@jack Or you could see "The Triangle of Sadness" which is a very unexpected film. Maybe because it's not a Hollywood movie...đ€?
“Canelo Alvarez bests previously undefeated Billy Joe Saunders via eighth-round technical knockout to unify the super-middleweight titles; crowd of more than 73,000 sets a US indoor attendance record for boxing.”
Is it strange to anyone else that an “indoor attendance record” of any kind was set amidst a global pandemic?
@alexsavin The contrast in this is absolutely stunning.
@jayeless Thank you!
Hello Friends,
Welcome back to your almost-every-Tuesday-barring-natural-disaster meander about the internet, Bird Mail. I donât promise to have the answer to life, the universe, and everything but I do have a story about the snow, some photographs, and something to read and ponder.
I hope you didnât miss Bird Mail too much last week. Like every other Texan except Ted Cruz, I was dealing with the sustained effects of the cold weather that gave us that beautiful view of downtown from Zilker Park. There are far better places to learn about what happened, so I wonât spend any more time other than to say that Bird, Navy Bean, and our families are all safe. Some are a bit worse for wear, but everyone made it through.
Onward.
It is unusual for it to snow in Austin. It is even more unusual for it to snow twice in the span of thirty-something days. For once the forecasts are right and the snow is coming and someone in this household is kid-on-Chrismas-morning-excited for it. At 0200 I wake up to Bird sitting at the window marveling at the flurries. At 0630 I am rather rudely woken up by an alarm on my holiday Monday off.
âIâm too excited Iâm already dressed Iâm going outside!â
Iâm trying to get the words out to say, âlet me put my warm clothes on, Iâll be right behind you,â but before I finish my sentence, the door slams and sheâs off.
I quickly throw on my warmest clothes, dig around for my gloves, grab my Leica and run out the door. At this point I am minutes behind and am so intent on catching up I miss the initial wonder of the fresh snow and the quiet of everything.
Crunching quickly toward Zilker Park, I pause to see the steam rising where the Barton Springs waterâa normally bone-chilling 68ÂȘ year-roundâmeets Lady Bird Lake. click With gloves on and a still-new-to-me-camera, I completely miss focus on my first shot. I line up the rangerfinder correctly this time. click
There are only a few sets of footprints headed toward the park and in the distance I see a small person calf-deep in the snow. It is at this point I realize Bird and I are two of the first people in the park today. There is beautiful sculpted, unbroken snow all around, and the kind of quiet you only get when thereâs a layer of snow a few inches thick soaking up all the sound.
We trudge toward the big rock in the center of the park. Normally, it is a reliable meeting place during the Austin City Limits Music Festival, and a welcome source of shade. Today, it is hard to tell where the elevation of the rock is among all the white. click
We get to the top of the rock, and turn around just as the sun crests the edges of the buildings on the East end of downtown. The blue shadows are immediately hit with the warm orange light and I throw the lens focus to infinity. The wide route we took to the rock pays off. Not a single footprint in the frame. click
My gloves are thin and my fingertips are numb, but I keep pausing to admire how the the little crests and troughs that I never notice in the land when I walk on it on a sunny Sunday have been replaced with ripples of white, sculpted into dunes by the wind. click
I like to think that in some ways, I curate my own, tiny corner of the internet, but not in the same, overused way that a gift guide is curated to give you the âseven perfect things you didnât know you needed to give someone that will end up being donated to Goodwill within seven months.â My corner is mostly contained by the bounds of this newsletter, and what other writings you might find on my website, and I am thoughtful about what goes there.
I spent part of last week finishing a wonderful paper-copyâthe power was out and I needed to conserve batteryâbook about the art world. I promise it is, and is not, as pretentious as it sounds. Everything You Always Wanted to Know about Curating*: *but Were Afraid to Ask is a series of interview snippets with the curator, and historian of curation, Hans Ulrich Obrist. There is much to be learned from this master of curation and interviewingâhe runs twenty-four hour long interview marathons with artists, scientists, architects, futurists, and the likeâbut perhaps my favorite bit of wisdom is that curation, and art itself, is a daily protest against forgetting.
That is exactly what these photographs, and this story, and this newsletter is about. Bird Mail is a collection of words and images, all digital internet ephemera that could easily be lost in the mix, that might be worth remembering. Not everything in Bird Mail will be memorable to you, dear reader, but I sure hope a link here or there is. At this point, my thinking on the Bird Mailâs place in that protest against forgetting, and a few of Obristâs other ideas are still developing. More on that to come.
I donât track analytics on Bird Mail. I believe your privacy is more important than my knowing when you open Bird Mail and what links you click. I measure the success of this newsletter by your replies, or when you share Bird Mail with a friend in hopes they might find something worth remembering. I would love for you to share a little piece of internet ephemera that you cannot forget. I will add them to my ever-growing list of ideas and you just might see it in Bird Mail one day soon.
Oof.
This was a long one (<â that was the one-thousandth word in this issue) but thank you if you made it this far. I promise they wonât all be like this. I think. Who knows really? This one was fun to write in a different way than previous issues.
If, for whatever reason you made it this far and you donât want to hear another word from me, you may [exit this way]({{ unsubscribe_url }}).
Until the next Tuesday,
Bruce
If you enjoyed this issue and aren’t already getting Bird Mail every other Tuesday, you can join the small, but growing, group of birders here to get moreâbut not too manyâemails about design, bicycles, art, technology, and anything else on the internet I find worth adding to my collection. If you want to share Bird Mail with someone you know, simply forward this email to them.
Bird Mail 040
I have been thinking a lot about this excellent article…thing by Robin Rendle about the unusual position writers on the internet are in when trying to share their work, and how newsletters fit into that space. Robin mentions the fact that newsletters, unlike blogs, let readers know that there is something new to be read. I feel so fortunate that you have given me this small space in your inbox each Tuesday.
Question for you readers: if there were to be a blog component, something updated more frequently, but that wouldnât tell you that there was new writing for you, would you seek that out to read it?
Oh, hi. Iâm Bruce and this is Bird Mail, a collection of delightful links from around the internet delivered to you sometime on Tuesday, just in case you were wondering why this email landed this week.
Iâm not sure if any of you have ever wondered how I make Bird Mail each week, but as you might have expected, it is inspired and populated by many things that I find from other newsletters. I love newsletters. My favorites are those that give me a peek into the thoughts and interests of someone far different from me, but with some overlap to my own thoughts or interests, no matter how small that overlap.
This fortieth(!) issue, I wanted to do something a bit different. Inspired by this issue of Snakes and Ladders by the writer Alan Jacobs, I too have made âa newsletter of newsletters.â
Snakes and Ladders is a great place to start actually. Like so many of the newsletters that land in my inbox, I can no longer remember where I found it, and on the surface it does not immediately seem like a newsletter that I would be interested in. Jacobs often writes about religion and prayer, two subjects I know virtually nothing about, but his writing about the history of books and reading and all the other various topics keeps me reading each week.
Another roughly weekly, but more like whenever-he-has-something-to-share newsletter that I have loved of late, is photographer Noah Kalinaâs newsletter (you might remember that name from a few issues back when I highlighted his wonderful book of chicken portraits Tiny Flock). Noah takes a creative approach to ranking car washes or bagels, or new points of view. With no exact schedule, his newsletter is always a surprise I enjoy reading.
Newsletters that arrive out of the blue are some of my favorites. They are a reminder that someone neat is still making and sharing something, and today, this moment, they have something to share with you. One of the missives I most look forward to reading each time I see it in my inbox is Edith Zimmermanâs Drawing Links. With her loose sketching style Zimmerman chronicles her journeys into running, sobriety, nature, and so many other topics. Sheâs a writer with fantastic voice, yet her drawings capture something different: a glance, the shape of a flower, the colors of the sky.
Some of my other newsletters are more structured in both their content and/or their delivery schedule.
The Prepared is a beautifully structured newsletter with content that is so far from any of the activities of my daily life, and yet, I always find at least three interesting links to click in it. The authors rotate for the issues, but the content is always ostensibly about the machinations of manufacturing. âManufacturing what?â you might ask me. To that I would say, âwell, anything.â If this sounds remotely interesting I recommend poking around their archives as you will likely find something that intrigues you.
Bird is often surprised and will ask me how I know about some weird meme or pop culture reference, given we watch the same quarantine steaming material and spend the workdays on the opposite ends of a too-small dining table pecking away at our keyboards. Iâm going to reveal a key source here. The Public Announcement newsletter, a condensed version of their early-web-styled-website linked above, is one of the main reasons I am able to keep up with what is going on in the âcoolâ parts of the internet. A Monday through Friday newsletter that is made up mostly of politics, pop culture, and other plights of millennials on the internet is broken up by âWednesday Stillsâ which are a lightly curated set of images from a different person each week. I spend time each week roaming about the internet looking for links and things that interest me, and yet, I cannot begin to imagine where the weekly curator finds the strange and wonderful combinations of images that make up âWednesday Stillsâ.
Okay, weâve covered writing, photographs, drawings, pop culture :checking things off list here: ah, yes, music! I have always been one to work, or even read, with a soundtrack. I still remember putting CDs or even individual songs on repeat while in the back seat of our Honda Odyssey to drown out the road noise (and the geology lectures, sorry Dad) so I could plow through whatever book I was readingâlikely something by Rowling, Cussler, or Clancy. Now, as I sit down to work, I pop my IEMs in and often fire up something ambient and free of lyrics. The Flow State newsletter has kept me from wearing out Brian Enoâs Music for Airports and the Monument Valley soundtrack. Each weekday they deliver roughly two hours of ambient listening by a new artist I have never heard of. Lately I have been enjoying Grandbrothers and Domenique Dumont. I recommend subscribing, but also going back through the archives because there is so much wonderful music to be found for working, cooking dinner, or just lounging about on a Sunday morning.
I hope there is a newsletter here that strikes your fancy, but if not, please let me know. I subscribe to a likely-ridiculous number of newsletters and probably have something I can pass along that will interest you.
If you, dear friend, have a newsletter you enjoy and would like to pass on to the Bird Mail Club, send it my way. I would love to have a section at the bottom of the next issue dedicated to all the reader submissions.
Until next time, I hope you find some joy in your inbox, and spread that out into the real world.
Your friend,
Bruce
If you enjoyed this issue and aren’t already getting Bird Mail every-ish Tuesday, you can join the small, but growing, group of birders here to get moreâbut not too manyâemails about design, bicycles, art, technology, and anything else on the internet I find worth adding to my collection. If you want to share Bird Mail with someone you know, simply forward this email to them.
Hi friends,
Welcome back to Bird Mail, your Tuesday newsletter of links from around the internet that keeps changing forms because I am currently having fun trying to figure out what this space is supposed to be.
This week, it’s short list: 4 things to watch, and a place for collecting the other things to watch. Next week, expect something totally different.
If for some reason, Bird Mail isn’t your jam anymore, no worries, you can [leave the nest]({{ unsubscribe_url }}) at any time.
I hope you enjoyed this week’s Bird Mail. Let me know if there’s one form or another you prefer, or if you’ve found anything in your own little corner of the internet you’d like to share. I look forward to hearing from you.
Your friend,
Bruce
If you want to share Bird Mail with someone you know, simply forward this email to them.
If you aren’t already getting Bird Mail every other Tuesday, you can join the small, but growing, club here to get moreâbut not too manyâemails about design, bicycles, art, technology, and anything else on the internet I find worth adding to my collection.
Friends!
January is almost done. This year is already moving at a rapid clip and though we are far from out of the woods yet, the days feelâŠlighter. Not just in that there is more of that precious daylight at the end of each day, but the tenor of the days is lighter too.
I think they might have something to do with the marquee at the top of this image. Bird Mail is not the place to find politics, there are plenty of other places on the internet for that. But, I simply cannot ignore the momentous step that took place in American politics last Wednesday as a woman was finally, finally sworn in as Vice President of the United States of America. Itâs about damn time. There is still more work to do, but this feels like progress.
Or maybe that lightness had something to do with the awe I felt as I watched Amanda Gorman take the podium in her brilliant yellow coat and proceed to prove that she was the best speaker on that stage. If you have not watched, âThe Hill We Climbâ do that now, and if youâve already seen it, might as well go watch it again.
I felt that same awe as I watched Nia Dennis’s unreal, now viral, floor exercise from over the weekend. (Aside: the UCLA gymnastics team continues to crush it and go viral year after year.)
Longtime readers will know that I love displays of people at the absolute height of their craftâif that isnât obvious from the above links dig through the Bird Mail archives. The Girls of Guanabara is an amazing film about longboarders in Brazil that has far too few views for the quality of riding. I am thrilled to see amazing women being documented in places that have been so overly filled with (predominantly white) male faces: the pages of GQ, the world of high end watches, and in the new documentary Sisters with Transistors which I cannot wait to watch.
Last but not least this week, an up close look at an incredible woman. Make sure you open this on your computer and donât forget to click 3Dâthis will make sense when you see it.
Until next week, stay safe out there yâall.
Your friend,
Bruce
If youâre new, or if youâve simply forgotten why Bird Mail has alighted in your inbox today, it is because you once said, âyes I do want a bit of surprise and delight from about the internet in my inbox on most-but-not-every-Tuesday.â If youâve been forwarded this, you have a wonderful friend who wants to share with you. It would be lovely, if you, dear reader, could send this to one person who might like to join the club of Bird Mail readers.
@patrickrhone this is in my equivalent "hell yeah" playlist too!
If you are finding that all the weights and exercise equipment is still sold out, but you want to get your workout in, while improving your winter wood-cutting form, might I recommend Chopfit. Yes, this is real. And yes, you, too, could spend $140 on a FOUR POUND fake axe to swing in the comfort of your home. At $35 per-pound, this may be one of the most ridiculous pieces of “exercise” equipment you could purchase.
I will watch the videoâat least twiceâany time Danny Macaskill goes back home to Scotland. In his newest video he takes an e-bike to uninhabited Inchkeith Island for some electrified trials riding. Macaskill is used to doing these tricks on bikes that weigh 20 - 30 pounds, so to watch him throw 50(!) pounds of bike around with the same apparent level of ease is truly impressive.
I was reading Why Facts Donât Change Our Minds from James Clearâs newsletter today and I wanted to apply some of his thoughts to our current situation.
However, truth and accuracy are not the only things that matter to the human mind. Humans also seem to have a deep desire to belong.
For so many people in this time of too much COVID news and misinformation from an orange buffoon with too much power, there is more concern in remaining with a tribe than there is with knowing the truth or accurate information.
Collectively, from the beginning of this outbreak, we (the rest of the world) have been starved for accurate information. Mostâat least I hope mostâpeople are looking for the true numbers of infected, what best can be done to prevent the spread, and how to help. Accuracy is up in the air because so many things are being covered up by China and the POTUS.
This desire to belong, to one political party or another, is unquestionably clouding so many peopleâs ability to care about truth and accuracy. More concerned with being part of the ârightâ tribe has been such a big focus in politics for the past 3.5 years for one party in particular, and it has divided the country, and no doubt, will cost a number of people their lives.
Understanding the truth of a situation is important, but so is remaining part of a tribe. While these two desires often work well together, they occasionally come into conflict.
In many circumstances, social connection is actually more helpful to your daily life than understanding the truth of a particular fact or idea.
Right now, understanding the truth, or perhaps the Truth, of the situation is of utmost importance. Our daily lives and the social connections that are bound to them have changes dramatically, and in this case, knowing the truth of what we can to do #flattenthecurve is key to making sure we still have a tribe left at the end of (waves hands about wildly) all this.
We don’t always believe things because they are correct. Sometimes we believe things because they make us look good to the people we care about.
I have thought about this a lot recently in relation to COVID and our current political predicament. I remember hearing a long time ago, in the early days of the Trump presidency (and maybe even during his candidacy) that Trump uses the ad hominem attack âLoserâ often. The worst thing you can be in his eyes, and the eyes of those who follow him, is a loser. A loser is someone who asks for the facts, who trusts the media, who cares about others beyond those who look like themselves, the list goes on. A loser is anyone who isnât Trump or his cronies or the people blindly following the jingoistic hate that he so wildly spews. There are so many people out there who desperately do not want to be losers. They will hang on to their pride, resisting the programs that will give them food or healthcareâbecause welfare is for losersâor continue putting the lives of those around them in very-real-dangerâbecause Corona is a liberal media hoaxâall for the sake of not being a loser.
Convincing someone to change their mind is really the process of convincing them to change their tribe. If they abandon their beliefs, they run the risk of losing social ties.
Nobody wants their worldview torn apart if loneliness is the outcome.
The way to change peopleâs minds is to become friends with them, to integrate them into your tribe, to bring them into your circle. Now, they can change their beliefs without the risk of being abandoned socially.
Here Clear offers us some hope. And in this time of quarantine, social distance, and distant socializing, I think there might be some opportunity for this. I do have some fear that we all might have become too insular for us to step outside of our bubbles and work to change the minds of someone who thinks differently, especially during this time when tensions are so high. No doubt, changing someoneâs mind, even by inviting them in and giving them a new tribe, is a lot of work, socially and emotionally.
This is perhaps where our newly-forced forms of connection might be able to help us. Sometimes the physical awkwardness of meeting and talking about these hard topics can make you feel trapped because your only out is walking out. Now, if things get too tense, drop the Google Hangout and blame it on your bad internet connection. Give everyone a minute to cool off and jump back in.
In conversation, people have to carefully consider their status and appearance. They want to save face and avoid looking stupid.
Bring some levity to this insane situation weâre all in and work toward bringing someone into your fold. Itâs a lot harder to feel like you need to preserve your status when youâre sitting, trapped, on your living room floor with a quarantine cocktail and your pajamas on.
One day in the future, when we are all mercifully freed from the confines of our shelters-in-place, we can do the work of physically bringing them into our tribes and cement that changed mind for the better.
File under things worth believing in: Plain Text.
Jeff Huang uses a single, plain text file for all of his productivity.
I’ve tried adopting this, with the slight modification to Taskpaper formatâmostly for the cool tagging featuresâand this gives me exactly what I need in a digital productivity system. I still use paper for capturing and brain dumps and even short lists of what must be done today, but having this single text file as a running record is incredibly helpful.
I’ve broken mine into sections (Projects in Taskpaper parlance) with an Inbox at the top, month projects with nested day projects under each, and an archive at the bottom. Taskpaper’s ability to collapse and search or filter for specifc tags is just enough to show me only what I need to see at a given time without being too fiddly and getting into things like Omnifocus’s perspectives (which while great, cost me a lot of time in the past).
The beauty of plain text is its ability to be exactly what you need it to be. As your needs change, your file changes.
âŠthereâs a difference between hearing about it and experiencing it.
Thereâs no excuse for being uninformed when it matters, thereâs also no good reason for being inexperienced.
Thereâs often a piece of glass between us and the world as itâs delivered to us. That glass magnifies the awareness, but it doesnât have the same impact as experience does. It canât.
Our awareness has been stretched wider than ever in history, but often at the cost of taking away a lifetime of experiences.
â Seth Godin
Like so many people on the internet, I am trying to figure out ways to limit the power this little brick of glass, metal, and light in my pocket has over my life. As someone who enjoys collecting and sharing knowledge, I sometimes struggle with drawing the line between where I should focus my attentionâon the real world or the digital oneâat any given time.
Iâve largely left social media, though I still feel the tug of Instagram more than Iâd like. I am deleting apps from my phone left and right. In some cases I found ways to do the same actions from my computer when Iâm home, or better yet, not do them at all.
While all of this helps in one way or another, it is still easy to become overwhelmed and drown in the infinite river of the internet, thinking that Iâm doing yourself a favor by learningâAKA becoming awareâof all these new things. Theyâre shiny and exciting and they can maybe be used in conversation to teach someone else something, or make me sound more interesting.
The infinite internet is a constant pull, a tidal wave of overwhelming information, and distraction. Seth Godin offers simple advice, âFind your footing and do your work. Itâs a choice.â That work heâs talking about, is making sure that your life is filled with experiences and not merely awareness.
It is hard enough turning away from the allure of the ever-growing internet and all the things I can learn from it, but/and now I must attempt to find the experiences I should be devoting my life to having. As with the internet, there are an infinite number of paths, and so many of them seem grand.
I want to have an answer for you, dear reader (and more importantly, for myself). But I do not. At least not right now. I have a list of experiences I want to have, and some experiences that Iâve ruled out, but how to choose the rest of them while avoiding getting sucked down the rabbit holes of merely being aware is something I must figure out. Perhaps learning out in the open, showing my work if you will, can help someone else struggling with this too.
Spent New Yearâs Day on the rocks at Enchanted Rock State Park. Climbing outside is a lot tougher than I expected and it made me realize just how much having a big cushy mat under you gives you confidence in a climbing gym.
I think this is true for a lot of things. A safety net of any kind can give you the peace of mind to try something that’s a bit beyond your reach or skill level.
Iâve been thinking a lot about how the internet I want to be part of is focused more in small spacesâlike Micro.blogâand I think Yap is an interesting idea in a similar vein. Slack, while wonderful for instantaneous communication is a river of chat that quickly bogs down and becomes ineffective when treated as a knowledge source or repository. Chat isâor in my mind, should beâephemeral and Yap helps make that possible in a world where so much is archived for seemingly little reason.Â
LATA 65 is making deviant artists out of the young people over 65 years old of Portugal. If you want to make some public art of your own, I highly recommend picking up some Krink K-60s or K42s for making your own marks. Iâve been crushing on this MTA-inspired box set.
I will endeavor to take joy in having this chanceâthe chance to be tested in the name of values I hold dear. In the end, Your Honor, the more frightening my future, the broader the smile with which I look at it.
â Yegor Zhukov
A powerful sentiment from a Russian college student on trial for “extremism” from the full translation of his closing statement.
Though Austin is nowhere near the right temperature for snow, I have been thinking about snow, watching videos about snow. Pray for snow.
In one of the newsletters I receive to help fill my collection with internet ephemera, and help me make Bird Mail for yâall, I came across an article about where we focus our curiosity. Why arenât we curious about the things we want to be curious about? is a question I ask myself a lot. I have explored the rabbit holes of the internet in search of the mundane and the trivial. I fall victim to the idea that though this knowledge is technically useless to me now it might be valuable to me next week or monthâso I might as well read these three tabs, and watch a youtube video about it now, right? I explore many things that donât teach me things of value, I just think I should know them, but I donât know why.
Instagram is a sinkhole for this kind of junk food information, Tumblr used to be, and way back when I first had reliable access to a browser of my own it was StumbleUpon that stole hours and hours of my nights taking me all over the internet. They all fed my brain an endless supply of novel and mostly trivial information. I would squirrel things away in bookmarks, Pinboard, Pocket, or Instapaper thinking it would be valuable to know or come back to as reference material. Except I rarely comeback. There is too much new.
I seem to always be adding to my collection, but reviewing far less frequently. There are some things that I come back to monthly or yearly, information that becomes knowledge because of its longer term value instead of its short-term dopamine hit from learning something new. I try to include those in Bird Mail when/where they make sense. Though I will not stop looking for more information, more of that internet ephemera, that I so enjoy collection, I am now thinking more about where it comes from and its long-term value. Iâm not sure if that means shifting focus to longer-form writing, or somewhere else. Iâll let you know as I figure it out.
I love the idea of Future Fonts. Get in early on some cool typefaces from great designers.
(via swissmiss.)
Something to believe in:
Writing things down isn't just about keeping a record; it's about a deeper level of clarity that the finer articulation releases.
Nicholas Bate's Jagged Thoughts for Jagged Times always delivers.
Social networks have amplified this desire, at the same time they simplified the execution. Now you can waste time and dignity instead of money. Who can you tear down? How much time can you waste? Whatâs it worth to you to have more followers than the others?
Itâs a lousy game, because if you lose, you lose, and if you win, you also lose.
The only way to do well is to refuse to play.
Earning trust outperforms earning envy.
â Seth Godin - The never-ending rachet of conspicuous consumption
Emphasis on the last line is my own, and it is what has me thinking the most. Where do you earn trust on the internet? Social media seems like the defacto place to do it, but the benefits seem less and less as time goes on.
With all the noise on the internet, how can you be found, or heard, so that people can start trusting you?