Jan
25
2010

Free Range Kids

I’ve been collecting links for this one for a while, though admittedly I still haven’t really come up with any particularly cohesive argument about it, more just presenting it as something to think about.  The idea/argument/trend/anti-trend is what’s referred to as Free Range Kids.  Basically it’s  the counter to the current trend towards “in the world we live in, you just can’t be too careful, especially when it comes to kids”.  Free Range Kids would tend to say that it’s probably okay if you let your kids go outside and play without an adult hovering over them or gps enabled tracking bracelets strapped around their ankles.  As many others have said it better, here’s a few links:

  • Lenore Skenazy, the woman who sort of kicked off the movement/firestorm, introducing it in her own words here.  She also had a blog here.
  • Here‘s a more lengthy interview with her on Salon.com (via Boing Boing)
  • A more local take with a few links to other stories.

The comment sections (where applicable) tend to be interesting for the mix of adults fondly remembering wandering and exploring as a kid, and cynics assuring anyone that doesn’t hover over their child that the child will end up dead or a heroin addict.  They tend to get pretty fierce, even by internet standards.  A few more articles for the sake of the comment sections here, here, and here.

Discussions of free range kids tends to draw to the surface quite a few pretty hot button issues/debates, such as:

  • It takes a village to raise a child vs stranger danger.
  • At what point is society allowed to step in and tell someone how to raise their children?
  • How marketing and the news media / cable / cop dramas affect our view of society and how we interact with it.
  • The sliding scale of how okay people are with letting children roam vs the size of the city / percent of nearby neighbors that the parent knows.
  • The affect of two parents working outside the home, and therefore there being less adults at home during the day as a default safety net.
  • How being very protective of children both responds to and creates a culture of distrust / lack of community / suspicion of everyone / (stretching a bit) a culture of fear and isolation.
  • Have you ever walked past a playground and glanced over and smiled at the joy of children at play?  Have you gotten a dirty/suspicious look from a parent on the playground for doing so?
  • Keeping children young and helpless forever so parents can always be important.

There also seems to be some parallels in here for that other major freedom vs safety debate of our times – terrorism.  How much should we modify our lives and how many freedoms should we give up to try to foil the terrorists / pedophiles?  How does the media affect our perceptions of these threats?  How much should the parents / government always be the ones to make decisions for what’s best and safest?  How much does one lead into the other, with the government replacing parents as an authority figure that can tell us what’s safe?

Dec
16
2009

One for the ages

People tend to be pretty fond of ripping on pictures of models that have been overly Photoshoped to make them look “beautiful” (big air quotes there, ie – like anorexic, heroine addicted 13 year old boys with boob jobs, who may also be of an alien species), and rightfully so.  However, focusing just on photoshop also overlooks all the tricks that have been going on since long before digital retouching really hit its stride.  Namely, it overlooks the huge effects of make up and lighting.  This series of the same model with a variety of different make up and lighting is stunning. (via Kottke)

You don’t need Benjamin Button priced CGI to create effective false perceptions.

Comments (0) | Tags: , , , , , | Written by on Dec 16,2009 |
Nov
19
2009

Bits and pieces 5

  • The Bloomberg Way – A short quote, but I’m pretty sure it proves I will never write for, or most likely, enjoy reading anything from Bloomberg News, however, I admittedly don’t know all that much about them.
  • I like Wendy’s logo / brand, in no small part because of their total lack of modern update.  And as ultra cheap fast food goes, it’s not bad.
  • What do you call someone who compulsively stores jars full of baby poop in a freezer for over 30 years, adding to the collection on a regular basis?  Um, a scientist.  They apparently also go for fruit bat blow jobs.  And hell, while we’re at it, growing rabbit penises in a lab.  Because really, that’s what the world needs, more rabbit penises.
  • Brawndo begins it’s assent to world power.  Here’s the commercial they reference in that article:

    And, of course, where to buy it.
Comments (0) | Tags: , , , , , , , | Written by on Nov 19,2009 |
Nov
12
2009

Mainstream Media Commercial

Aren’t you glad we’ve forgotten about all those complex issues related to things like being at war in two countries, the $5,000,000,000,000 bailout, and torturing people we’ve unconstitutionally detained, and back to the things that really matter, like Kanye West and Balloon Boy?

Comments (0) | Tags: , , , | Written by on Nov 12,2009 |
Nov
11
2009

The power of advertising

A really good video demonstrating how advertising affects us.  I’d like to see a little more of the set up for it, but the overall idea is definitely there.  With that subtle of cues giving that strong of an effect- almost photographic duplication of something they didn’t even necessarily register seeing- just think of how much TV commercial breaks, billboards, and radio ads affect us all.  How it affects us not just in what we buy, but also in how we act and what things we think up and think are our own.

And that’s to say nothing of the brands and logos that are embedded in our everyday lives.  How far outside of the screen you’re looking at right now is the nearest logo/brand?  How about the ones already on the screen (Windows logo, Firefox, Word, the icon for this site, etc)?  Just think of all the logos all over all of the everyday products you use and never really look at.  For example, I counted and my cell phone alone has 9 brands/logos on it.  My watch has 6.

Via Ovablastic

Sep
26
2008

John Stewart on the Iraq War

Very good, if slightly aged, clip of Bill Moyers interviewing John Stewart, talking about the American people’s relationship to the war in Iraq.  Right around from 2:00-3:00 is so, so good.

It’s part 2 of 3 parts to the interview.  Part 1Part 3.

Comments (0) | Tags: , , | Written by on Sep 26,2008 |

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