• Album Cover Art: Naïve Art/Doodle Edition

    Naïve art, whether from an authentic or imitative informal style, ignores realistic perspective and is notable for its childlike simplicity and playfulness.

    Rules for Picking This List:

    • Feature ten album covers
    • Album or song from album must be saved on my Spotify account
    • Album cover design must be illustrated
    • Album cover design must evoke a naïve art style so no overly-detailed or clean illustrations
    • No album cover designs I’ve already featured

    The Bible 2 by AJJ

    Album Cover Artwork by Multiple Artists

    Artwork – Sean Bonnette
    Layout – Rachel Harper, Christina Johns

    Guero by Beck

    Album Cover Artwork by Multiple Artists

    Art Direction, Design – Beck, Kevin Reagan
    Artwork – Marcel Dzama
    Front Cover Layout & Additional Art – Adam Levite

    Body Songs by Born Gold

    Album Cover Artwork by Megan James (of Purity Ring)

    Cage the Elephant by Cage the Elephant

    Album Cover Artwork by Multiple Artists (Listed Below)

    Illustrations & Logo – /r\clint(colburn)
    Design – Brianne Kumelos

    Sometimes I Sit And Think, And Sometimes I Just Sit by Courtney Barnett

    Album Cover Artwork by Courtney Barnett

    99.9% by KAYTRANADA

    Album Cover Artwork by Ricardo Cavolo

    This Old Dog by Mac Demarco

    Album Cover Artwork by Mac Demarco

    Dang by Mac Miller + Anderson .Paak

    Album Cover Artwork by ???

    Monsters by Meat Puppets

    Album Cover Artwork by Cris Kirkwood, Curt Kirkwood

    Tom Tom Club by Tom Tom Club

    Album Cover Artwork by James Rizzi

  • TL;DR: Memes Imitate Art, Art Imitates Life

    You may be onto something here. Memes used to be simple. Relatable. Worth a chuckle. Then they evolved. New formats, new tag lines, new content that was then turned into a new meme. Then memes became increasingly meta and self reflective. They parodied themselves and the users who both made them and consumed them. They built off of one another. They grew. They morphed into something entirely novel. This progressed to the point where even that wasn’t enough. They had to become something more than themselves. They became surreal. They became deep fried and nuked. Each flavor building off of the last and transforming into a nearly intangible, unknown entity.

    Art progressed in a similar fashion. Started off simple, I’m talking cave drawing simple. Then some pottery and some small abstract sculptures. Subjects everyone could relate to and understand. Then, as technology allowed for the creation of cultures and societies, art began to reflect that change and it evolved along with it. By the Ancient Greeks and Romans, art had become a more advanced version of the Stone and Bronze Age arts. Better drawings, paintings, and the addition of mosaics. Sculptures eventually shifted from stylistic expression to naturalistic representation. Still accessible to everyone, yet more nuanced and complex.

    After the fall of Rome art stagnated and didn’t change very much for nearly a millennium. Early Christian art dominated for the most part, consisting of murals and frescos and simple statues. All of which were based on the Ancient styles. Romanesque and Gothic art also built upon these precedents. This all changed when the Renaissance attacked.

    A cultural explosion changed the art world forever; arguably starting with the Italian artist, Giotto. He began using techniques like foreshortening and linear perspective so that the material world could be represented as it appeared to us. A callback to the naturalistic stylings of the Greeks. Almost like a reference to the days of yore. A celebration of how art used to be, but with the explosion of new techniques and technologies, the art grew increasingly diverse. New and improved frescoes, meticulously crafted sculptures, architectural marvels and the inclusion of new materials in these works. Instead of tempera, oil was introduced along with new styles of depicting light and shadow through sfumato and chiaroscuro. These techniques and stylistic changes, while impressive, were simply an advancement of pre established art. The Renaissance paved the way for the explosion and diversification of dozens of art movements that followed.

    From prehistoric art to the end of the Renaissance, art was mostly about the same subjects and used similar techniques to accomplish the goal of producing a work of art. Yes, the technical proficiency exponentially improved but considering the centuries in between, few true advancements were made.

    Compare this to memes. They were so simple at first and really were nothing more. Then they got better. More technical. More circumstantial. More media to create them with. But memes could last years or many months before dying off. As time went on, the longevity of a meme shortened. This is paralleled in the art world.

    After the Renaissance the Baroque period started. Then the Neo-Classicism, Romantic, Realism, and Impressionism movements not long after. Still utilizing the same technical process but the reasoning behind the movements changed. No longer was it about simply depicting the world around us, it was about prompting the viewer to consider new thoughts and ideas. Urging them to look past the image and think deeper about meaning and context. Pushing the boundaries of what art could be. The Baroque to Impressionism era spanned roughly 300 years. Compare that to the thousands of years between archaic art and the Renaissance. It was a huge explosion of self expression. Finally, in the mid to late 19th century starting with Post-Impressionism, Modern art emerged. This movement focused on self-consciousness, self-reference, introspection, existentialism, and even nihilism. I’m talking Fauvism, Cubism, Futurism, Dada, Abstract Expressionism, and Surrealism to name the most well known.

    These styles changed what art could be. They were no longer about depicting life as is, or layering a painting with hidden motifs for only the privileged to understand, they were in and of themselves absurd. Abstract shapes, aggressive lines and colors, nonsensical dreamscapes. But it didn’t stop there.

    Post-modernism. Pushing art to the limit of its potential. Pop art, Conceptual art, Minimalism, Fluxus, Installation art, Lowbrow art, Performance art, Digital art, Earth art. These movements are about skepticism, irony, rejecting grand narratives and reason and instead embracing the idea that knowledge and truth are the result of social, historical, and political discourse and subsequently are a subjective, social construct. It’s irreverent and self-referential. It’s avant-garde pushed to 11.

    But what’s next? Post-postmodernism? Metamodernism? Hypermodernity? Who knows? Only time will tell.

    This is where memes are headed. They started off slow but have picked up so much momentum they’re evolving at an exponential pace. They used to hang around for a couple years at most. Then it turned to months. Then maybe only one month. Suddenly it was a week tops. While some particularly great memes do still stick around much like the masterpieces of art in the past, new memes are created every day, every few hours. New movements of memes are being created all the time. Anti-memes. Dank memes. Abstract memes. Wholesome memes. Surreal memes. Deep fried memes. Nuked memes. Even black hole memes, time travel, and dimensional memes are now a reality. What’s going to happen next? A return to the classics? A new format so brilliant it steals all our hearts and then starts a whole new movement? I’m excited for the future of memes.

    TL; DR: Memes imitate art, art imitates life.

    And most importantly we must always remember— I mean me too thanks lol

    American computer scientist Larry Tesler is widely considered the pioneer of “cut and paste” commands, first putting the function into text-editing software in 1974.

  • Album Cover Art: Face Edition

    Rules for Picking This List:

    1. Album or song from album must be saved on my Spotify account
    2. Album cover design must not be an extreme close up like focusing on eyes or mouth
    3. Album cover design must have enough face visibility so no upper body shots, full body shots, profile shots
    4. Album cover design must feature only one face

    Blank Banshee by Blank Banshee

    Album Cover Artwork by Blank Banshee


    The cover art I picked is the art used on Spotify but there’s a different version used on his Bandcamp page. This is a vaporwave classic and essentially invented vaportrap. That’s Lara Croft’s face. I also enjoy how the album title uses 0 (zero) to denote the debut album.

    Forever Young by Alphaville

    Album Cover Artwork by Ulf Meyer Zu Küingdorf

    I Get Wet by Andrew W.K.

    Album Cover Artwork by Roe Ethridge

    Truly a “Party Hard” expression. Andrew W.K. claims he hit himself in the face with a brick but didn’t bleed enough so he used a water bottle full of pig’s blood to achieve the effect for the cover art. Yikes.

    Richard D. James Album by Aphex Twin

    Album Cover Artwork by Aphex Twin

    Richard D. James is Aphex Twin’s real name and he made the cover art himself using Photoshop. He has also hidden his face inside songs before which is uncovered by a spectrogram.

    Sea Change by Beck

    Album Cover Artwork by Multiple Artists (Listed Below)


    Broken-hearted Beck. Also had four cover art versions.

    Artwork credits:

    • Autumn de Wilde – cover photo(s)
    • Jeremy Blake – artwork
    • Kevin Reagan, Beck – art direction, design
    • Ekaterina Kenney – creative director

    Cobra Juicy by Black Moth Super Rainbow

    Album Cover Artwork by Tobacco


    Tobacco sold this design as Ugly Orange Full-Head latex masks. I helped fund this album when it was on Kickstarter with my measly college-era $1. It was exciting because this was a “return” album for BMSR. Tobacco likes obscuring his own face in promo images.

    Because The Internet by Childish Gambino

    Album Cover Photography by Autumn de Wilde


    That’s the kind of mug that yawns, “I’m more talented than you and I will own music and television.” Actual cover art is a GIF and the physical version uses lenticular printing to get the animation.

    Matangi by M.I.A.

    Album Cover Photography by Daniel Sannwald

    Moon – EP by M|O|O|N

    Album Cover Artwork by Multiple Artists (Listed Below)


    Art Credit: Photo by Drew Swantak, edited by Madison McKenna.

    Discovered by playing Hotline Miami 2 which is an addicting game with a pulsating soundtrack.

    Illmatic by Nas

    Album Cover Artwork by Aimee Macauley


    Classic cover art for a classic album. Does the classic album make it classic cover art or does the classic cover art make it a classic album? Maybe they work in tandem? Started the trend of rappers using photos of themselves as babies on covers (see Biggie, Lil Wayne, Drake). Wikipedia has a whole section about the album artwork.

    McCartney II (Special Edition) by Paul McCartney

    Album Cover Artwork by Multiple Artists (Listed Below)


    Not sure who designed this but AllMusic has the following credits:

    • Rebecca Church – Art Research, Photo Research
    • Richard Miller – Art Research, Photo Research
    • Claudia Schmid – Art Coordinator, Photo Coordination
    • Catherine Shepherd – Art Research, Photo Research

    Fatherfucker by Peaches

    Album Cover Artwork by Walter Schonauer


    Don’t fear the bearded lady.

    Mondo Sex Head by Rob Zombie

    Album Cover Artwork by Rob Zombie


    I’ve used a cat as the cover design for a book so I feel I’m in very extended company with Mr. Zombie.

    Ross Ross Ross by Sebastian

    Album Cover Artwork by So-Me


    So French. When is he releasing new music?

    Rap Money by Shirt

    Album Cover Artwork by Shirt?

    Recess by Skrillex

    Album Cover Artwork by RØBØTØ

    Actor by St. Vincent

    Album Cover Artwork by Annabel Mehran

    The Seer by Swans

    Album Cover Artwork by Simon Henwood

    To Be Kind by Swans

    Album Cover Artwork by Bob Biggs

    Paper Trail by T.I.

    Album Cover Artwork by Bill Orcutt and Ian Wright


    The only face on this list of album cover art made through collage. Live Your Life samples the song featured in one of the OG YouTube viral videos.

    Fucked Up Friends by Tobacco

    Album Cover Artwork by Tobacco


    The only face split in half. Looks like a broken VHS tape visual. Very in line with Tobacco’s aesthetic.

    Luck by Tom Vek

    Album Cover Artwork by ???

    Melted by Ty Segall

    Album Cover Artwork by William Keihn


    Reminds me of Texas Chainsaw Massacre. Ty Segall sounds like he strung up a chainsaw as a guitar to play.

    Music from The Comedy, A Film by Rick Alverson by Various Artists

    Album Cover Artwork by Emily Kaplan?

    You’ll Cowards Don’t Even Smoke Crack by Viper

    Album Cover Artwork by Viper?


    Viper out Lil B’d Lil B in 2014 when he released 347 albums. This cover art is a total meme but it fits with his DIY aesthetic. I legitimately enjoy some of the cloudy beats on this thing.

  • Here’s a GIF-based Mini-Game to Get Your Creative Juices Flowing

    “My goal is to publish at least 10 blog posts in September. The guiding principle for each post is: SHARE and/or SPARK CREATIVITY. Just in starting to blog again my antenna has been up for things worthy of turning into new posts which has been a nice shift in perspective for my daily living. It’s a mood booster for sure.”

    September 5, 2017 journal entry

    This is my 10th post for September 2017. I think I’ve mostly stuck to this guiding principle but since this is my personal blog, I’m open to watching it evolve and take different shapes depending on what’s inspiring me and what I think is valuable to share. Let’s hope this goal morphs into a system and I continue blogging into October and beyond.

    Here’s a creative mini-game to celebrate.

    On computer: Using your mouse, click on the GIF above and drag the image to the side.

    On mobile: Take a screenshot of the GIF.

    The card you pick is your brainsparker for the day.

    How It’s Made

    Giphy GIF Maker to make a GIF from screenshots of different brainsparker cards.

    Screenshots of brainsparker cards come from the brainsparker app, which is by far my favorite mobile app. I have it set to notify me to pick a new card every day at 12:30 PM. I bought all the available card decks they have so sometimes I get a word, sometimes a quote, sometimes a specific prompt or question. With this setup, it works exactly as a creative inspiration mobile app should work: there’s a routine, it’s pushed to me, it takes seconds to read, and I can ignore it if it doesn’t catch me or it can be what influences the rest of my day. You can also go to the app itself to shuffle and pick from the card decks. I recommend this to anyone interested in keeping their creative juices flowing.

    There was very clear influence (basically stolen) from this mini-game posted on Instagram.

  • What If You Could Only Use One Word for the Rest of Your Life?

    What word would you use?

    I love questions. I love unique questions. I love ordinary questions. I love stupid questions. I love smart questions. I love uncomfortable questions. I love feel-good questions. I love big questions. I love small questions.

    This is an especially challenging question and something of a thought exercise.

      • Would it be the, the most commonly used word in English?
      • Would it be your own name?
      • Would it be you or me or I or us or we?
      • Would it be who or what or when or where or why or how?
      • Would it be an uplifting word like love or hug?
      • Would it be a direction like to or from?
      • Would it be a social transition like hello or goodbye?
      • Would it be an answer like yes or no?
      • Would it be a beautiful word like effervescent or ephemeral?
      • Would it be a funny word like booty or booby?

    I asked myself this question once and the best answer I came up with is: create. This, along with the answer to the superpower question, helps me clarify how much I value creating.

    If I could only say or think “create” for the rest of my life, it would drive me to create memories, moments, conversations, solutions, designs, videos, questions, relationships, opportunities.

    It would allow me to interact with others and my surroundings in a more attentive way, help bring out more of my potential, and lead to amazing ways of engaging with the world and my experiences.

    The word “create” feels like a divine yet mortal call-to-action contained in a single word.

    This same question has been asked on forums throughout the internet. Some highlights include the following answers: Eh, Please, Fuck, Hodor, Anyong, Trabajaba, Dude, Meow, Thanks, Om. Charles Slade, “Former mathematician, current patent lawyer,” on Quora has a clever answer:

    “’Beep’ does that job. There are very few times when someone otherwise needs to say ‘beep.’ Moreover, if someone came up to you and just said ‘beep beep beeeeeeep beep beep,’ your first thought would be that they’re a lunatic. But your second thought would be that they are trying to communicate in some kind of morse code. I’m happy enough to get that thought into the top 3. :)”

    So if you could only use one word for the rest of your life, what word would you use? Why? What can you learn from your answer? What can you learn from searching for this answer?

     

    Sources and Further Reading:

    Wikipedia: Most Common Words in English

    Wikipedia: Five Ws

    Just English: “The 100 Most Beautiful Words in English”

    Science of Us: “Apparently, These Are the Funniest Words in the English Language”

    Gizmodo: “Scientists Say These Words Are the Funniest”

    Tyler Fugazzie: “Yes”

    Tyler Fugazzie: “No”

    Tyler Fugazzie: “Word of the Day Project” 

    AskReddit: “If you could only say one word for the rest of your life, what would it be and why?”

    AskReddit: “If you could only say one word for the rest of your life, what would it be?”

    Personality Cafe: “If you could only say one word for the rest of your life…”

    Quora: “If you could only say one word of your choosing for the rest of your life. What word would it be?”

  • How I Accidentally Started Riding the Clout Goggles Trend in 2014

    Some weeks ago I made my Twitter profile picture a photo my friend Andrew took of me on our trip to Seattle in 2015.

    I brought these glasses on the trip because I wanted to look like Kurt Cobain and try to channel his creative spirit during our journey.

    I bought these glasses in 2014 as part of a Halloween costume I was doing as Willy Wonka’s son.

    The above photo has been my Goodreads Author profile picture since that same year.

    Fast forward to a few days ago and one of my coworkers sends me this meme.

    Okay, a reference to the Cobain shades I’m wearing in my Twitter profile picture which I recently made the profile picture for my work email. Fast forward to earlier today and another one of my coworkers references my picture and calls out “Clout Goggles.”

    I recognized the use of clout connected to the shades from this meme but I was still lost. Did this have anything to do with Klout? Was this just about clout the term and concept itself? What the hell is going on? I’m feeling lost. Out of the loop. Not in on the joke. I don’t like this feeling. Call it FOMO. Call it Losing My Edge. What is happening? What is this? Why did nobody tell me about this?

    While I don’t like the feeling, I love the opportunity to learn something new, especially from people younger and more hip than me. I’m getting exposed, introduced, educated. This is good stuff.

    These are apparently now and probably temporarily known as “Clout Goggles” as covered by Jake Woolf for GQ and supposedly coined by Denzel Curry. In addition to outlining how fashion power brokers have posthumously picked apart Cobain’s “look” to sell as new styles for people to wear, he goes on to write:

    “In a short amount of time, Clout Goggles has become shorthand for a style favored by fame-hungry rappers and Internet-based “creative” types chasing followers. They’ve become as ubiquitous among a certain subset of stylish guys as souvenir jackets, side-stripe track pants, suede Chelsea boots, and any other number of left-of-center menswear items currently clogging Instagram #influencer feeds.”

    Internet-based “creative” types chasing followers. 😭. I almost feel personally attacked with this phrase and strategic deployment of quotation marks. Called out for following a trend I was unaware of even though I’ve technically been ahead of the curve on this one. I’ve now made my “Clout Goggles” picture my profile picture on Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, and WordPress thus staking my new digital avatar “brand” largely based on these shades which have probably already lost whatever vague relevance they regained before I started writing this post.

    No apologies.

  • When You Don’t Have It

    Last Sunday I achieved something monumental. I woke up before noon. It was thirty minutes before noon but still before noon nonetheless. This is an achievement for me because I am almost always waking up in the afternoon on weekends. This situation is caused by a combination of mounting sleep debts during the week, a fetish for free time, and a proclivity to squeeze the last enjoyable hours out of the day’s tube.

    This win led to more wins.

    “Designed flatland, hat, saxophone, sponge, ghost, electroconvulsive therapy, claw, and finished fax. Felt like the time flew by. I was truly in flow. Flew and flow.”

    – September 10, 2017 journal entry

    I produced a number of my “concrete series” designs, some among my favorites in the whole series, and shared them throughout the past week.

    This Sunday I woke up at 8:30 AM. Another win! I was expecting to flow again with even more of the day available to work.

    “I’m having bits and pieces of design ideas yet nothing seems to be clicking or working to even get photos to bring into Photoshop to begin. Should I work on something else? I think I might clean out and organize my [Google Chrome] bookmarks…Really struggling with these concrete designs. Nothing is clicking. Nothing is catching my interest.”

    – September 17, 2017 journal entry

    I didn’t have it. I tried to do designs for block, boots, key, keys, keyhole, beach ball (influenced by a really beautiful dream sequence I had on Friday night), net, chain, chains, fur, dust, bubble wrap, bottle, screw, tag, mint, mints, coin, traffic light, window, jackhammer, needle nose pliers, and cross. Absolutely none of these were happening. My attempts between 10:00 AM and 6:30 PM were total busts.

    “Finally landed on something I liked and wanted to share. ATAS, organization that votes on Primetime Emmys. Plus I made it a GIF. Inspired by doing the white background, side-by-side square transition used between scenes in Arrested Development and then Google searching ‘Academy of Arts & Sciences’ when I was curious about who actually votes on this [stuff]. I saw a cool, vaporesque photo of a building, palm trees, and people walking. It was interesting enough to use. Very happy this worked out because if I landed on nothing I would’ve felt like [stuff].”

    – September 17, 2017 journal entry

    So I came out of the day with one piece worth sharing.

    The breakthrough came when I stopped working on the designs to watch Arrested Development, noticed an interesting layout to mimic, and looked for inspiration from a newsworthy/cultural event. And my indecisiveness about which pairing of photo pieces to use side-by-side led to the first GIF in the series.

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BZKPg51BxyG/

    These kind of “I don’t have it” times happen: ideas wither when you try to bring them into reality, you’re immediately bored by something that gives you a flash of excitement, you can’t render the path ahead of you, you hit dead end after dead end, you try to switch up approaches and still fall flat. It’s discouraging, frustrating, and can lead you to doubt your abilities and the value of whatever work you’re trying to pursue. I’m reminded of a quote David Lynch shared during an interview when asked about where he gets his ideas.

    “If I knew where the good songs came from, I’d go there more often.

    – Leonard Cohen”

    Anyone who does creative work, whether they’re a venerable film director, a prolific songwriter, or an itinerant internet creative with passable Photoshop skills, faces this challenge. I’d like to call anyone who does creative work and doesn’t admit to having these “I don’t have it” moments liars. If you don’t have it, trust that you will find it as long as you keep looking.

    And maybe watch some Arrested Development.

  • Which of These Rhymes Define Your Life?

    Rhymes are musical. Rhymes are memorable. Everyone loves rhymes and rhymes are everywhere, in everything. Which of these rhymes define your life?

    • Don’t do the crime if you can’t do the time?
    • Too cool for school?
    • Single and ready to mingle?
    • Team work makes the dream work?
    • Fake it till you make it?
    • Hey there care bear?
    • StubHub?
    • GrubHub?
    • Piggly Wiggly?
    • Laffy Taffy?
    • Mello Yello?
    • Lynyrd Skynyrd?
    • Oingo Boingo?
    • Chumbawamba?
    • Wooly Bully?
    • Thong Song?
    • Hocus Pocus?
    • Orinoco Flow?
    • Pretty Fly (For a White Guy)?
    • Reese’s Pieces?
    • Good Golly Miss Molly?
    • Abracadabra?
    • Rock Around the Clock?
    • Paranoid Android?
    • King of Swing?
    • It Don’t Mean a Thing (If It Ain’t Got That Swing)?
    • Build Me Up Buttercup?
    • All My Ex’s Live In Texas?
    • 7-11?
    • FitBit?
    • Jack Black?
    • Shaquille O’Neal?
    • Faye Dunaway?
    • Tutti Frutti?
    • Hell’s Bells?
    • Humpty Dumpty?
    • Itsy Bitsy Teeny Weeny Yellow Polka Dot Bikini?
    • Be Kind Rewind?
    • Dennis The Menace?
    • Deuce Bigalow Male Gigolo?
    • Cat In The Hat?
    • Amelia Bedelia?
    • E.T.?
    • He Said She Said?
    • I Am Sam?
    • Kill Bill?
    • Limousine-riding, jet-flying, wheelin’ dealin’ kiss-stealin’ stylin’, profilin’,?
    • Jabroni-Beatin’, Pie-Eatin’, Trailblazin’, Eyebrow Raisin’,?
    • Me, Earl, And The Dying Girl?
    • Even Stevens?
    • Friday Night Lights?
    • Super Troopers?
    • You, Me And Dupree?
    • Pain & Gain?
    • Romper Stomper?
    • Blast From The Past?
    • Rub-a-Dub Dub?
    • Nationwide is on your side?
    • I before E except after C or when sounding like A, as in neighbor or weigh?
    • If this van’s rockin’, don’t bother knockin’?
    • Lefty loosey?
    • Righty tighty?
    • He who smelt it, dealt it?
    • Beer before liquor, never been sicker?
    • Liquor before beer, you’re in the clear?
    • Candy is dandy?
    • Rain, rain, go away?
    • Come again another day?
    • April showers bring May flowers?
    • If you sprinkle when you tinkle, be a sweetie, wipe the seatie?
    • An apple a day keeps the doctor away?
    • If the glove don’t fit – you must acquit?
    • If it’s yellow let if mellow?
    • If it’s brown flush it down?
    • A friend in need is a friend indeed?
    • Red sky in morning, sailors take warning?
    • Red sky at night, sailor’s delight?
    • Eager beaver?
    • See you later alligator?
    • In a while, crocodile?
    • Peace out girl scout?
    • Buhbye butterfly?
    • Awesome possum?
    • Neat-o mosquito?
    • Guess what chicken butt?
    • What’s the story mornin’ glory?
    • What’s the deal, banana peal?
    • What’s the word, hummingbird?
    • You got it made in the shade?
    • Lookin clean, jellybean?
    • Easy-peasy lemon squeezy?
    • Later, tater?
    • Whattya know daddy-o?
    • Sensing Tension?
    • Smuggling Hummingbirds?
    • Runny Tummy?
    • Borrow for Tomorrow?
    • Wear Their Hair?
    • Map Stats?
    • Haven’t Met Yet?
    • Sup Pup?
    • Drone Tone?
    • Astronomical Monocle?
    • Swimmin Women?
    • Flooded Blood?
    • Pain Drain?
    • Train the Brain?
    • Mellow Fellow?
    • Post-Most?
    • In Pins?
    • Grand Brand?
    • Hand Band?
    • Prude Dude?
    • Pride Died?
    • Pump Dump?
    • Down a Clown?
    • Silly Villain?
    • A Dress I Guess?
    • Weak to the Leak?
    • Reason for Leaving?
    • Weirdy Beardy?
    • Ruin Reunion?
    • Improved Mood?
    • Tell Your Cells?
    • Dirty Thirties?
    • Ghostposters?
    • Think Thin?
    • Summer Fur?
    • Beat Heat?
    • Neon Peon?
    • Sweet Tweet?
    • Will Still?
    • Fewer Viewers?
    • Cool Tool?
    • Stopped at the Top?
    • Jail Bail?
  • Wear the Same Thing Every Day and Become a Cartoon Character

    It’s New York Fashion Week here in…New York and I’m celebrating by wearing the exact same thing to work two days in a row.

    Granted, this “decision” arose more out of circumstance rather than intent, but I believe it has offered me some important lessons.

    “You’ll worry less about what people think of you when you realize how seldom they do.” – source unknown

    No one has noticed I’m doing this. I’m flying under the radar. I have a subdued, tasteful normcore look as it is, so people aren’t often drawn to what I’m wearing.

    “I love wearing the exact same thing all the time because I think it makes you like a cartoon character. They always wear the same outfit and everybody always remembers them for it, so I feel like I should do the same thing.” – Ke$ha

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BY9Ycpmh21n/
    As I see myself looking the same between yesterday and today, I remember some of my favorite cartoon characters. Fry from Futurama, the South Park gang, Homer Simpson, and other legendary cartoon icons become iconic because they wear the same thing every day. Wearing the same thing every day establishes your brand.

    This would be the kind of brand Steve Jobs cultivated by wearing black turtlenecks, jeans, and white sneakers. This is partially what Mark Zuckerberg does with his gray t-shirt deal. Though Mark’s reasoning is more about freeing up precious decision-making resources to CEO a social capital megacompany.

    “I really want to clear my life to make it so that I have to make as few decisions as possible about anything except how to best serve this community…I’m in this really lucky position, where I get to wake up every day and help serve more than a billion people. And I feel like I’m not doing my job if I spend any of my energy on things that are silly or frivolous about my life.” – Mark “The Zucc” Zuckerberg

    I was worried. From a fashion standpoint, this is a risky move. For some people, this would be fashion suicide. Again, this arose out of circumstance, but I am ultimately better for the experience. Worrying less about what others think. Honoring the legendary figures of the animated world. Developing a personal brand through clothing choice. Freeing up mental resources to noodle through how to best serve my community by making and sharing this post.

  • What the Hex is That Blue?

    Here are six blues I find interesting along with their hex color codes.

    Gray-Blue
    #8C92AC

    Part of the blue-gray series of colors. These blue-grays are also known as livid colors, coming from the Latin lividus meaning “a dull leaden-blue color.” It’s also a way to describe bruises on flesh and gives us the “black and blue” expression. And yes, blue-gray is different from gray-blue.

    International Klein Blue
    #002FA7

    French artist Yves Klein invented this color and used it extensively and sometimes exclusively in his work. From what I read, it’s impossible to properly represent this color through the web. This is also the color that makes the Blue Man Group blue.

    Midnight Blue
    #191970

    There’s a blue for the middle of the night and a blue for the morning but Morning Blue, as I see it, appears too close to green to include in this list.

    Rhythm
    #777696

    Part of the blue-gray series of colors. I like this based on the name and the color itself is cool as an almost pale purple. Rhythm and blues anyone?

    Shadow Blue
    #778BA5

    Part of the blue-gray series of colors. The blue-grays are very attractive to me right now for some reason. This was created by Crayola to represent a metallic color but that’s basically impossible through a computer.

    Space Cadet
    #1d2951

    A very dark navy. Apparently (according to the almighty Wikipedia) named this because it resembles what someone serving in a space navy would theoretically wear. Looks like it would serve some camouflage out in space but let’s hope we won’t need a peopled military there…