Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Sarah Price's new movie _Summer Camp_ is out!



Sarah Price of _American Movie_ (1999) fame (and several other projects) has a new documentary out called Summer Camp.
summercampmovie.com
myspace.com/summer_camp_movie
trailer
It is premiering at July 18th at the IFC Center in New York but opens across the country over the next couple of months.

The NY Sun beat NYT to it

The New York Sun published an article about the Hipster librarians three days before the NYT did. 

For New-Look Librarians, Head to Brooklyn

By GARY SHAPIRO
Staff Reporter of the Sun
July 5, 2007

Read it.



Park yourself in front of a world of choices in alternative vehicles.
Visit the Yahoo! Auto Green Center.

annoyed librarian blog rants on the librarian hipster article

This New York Times article "A Hipper Crowd of Shushers" by Kara Jesella is spreading across the library community like the hamster dance c. 1997. The annoyedlibrarian.blogspot.com posted an annoyed screed about it. I posted a comment:

Your post is just as shallow as the NYT piece. Other than a disdain for the Brooklyn hipster culture, you offer no real critique of the article or of the people profiled. Of course the article is shallow. It is a puff piece that people read because it turns a commonly held belief on its head. You rail about how these hipster librarians never speak of or perform real librarianship yet you do not define librarianship as you see it. The article was not intended as an investigation of librarianship, and I highly doubt that such an investigation would have made it to print. Other than the profiled librarian's interest in left leaning social activism, which you obviously do not connect with librarianship, your post is at the very least denigrating to your own profession. I don't uinderstand how you can say that librarians do not contribute to society, and your position that only people working for the corporate "man" are contributing members of society is just plain weird. If librarianship does not lend itself to social activism, why then does ALA have committees on intellectual freedom, policy monitoring, diversity, and the status of women in librarianship as well as supporting groups such as the Social Responsibilities Round Table, The GLBT Round Table, and the Black Caucus of ALA? It seems to me that your post is incendiary where it should be ironic. If you want to rail against the writer and the article, do so but leave the hipsters out of it. They'll grow and change (hopefully) to a point where the trappings of rock shows and tattoos are no longer required to support their identities.
P.S. who cares where they buy their clothes?

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

At the end of the day, you've given 110%

An article from the UK paper The Telegraph about infuriating phrases.

"I hear what you're saying." The point was to pack the most clichés
into a single stretch of prose. So let me run this by you. After all,
it's not rocket science...

Monday, June 18, 2007

User Services Blogging

Each day in the news we hear about a huge variety of topics, each of which could be used as "Hot Topics" feature on a library or reference blog. For example, NPR has "Science Fridays" feature which discusses the science behind current events. With a little work, librarians could perform some quick research to find supplemental materials on the subject of the latest topic. It could be a current awareness service or a way to show off our collections to patrons.

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

practice vs. t-shirt

I was at the University of Chicago for a training meeting yesterday. I saw a guy wearing a t-shirt that said: "that's all well and good in practice..."