Showing posts with label blogging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blogging. Show all posts

30 January 2023

Sociopath media

Poem for the week, 30 January 2023

 

 

 

 

 


Sociopath media

My wall's a stream of platitudes,
those mass-produced collectables
viewed through heroic spectacles,
waving a flag and a god and a bloody big gun.

Each day turns into saccharin,
a box to put your feelings in,
where truth is out, replaced by spin,
refreshed non-information dressed as favourited fun.

Like me and fill your database
with status, feeling, time, and place.
We're free because we share our face
in terabyte-size clouds where clever algorithms run.


Other poetry by this author:
Magnetic Resonance Imaging: lyrics of love and loss
Those Footsteps Behind: around the world in 50 poems

16 January 2023

Post deconstructionism

Poem for the week, 16 January 2023

 

 

 

 

 


Post deconstructionism

Our landscape has changed.
Spaceland, faceland, wasteland, what you will.

The users wtf and lol in the distance,
a gurning orgy of burning thesauri;
a lethal injection of terse free verse.

The others --
there's no sound of them
on this blasted derivative heath.

Meanwhile,
a thousand cottage industries
forge endless aphorisms;
embryo memes in screaming template font,

post after post after post,
gathering virtual dust on virtual walls.
Three likes.


Other poetry by this author:
Magnetic Resonance Imaging: lyrics of love and loss
Those Footsteps Behind: around the world in 50 poems

17 July 2020

A post about a feed about a blog

A bit of a bit of Bruce's poetry is for sale!

Yes, there are now two ways to own your very own bit of a bit of Bruce.



Option 1: Amazon

My very own piece of Amazon virtual real estate, in the form of an author page, is up and running.  It includes a feed from this blog, so don't get lost in the ol' click to infinity there.  Just choose a book and buy it.  Simple.

Option 2: Lulu

Or, if you're more of a kind of indy type of person who prefers to go to the authentic source, the alternative kicks involve heading over to my *other* author page on Lulu.  Get the feed direct from the horse's mouth, so to speak.  Hipster heaven.

Either way.  Hey.  Go crazy.

14 February 2012

The unoriginality of memes

I used to like Facebook.

Initially, as a late adopter, I was suspicious. Facebook is a so-called "microblog". Don't worry about the full thought, just get that sound-bite out there as a status update.

But I found that I don't really mind that. Photos and check-in locations are cool (sometimes).

One thing that I do mind is that Facebook, to me, is losing the atmosphere of being a personal playground where you can dig up new stuff.

I had a Facebook zombie (for example). Childish, I know, but at the push of a button, my zombie would attack a friend's zombie, and one of us would win points. Then my friend could retaliate. Simple but strangely satisfying, and it felt fresh.

It was like an additional channel of communication. It was very much on the level of 'poke' or 'wave across the bar' rather than on the level of discussing international finance, or even the Arsenal back four, but it was still personal. It was still my zombie trying to beat up my friend's zombie.

If I can use that as the basis for a prolonged and somewhat strained metaphor, what I find now is something rather different. My zombie has almost gone.

I see quotes from and about famous people discussing their zombies (so to speak). I see (and spread, mea culpa) links to news about those same celebrities' zombies (so to speak). I see some people who even use pictures of famous zombies as their own avatar (I like this metaphor).

Moreover, I see 40-year old jokes about zombies being copy-pasted into identikit image files, while at the same time exuding this strange air that the whole process somehow represents creativity.

It is not creativity. They are 40-year old jokes. Copy-pasted. Into a template.

In a word, they are memes. Look it up in a dictionary!

I want my zombie back.

26 October 2011

Two bits divide

For grits and shins (as you might almost say), the bits of Bruce are dividing in twain.

You may consider this a bit rich, considering that no bits have been posted here for a year. However, the business bits are now elsewhere. The personal bits (or what I choose to reveal, which lately is less than a nun in a space suit), remain here.

Business-minded bods may please feel free to click thus:
thetextbiz.blogspot

07 November 2007

I control the blog.
The blog does not control me.

It's a funny thing.

Sometimes you want to blog your thoughts and feelings to the whole world to let everyone know how wonderful, cruel, beautiful, absurd, or unfair life is. And sometimes you just want to sit quiet and keep them warm and safe.

It's a funny thing.

11 July 2007

Random numbers

By 19:30 on 11 July 2007, my blog had been viewed 4,065 times.

By 19:30 on 11 July 2007, my Flickr stream had been viewed 5,514 times.

By 31 December 2006, 15,512 copies of my book had been sold.

On 10 October 2000, The Washington Post claimed that 1 in 140 people react severely enough to have to stop taking mefloquine, the malaria prophylaxis that I have just started.

On 11 July 2007, the BBC 24-hour weather forecast for Udaipur in Rajasthan, India, was 35°C maximum temperature with 100% relative humidity.

The 2007 eniro telephone directory online lists 193 hairdressers in Espoo and 825 in Helsinki.

12 April 2007

Slightly perturbed

Fantastic! The Players' very own and very wonderful hannamime has started a blog. Three cheers!

She begins with reference to her commendable attitude of (quote) "I-communicate-with- people-not-machines".

I can almost sense the Windows alert pop up on my frontal lobe.

Back when I was a teenager, I was the proud owner of a Sinclair ZX81. My goodness, the things that it was possible to do with 1K of memory and a cassette recorder! Well, you had to. The infamous RAM-pack wobble rendered the luxury of 16K particularly unstable. Mine was secured with hi-tech blu-tac. But Space Invaders on less than 1K, using a touch-sensitive keyboard, was a reality that almost beggars belief in these megapixel, gigabyte-hungry days.

I then went into computer stasis just at the time that everybody else was packing up their magnetic tape and getting all floppy. So to speak. And I was nearly 30 before I used the Internet or a mobile phone. That's partly a generation thing, of course, but also because I was more into being a humanist. Into, well, people rather than machines. I used to say things like "never trust a machine that can only count up to one."

However, since rediscovering the silicon habit, I've been determined not to be a doddery technophobe. I have embraced e-mail and have gone so cyber with Flickr, Twitter, and Blogger that these are now part of my daily routine. Feel the pulse of that street cred, dudes! So much so that I read words such as "I-communicate-with-people-not-machines" and wonder. Have I sold out and transferred my capacity for communication onto ether? Is this blog entry just another example of the same?

Uh-oh!

Self-search in progress. Please wait.

13 March 2007

Reasons to hate tag

Blast! I've been tagged. I hated this stupid game in the school playground and I feel much the same about it on the Internet now. I'm just non-aggressive, see, and don't have the heart to chase people around and poke them, because it makes me feel guilty. Maybe that's one reason why I'm still single. That and the fact that I don't much like being poked, physically or emotionally, which is something that some people simply cannot comprehend. Anyway, friends are people who will viciously tag you and then leave you on your own in the corner to cry. That much I have learned from life.

But, with a resigned sigh, on we go with the game. Five things that most people don't know about me.

Well, I've been horribly self-revealing recently, so there's not much that the inner circle doesn't know. So, conscientious writer that I am, I must first consider the identity of my target audience. Maybe it's that lovely someone whom I secretly hope follows my blog and whom I would very much like to realise what a wonderful, charming, witty, irresistible, unparalleled, match-made-in-heaven sort of chap I am.

Oh dear. I don't do that stuff. This is me. Simple. What you see is what you get. No more, no less. And I can only hope that maybe my secret would-be admirer will find that sufficient. If she ever clicks this way.

But here goes.

1. My psychotherapist thinks being a Caesarean birth is one reason that I can't swim.
Blimey, there's three for the price of one. I defer to Anna MR on the Caesarean analysis, which she summarises so well. My contribution to that ongoing thread is that being 'dragged from the pool' has apparently traumatised me out of a healthy relationship with water.

2. I have never had sex with anyone who speaks the same first language as myself.
No nationality lists here. That's just crass butterfly collecting. I'm not going to become the sort of person who keeps an atlas and a checklist under the bed. But, so far, no mother-tongue English speakers for me. I just have to live with the idea that women who fully understand what I'm saying turn me down more often.

3. I failed my driving test four times.
I have my licence. I passed the test at the fifth attempt eleven years ago and haven't driven since. Actually, I shouldn't have passed then. I had to drive onto the pavement during the test to get round a bus, but as I gave the examiner a running commentary on the situation, he let it go. He even told me it was 'a good drive'.

4. I was school athletics champion at age 15.
Come on, you've got to allow me one ego-booster. One chance to impress my secret would-be admirer. I was a sprinter: 100 metres, 200 metres, and triple jump. Pretty good, too, if I may say so. My little trophy is gathering dust somewhere in England, inscribed 'Victor Ludorum 1983'. But where's the athletics scouting and coaching network when you need it? Not in small-town Yorkshire, anyway.

5. I received a court summons for refusal to pay poll tax.
Alright, at that point I went all weak-kneed, caved in, and paid up. I would have made a case, though. At the time I was 23, working for little more than pocket money at a kids' adventure holiday camp, and living in a tent in a field in the middle of the Brecon Beacons. I didn't want to swap that for a police cell. But maybe my procrastination and paperwork went some way to proving that the poll tax wasn't really like the council rates. And we won in the end.

There. Make of that lot what you will.

I will not now pass the tag on. Partly because every current blogger that I know has already been tagged, and partly because I hardly ever tagged anyone in the playground either. But if any visitor happens by here and would like to be tagged voluntarily, they should feel free to pick up the challenge.

Go on! You know you want to!

22 February 2007

A surge of madness

About five years behind the trend as usual. A sudden surge of madness compels me to start what may turn out to be a series of self-portraits on Flickr. Don't ask me why, because I'm not sure why. It may be about ten years too late for it to look any good, and it may turn out to be a really bad idea. But what the heck. Call it more therapy.

18 February 2007

Cold, shamed, and naked on the floor

Before starting on Blogger, I had a quick look at MySpace. True, Blogger is the grown-ups' version. But one thing that I'd like to add from MySpace is the possibility to list 'currently listening' music. For me, the choice of background music while blogging gives a definite flavour of mood that is difficult to share in words.

This evening it's Natalie Imbruglia. 'Torn', in fact, sums it up pretty well. If one is allowed to feel that way when one is not young, attractive, and female. Because I'm not. And I do.

12 January 2007

Googling for Kanikoski

I am somewhat diverted to discover that the Kanikoski Cup appears to be a Swedish fencing competition. No, really!

I am equally diverted to find 'A bit of Bruce' listed as a source for 'photos of Quim'.

22 December 2006

Christmas break

All bits of Bruce, with the possible exception of the turkey-munching muscle, are offline for Christmas.

If, during the break, you miss reading about the Bulgaria of 15 years ago, then have a look at The Porcupine by Julian Barnes. It's much more intelligent and far better written than A Kick up the Balkans, which will reappear on or around 10 January 2007.

If you miss the poetry, things may return sooner than that, but watch out for Poetry & Jazz in the New Year.

If you miss the rest, watch the Twitter frame on the right, to see if anything is going on.

Peace on Earth. Have a good one, everybody!

14 December 2006

Service interruption

The auditions are over and the decisions are made. I can do public communication again. Hello, blog!

06 December 2006

Here are the results of the Espoo jury

The day of the profile photo dawns. The Grand Jury of bits of Bruce convenes. The vote is conducted according to the strictest democratic principles.

First off, the jury disqualified people who voted more than once, because she obviously doesn't know one from the other and tried to vote for three things anyway.

For a moment, the jury thought it would follow the American model and just select bush. But then we read the indecency laws and decided not to risk it.

Next, the jury discounted anyone whose candidate was not on the ballot paper and whose vote was just, like, well, ... wrong.

Finally, the jury decided that nmj is obviously a woman of taste, so we'll do what she says.

The declaration of the returning officer, therefore, is that once again democracy gives you ... the finger.

Any appeals should be lodged with the Supreme Court of bits of Bruce. But as the judges are all brothers of the finger, don't hold your breath.

04 December 2006

Which bit of Bruce?

Well, well. Fellow blogger happeningfish has heard that 'A bit of Bruce' is not happy with its profile photo. Go on, says happeningfish, take a poll to find out which bit of Bruce you should put up there.


I'm going to regret this.

Dear readers, should it be ear, eye, fingertip, hairline, or teeth?

Vote away. No correspondence will be entered into, and the editor's decision is final and not necessarily influenced by the number of votes cast. So it'll be just as democratic as the US elections. Heh!

20 November 2006

Sex, sex, and more sex (not)

Tracking statistics show that someone in Hong Kong came to 'A bit of Bruce', typed in the search words 'sex' and 'video', and left. Presumably unfulfilled.

Well, if that person returns for another go, they will find their own story.

Ha!

16 October 2006

Dear regular contributors

I have taken the liberty of embellishing my page with blogtastic links to those whom I visit regularly. It saves on bookmarks. If anyone wishes to be removed, nothing could be simpler!

14 September 2006

Ego trip

I have managed to add a hit counter. All on my own. Considering how many millions of people have done this before me, I am inordinately smug.

13 September 2006

Does my ego look big in this?

It's a curious thing, blogging. The Internet is both private and immensely public at the same time, and the exhibitionist urge to lay the details of your life open to all-comers grows with the amount of technology that there is to help you do so. Or am I alone in that?

I like Flickr. When you post a photo, you can see how many people come along to view it. There is no such comfort in blogspot posts. It's an empty void out there in the bustling superhighways of webland. It's only the collisions, the comments, that register.

Having started off with the super-pretentious intention of avoiding personal trivia, what else is there? The accumulated archives must be dreamland for the shady secret agent types who guard and track our lives.

But when all else fails, read the manual. This post was simply to get my photo into my profile. So much fuss over so little a thing....