Live blogging the 24 Hour Creative Marathon

From 8pm tonight to 8pm Saturday is the 24 Hour Creative Marathon 2 at Creative Treehouse, Bellevue, PA. I’m going to be here for as much of the event as I can handle. Let me tell you all about it.

(Updates will be on top, so read from the bottom if you’re just starting.)

8:30am: Put a fork in me, I’m done. I’ve packed up and I’m ready to head back home for a little shuteye. I’ll be back in the afternoon. In the meantime, watch the creative marathon site for blog updates from others.

7:12am: Sorry for the radio silence during the wee hours. I have neither slept nor napped. Instead I made a nifty collage, and then may have ruined it by trying to put a protective coating on top. Am currently too tired to fret about it. The point wasn’t so much the end result anyway; it was the act of making, and the experience of creating something along with others.

We’ve had a nice group of folks here this evening. The bulk of the participants were here from about 10 until about 2. The paintings they created are propped against the walls around the room.

Right now about a dozen people are dozing or seriously sleeping on couches and in corners. Another dozen are still working, either completing the piece they’ve spent the evening on or starting on something new.

10:00pm: More people continue to arrive. So far I’ve consumed just a cookie and Burn energy drink. Any surprise that I’m a little frizzy? None at all.

Art is being created, video is being filmed, code is being discussed. Thinking about the theme of “lost and found” — how to break free of cliche?

9:20pm: Spaces are filling in. The Something To Be Desired crew is arriving — they’re filming an episode here tonight to air Monday. An art class has also arrived, their teacher gaining big coolest-ever points by bringing them here. Next to me a young man is making a frame and canvas, with Exacto knife. Overall vibe: Anything is possible.

8:40pm: I’ve arrived. Over an hour late, but everyone is kind about it. The vibe is energetic, expectant. Those who were here at the first marathon are pacing themselves on the Burn energy drinks, but (significantly) they’re not holding back really.

Myself, I’m on my first Burn and thinking about the “lost and found” theme. What’s lost? What’s found? What comes now?

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Finding your inner artist

drawing of tree and sky by Elizabeth PerryToday, Elizabeth Perry is throwing a virtual drawing party to celebrate 1000 consecutive days of her drawing something every day. You should participate:

I am inviting you to a distributed drawing party: sometime during the day Monday, please find a comfortable place, get a piece of paper and a pen and make a small drawing of something you see. Nobody needs to see it – the important thing is to have fun! O.k.? Maybe you can think of it as a party game, and then leave a comment on my 1000th drawing post to let me know you did that.

There’s a small chance you’ll win a lovely drawing, but more importantly there’s a large chance you’ll experience the special thrill of making something. Even if you believe in your heart that you can’t draw, the truth is you can. Have at it.

And if this party whets your appetite for creating art, please join us at the 24 Hour Creative Marathon in Bellevue, starting at 8pm this Friday:

The 24 Hour Creative Marathon is a two-part event, beginning with a 24-hour artistic marathon and culminating in a gallery show and sale the following day.

Beginning Friday, September 28th, at 8pm, artists will gather at the Creative Treehouse to create a piece of work in 24 hours that pertains to the theme “Lost and Found”. Artists of all media and levels — from professional to amateur to the curious and motivated — are invited. Size restraints are 18×18 inches, and canvas or masonite will be provided to those that do not have their own.

Registration is FREE for marathon participation. Although registrations will be accepted at the door, there is a 150 participant maximum, so pre-registration is recommended.

At 8pm the next evening, September 29th, the Creative Treehouse will feature these newly created works of art in a gallery show. Food will be provided and beverages are BYOB; music will include Paul Luc, Jim Dandies, Buddy Nutt, and Some Other Band. The gallery show costs only $2 at the door. Artwork will be available for purchase, with a portion of the proceeds going to support the Creative Treehouse. Both events are open to the public.

Sponsors: Affogato Coffee, Aldo Coffee, Big Big Design, Burn Energy Drink, Mr. Baconpants, Pittsburgh Technical Institute, Unicorn Mountain.

If you don’t want to make any art, come and see people creating great and small things. Or come to the gallery show on Saturday and buy something fine, support the Creative Treehouse, and have fun.

Fantasy football 2007: Week 2 wrap

Official Lush Life team helmetFootball and fantasy football are back in session, much to my glee.

In past years as a fantasy football manager, I spent many, many hours pouring over player and NFL team stats, adding and dropping players, changing my lineup several times each week, and watching hours (days!) of TV coverage. This year I’m more laid-back. I have made a few judicious free agent pickups, but I’ve adjusted lineups only a few times, and I haven’t watched more than a few minutes of analysis on TV.

It’s only week three, but so far this laisse-faire approach is working for me. I’m 1-1-0 in the LFM League (with my fellow grad school alumns) and 2-0-0 in the Pittsburgh Celebrity Bloggers League.

Of the two leagues, the PCBL is the more interesting. More teams mean tougher competition for players and closer games, plus much more trash talk so far. And the fact that I’m undefeated makes it more fun as well, of course.

Something To Be Desired helmet My opponent last week was Justin Kownacki, Pittsburgh-based social media consultant and the force behind Something To Be Desired, a web sitcom also based in Pittsburgh.

(Please do check out STBD: It’s currently in season 4, but you can start watching from any point in the series. You’ll miss out on some of the ironies and jokes but you’ll catch on to the characters and situations quite quickly. It’s a bit bawdy and very funny.)

I’ve worked with Justin on PodCamp Pittsburgh 2 and the intro-level social media Bootcamp we ran earlier this year, plus on-going PodCamp Pittsburgh stuff, and he’s an all-around great fellow.

However, last week I put aside all that and whupped Justin in fantasy football, 145.27 to 94.07. My main weapon was Steve Smith of the Carolina Panthers, who brought me a gorgeous 43.30 points even as his team lost to Houston. Twenty-five points from the Minnesota defense helped as well.

Lush Life (my team)

       
Points
Pos
Player
Opp
Status
Projected
Actual
QB
(Sea – QB)
@Ari L, 23-20 14.50 13.17
WR
(Car – WR)
Hou L, 34-21 14.07 43.30
WR
(StL – WR)
SF L, 17-16 12.09 11.40
WR
(Ari – WR)
Sea W, 23-20 9.75 8.30
RB
(KC – RB)
@Chi L, 20-10 12.90 8.70
RB
(Atl – RB)
@Jac L, 13-7 6.74 4.30
TE
(NE – TE)
SD W, 38-14 5.55 10.90
W/R
(Den – WR)
Oak W, 23-20 7.78 8.20
K
(StL – K)
SF L, 17-16 8.67 12.00
DEF
(Min – DEF)
@Det L, 20-17 11.09 25.00
Total       103.14 145.27

STBD Gets Sporty (Justin Kownacki)

       
Points
Pos
Player
Opp
Status
Projected
Actual
QB
(Det – QB)
Min W, 20-17 19.43 14.87
WR
(StL – WR)
SF L, 17-16 6.30 19.20
WR
(Chi – WR)
KC W, 20-10 5.37 0.70
WR
(NE – WR)
SD W, 38-14 4.11 9.70
RB
(SD – RB)
@NE L, 38-14 26.34 5.80
RB
(Car – RB)
Hou L, 34-21 8.51 5.10
TE
(Bal – TE)
NYJ W, 20-13 7.07 13.60
W/R
(Det – WR)
Min W, 20-17 5.23 7.10
K
(Ind – K)
@Ten W, 22-20 8.91 7.00
DEF
(Pit – DEF)
Buf W, 26-3 12.24 11.00
Total       103.51 94.07

Images note: Both of these fantabulous helmets were created by Norm Huelsman, another member of the PCBL and my opponent this week. I offer him all kinds of kudos and thanks.

The helmets’ sheer wonderfulness will not prevent my team from pounding his into a whimpering mess, by the way.

Mixology Monday: Boilermaker

Mixology Monday 19: FizzIt’s Mixology Monday, hosted by the intriguingly introverted Gabriel of Cocktail Nerd.

The theme is Fizz, so I thought this would be a good time to try out a Sloe Gin Fizz. Or maybe a Tom Collins, a classic drink I was surprised to realize I’d never had. So last week I started sampling my options.

Unfortunately, nothing seemed quite right. I am beginning to see that I’m not a huge fan of tall drinks — except for a classic Highball with lovely ginger ale and good bourbon, or maybe a Moscow Mule with homemade ginger beer. I do like things with soda — say, Campari and soda, which is ideal for a sweltering summer evening. But I’ve discussed my favorite tall drinks already, and for this I wanted to try something that was new, at least for me.

Then I remembered that beer is fizzy. I’ve written previously about my experiments with Iron City beer and Pimm’s No. 1. That was good, so I felt I was on the right track.

What I’d not written before — what I’d not even tried — was a Boilermaker.

Boilermaker

shot of liquor
beer

Two options for serving:

Option 1: Pour beer into pint glass. Pour liquor into shot glass. Serve both glasses side by side.

Option 2: Pour beer into pint glass. (Leave room at top of glass.) Pour liquor into shot glass. Gently lower shot glass into beer until it’s nearly submerged. Release shot glass so it drops to bottom of pint glass. Watch foam start to rise, and tell someone to start drinking.

Given our fizzy goals for Mixology Monday, I selected option 2.

A whole range of combinations present themselves for this. Father Spoon of Should I Drink That suggested Rebel Yell and Cold Hop, which they’d officially approved during the afterparty of one of their podcasts. John Carman thought a Flaming Dr. Pepper would be a worthy subject. Both options were interesting, but not quite right for this situation.

I decided I would look for a fairly hoppy beer with warm caramel notes. The bourbon in my cabinet right now is Woodford Reserve, my favorite, and I suspected that strong hops would compliment the Woodford’s sweetness. I didn’t want anything too hoppy, though, or it would clash with the bourbon. A little caramel would help blend with the bourbon and make everything friendly.

So at the new-ish Butler Hot Dog Shoppe (not the old, classic one that closed a few years ago; the newer one in the converted gas station on Monroe Street, with the long lines at lunch time and the option to make a mixed six-pack from the cooler), I found a likely candidate beer: Hot Shot ESB from the Great Divide Brewing Company of Boulder. I was delighted to find an ESB (extra special bitter) of any label in my small town; and in my experience, Colorado has the best small batch breweries in this country.

I am not always right, but in this case I was spot on. The beer was perhaps a little over-fizzy, due mostly to having been bought and schlepped home right before I opened it. A sip I took before adding the bourbon confirmed that it was a yummy, tangy ESB, worthy enough on its own, and just the kind of thing I wanted for this application.

And once I dropped the shotglass in:

Boilermaker -- hey, someone better drink that!

A big fizzy mess.

But a massively tasty mess. The sweet bourbon made a lovely counterpart to the hoppy beer, and the fizziness caused everything to mix and blend in happy ways. No stirring or shaking required.

Given that it’s really two drinks in one, you may choose to limit your consumption of these. But I guarantee you’ll enjoy them.

UPDATE: Gabriel of Cocktail Nerd has posted a charming summary of the many, many Mixology Monday XIX posts. Cheers!

Obit: Alfred Peet, coffee entrepreneur

Alfred Peet in the late 1960s, in his original coffee shop in BerkeleyLast Wednesday, Alfred Peet passed away at age 87. (New York Times obituary; San Francisco Chronicle obituary)

Peet was the founder of Peet’s Coffee, my preferred brand of java. As a master roaster in the San Francisco Bay area, he also influenced the founders of Starbuck’s and changed the way America drinks coffee.

From the SF Chronicle:

He immigrated to San Francisco in 1955 and took a job with coffee
importer E.A. Johnson & Co. He favored high-altitude coffee from Costa Rica, Guatemala and East Africa that his father used to buy, and although there was no market for it in the area, he decided to create one.

“He went to a great deal of trouble to find only the best beans,” said David. “He knew his business like nobody I ever met.”

Importantly, David added, Peet introduced customers to coffee they didn’t know existed.

“We would drink it and it put us in a new realm. It had complexity and richness – that’s the best way to describe it,” said David.

Along the way, Peet influenced younger roasters like James Freeman, owner of Blue Bottle Coffee in Oakland. “He really opened the door for the specialty-coffee industry,” said Freeman, who said Peet made a radical departure from the roasting style of the day, with smaller batches, darker roasts and higher-quality coffee.

“He really showed that people in America are willing to spend a little bit more money to get a little bit better when it comes to coffee,” said Freeman.

I had known that there was a relationship between the early days of Starbuck’s and Peet’s, but this is the first time I’ve read the full story and the story of Alfred Peet.

I feel bad that the coffee I’m drinking right now was made with Starbuck’s beans. Of course lately I’ve been enjoying the Peet’s from Giant Eagle, but I ran out and was at Target, so…. I’ll pick up some more Peet’s today.

Oh! My parents have recently started drinking Peet’s now — again, because it’s at Giant Eagle. My dad apparently prefers it to Starbucks. He has always had a preference for strong coffee. Another convert.

(Photo copied from the NYT obit, property of Peet’s Coffee & Tea)

Gwen attempts to help the Butterscotch Stallion

I’ve linked to Intoxicated Zodiac a few times in the last month, and I hope you’ve been reading her site. Delightful? You bet.

For example, today we have thoughtful, in-case-you-fall-off-the-wagon tips to Owen Wilson, newly-sober Hollywood hunk:

what i’m trying to get at is, c’mon, do you really think poor owen is staying on the wagon? i sincerely hope he does, but in the extremely off chance that he does make a little boo boo…. well, it’s a slippery slope. so at least drink something halfway good for you… and that would be st. john’s wart tea. this beautiful flower, with it’s full head of yellow petals (not unlike his golden mane), belongs to the sun and is hence a plant of leo.

Please go read the full post, and add Intoxicated Zodiac to your must-read list.

Upcoming in Pittsburgh: mad creation of art for 24 solid hours

24 Hour Creative Marathon

Fun event coming up for artists, aspiring artists, and people who think they’re not artists but who are open to creativity:

The 24 Hour Creative Marathon is a two-part event, beginning with a 24-hour artistic marathon and culminating in a gallery show and sale the following day.

24 Hour Creative Marathon
Beginning Friday, September 28th, at 8pm, artists will have 24 hours to create a piece of work pertaining to the theme “Lost and Found.” Registration is FREE for marathon participation.

Please complete and send in the registration form to pre-register. Registrations will be accepted at the door, but we have a 150 registrant maximum. (Don’t be left out!)

Gallery Show
At 8pm the very next evening, the Creative Treehouse will feature these works in a gallery show, along with food, drinks and live music. All this for only $2 at the door. Artwork is available for purchase and all proceeds go towards supporting the Creative Treehouse.

Both events are open to the public. Artists of all levels — from professionals to amateurs to the curious and motivated — are invited to join us.

I’ll be there for the marathon and as much of the gallery show as I can stay awake for. Last year’s DrawMo has helped me feel bolder about drawing so I’m looking forward to taking on the challenge of the “Lost and Found” theme. (Which I voted for and thought was a super theme, but now feel rather cowed by. But which I will take on anyway.)

Find out more and register at the official 24 Hour Creative Marathon website.

First and ten

I’m in two fantasy football leagues this year. After taking last year off from the fantasy football world — and as a result from football as a whole — I feel like I’m coming out of a football deep freeze. So many players I don’t know and coaches I don’t recognize. I’m not even sure I’ve seen these plays before.

The first league I’m in is the Pittsburgh Celebrity Bloggers Fantasy Football League, run by Jim Shireman of Sportsocracy. We drafted back in early August, and I was third in the draft, so I had the slightly risky choice of whether to draft Larry Johnson, who was then holding out. I took him without worry. He ended his holdout and is playing today, but so far hasn’t done much to justify my faith. I expect him to do more in the second half of today’s game.

Here’s my team:

M. Hasselbeck (QB – SEA)
S. Smith (WR-CAR)
T. Holt (WR-STL)
A. Boldin (WR-ARI)
L. Johnson (RB-KC)
C. Williams (RB – TB)
B. Watson (TE – NE)
J. Norwood (RB – ATL)
M. Schaub (QB – HOU)
M. Turner (RB – SD)
B. Marshall (WR – DEN)
J. Wilkins (K – STL)
J. Scobee (K – JAC)
San Diego Defense
Minnesota Defense

My celebrity blogger opponent this week is the redoubtable Mean Gene Bromberg, Pittsburgh’s premier poker blogger and all-around sports fanatic. He’s also a client of Big Big Design (my web design company), but I will not hesitate to crush him all the same.

My second fantasy league is the LFM Fantasy Football League, which is the league of my grad school program’s alumni Class of 1997. We started the league while we were in school, in 1995, and ran it for 10 years.

I was too busy last fall to bring it together, so we took a year off. This summer some of us talked about restarting but not enough people seemed to commit. And then, the day before the season started, there was a sudden buzz of enthusiasm. We got seven people to commit to doing it, figured we can give the seventh team to our classmate Kevin — he’s in the Air Force and stationed in Afghanistan, so in past season’s we’ve managed a team for him, and he checks in when he’s got Internet access to offer executive coaching direction and briefly join the fun.

I had the good fortune of drafting first in that league. Here’s my team:

M. Hasselbeck (QB-SEA)
C. Johnson (WR-CIN)
T. Owens (WR-DAL)
L. Tomlinson (RB – SD)
R. Brown (RB-MIA)
J. Shockey (TE-NYG)
J. Walker (WR-DEN)
H. Ward (WR-PIT)
J. Kitna (QB-DET)
J. Witten (TE-DAL)
T. Bell (RB-DET)
J. Wilkins (K-STL)
S. Graham (K-CIN)
Carolina Defense

So far this week I’m not doing well in this league, but my key players don’t start until this afternoon and evening or tomorrow night. So there’s a lot of playing yet to come.

Right now I’m more focused on how fun it has been to think about football again, and fantasy football in particular. FF gives one a different view of the NFL — all the games carry weight, not just the home team or the home team’s division, and every bit of yardage and sack and missed extra point can have impact.

Let’s play ball!

UPDATE: I won both my games this week.

In the Celebrity Bloggers League, MyBrilliantMistakes crushed The MeanGene Machine, 112.70 to 70.63.

And in the LFM league, Steely McBeam (yeah, I know, but I needed a team name and that seemed as ridiculous as any — alternative suggestions welcome in the comments) spanked Kevin (see? he doesn’t even have a team name), 109.46 to 70.66.

Dang, I love football.

My brother nearly died choking on his Earl Grey tea when he saw this video

To help promote the Bob Dylan biopic coming out, there’s a website gadget that lets you replace the written lyrics on the cue cards in the Pennebaker video for “Subterranean Homesick Blues” with words of your own choosing.

At least one person used this to make a smart statement on commercialism in our society.

Daniel Radosh, humorist, freelance writer, and general wiseacre, came up with a version that I think everyone needs to see.

Also see his blog post with comments and other subversive options.