Daft Punk’s Sorrows

Hey! It’s my second music video in four years! Although, this one is a remake of a music video I made… 14 years ago. O.o

Among other things, I upgraded from crappy, timecode-stamped footage to glorious DVD quality. I’ve meant to remake this video for 11 years (yes, that is how old the project file is on my computer). When I finally decided to do it in June, I thought maybe I’d waited and procrastinated long enough for Daft Punk to have re-released Electroma in HD, but sadly, no. There may never be sad robots in HD.

I also made this music video for OokiiSoraCon’s AMV+ contest. It also didn’t win me any prizes. Sad.

Cheeky Geeky Vaudeville: Hindsight is 20/20 and Other News

https://youtu.be/dGWCCfR9P8k

The Cheeky Geeky Vaudeville: Hindsight is 20/20 Show came out on Halloween. I’m behind with posting it, but well, the past four months have been strange, terrible, exciting, and fast-paced. Among other things, a traumatic death occurred in my family. Then, I got a full-time job as a Software Engineer and moved to another state. Three big life events in four months is a lot but typical 2020 chaos I suppose. Anyway, here’s Cheeky Geeky Vaudeville’s annual fall performance, presented digitally at a safe social distance.

Cheeky Geeky Vaudeville Quaranshow

If you have the convention blues, the Cheeky Geeky Vaudeville put together a Quarantine-show for Memorial Day weekend. Our team of geeks is still here (at a safe social distance) to entertain you with Moana-, Baby Yoda-, and FFX-themed song, dance, and comedy.

I don’t realize how much my social life revolves around conventions and performing arts until it’s all gone. If you’re feeling the same, I helped edit this video together FOR YOU!

https://youtu.be/2JI2Lq6dVN4

The Night My Heart Stopped (Resident Evil AMV)

I made this over the weekend for OokiiSoraCon‘s AMV contest.

It’s my first video in two years. O.o It felt good to video edit again. I missed it.

…And, of course, it had to be violent dark humor mixed with bizarre, Caribbean-influenced screamo-electronic music because I can’t do anything normal. XD

In Memory of Kyle

A high school friend of mine committed suicide sometime this past weekend. It’s been about eight years since I last saw him, but it’s still sad to hear. He was a talented artist who became very troubled after high school. Last I saw him, he was in a dark and dangerous place, and ever since, I’ve wondered if he made it out. I decided to put together a video of some of the footage I have of him. It’s at least ten years old, but it represents my best memories of him. I can’t say I knew him well, even before we fell out of contact, but we all had some fun times making silly movies together.

Unsolicited Comment: What Type of Customers are We?

https://youtu.be/wQyCx92jzx8

For quite a while, I’ve accepted the argument that employers have the right to fire employees who say things perceived as, or that are in actuality, racist, sexist, or otherwise offensive on social media. Employees represent who their employer hires and the company as a whole. If they represent themselves badly, they can cost the employer sales and customers, so it makes sense that a post on Facebook could cost the poster his job… Right?

Mike Cernovich’s documentary on free speech, Silenced, made me think of a different way to look at this dilemma. Firing someone is equivalent to throwing rocks at them for something they said, which contradicts everything we teach our children and uphold as moral. When a child says something mean to another child on the playground, we generally don’t encourage the victim to beat the bully half to death with a stick. In movies and TV shows, heroic children stand up to bullies with cleverness by revealing the bully’s hypocrisy and flaws. More realistically, we encourage our children to tell a teacher or parent; an adult will have more resources to find the source of the bully’s behavior and (hopefully) correct it. We can also encourage children to ignore the bully or leave the situation.

This is what we do in our personal life as adults, too. If someone has an opinion we disagree with, we can attempt to reveal the flaws in their belief, or discover the flaw in our own, in a discussion; we can share the books, videos, and podcasts that support our beliefs; we can accept that we have different opinions; or we can disengage with one another altogether. If we can’t prove that someone’s opinion is wrong, or if they’re just being mean or stubborn, it still isn’t acceptable to punch them in the face.

When employed citizens voice a thought perceived as unpopular, misinformed, or offensive, however, suddenly, it’s acceptable to deprive them of food and shelter (i.e. their source of income). Sure, if an employee is pestering customers and colleagues with her troll-like personality, stubbornness, or beliefs and negatively affecting the company’s productivity, then she should be fired, not because of what she says but because she isn’t doing her job. But if companies must fire employees for what they say on their personal time to please their customers, what does this say about the customers and society as a whole? They are so sensitive that they see a man venting thoughts to his Facebook wall as the next Hitler simply because he mentions a statistic that, on average, whites have higher IQs than blacks and Hispanics. They love diversity so much that they would reject everyone who isn’t like them. They are so uncertain of themselves and their beliefs that they would sooner kill someone who questions them than allow their “attacker” to have his naive beliefs. They are so afraid of the violence that the speaker doesn’t even intend to perform that they would perform it first. They are so dependent on the speakers’ thoughts being false that they would silence them without proving them false. They are so immature that they want an adult, a company, to ruin anyone who says something they disagree with. And companies have no choice but to serve them.

The question isn’t just, “Should companies fire employees for what they say on social media?” The question is also, “What type of customers do we want to be?”

New Episodes of Improvised Incoherence

This month, I read and discuss random writings I found in my closet. Most are stories that I wrote when I was little. Some, however, are bizarre… other things.

A raccoon must find happy flours. They can cure you of any decease.

Did you know that being scary and scaring people are two different things?

Finally, I read James Frederick Christian Von Uhde III’s carefully researched report on the life and accomplishments of Benjamin Franklin.

Improvised Incoherence #3 and #4

I made two episodes of Improvised Incoherence this month since, between all the chaos of moving to Spokane, I didn’t make an episode last month. The theme is my new living space.