By S.T. VanAirsdale
Contributions to the Totally Unrelated Blog-a-Thon are popping up slowly but surely around the Web; this post will be updated as events warrant. Send your links to stv [AT] thereeler.com.
Gustav Mahler WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 31
Gustav Mahler's Sixth Symphony
By Kenji Fujishima, The House Next Door
"This Halloween, you won’t be hearing old Halloween standbys like Johann Sebastian Bach’s “Toccata and Fugue in D minor” or Camille Saint-Saëns’s “Danse macabre”—or, heck, maybe even Michael Jackson’s “Thriller,” most likely with the music video—emanating from my speakers. Instead…you’ll be hearing Gustav Mahler’s unsettling Sixth Symphony blasting away."
Halloween (aka, The Scariest Song Ever)
By Michael Tully, Boredom at its Boredest
"What better day than to post about a recent musical revelation ... or as I like to call it, The Most Frightening Song I've Ever Heard In My Life?"
Getting Used to It
By Jeff Ignatius, Culture Snob
"My feelings the day after were muted, as I had a sense they would be. I smiled and chatted with the people who talked to me, but it didn’t feel like my team had just won the World Series."
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30
Politics
By Michael Tully, Boredom at its Boredest
"Is there ever going to be a candidate who transcends party lines and cuts through the politics to address universal human issues that matter to those of us who aren't stubborn conservatives or condescending liberals? ... Ladies and gentlemen, my vote for the next president of the United States of America is this person. No, I'm not kidding."
MONDAY, OCTOBER 29
The Totally Unrelated Power of the Marketing Balloon
By Alan Lopuszynski, Burbanked
"You’re out driving your minivan with your three adorable and playful children sitting in the back. Speeding through a yellow light, you come upon a McDonald’s that has a massively inflated Ronald McDonald sitting on top, beckoning to your children. It’s colorful and fun; it’s corporate branding come to life and your children succumb to it. 'Daddy, look! There’s a big Ronald McDonald balloon! Hee hee! Please buy us a Happy Meal© and we promise we won’t cry and kick and swear and pout and ruin your day off if you please please just buy us some fast food right now or else and are you turning yet and - ' "

From "Why Your Blog Must Die," at Movie City Indie (Photo: Ray Pride)
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 28
Hardball & I
By John Lichman, Idiot Savant Online
"For the sake of future editorial inquires, I will now relate the rest of my personal thoughts on working for Chris Matthews."
American Gigolo
By Lauren Wissot, Beyond the Green Door
"it’s high time for the Constitutional amendment that will allow for Arnold Schwarzenegger to leave the charred ruins of Hollywood and run for Terminator In Chief. Why? America is a land of movers and shakers -– of hustlers -– so who better to represent us in the Oval Office than a former male hustler?"
Why Your Blog Must Die
By Ray Pride, Movie City Indie
It's an old screed, one that I linked to a couple years ago, but it's still fragrant: ... "You think you know all there is to say about blogging because you understand the concept of HTML and CSS, but the horrible truth is that 40% of you are all using the same shitty default layout. Then you take pictures of yourselves looking pensive or making vague allusions to mythology."

From "The Impact of the Cities," at Movie City Indie (Photo: Ray Pride)
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27
"The Impact of the Cities," after Bertolt Brecht [AN URBAN ADVENTURE IN 18 IMAGES.]
By Ray Pride, Movie City Indie
"I speak to you merely
Like reality itself
(Sober, not to be bribed by your particular nature
Tired of your difficulty)
Which in my view you seem not to recognize."
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 26
Music to Run a Marathon By
By Kevin B. Lee, Shooting Down Pictures
"Just 10 days away from my debut at the ING New York City Marathon. As I enter my tapering period (avg. 2 miles per day instead of 5), I’m starting to cast my attention on other preparatory matters, like which $100 pair of running shoes to designate for marathon day (currently leaning towards Nike over Saucony). But the order of this post is to compile my official marathon iPod playlist, four plus hours of music to sustain me over the 26.2 mile jaunt through the five boroughs."

Among the work featured in Matt Seitz's "My Three-Year Old Could Shoot That" (Photo: James Seitz)
My Three-Year Old Could Shoot That
By Matt Zoller Seitz, The House Next Door
"One day my three-year old son, James, saw me opening a new pack of cameras and asked if he could take some pictures. I taught him how to look through the viewfinder, click the button and wind the roll to the next picture. He developed a taste for it. He's gone through about 10 disposable cameras since then."
Me Want Food
By Karina Longworth, Spout Blog
"When I had the chance to write about film for a living, I left the food industry without a second thought, and I definitely have no regrets about that. But there is something almost theoretical that I miss. ... Food is not an emotional experience for me. It’s purely sensual, but sensual in a way that can be concretely qualified (put it this way: anyone who’s using food as a substitute for sex doesn’t know how to eat)."
Music
By Michael Tully, Boredom at its Boredest
"This is my most recent song, which I recorded in Maryland this past weekend at my parents' house, on a cold and rainy Friday night. ... But fear not. That ditty is just the humble precursor to today's majestic main event."
The Armageddon Cooler That is the G+T
By Ray Pride, Movie City Indie
"On a warm day in December 1961, John F. Kennedy drank Gin and Tonics in Bermuda while working out the details of the end of the world."
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25
A Poem: "Vacation Days"
By Michael Tully, Boredom at its Boredest
"We spoke to no one, and watched nothing,
And promised not to ever wake up."
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24
The Mash-Up and YOUUUUUUUUUUUUU
By John Lichman, Idiot Savant Online
"This is the age of YOU. We are the children of the revolution, moblogging the march and uploading to Flickr while we drink our Aqua Velvas from the skulls of the old media. Or something. A skull isn't much of a glass. Trust me on that one."
The Real Thing
By S.T. VanAirsdale, The Reeler
"Why do loyal fans continue to lay out upwards of $90 a head to hear Warwick sing what, in the hands of lesser artists, have proven to be some of the 20th century's most overwrought ballads? It's not just to see a real survivor in person (even I might argue that Warwick hasn't technically "survived," but more on that later), but rather to hear -- to closely, carefully listen to -- the rare sound and even rarer soul of someone who means it."
Posted at October 31, 2007 11:46 AM
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