Russell Davies

As disappointed as you are
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Powered entirely by bicycles

I can't remember where I heard about Houses Slide but I'm fascinated by it.

It's a work of contemporary music/art by Laura Bowler which "describes one woman's intimate psychological journey to figure out her response to the climate crisis, from an initial depressing realisation of the gravity of the issue, through to her refusal to be overwhelmed and decision to take positive action."

And "With a text created by Cordelia Lynn using submissions from members of the public, this concert presentation conceived and directed by Katie Mitchell is an industry-first, being powered entirely by bicycles."

That's the bit that really struck me.

'A concert presentation powered entirely by bicycles.'

On the stage apparently. And at the back. Obviously, it's slightly gimmicky and perhaps obvious, the first thing you'd think of. But there's something powerful and clear about it.

Increasingly, we need to think about power and work and energy and seeing it embodied in some cyclists is useful. It takes a bunch of people, cycling for quite a while, to provide sound and light for a concert. (A review and pictures) We need to understand the scale of that kind of thing.

August 12, 2021 | Permalink

Listening

The most important organisational skill is listening (and personal one, probably but I feel less qualified to airily pronounce on that). I'm not very good at it. My colleagues will tell you that. But I have tried, recently, to get better and I think it's do-able. This article is full of golden tips for just that.

"Just a few weeks later, my daughter was telling me about a problem she had. I was five minutes into a prescriptive list of what she should and shouldn’t do, embellished with my own stories to reinforce the points, when I caught her face. She was keen to listen, but I could tell I wasn’t giving her what she needed. I remembered another child psychotherapist telling me that children wanted fewer solutions, and more empathy. Recognising and naming a child’s feelings (in fact, anyone’s) was crucial. “That sounds like a really hard day,” I said, inwardly thinking how insubstantial it sounded, “and I can see how sad it’s made you.” “It was!” she said, beaming. “And I was.” And off she went. Could it really be that simple? Not always, but as a strategy it’s more powerful than you think."

August 11, 2021 | Permalink

On the road again

It's been a long time but it seems like I'm going to be speaking at a thing. Lots of interesting speakers. Donation to a good cause.

And I'm going to be doing a presentation about doing good presentations - which seems like a fool's errand. Crumbs.

August 10, 2021 | Permalink

Good streams: Amazon chronicles

I've been a fan of Tim Carmody's media inventions since the Snarkmarket days.

Amazon Chronicles is a great one, reporting on a single company at the level of commerce and culture and beyond both. It's inventive and interesting and revealing. It sounds silly in a way, but just have countries should have ambassadors to Facebook a media vehicle focused on Amazon makes absolute sense.

Choice episodes: What is Blue Origin for? The cruelty is the point.

August 09, 2021 | Permalink

July 2021

July 2021 from russelldavies on Vimeo.

Music

August 08, 2021 | Permalink

Performative incompetence

'"When David Cameron was mocked for admitting that he didn’t know the price of a loaf of bread, a reporter confronted Johnson with the same question. He got it right, but then added: “I can tell you the price of a bottle of champagne—how about that?”

If you want to know why despite endless attacks on him for being an arrogant Etonian he remains stubbornly popular with voters, including working class voters, the answer is there. Asked (in a previous interview, cited by McTague) about his performative incompetence, Johnson called it “a very cunning device. Self-deprecation is all about understanding that basically people regard politicians as a bunch of shysters.” This an acute insight into the minds of voters and it’s delivered in a way that basically obliterates our normal distinctions between candour and deceit. He lets us in on the “cunning” tricks of politicians, even as he uses them himself."

Ian Leslie on 'authenticity'.

Related: Ian Leslie on the blandness of politicians.

August 07, 2021 | Permalink

Not in the book: pauses

This would have been an excellent thing to quote when talking about the rhythm of presentations:

"‘In the pause,’ the columnist Ezequiel Fernández Moores wrote in La Nacion, quoting a phrase common in the blues tradition of Argentina, ‘there is no music, but the pause helps to make the music.’"

Inverting the Pyramid - Jonathan Wilson

August 06, 2021 | Permalink

500 words

Whenever I start thinking that writing is too hard, or that I can't do it without the right pen or the right technology I think about Graham Greene:

"Graham Greene was an almost eerily disciplined writer. He could write in the middle of wars, the Mau Mau uprising, you name it. And he wrote, quite strictly, five hundred words per day, in a little notebook he kept in his chest pocket. He counted the words, and at five hundred he stopped, even, his biographer says, in the middle of a sentence. Then he started again the next morning." 

New Yorker - 8 March 2021

August 05, 2021 | Permalink

Not in the book: Presentations / short stories

There are a lot of things which didn't fit in my book. (And which might have made it better). Some of them because I couldn't quite work out how to make them fit or make them settle. This thought about the difference between short stories and novels is one of them. By Louis Menand from the New Yorker of 5 July 2021:

"Short stories are more like poems than like novels. Novelists put stuff in, because they are trying to represent a world. Story writers, as Poe implied, leave stuff out. They are not trying to represent a world. They are trying to express a single, intangible thing. The story writer begins with an idea about what readers will feel when they finish reading, just as a lyric poet starts with a nonverbal state of mind and then constructs a verbal artifact that evokes it. The endings of modern short stories tend to be oblique, but they, too, are structured for an effect, frequently of pathos."

I think a good presentation is a bit like that, except it's trying to express a single idea. And possibly lead to a change or an action.

August 04, 2021 | Permalink

Blog all dog-eared pages: Hot Stew by Fiona Mozley

"Grubs and worms, awakened by the tremors, begin to settle again within the tunnels they have mined. They have followed the quaking rocks and dug deeper than ever before. Now the clamour from below has quietened, they are left with the familiar shuffle of the city above: the pulsing of human footsteps, rubber wheels scuffing tarmac, pencils being dropped, hammers striking nails, knives and cleavers landing on chopping boards, mugs of hot coffee clunking on tables, bums on seats, bodies on beds."

(I love that way of recording the life of a city: the things that worms sense)

"Precious is called in to see the nurse. Her name sounds rusty through the tannoy. The P pops and the ‘shus’ rustles. Her surname is swallowed."

"Roster changes the subject, though only in the way a hawk shifts direction after a missed catch to loop back and try again."

"Robert is afraid of silence like other people are afraid of the dark, and has spent his life avoiding it, moving in large crowds, living in the busiest parts of busy cities."

A fantastic book

August 03, 2021 | Permalink

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