May 2007, 207 entries
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@ Flickr
Photo-0016.jpg — about 1 year ago
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Lumosity — about 1 year ago
I'm sort of in love with this new site, Lumosity, even though it makes my brain cry. Web 2.0 + neuroscience + games = heaven for Buster.
It's a well designed and easy to use version of some of the really awesome brain improvement games that I am usually too bored to keep up with. But this free 30-session training period thing could be just the thing. I'm worried about my brain and my memory, and this could be just the thing for it.
If you take the test, let me know how you do. Join me in the middle spectrum of brain strength! -
@ Flickr
My lumosIQ — about 1 year ago
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Buster M. @ Moe's Mo'Roc'n Cafe — about 1 year ago
Buster M. @ Moe's Mo'Roc'n Cafe ! Their wallpaper isn't nearly as great as ours! :)
925 East Pike St
Seattle, WA 98122 -
Press release: The Barbarian Group at McLeod! — about 1 year ago
Hello all,
We have some exciting stuff coming up at McLeod Residence! Join us on First Friday this Friday, June 1, to view work by The Barbarian Group, a visionary interactive firm headquartered in Boston. Want to get a peek even sooner than that? We're having a members-only preview on Thursday, May 31. Join now to be invited to the preview and other awesome members-only events.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact:
Maggie Santolla McLeod, Press Relations
maggie.santolla@gmail.com
Cell: 206-715-5348Lele McLeod, Gallery
leleblixa@gmail.com
206-441-3314The Barbarian Group Shows You a Better Version of Yourself at McLeod Residence
Electronic Mirrors Offer a Tease of What's to Come in JulyMember Preview: Thursday, May 31, 6pm-12am
Opening Reception: Friday, June 1, 6pm-9pmSEATTLE – May 30, 2007 – Boston interactive creative firm The Barbarian Group, known for their groundbreaking Subservient Chicken campaign for Burger King, presents a limited-edition series of unusual bathroom mirrors at McLeod Residence during the month of June. The mirrors are just a preview of what's to come when The Barbarian Group creates an interactive installation during the July/August exhibition cycle. The mirrors will be installed in time for June's First Friday artwalk on Friday, June 1, from 6pm – 9pm.
McLeod Mirror Series 1: See Yourself in Others are not actually made of mirrored glass, but an LCD screen housed in a wooden case with a web cam attached to the top. The camera records the viewer and creates a collage of the person's image along with images of everyone else who has stood before the mirror. The image allows the viewer to "see themselves reflected in others" in a new way. The mirrors bring a timeless bathroom product into the digital age, creating a twist on the staple that is more interesting and dynamic than the original, while perhaps pointlessly complex. The images are not recorded or archived, so the digital artwork created on the spot will never be seen again. The mirrors will be available in an edition of 100, and the mirrors will also hang in the Barbarian's Boston offices.
The Barbarian Group describes themselves as a group of art directors, industrial designers, interactive artists, developers, animators, illustrators and more who strive for the perfect marriage of creative and technology with interactivity as their canvas. They found fame with innovative web projects such as The Subservient Chicken for Burger King ( www.subservientchicken.com), Become an M&M for Masterfoods, The Beer Cannon for Milwaukee's Best Light and Comcastic for Comcast. In addition to creating web sites, viral marketing campaigns, television spots and software, the Barbarians have ventured into installation artwork, including work for Nokia with Universal Everything for their Hong Kong showroom. The upcoming McLeod Residence installation marks the first pure art installation the Barbarians have undertaken as an organization.
Collaborating with The Barbarian Group on the fabrication of the mirror casing is Ben Durrell, a Boston-based designer. Durrell's work has shown at venues such as the Tokyo Designers Block, Milan Furniture Fair, and the ICFF, and he has designed project-specific products for such institutions as The Center for Advanced Visual Studies (CAVS) at MIT, George Little Management (ICFF), ReadyMade Magazine, Housespecial.org, The Berwick Research Institute, and MKS Design. Currently he maintains a studio in downtown Boston with designer Matthew Christensen under the name + /-, or "Give or Take.'"
Also continuing at McLeod Residence is Disconnects, an exhibit that brings together artists from Seattle and Brooklyn who each play with the tension between their media and their subject matter in an unusual way. Curated by McLeod Residence's Chris Weber, the exhibit includes work by Mandy Greer, Dylan Neuwirth, Salah Mason and Maceo McNeff, Doug Young, Aaron Linn, and Eric J. Olson and runs through June 30, 2007. Ongoing exhibits include neon art by Jeremy Bert and Jen Elek and furniture by James Reinhardt and Gary Andolina.
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McLeod Residence, located at 2209 Second Avenue in Seattle, Washington, is a home for extraordinary living through art, technology and collaboration. Proprietors Buster McLeod and Lele McLeod founded McLeod Residence in 2006. McLeod Residence is open Tuesday-Saturday from 10 am to 6 pm. For more information, contact McLeod Residence at 206-441-3314 or visit www.mcleodresidence.com.
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to squid! — about 1 year ago
If you have a secret that you don't want anyone to ever learn about but you have to tell someone, you whisper it into the tiniest suction cup on the tentacle of a giant dying squid at the bottom of the ocean... or you post about it on your LJ friends list. Right? Squid are on the brain and in the stomach lately. I am in love with them because they break the well known riddle of animals in the natural world... you know, the one that states that any given animal can have one or two out of three (but not all three) of the following qualities: beauty, smarts, tastiness. Humans are beautiful and smart, but not terribly tasty, jellyfish are beautiful and tasty, and chickens pigs and cows are only tasty. Some people are strictly uglyovores... only eating things that aren't cute. Some people would never eat something that's smart, like a dog or a monkey. But, squid are the exception! If someone doesn't like squid, it's mostly because it's too chewy, not because it's too beautiful or too smart. They are the anomalies of the cuisine world, not to mention the deep blue. Go squid go!
I want to tell you all kinds of things that are going on. Doubling down on love, life, and friends means doubling down on living it out. Maybe tonight I'll ramble on about some of that. For now, what would you rather eat: balls or brains? I'm taking a survey and have a hypothesis about it. -
Tuesday May, 29 — about 1 year ago
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Kellianne returned to NYC, I returned to post-birthday day-after-Christmas still awesome life.
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