Tweets and Howls: An Email Conversation

On Mon, Jul 12, 2010 at 4:00 PM, Good Dude wrote:

The internet “scatters our attention,” says Nicholas Carr, turning us “into lab rats pressing levers to get tiny pellets of social and intellectual nourishment”... more»

From: Matthew Kreiling [mailto:kreiling@gmail.com
Sent: Tuesday, July 13, 2010 8:02 AM
To: Good Dude
Subject: Re: Have you heard of this man Nicholas Carr (saw him on the Daily Show)...

 I read and wrote about his article in the Atlantic. Google makes us stupid or something.

I don't really buy it. Intellectuals imagine that everyone once had their kind of focus and "long moments" but I think life is a series of snapshots anyway.

 This short talk is by another brilliant guy, who actually concedes - at the end - that there is a possibility that we are being "honed into a more succinct cognitive paradigm" and we should study it and our teachers need to "manage" it - doing such things as putting the long form books on the internet.

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Boj8VYzDAy

On Tue, Jul 13, 2010 at 9:38 AM Good Dude wrote: This was my very next click!  

TWEET.

BY OYL MILLER

- - - -

I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by brevity, over-connectedness, emotionally starving for attention, dragging themselves through virtual communities at 3 am, surrounded by stale pizza and neglected dreams, looking for angry meaning, any meaning, same hat wearing hipsters burning for shared and skeptical approval from the holographic projected dynamo in the technology of the era, who weak connections and recession wounded and directionless, sat up, micro-conversing in the supernatural darkness of Wi-Fi-enabled cafes, floating across the tops of cities, contemplating techno, who bared their brains to the black void of new media and the thought leaders and so called experts who passed through community colleges with radiant, prank playing eyes, hallucinating Seattle- and Tarantino-like settings among pop scholars of war and change, who dropped out in favor of following a creative muse, publishing zines and obscene artworks on the windows of the internet, who cowered in unshaven rooms, in ironic superman underwear burning their money in wastebaskets from the 1980s and listening to Nirvana through paper thin walls, who got busted in their grungy beards riding the Metro through Shinjuku station, who ate digital in painted hotels or drank Elmer's glue in secret alleyways, death or purgatoried their torsos with tattoos taking the place of dreams, that turned into nightmares, because there are no dreams in the New Immediacy, incomparably blind to reality, inventing the new reality, through hollow creations fed through illuminated screens. Screens of shuttering tag clouds and image thumbnails lightning in the mind surfing towards Boards of Canada and Guevara, illuminating all the frozen matrices of time between, megabyted solidities of borders and yesterday's backyard wiffleball dawns, downloaded drunkenness over rooftops, digital storefronts of flickering flash, a sun and moon of programming joyrides sending vibrations to mobile devices set on manner mode during twittering wintering dusks of Peduca, ashtray rantings and coffee stains that hid the mind, who bound themselves to wireless devices for an endless ride of opiated information from CNN.com and Google on sugary highs until the noise of modems and fax machines brought them down shuddering, with limited and vulgar verbiage to comment threads, battered bleak of shared brain devoid of brilliance in the drear light of a monitor, who sank all night in interface's light of Pabst floated out and sat through the stale sake afternoon in desolate pizza parlors, listening to the crack of doom on separate nuclear iPods, who texted continuously 140 characters at a time from park to pond to bar to MOMA to Brooklyn Bridge lost battalion of platonic laconic self proclaimed journalists committed to a revolution of information, jumping down the stoops off of R&B album covers out of the late 1980s, tweeting their screaming vomiting whispering facts and advices and anecdotes of lunchtime sandwiches and cat antics on couches with eyeballs following and shockwaves of analytics and of authority and finding your passion and other jargon, whole intellects underscored and wiped clean in the total recall 24/7 365 assault all under the gaze of once brilliant eyes.

 ---------- Forwarded message ----------

From: Matthew Kreiling <kreiling@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, Jul 13, 2010 at 10:53 AM
Subject: Re: this was my very next click....
To: Good Dude


holy holy holy holy

 
even a ginsberg knockoff sounds good - 
"who.." is like an invocation of  images and trains
 
original howl parts 1-3
 
footnote to howl
 

"What sphinx of cement and aluminum bashed open their skulls and ate up their brains and imagi- nation? 
Moloch! Solitude! Filth! Ugliness! Ashcans and unob tainable dollars! Children screaming under the stairways! Boys sobbing in armies! Old men weeping in the parks! "
 
who stopped work to hit reply,
who stole music from an infinite supply,
....
What virus of light and wires slithered within and divided their attention and confused their directions and purpose?
 
Net! Persistent! Inexorable! Fractious! Ubiquitous! Trash and unobtainable dollars!
 

Posted by tinynow