Greetings From Weird-Landia

Screen Shot 2014-09-05 at 4.55.02 PM

Frogman Pdx is a Portland superhero. I don’t know what his powers are other than to host a damn good show called Weird-Landia. In episode 2, subtitled Little Beirut, a silver metallic clad marching band called LoveBomb Go-Go struts into view. Throughout the show, Frogman Pdx roams Portland talking to various political activists. The episode cuts back and forth from the band’s performance with horns bleating and dancer hips swinging to political types who speak in earnest to our hero clad in his green skinned costume and frog-eyed mask accessorized with rubber gloves and a speedo—both purple. The interviews add a deeper dimension to local concerns while the show captures the west coast energy that I hoped to find when I moved here.

Screen Shot 2014-09-05 at 4.52.07 PM

LoveBomb Go-Goes!

Weird-Landia 2: Little Beirut aired on Oregon Public Broadcasting and can now be seen at the link below:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KOkvodFoTn0

High Rocks

Sitting around on a Sunday morning in late August wondering what to do it occurred to me that we should go to a swimming hole. After six years of living in Portland, I still had not done this. In doing some online research, my wife, Ronna, found a link to a documentary short called High Rocks named after the recreational swimming area on the Clackamas River in Gladstone, OR.

It’s hard to turn away from watching people drink and dive, break out Laff-a-Lympics style diving maneuvers and get rowdy on giant sheer boulders in a scenario fraught with danger from ice cold water, river currents, undertows and inebriation. Sometimes the right amount of fascination can be found in seeing people behave badly. Filmmaker Jason Blalock takes viewers right to the heart of High Rocks where you feel like you’re in line waiting for your turn to jump. Shot in 1998, High Rocks is a time capsule transporting us to a place where things could get a little out of control.

Screen Shot 2014-09-04 at 4.46.30 PM

High Rocks link:

More about Jason Blalock:

http://www.jasonblalock.com

Sign Says…

It’s nice to get an invitation that offers a green light to pick fresh fruit off a neighbor’s tree and gives you that, you don’t have to steal it’s free feeling.

It’s seems like every year our unknown neighbor hangs a friendly sign in his tree. This year it was two. We took advantage of it.

pearsignHelp yourself...

 

Here’s an organization that does good work. Please don’t encourage them to take our fruit source!

http://www.portlandfruit.org/

 

Note: The title for this blog post was inspired by a lyric from the song “Signs” released by the ingeniously generic named band Five Man Electrical Band in 1971. While doing research, I saw the lyrics used when Tesla recorded the song almost twenty years later and discovered their lyrical revisions included the use of a profanity to make the song even cooler. 

Yes to NoFest

My favorite festival in Portland is NoFest. In part it’s due to my fondness for the St. Johns neighborhood but also because this festival is always filled with random and eclectic musical offerings and there’s no admission fee. Yes you can pin it down by looking at the website, but in the past I’ve squeezed it in between other commitments so I’ve ended up running through the streets to get a feel for it. This Saturday, September 6 is the 7th annual, all day, taking over downtown St. Johns–NoFest. The event runs from noon until after 1am and there will be an art happening as well, so put on your loudest shirt, wear a disguise, if you have to, and check it out.

www.nofest.net

Hear part of a performance by Derek Ecklund at last year’s NoFest:

10634233_10152721001133000_1093260260_n

Portland Film Beat

Screen Shot 2014-08-26 at 4.38.43 PMTwo of my heroes, film makers Bryan Hiltner and Michelle Vincig, participants of the former monthly screening series Attack of the Flix (I’ll write about it someday) were interviewed on the public access show Portland Film Beat. A cross section of the Portland film community has already made appearances on the show which are also available on YouTube.

Here’s a link:

overheard

in the street 1

I don’t get out much, but last week, during a lunch break while serving jury duty, I was walking the streets of downtown Portland when I heard a woman say, “Do you think I took a whole day off from work to look at some tiny waterfall.” And then while leaving the store Tender Loving Empire someone cried out “Oh my God, what are the mushrooms?” Along with an encounter with the artist Michael Patterson Carver, the streets could not have been more entertaining.

Glean

photo

There’s only one weekend left of the Glean show at Disjecta 8371 N Interstate Ave, Portland, OR, 97217. If you meet the same gallery sitter my wife Ronna and I met earlier in the month, you are bound to have an interesting conversation about trash and other consumerist excess. The art for the show was created from trash collected from the local transfer station before it was hauled off to the landfill. What’s not to like when art and trash intermingle?

The link below is related to the show and the organization that puts it on every year:
http://www.gleanpdx.org.

Lonnie Holley

My attempt at taking a picture of Lonnie Holley using my iPhone resulted in this image:

Potrait-Lonnie Holley

Sunshine was making it difficult to see through the view finder. With everything I was learning about this unorthodox artist/musician, this picture seemed to make more and more sense considering Holley’s catch phrase “Thumbs up for mother universe.”

After seeing his art show at the Portland Museum of Modern Art  at 5202 N Albina Ave, Portland, OR 97217, which runs through September 27, and watching his performance in the park across the street from Mississippi Records on Saturday, August 9th, I had a big bang fit of inspiration and decided it was time to get my act in gear and become a web blogger.

More information on Lonnie can be found at the link below: