Archive for November, 2008

A Daiko in Portland

November 30, 2008 3:45 pm
   by Lauren Hudgins

In Japan, there is this service called a daiko. It costs just a bit more than a taxi. If you call for a daiko, two drivers will come in a taxi car. One driver will drive you and your car home and the other will follow behind.

When I lived in Japan, it took me a while to warm up to the idea of a daiko. It costs more than a taxi and why would someone deliberately drive to a place where they were going to be drinking heavily? Why not take a taxi both ways? (More expensive.) Or take public transportation one way and taxi back? (Not as convenient.) My hesitation was really just a blatant case of neophobia. Daiko are awesome.

Using a daiko allowed my friends and I to party anywhere, and at unexpected times. We only had to wait for the service to arrive once rather than twice. Car-sized groups of people could be on the move at a moment’s notice, going where public transportation didn’t want to take us. With enough people, it actually becomes about as cheap as individually paying for public transportation. By the end of my year in Japan, daiko made so much sense I wondered why we didn’t have this service in the US.

The drinking culture (and the driving culture) is very different in Japan than here (in many surprising ways, I won’t go into details), but a daiko company still makes sense in this country. Who hasn’t wondered what the hell to do with their car at the hazy end of the night? Who hasn’t gone to a friend’s house for a “couple of drinks” and ended up passed out on the lumpy couch, squinting and fighting nausea in the dawn to move the car before the towing company does?

As it turns out, Portland does have a daiko service. Who knew? They have been pretty lousy about advertising. I found a flyer in a bowling alley. And it’s non-profit! It’s odd that RideOn, a non-profit organization dedicated to decreasing intoxicated driving, would adopt such a profitable practice before a private business caught on to the idea. Way to drop the ball entrepreneurs, bleeding-heart softies beat you to it!

For a mere $10 (again not much more than a taxi), RideOn will drive you, your car, and your friends (no additional charge per passenger) safely to your home. But, don’t get too excited, RideOn’s area of operation is pretty limited. They’re only located on the east side (but will go as far as 82nd St.). And only travel north-south from Burnside to Powell. That’s a pretty narrow swath of Portland, and potentially walkable for the cheap and deteremined. Plus, lot of Portlanders take pride in their ability to bike drunk regardless of personal risks. To cut down on drunk driving, RideOn must target those who are driving drunk to begin with. Not to mention, if someone is driving drunk, they might consider Powell-Burnside a close enough dash to risk it. (If this is you: Stop it!) RideOn will have to extend their territory across the bridge and into NorthEast before they can truly have an effect on Portland’s plastered and mobile.

But if you’re heading to the lower east side from 82nd or Mt. Tabor, I know you’re not walking and you’ve got cajones if you’re biking. So please, consider a daiko.

RideOn
(503) 235-RIDE
11pm-3am

www.rideonportland.org

The Portland Daiko Service

The Portland Daiko Service

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Obama’s Weekly Address — Thanksgiving Style

November 27, 2008 10:38 am
   by Mike Burnett

Make A Difference

November 25, 2008 5:20 pm
   by Mike Burnett

Are you a FUN and OUTGOING DRAG QUEEN with lots of friends – that wants to earn some extra money?
We are looking for a Fierce Drag Queen Bartender for 1 to 4 Monday Evening shifts a month. You must have bartending experience, valid OLCC card, valid Food Handlers card, and ideas to format “your night” in our venue.

Please submit a head shot and resume and we will contact you for an interview!

via Craigslist.

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Make Noise With Computer Chips

12:54 am
   by Mike Burnett

Sure you can install any music software suite and complete a track in five minutes, but what’s the fun in that? The real glamor is in programming a circuit board and processor to make beeps and crackles.

Please let me be able to afford and not wimp out on this!

If you can’t read the text, here’s the details from the email:

As a part of the ongoing Arduino Cult Induction workshop series, this month we will be focusing on sound.

In particular I will be going over creating sound using the Arduino’s built in Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) and Direct Digital Synthesis using resistive ladders. We will investigate using the Piezo element
as both a simple speaker and an input trigger. We will review the Musical Instrument Digital Interface (MIDI) from a hardware and software perspective, and look at a couple of useful integrated
circuits (the lm324 and the lm368).

The workshop will cost $25 and participants will recieve a complete midi interface board for the dorkboard/arduino and a piezo element which will be used to create a midi drum trigger.
Participants will also take with them parts for an r2r ladder, an op amp and an audio amp capable of driving small speakers or headphones.

Participants should leave the workshop with a better understanding of how micro-controllers such as the Arduino can be used to create and control sound, they should have built at least one working musical controller and they should have the foundations for several sound related projects.

Please bring your dorkboard, rbba, or other arduino compatible board, a soldering iron or breadboard, and a laptop.

The workshop will be held at PNCA (NW 12th and Johnson) in room 205 from 1-5pm on Sunday, November 30.

To reserve a space you can paypal the workshop fee to cult@tempusdictum.com and you can feel free to email me with any questions.

The Arduino Cult Induction series of workshops are Sponsored by Tempus Dictum, Inc. in support of DorkbotPDX. (graphic by Jason Plumb)

That email email is from Donald Davis. Long time readers may remember Jason Plumb, the designer of the flyer, from our interview with him last year.

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Menomena! Tonight!

November 23, 2008 12:17 pm
   by Lauren Hudgins
Photo by Dominik Kolendo

Photo by Dominik Kolendo

It’s time for another last minute recommendation! At this moment, I am willing to say that Menomena is my favorite Portland band. I saw them at MFNW this summer and was pretty awesomely surprised.

They’re playing tonight (Sunday, December 23) at the Doug Fir, in a benefit for the Lukemia and Lymphoma Society. (Aww. They’re sweethearts too.)
Other musical guests include Dolorean, Eluvium, and Tractor Operator.

Comic book and life drawing artists are supposed to be drawing the bands during the show and then selling their art afterwards. I can’t find any information on who these artists will be, but hopefully they’re good.

Get out, rock out, and battle some cancer!

Doug Fir
830 E. Burnside St.
Doors open at 7, show at 8
$12

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Tubeside Chat From 11/21/08

November 22, 2008 12:42 pm
   by Mike Burnett

All Aboard The Pardon Boat!

12:32 pm
   by Mike Burnett

Dear Representative,

I urge you to co-sponsor Rep. Jerrold Nadler’s H.Res. 1531 urging President Bush not to pardon senior members of his administration for crimes authorized by the President – and to investigate those crimes both in the House and the Justice Department, and prosecute if warranted.

Please sign and send this online petition to your representatives, if you’re so inclined.

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The History (and Mystery) of The Universe

November 19, 2008 11:37 am
   by Mike Burnett

Last night I saw D.W. Jacobs’s play, R. Buckminster Fuller: The History (and Mystery) of The Universe at Portland Center Stage. The performance was in the smaller Ellen Bye studio, which was the ideal way to watch actor Doug Tompos’s intimate portrayal of Fuller.

Jacobs and Tompos thoughtfully animated one of the 20th century’s most stunning thinkers, humanizing Fuller, and escorting the audience through his ideas with simple, elegant visuals. The inventor of the geodesic dome, a godfather of environmentalism, a humanist, and a Utopian — Fuller responded to the mysteries and personal tragedies in his world through vibrant, applied imagination. I felt the play did a wonderful and fair job in teasing out intellectual ironies or conflicts, such as Fuller’s stubborn individualism and his belief that humans exist to benefit one another. The 2-hour running time (with a 15-minute intermission) went by surprisingly fast.

R. Buckminster Fuller: The History (and Mystery) of The Universe runs through Dec. 7.

Here’s the trailer [which makes the play look bad, I realized after posting it]:

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Prop 8 Protest on Saturday

November 13, 2008 11:20 pm
   by Lauren Hudgins

Protest Against Propostion 8
Saturday, November 15th, 2008
10:30am
Portland State University
South Park Blocks Near the Farmers Market
(corner of SW Broadway and Mill)

An organization called Join the Impact has concentrated nationwide frustration against anti-gay measures passed in California, Arkansas, Arizona, and Florida. Protests been planned in most major cities to be staged at the same from coast to coast, and even includes an early morning demonstration in Hawaii.

I’m sure there are others who are like me and hesitant to be so faithless to the democratic wishes of the people. But when it comes to civil liberties, not everything can be left up to the will of the masses. Sometimes change must come from the top, if the majority does not wish to step outside their own comfort level and examine their prejudices. In this case, the protestors are demanding a repeal of the measures, especially Prop 8. Within our country’s history of racism and sexism, the government and the courts have had to intervene and declare all people equal, when Amercians have been too frightened to love their neighbors. Eventually, the shock settles. In the study of history, it becomes a wonder how we could have justified treating others or stood being treated as second-class citizens. As it has been with minority rights and women’s rights, so it must be with gay rights.

Furthermore, much of the funding to pass Prop 8 did not come from the people of California, but from the Mormon Church and other out-of-state big-money conservatives. This Prop 8 could be less a problem of misguided democracy and more of an example of democracy perverted.

The civil rights movement isn’t over yet. Come downtown this Saturday.

//flickr.com/photos/fritzliess/3018941936/">Fritzliess</a>
Photo by Fritz Liess

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Wildbirds and Peacedrums Dec 9th at Doug Fir

November 11, 2008 9:20 pm
   by Mike Burnett

I received an email today about a Swedish band called Wildbirds and Peacedrums coming to Portland, and asking whether I’d write something about them. Included in the email was a link to the following Youtube video of a live performance. What struck me first was the instrumentation. There aren’t very many Western popular artists who perform using only percussion and vocals.

It looks like most of the live videos of Wildbirds and Peacedrums feature similar instrumentation. Steel drums make an appearance. The studio recordings on the band’s Myspace have subtle guitar additions, but the stark drum and vocal style remains.

Wildbirds and Peacedrums will be playing Dec 9th at Doug Fir with Seattle’s Mt. St. Helens Vietnam Band

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