Artgig - The Week In Pictures

Mon, Apr. 12 2010

Bad, bad, blogger.I assure you the lack of posts is not due to laziness - actually, quite the opposite is true.We've been very busy, working under a cloak of secrecy on various projects over the last couple of months with many launching, or about to, as I type. Do you hear that?It's the sound of the floodgates opening for lots of blogging with plenty to talk about.Until then, here's a little sneak peek behind the scenes at Artgig last week to whet your appetite. It was a week that trumpeted the welcome arrival of wonderful Spring here in Pleasantville, with the flowers in full bloom, the bees as big as small birds out and about, and a Barcelona beating for Arsenal in the Champion's League that drove us to drink.

Enjoy!

MUSE LIVE NYC

Mon, Mar. 8 2010

I gotta say, I had mixed feelings going into this one. I like Muse, but it's far from an unequivocal love - I probably skip as many songs as I listen to. Their sound is typically big and heavy and undeniably catchy, but it too often slips into full-blown opera (think Queen)–and that's where they lose me. On the plus side:

  • There are few songs better for late night driving on the West Side Highway than "Map of the Problematique." 
  • I saw them perform on television at last year's VMA's (yes, the one hijacked by Kanye West) and I was struck by the precision and confidence of their crunchy performance.
  • Ever since, the buzz has been building, culminating in a glowing firsthand concert report from Artgig Australia at Big Day Out in Sydney just a couple of months ago.
So when the Garden gig was announced, I felt an immediate tug and grabbed some tickets. If I had any doubts going into Friday night, Muse smashed them to bits with a powerhouse performance that quite simply kicked ass. This is a band made for the big stage and they used every inch of it, up and down, to put on one hell of a big show. See them now if you can. You won't regret it.

ChatRoulette - Exactly What It Sounds Like

Mon, Feb. 22 2010

It's 7:20 pm in Moscow - do you know where your children are?

As I went through my Monday drive mental checklist this morning, I stopped at one nagging item - "must nurture blog."

But this is easier said than done.For one needs something to write about in order to write.And I know as soon as I get into the office, I'm likely to come under heavy fire that will not let up until sometime Friday when I lock up for the night, so the opportunities for a moment of precise clarity leading to a worthy blog post are few and far between.

Needless to say, I arrived at work without a topic.Well, I was thinking of interviewing Steve, but I'll save that for another day.

As I dove into my morning mash of news and tweets, it hit me square in the face.

Enter ChatRoulette to save the day.

What is this? I thought. Another breakthrough social web platform–and I've not heard of it.

How is it possible?

I read the New York Magazine article about a 17-year-old Russian kid who, out of boredom, built the site for random video chatting with strangers.

If you don't like what you see, all you have to do is click next to get a new stranger from somewhere else in the world - before they do it to you.

Brilliant. I thought.

Exciting. I imagined.

Gotta check this out - I did.

And what I got in my five minutes on ChatRoulette was a lot of quick images - mostly guys and most of them jerking off.

Next, next, next...

A guy, wearing a furry raccoon hat with murder in his eyes, stares back at me - next.

A woman, no that's a guy with breasts, next...

A sign - "show me your tits", next...

And then I arrived at something different - like a bad art installation.Are those giant bags of cocaine or is it seat cushion stuffing set against an aluminum foil backdrop?

The chat started as words appeared on my screen - the stranger on the other side asked me "know what this is?"

"Clueless," I responded.

Next - the stranger disconnected.

Clueless, and happy, I thought.

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