24 March 2008

What a novel robber!


Crystal Ball's job validated - too late


Video Shows Man Hypnotizing Cashier Then Stealing Cash



24 MAR 08

MEMORANDUM

From: Crystal Ball

To: Cobra Human Resources Dept.

Subj: Letter of Resignation

Being the single most unappreciated Cobra - I quit. I mean, what - with a PhD and all, eight years of barely scraping by on a crappy stand-up comic routine and no love from the Baroness, well I'm moving on to bigger and better! It's the limelight for me, baby! I'm going for where the REAL money is. Screw you, Cobra Commander!

C BALL

08 March 2008

... The train as a metaphor for change








Looking through the window...

Flashbacks from the train

How Did You Discover Murakami?


I was working under the Seventh Fleet and one day read in the Asahi Shimbun about a very unique and cutting edge multi-media stage production of The Elephant Vanishes. At the time, I had just started riding the trains, and was interested in learning more about the culture and psyche of my gracious hosts. I wanted to turn to literature, so a friend picked me up a copy in the bookstore. It was profoundly esoteric and beautiful.

What's just beyond the grasp of easy understanding is a subject worthy of long-time pursuit. As meaning-making creatures, people seek to understand their world and relationships with people confronting the same task. This literature brings to mind Lacanian theory - jouissance and the signified 'Other' - and imperatives at different levels of perception.

“There are lots of things we never understand, no matter how many years we put on, no matter how much experience we accumulate. All I can do is look up from the train at the windows in the buildings that might be hers. Every one of them could be her window, it sometimes seems to me, and at other times I think that none of them could be hers. There are simply too many of them.” - Haruki Murakami

Through this chance exposure to Haruki-san, I found a truly avant-garde author and was helped to not only see but also feel “the extraordinary in what is all around us,” for which I will always be grateful.

06 March 2008

A brief introduction to my blog


"Grey complex, piercing azure sky" is about memory just beyond the reach of grasp. On some levels, it is about transcendence of common sense over political correctness, and prevailing over what the mass media (Cable news, MTV, internet, newspapers) leads people to think is popular opinion.

Who am I? I am a part of the coveted 18-35 demographic. I am a member of “generation x” who has survived “angst crises” of self-actualization and coyly describe myself as a “rugged individualist,” and “suburban administrative warrior.” My primary “pop influences” include the 80s, Ronald Reagan, and Mark Twain.

I am concerned with the growth of political correctness in the United States and use my blog as an outlet for occasional creative expression, mainly in order to share items that I have found sardonic or provide the benefit of reminding us to occasionally question our own perspectives.

The influences of pop culture intrigue us but also are becoming the source of some visceral frustration, oddly enough. We who believe that "all the news that is fit to print" does not necessarily involve Hollywood socialites -- nor tearing down America's modesty -- share a common bond. I believe somehow that our collective subconcious resists such modern iconoclasm and longs for Andy Griffith.

This is - ACHIEVEMENT!

Perfect score on Jumble! How often does that happen?

Ladies, this guy is a keeper!