Words
Rete
|by Daniel Sprouse
Whale Joke
|http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0QDQ3-UEdq8″Whale Joke” is exploring the language of comedy as the same “Whale” joke is told by different people. New York is a haven for comedy of all types, but is very famous for it’s stand up scene. I decided to play with the normal feel of a stand up lounge (brick wall, person standing alone facing the audience . . .) but instead using joke that has very little to do with actual words. I like the fact that everybody can tell a joke, but the way a joke is told and recieved is all in the expression that is used in telling it/ hearing it. This joke contains very few words so the language is completely dependent on the way the joke is expressed and interpreted.
As each person expresses the same joke in a different way, the language of the joke changes with each person’s interpretation of the joke.
Not only is the joke teller expressing the joke in a different individual “language” but every audience member understands it in a different way. For example, one audience member might find the very first person to tell the joke hilarious, while another audience member might find someone else later on in the sequence to be funnier. The receiving/”understanding” of the joke is completely based on the persons preference. Do they think it is funnier based on Gender? Age? Vocal pitch? Facial movement? Timing in which the telling occurs in the sequence? There are so many factors that a person never considers that go into enjoying a simple joke, but each factor is like another personal language that needs to be interpreted so that the humor is registered.
Humor is a languages that changes with each person involved in the interaction.
Holus Bolus: NYC’s Everyday All At Once
A small chunk of the enormous variety of activities that go on in Grand Central.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yqi7nnaG9M8
Diglot: Choice Meats in the Meatpacking District
|http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z9KJQnBl8Tk This video juxtaposes images of the upscale clubbing scene and the grungy blue collar meatpacking business that coexist in this unique manhattan neighborhood. Although the video doesn’t literally present a diglot, in a sense the neighborhood is speaking two different languages by sending out mixed messages of its identity. On another level, the video itself sends mixed messages. On one hand it is the displaying the upscale crowd mixed with the lunchpail crowd and on the other hand it also derogatorily compares woman to meat. (I personally don’t believe that woman are comparable to meat!)
Welkin
|Pelagic: Haste Makes Waste
A short film about the sewer systems in NYC. Directed by Audrey Gevorkian.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PKQXR2p1kfw
Alice in Wonderland and Omurice
In my recent business trip to Tokyo, I’ve decided to read Alice in Wonderland on the plane. There was a Japanese cartoon series based on Alice in Wonderland I loved to watch when I was a kid and I thought reading it would somehow help me find my way in Tokyo…
If there is a dish that can be served during the tea party in Alice in Wonderland, Omurice has to be it. It’s a Japanized version of western Omelette with fried rice in ketchup.
To me, this is the quintessential Japanese food and a very worthy offspring of western Omelette. It’s hearty, colorful, inexpensive, and very very tasty. Everyone who visits Japan should try it instead of cold and overpriced Sushi that most people seem to favor for a reason that I can never understand…