Crossroads Coffee (http://crossroadsrva.com)
FBM (http://fbmbmx.com)
Keirin Culture / Kazane (http://keirinculture.com)
Lamplighter Roasting Company (http://tallbikecoffee.com)
Mash (http://mashsf.com)
Richmond Recycles (http://richmondre-cycles.com)
Rostov's Coffee & Tea (http://rostovs.com)
Red Bull (http://redbull.com)
UGLY! Pads (http://uglypads.com)

...and more to come!

More Slaughterama ...

A great video from Slaughterama 7 by RVA Magazine

Slaughterama VII HD from Squirrelly Jesus on Vimeo.

Featuring Zach from The Cutthroats as well as many of my close friends riding around in the red shirts.

Also, here's a great picture of Becky & Malcolm chicken fighting on the front cover of the Spring Issue of RVA Magazine:

Tuesday, April 27, 2010


Another picture from Slaughterama 7.
Photo by Emily Jones. Check out her stuff!
http://emily.potatoesandvegetables.com/

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Fellini

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

"The Rise of the Creative Class" Richard Florida

Here's a very interesting article that I had to read for my Urban Economics course. The article describes today's service economy and the "creative class" that we are all so much apart of (whether we'd like to admit it or not):
"The Rise of the Creative Class" Richard Florida

Monday, April 12, 2010

The Taint

Don't miss the "cock-exploding, head-crushing premier" this Weekend at The Byrd! Created by two really great guys from Richmond, Dan Nelson and Drew Bolduc.

Teaser Trailer for "The Taint" from Dan Nelson on Vimeo.

GY!BE: The Return



Not too big of a fan, but still huge news!

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Slaughterama 7


This past Saturday was Slaughterama 7 at Belle Isle. If you don't know, Slaughterama is an annual event thrown by The Cutthroats Bike Club. This year was my second time going and it was a big bowl of FUN. My team, The Saddle Sores, competed. Here's a great picture of Malcolm taking someone down in Tall Bike Jousting:

Here's a DC Blog with a great article and great pictures of the event:
Brightest Young Things: WHAT IN THE HELL IS SLAUGHTERAMA?!?
Lo and behold DC, your little cousin to the south: Richmond, VA. Seat of the south. Saddle Sores. Cutthroats. Vomit Squad. And no, these are not descriptions of the city, these are the names of some of Richmond’s famous bike gangs.
Here's a picture they took of yours truly, representin':

Monday, March 29, 2010

Cast Spells

Cast Spells (Lead Singer of Maps & Atlases) w/ Good Old War

Also, check out If You Make It for more videos like this of up and coming bands as well as free album downloads. Good stuff.

Buk

"I closed my eyes and listened to the waves.Thousands of fish out there, eating each other.Endless mouths and ass holes swallowing and shitting. The whole earth was nothing but mouths and assholes swallowing and shitting.The whole earth was nothing but mouths and ass holes swallowing shitting and fucking."

Charles Bukowski
Ham on Rye

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Monday, March 15, 2010

Robert Green and "Make it Right" in New Orleans

I met this man yesterday. He lost his granddaughter and his mother during Katrina. The storm moved his house over fifteen blocks from where the foundation stood. All that remains are the concrete steps he stands on in that picture. He invited me, Charles, and a group we were with into his house to share his story.

Within the past five years since Katrina hit, Robert Green has been getting a lot of press and is the subject of much art because he is living in the "Make it Right" Neighborhood that Brad Pitt has committed himself to build in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans. Brad Pitt has raised over 100 million in funds to pay architects and developers to build very interesting-looking, sustainable, and affordable structures where the homes of families like the Green's once stood. The program is very interesting in that it only allows certain people live in the neighborhood. One of the parameters is that the family must have had several generations living in New Orleans. Also, if the family living in the new home (and paying a monthly mortgage + property taxes) stays for five years, they are relieved of the remainder of the mortgage.
Here's a few examples of the innovative design used on the homes:

This is but one of the extremely interesting (and also very random) things I've come across in New Orleans. I've only been here for one day!

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Springtime

Been listening to so much Cassino as of late. Here's a song off of their new album "Kingprince". Nick Torres has such a great voice.

So much has been happening in my life, but that's for another time.
Heading down to New Orleans next week.
More later!

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Bergman's Home at Faro

The following pictures were taken by Stephen Shore. They appeared in the art issue of W Magazine (my girlfriend is subscribed):



Here's a link to the actual article about Bergman's home on the Island of Faro, Sweden (the place where most of his works were filmed):
Art & Design: Ingmar Bergman - W Magazine

Reading this really makes me miss Bergman's Films. It has been far too long since I've seen anything by this man. If you haven't, please watch Wild Strawberries, The Seventh Seal, Scenes from a Marriage, Through a Glass Darkly, Persona, Franny & Alexander ... the list goes on. All favorites of mine.

Also, be sure to check out photographer Stephen Shore's other work. He's great! (Here's a teaser):