Category: Blogging

Free Darko closes

April 12th, 2011

Through two books, hundreds of posts, a unwavering belief in what makes basketball beautiful and an undying devotion to the 2006-07 Warriors, Free Darko dissected the finer points of the game through complication and loftiness.

Free Darko ShirtYesterday, they closed the doors.

It’s a sad day for basketball blogs, yes. But there’s also freedom. As the partners continue doing what they do, we’ll look at Free Darko as a starting point. Chitwood & Hobbs puts it best:

When I think of the end of FreeDarko I find parallels with the punk band Operation Ivy.

Operation Ivy was a punk-ska band that existed between 1987 and 1989. In those two years Op Ivy performed 185 shows and recorded 32 songs. They went on a national tour, began booking larger venues, and felt pressure to sign with a major label — instead they broke up. They flamed out.

The good news is that the idea of Op Ivy didn’t die with the band. They were arguably even more successful after they broke up. Their only studio album, Energy, has sold more than 500,000 copies and the iconic band has been credited with the 1990’s punk revival in California. They are a worldwide cult success. Tim Armstrong parlayed Op Ivy’s success with Rancid, the Hellcat Records label, and a lucrative song writing profession for artists such as Pink and Gwen Stefani.

The posts. The art. The random references I never understood. At least I’ll always have the books.


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Issues Considered: Basketball, Blogging, Books

Serves Four

March 15th, 2011

I live for food, it seems. I live for pizza and Indian and Thai and slow-cooker pork and enchiladas and more enchiladas and let’s just say I really like enchiladas, okay, so stop judging.

Want to know what makes this “live for food” thing pretty fun? My wife. She likes to cook. A lot.

So we cook. A lot. And we try new things. And we grow gardens. And we buy cookbooks with beautiful pictures. And we introduce our kids to foods that they normally wouldn’t encounter and, let’s be honest, they still don’t eat them but at least they know what lentils and cardamom pods and homemade turkey pot pie are.

Serves FourIn the past month, we’ve roasted our own coffee, baked our own hamburger buns, planned a spring garden and developed a fast and easy kettle corn process.

(I say “we,” as if I’ve had any real input other than saying, “OMG THAT SMELLS GOOD LULZ!”)

So we like cooking, baking and gardening.

Now that THAT’S been established, I’d like to finally announce Kerrie’s new blog: Serves Four, a blog about cooking, baking and gardening. It’s named “Serves Four” because our four person family gets to reap the rewards of all that cooking, baking and gardening. It’s a blog because there JUST AREN’T ENOUGH cooking, baking and gardening blogs out there.

Check it out. We’d appreciate it.


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Issues Considered: Blogging, Family, Food, Meta, Writing

Beef freezer

February 24th, 2011

Today, Kerrie made a list of food in our freezer. She did this because we just purchased a third of a cow, and we need to remember what we have in there. YES, I SAID A THIRD OF A COW.

The list:

Beef roast (2)
Sirloin steak
Beef stew (2)
Ribeye steak
Beef ribs
T-bone steak
Ground beef (14 lbs.)
Whole chicken (2)
Fake bacon (2)
Spicy black bean (3)
Garden veggie (2)
Meat crumble
Ham hock
Lasagna (3)
Rhubarb
Cubed ham

And to think: we used to be vegetarian.

In other news, Kerrie now has an extra reason to collect frozen food. She has her own blog: Serves Four.

I think it’s pretty great, so go bookmark it or RSS it or whatever you people do to save cool web blogs.


Comments: 2

Issues Considered: Blogging, Food

Where’s My Jetpack goes on hiatus. Damn it.

February 4th, 2011

I don’t really read marketing and advertising blogs anymore because I don’t really like marketing and advertising blogs. They are filled with banal “commentary,” synergistically leveraging a choice brand package of marketing buzzwords, or they just suck. It’s the advertising industry, and NATURALLY most commentary-based advertising blogs are built to either secure jobs or promote agencies. Or both.

So when one of the good ones decides to close up shop, well, I mean, that sucks.

From Where’s My Jetpack, “Post Number 2000:”

I’ve tried to make this blog more about quality than quantity. It has been for me, above all, a creative outlet, because we all know how hard it is to actually be creative, even in a supposedly creative industry. (As I tell every “creative,” keep a real creative passion on the side just to keep you sane, because you will never fully satisfy your need to create through your work.)

And with that, I’m putting this blog on indefinite hiatus.

I love Dave’s blog because I love it when people call advertising’s bluff. I love it EVEN MORE when that bluff-calling is both accurate and confident. It’s rare to find someone that’s part of the industry without being tied to it and seeking justification for some of advertising’s biggest problems.

Where’s My Jetpack is/was a smarter marketing/advertising blog than most, and he’s a smarter marketing/advertising guy than most I’ve ever met. That he isn’t getting job offers by the boatload proves a lot about how I feel about the advertising complex: namely, that it still doesn’t understand what it’s looking for. The notion of being safe rules the industry. Where’s My Jetpack is/was a beacon in that sea of safeness.

Good luck, Jetpacks. May you return to my RSS sooner than later.


Comments: 1

Issues Considered: Blogging, Linkage, Marketing

Black Marks on Wood Pulp wins South Dakota Socies Award, Crowd Sorta Rejoices.

January 20th, 2011

Welcome, new visitors!

You – like millions of others – are stopping by because you heard about my South Dakota Socies win in the Argus Leader. We’re glad to have you. Take a look around, check out the archives, have some soup, and MORE!

What are the Socies? I’m fantastically glad you asked, new friend.

The Socies are an award given to the most practiced of social media users, presented by the handsome men at Click Rain, with help from our local paper. And while I usually bristle at awards (I know for certain that Black Marks on Wood Pulp is hardly the best blog in the state and it’s difficult to make judgment based on a small sample size of personal taste) I showed up to claim my award with pride. Because I’m not ALWAYS a curmudgeon, regardless of what my coworkers, friends, wife, kids, mother, personal trainer, mother-in-law, etc. say.

I got a medal. And a t-shirt. And some beer things! A lot of beer things. (The message is loud and clear, guys. I’VE STOPPED DRINKING BEER FOR BREAKFAST. But not for lunch.)

So check it all out!

Oh. By the way. If you’re coming from the Argus, disregard the series of five blog posts where I call the Argus a lame excuse for a newspaper. That was a bad couple of days. I must have been pretty crabby.

Oh, and there’s that one where I got cranky about their article pagination. Or the one where I got upset about a word they made up. Also, disregard the time when I called the lead Web guy on the carpet (Cory Myers, a very cool person who I have since met and actually like) for mangling my tweet.

Huh. Are you guys sure the Argus had a hand in these awards? I can’t imagine they’d hand it over to a punk like … hey … wait. Don’t leave.


Comments: 5

Issues Considered: Blogging, Journalism, Meta

Bowles on “bloggers’ disease”

January 13th, 2011

Cennydd Bowles on “bloggers’ disease.”

“Suffering from bloggers’ disease lately: the paralysis that results from trying to reach the skies with every post. Expect more frequent snacking to accompany the main courses.”

I know. His blog post had NOTHING to do with “bloggers’ disease” outside of a small P.S. at the end, but seriously.

What a fantastic term. I can totally relate.

(Also, his “snack” about branding is pretty spot on, too.)


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Issues Considered: Blogging, Words

Peeking at the elephant

November 16th, 2010

Content Strategy Blog: The PreviewHey. Pardon me for a moment while I talk about a new little project I’m working on.

It’s another blog.

Wait. Before you click away. Wait.

It’s a content strategy blog. It’ll touch on IA and UX and CMS and Web writing and all of those other cousin-disciplines, but first and foremost it’s going to be a content strategy blog.

I feel so grown up, writing a blog about one professional subject. *Blush.*

Why? Here’s why: I’ve been writing about content strategy, either here or over at Blend’s blog, for over a year now, but in both places the posts have seemed out of place.

At Black Marks on Wood Pulp, they’ve fallen upon the wrong ears; they’re shards of glass in the jelly of this might-as-well-be-a-daddy-blog blog – too sharp and too work-related to fit in with the posts about Sierra’s poop. And Blend’s blog is more of a news feed – a stream of data rather than a chapter book on professional development.

So, at the urging of Deane and with the help of Blend, I’m going off the deep end. I’m starting a content strategy blog. Just like everyone else who started a content strategy blog. Except mine’s going to be different.

Because it’s got a big jungle animal on it.

I’ll admit – I’m pretty excited to dive in.

Look for it. Soon. That is all.


Comments: 7

Issues Considered: Blogging, Career, Content Strategy, Writing