London by Bus

If you’re like me, you love to wander through cities the lazy way : by public transit. It’s always a bit surreal to take-in the city as it swims by a bus or tram. This excellent short film of London by Moritz Oberholzer captures that wonderful mood. He shot the video with a handheld Sony camera over a thirty hour stretch from London buses.

Posted in Europe, Film, Tourism | Tagged | 1 Comment

Never Forget

9/11/01

Posted in USA | Tagged | Leave a comment

New York City : more MTA

It’s a clever marketing synch: the MTA, which has had its history of collusion with corrupt politicians and historic subway trains running  old stock to promote a TV show about a crooked politician.

 HBO is paying the Metropolitan Transit Agency  more than $150,000, according to a spokesman, to run a Prohibition-era train along the 2/3 line in Manhattan during four September weekends. It’s a promotion for the second season of “Boardwalk Empire“, a drama set in 1920s Atlantic City.

The MTA says running the vintage train was their idea. HBO came to them looking for “something nostalgic,” said Eugene Ribeiro, the transit agency’s director of promotions. So the MTA offered one of its retired trains, an old IRT train that ran from 1917 to the 1960s. A few of the historic trains sit around in yards and at the Transit Museum in Brooklyn (where Boardwalk Empire is filmed).

The subway will run between 42nd Street and 96th streets, making express stops in between. Its interiors will be adorned with images of Nucky Thompson, the corrupt political boss at the center of Boardwalk Empire who stays in power by dispensing both fear and favors.

People paid by HBO will walk around Manhattan later this month giving out free MetroCards courtesy of Nucky.

 

Posted in Tourism, USA | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

New York City : Subway Manners

New York artist Jay Shelowitz has embarked on an admirable campaign to help his fellow New Yorkers (and visitors too) behave civilly on the city’s subway. He’s been putting up hundreds of posters modeled after the MTA’s service changes notices. Here’s his first batch that he based entirely on surveys that he did with subway riders.

Posted in Art, Tourism, USA | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

World’s Smallest Train (maybe)

This may be the world’s smallest train…

Posted in Asia | Tagged | Leave a comment

How to board a plane

Physicist Jason Steffen claims that he has discovered the best method for getting passengers onto an airplane twice as fast as any other way. You decide…

Posted in Tourism | Tagged | Leave a comment

America’s Coolest Towns (small)

We all have those favorite small towns that we badger our friends to visit. You know, the out of the way villages and hamlets with great bookstores, restaurants, architecture and shops. Every year Budget Travel magazine celebrates those bright spots with the “Coolest Small Towns in America” competition. Readers nominate their favorite towns with a population of fewer than 10,000, this year nearly half a million voted, and editors choose the top ten. (full disclosure: we nominated our adopted hometown of Newtown & actively campaigned for votes)

The big winner this year is Lewisburg, West Virginia (pop. 3,830). No disrespect to Lewisburg, but we were dead chuffed by the towns that came in at numbers 6, 7 and 8. Town #6, Phoenicia, NY (pop. 309) is a slightly scruffy West Catskills mountain hamlet that’s home to our favorite pancake house in the nation, Sweet Sue’s Restaurant. And #8 this year is Cedar Key, Florida (pop. 896), which is an oldfashioned fishing village that has somehow evaded the developers onslaught.

But the big winner (from our perspective) was #7, Newtown, Pennsylvania, our little borough. Just 30 minutes from Philadelphia and 90 minutes from NYC, historic Newtown is the best of both world’s. The self-contained village of 2,384 souls ( and uncounted ghosts ) was founded by none other than William Penn himself in 1682. He even paid fair market value to the local Indians. Newtown is home to the world’s oldest continually operating movie house, a Revolutionary War battle site and one of America’s oldest public libraries. It has historic inns, colonial era homes and churchs, and blocks of classy Victorian houses. But we also have one of PA’s busiest Starbucks and two Gaps.

Posted in History, Tourism, Travel Writing, Uncategorized, USA | Leave a comment

Tolstoy Saws Wood…

Leo Tolstoy saws wood and more…

Freud kills God…

Kurt Vonnegut on censorship and power…

Ray Bradbury loves libraries…

Posted in Books | 1 Comment

Israel by Timelapse

Eran Amir created this engaging stop-motion within stop-motion video with the help of 500 close friends. The film travels around Israel in 100 seconds.

Posted in Film, Middle East | Tagged | Leave a comment

BookLamp…what is it?

Have you ever wished that  you could find new books the same way Pandora helps you find new music? Using a series of algorithms, BookLamp analyzes your favorite books for five style elements and then delivers you customized recommendations with similar themes and style.

BookLamp measures 30,000 points of data for each book in its database. When you enter a specific book in the search engine, it spits-out an extensive list of reading suggestions for you based on that book and author.

The site currently tracks more than 618 million data points, trying to decode the DNA of literature. Here’s BookLamp’s explanation of how it works: “Motion, Density, Description, Dialog and Pacing are stylistic metrics or terms developed to help make the complicated under-workings of our analysis more understandable. They are not the complete picture of what makes up a book’s writing style, nor a complete picture of what BookLamp tracks in a book, but they do measure elements that a person can easily understand.”

The online tool was created by Novel Projects, a company formed to help work on the Book Genome Project in 2003.

Booklamp’s Five Metrics Defined

1. Motion: “Motion refers to the level of physical motion in a scene or book”.
2. Description: “Description refers to the level of descriptive language that the author uses in his or her writing.”
3. Pacing: “Pacing refers to the layout of the text on the page. A scene with high Pacing will have characteristics that quickly move the reader’s eye down the page.”
4. Density: “Density refers to the complexity of the text. Text with high Density will take longer to read than a text of equal length with low density.”
5. Dialog: “Dialog refers to the amount of spoken text between two or more characters in a scene

I gave it a spin with the suggestion of Arthur Conan Doyle’s classic A Study in Scarlet. Booklamp provided a suggested reading list that included: Oliver Twist, The Moonstone, Frankenstein, Crime and Punishment and When We Were Orphans by Kazuo Ishiguro. I think they have some work to do on the analytics. But give it try and see how it works for you.

Posted in Books, Writing | Leave a comment