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Louis CK + The View and more

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This is a video about Louis CK. He was accused of sexual misconduct a few weeks back, along with a slew of others. It was actually a huge relief to me because I thought originally he was accused of sexual assault but NO it was just sexual misconduct. He's one of my favorite comedians and all that but even more so I think he's one of the most genius moral investigators of all time. He's not perfect and he's rough around the edges but here goes nothin'. For the record, I don't think his jokes are meant to mask his 'harassing'. They're more him dealing with himself and his moral quandaries. It's part of the genius! Right?

Music Artist

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To the 'nineties' tab I would add the band U2. Mostly because I can't believe they aren't there. They didn't start in the nineties but they had their peak in the nineties, so obviously that makes them a nineties band. They utilized the popular tech of the day, that is: digital sound editing, use of synths, electronic guitars, and the performance style of the era was also embraced. This is a classic. A real classic. This was when U2 was the heckin stuff over here. They pushed the middle eastern vibe in their certain attempts to find unity. This was their 'coexist' phase, I think.

Fart Video (cut short because of Anthony what the HECK Anthony!)

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So I did my project on farting. Farting is something that transcends all races, religions, ideologies, sexual orientations, genders, colors, eye colors, viral diseases, HIVs, creeds, the band Creed, etc. I think it's something that can unite people. There weren't many crowd reactions but one guy was pretty interested in the camera. Then a friend I was working with CONNIVED his way out of working with us: long story short we got goofed and lost our fart machine. So I tried to generate my own farts but lets be honest that's just rude.

Gyarados

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This project was a slow and prodding trudge. I started on it a little late so but I figured I'd finish within a day or so. But no! It took more than 2 days and I ended up pressed for time and trying to complete it during work. Finding materials was somewhat difficult, and required resourcing for different items at Michael's. At first I planned on using small plastic, reflective things. But they were too difficult to work with, so I went with puff-balls. Also, initially I wanted to have gyarados drawn in full. As in, his entire body. But then I realized the mouth took up around half the panel, so that ambition passed quickly. Still, I'm happy about how it turned out. He's very fuzzy for a water dragon, but I think that's fine. The puff-balls worked well as an atomic entity. He also knows Hydro Pump and Bite so beware. Here it is halfway done. I've already got a good grid-set aligned by having drawn out the first part of the ear and mouth. The rest of t

temporal title (Xerox Project)

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Gotta have the Frank's hot sauce. Friendship begins. I got this idea by talking to a school counselor in the Wellness Center. I was drawing spirals on the whiteboard next to me when my brain was too fried to think (I study in the wellness, sometimes). It was just a way to flush myself and relieve some stress. But she came in to get water and saw the spirals and said that when she was seven, at her grandmother's house, she would imagine a spiral in her head. And she would trace around the spiral, headed towards the center, but never reaching the center. She would get distracted or would have to talk to someone or do something. But she felt that if she reached the center, there would be some answer that would reveal herself, to herself. The spiral, she said, became a kind of motif for her throughout her life. She would tell people about it and talk about it. But one day, her friend saw a spiral in the sand, and pointed it out to her. And at the center of the

ASCII Art

As a kid, ASCII art was amazing and impossible to me. I was confident (at the time) that people used custom characters, or some program, or had simply drawn them and posted them as a .jpg, or that they had a computer analyze their drawing and turn it into characters. I especially thought this after completing Portal, a video game released by Valve. The end credits had a bunch of animated ASCII art. I've always wanted to create ASCII art. But every attempt is swathed by my always being too daunted, or thought there were better ways to articulate myself, or thought it was too much work unnecessarily. I think it would pose a challenge (beyond my attempt, even) to thinking about how to design something. Do you do it line by line? Do you create one object and then the others? What are the most effective ways to move your cursor around a word doc? All of these pose a challenge that is unconventional.

Technology in the 21st century: The Printer (Specifically the XEROX WrokCentre 7845i)

      The contemporary printer has made many changes and spun off in numerous different ways by a handful of companies; yet it still manages to break regularly. It's based on one of the most important technological advancements in human history, which is writing stuff down, and is also one of the oldest. You would think, after all these years, that humanity would have figured this out by now. But no. It still sucks.       The historical origin of the contemporary printer (namely, the XEROX WorkCentre 7845i) starts with a written record of anything. It starts with how man left his mark on nature in a meaningful or interesting way. Whether it was an arrangement of rocks in a river, a humble cave abode with plank wood over the entrance and cave art on the walls, or even mutilated animals in the forest. Sure, that's a scary image. But it's also pretty interesting so it counts. This eventually develops into a more advanced version which is the development of paper and pen. The