Tags / portland

Tagged with “portland” (20) activity chart

  1. Ethnic Stereotyping

    Huffduffed from http://www.prx.org/pieces/34578

    —Huffduffed by samlistens 2 weeks ago

  2. Episode 214 | Live Wire! Radio

    http://www.livewireradio.org/content/episode-214

    —Huffduffed by adamclaxon one month ago

  3. Wearable Tech And Augmented Reality - NPR OnPoint - Directions Magazine

    Technology you will wear. Google’s glasses. Apple’s iWatch. And “augmented reality” on its way. Guests Omar Gallaga, technology culture writer for the Austin American-Statesman. (@omarg) Amber Case, director of the Portland R&D Center for the tech firm Esri. (@caseorganic) Ben Chigier, retired software engineer and entrepreneur. He and his daughter each own a pair of “augmented” ski goggles. Full details: http://onpoint.wbur.org/2013/02/28/wearable-tech-and-augmented-reality

    http://www.directionsmag.com/podcasts/wearable-tech-and-augmented-reality-npr-onpoint/313482

    —Huffduffed by agileone 2 months ago

  4. Notebook on Cities and Culture S2E20: Conservatively Progressive with Carl Abbott

    Colin Marshall sits down at Portland State University with Carl Abbott, professor there of urban studies and planning and author of Portland in Three Centuries: The Place and the People. They discuss the debate over Portland’s status as a "small city" or a "big town"; the distinctive ease of making connections in the city; how modern-day Portland enthusiasts would look at the place before 1965 and see Akron, Ohio; the oft-made comparisons between Portland, Seattle, and Austin; the history and continued presence of agriculture and industry around the "cool Portland" of today; Microsoft and Boeing, the "accidental" companies that made Seattle the younger sibling that out-competed Portland, one with better booms but worse busts; Portland’s "conservatively progressive" politics, and how that sensibility shows up in its light rail system and central library (especially as compared to Seattle’s); the relationship between the city’s vaunted "livability" and its patterns of diversity; how he came to Portland and when, exactly, the city turned away from its former stodginess (and when its porno theaters started turning into revival houses); Portland entrepreneurship, which Portlanders prefer to call "D.I.Y."; how best to engage new immigrants and hip youngsters in "Portlandism," a civic-minded, participatory approach to incremental problem-solving; science fiction’s visions of cities, which present recurring patterns related to urban theory; and whether Portland counts as a utopian project, if a practical one. http://colinmarshall.libsyn.com/s2e20-conservatively-progressive-with-carl-abbott

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    —Huffduffed by joanofdark 4 months ago

  5. Notebook on Cities and Culture S2E22: Uncaptive Rider with Jarrett Walker

    Colin Marshall sits down in southeast Portland with Jarrett Walker, public transit consultant and author of the blogs Human Transit and Creature of the Shade as well as the book Human Transit: How Clearer Thinking About Public Transit Can Enrich Our Communities and Our Lives. They discuss how Portland "turned the battleship" toward sustainable transport in that least likely of all decades, the seventies; the city’s discovery of its own extraordinary capacity for self-promotion in the nineties; his adolescence there spent in fascination at the buses departing to all their myriad destinations; how thinking about transit makes thinking about cities more interesting; the unfortunate divide between urban design and transport planning; how the North American revolt against highway-building also hampered the construction of transit infrastructure; a city’s transportation system as the ultimate test of its citizen’s freedom; the close relationship between a city’s density and its transit possibilities, and why fantastically inefficient systems are always pleasant to ride; how he has come to love Los Angeles, during its current transitional moment, as someone who has hated it; Los Angeles’ place as a "city on the edge" that always captures the imagination, no matter the petty judgments it draws; Los Angeles’ distinctive geography offering the best possible opportunity for transit-building; the questions he asks about whether a city wants him to understand the whole of its transit system, and whether it treats him as a free actor; the surprises that delight him now that he’s gotten used to confusing, sad, and unpleasant transit experiences; airport stations and their tendency toward "symbolic transit"; and the importance of whether a city treats transit as a commuting device or as an all-purpose urban structure, and whether or not it’s motivated simply by the coolness of the vehicles.

    http://colinmarshall.libsyn.com/s2e22-uncaptive-rider-with-jarrett-walker

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    —Huffduffed by joanofdark 4 months ago

  6. Notebook on Cities and Culture S2E21: Grittiness and Heart with Kevin Sampsell

    Colin Marshall sits down in Portland’s Montavilla with Kevin Sampsell, publisher of Future Tense Books, editor of Portland Noir, and author of the memoir A Common Pornography and the novel This is Between Us, forthcoming from Tin House. They discuss the meth crime to be found beyond 82nd Avenue; Portland from the vantage point of his childhood in Washington’s Tri-Cities; how he met other writers by publishing his own "lo-fi chapbooks"; how one forges one’s own unique voice by maintaining their not-giving-a-crap nonchalance; his chronologically un-pinpointable founding of Future Tense and its surprise success with Zoe Trope’s Please Don’t Kill the Freshman; writing as a kind of martial art, which develops you even if you start out flabby, and which demands its own kind of meditation; how he became a (more) serious reader at Powell’s Books; his love of southern writers, and more generally those who combine grittiness and heart; how unimportant he finds sense of place in fiction, yet how much praise he won for "capturing the Tri-Cities" in A Common Pornography; his technique of mixing the mundane with the shocking and hoping for the best; moving from the "no style" and short chapters of his last book to the longer chapters and conversational style of his new one; and the attractions of the Portland writing life, including having space to live and being in a place where nonfiction writers and poets might actually associate.

    —Huffduffed by vanderwal 4 months ago

  7. S2E24: Every Part of the Pig with Camas Davis

    Colin Marshall sits down in Portland’s Pearl District with Camas Davis, food writer and founder of the Portland Meat Collective. They discuss why bacon has hit the zeitgeist so hard; her interest in fostering an "alternative economy of meat"; her former career writing travel pieces, which invariably and instinctively became food pieces; her education in the "meta-meta theoretical" exploration of food; how meat became cool again, after industrialization made it uncool (and not particularly tasty); her agreement with even the hardest-core animal-rights vegan about the horrors of industrial meat production; growing up in Eugene, where if you weren’t vegetarian, you weren’t cool; her return from vegetarianism to the meat-eating fold with a bacon meal while teaching in a women’s prison; how American got itself into an entitlement mentality about cheap meat thrice a day; the importance of killing animals we eat ourselves, and how she finds some people are better at it than others; her time studying in southwestern France, what exactly separates French eating culture from American, and how the French are just getting into some of what has made American food unpalatable in recent decades; all the surprising things you can do with a pig’s head; Portland’s food consciousness and food renaissance, and how they might serve as a bellwether for a countrywide shift in attitudes about eating; Portland’s suspicion of eateries that get "too big for their britches," which results in a certain elevated-comfort-food trademark cuisine; her butchery classes, in which she’s found far fewer obnoxious hipster foodies enrolling than she’d expected; our rightful fear of most meat, and the meat we need not be scared of; and whether America has many small food movements, or one big food movement.

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    —Huffduffed by joanofdark 4 months ago

  8. Notebook on Cities and Culture

    Colin Marshall sits down in the basement of Portland’s Hollywood Theatre with Dan Halsted, head programmer there and founder of the 35mm Shaolin Archive. They discuss fake Bruce Lee films; his adventure of rescuing classic kung-fu film prints, including gems like The Eight Diagram Pole Fighter and The Boxer’s Omen from a shuttered, junkie-surrounded theater in Vancouver; his youth in a distant Oregon town with 600 people, his move to Portland, and his discovery of kung-fu cinema; how much more kung-fu movies offer than the fighting; the advantageous openmindedness of Portland filmgoing culture; exploitation films and Quentin Tarantino’s high-profile love thereof; how different cities react to kung-fu movies, like the robust Chinese turnout in San Francisco or the disappointing attendance in St. Louis; kung-fu movies as a gateway to Chinese culture; 36 Chamber of Shaolin as a gateway to kung-fu movies; the evaporation of celluloid film, and the apparently dramatic shift in the way those under age twenty experience cinema; the various meanings of terms like "exploitation" and "grindhouse," and how the attendant concepts cannot be separated from the seventies, a time when Hollywood acted serious and independent film acted frivolous; what Portland’s smallness affords a film programmer; why audiences sometimes prefer watching a beaten-up print to a pristine one; how Portland has successfully integrated food and alcohol with filmgoing; his experience getting tased, and how the Portland police force, known for its own aggression, tried to use kung-fu movies against him in court; and his never-ending task of pushing outward the limits of local film taste. http://colinmarshall.libsyn.com/s2e23-stumptown-shaolin-with-dan-halsted

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    —Huffduffed by joanofdark 4 months ago

  9. Back Fence PDX Radio — Episode 104 Part 3 — John Roderick

    John Roderick’s lifelong battle with his getting his mouth and teeth in line.

    http://backfencepdxradio.com/episodes/episode-104/

    —Huffduffed by lach 5 months ago

  10. Hanselminutes Podcast 170 - Kanban Boards for Agile Project Management with Zen Author Nate Kohari - Scott Hanselman

    Scott Hanselman on Programming, User Experience, The Zen of Computers and Life in General

    http://www.hanselman.com/blog/HanselminutesPodcast170KanbanBoardsForAgileProjectManagementWithZenAuthorNateKohari.aspx

    —Huffduffed by richardkmiller 8 months ago

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