Showing posts with label tv show. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tv show. Show all posts

Friday, May 31, 2013

My Brain's "Memory" is Overloaded

Here's the problem with the world.  There's too much.  Too much what?  Too much of everything.  Too many books, too many audiobooks, too many movies, too many TV shows, too many podcasts, too many blogs, too many foods, too many songs, too many magazines, too many phones, too many apps, too many coffees, too many jokes, too many twitter accounts, too many tumblr's, too many bars, too many drinks, too many instagrams, too many flavors, and I could go on FOR-EV-ER.

What I means by Brain's memory, I mean like a computer's memory.  When you are doing too many things at once, your computer gets slow and can sometimes just shut down.  When I find myself getting caught up in too many things, my brain just needs to shut down and forget about a couple of things.

As I sit here, I am listening to one of the 20(!) podcasts that I listen to.  It's the Grantland Sports podcast with Jalen Rose, Dave Jacoby, and Bill Simmons.  I have 32 podcasts on my ipod that are unlistened to.  Let's see what else I have too many things of in my life:

Books I intend on reading: Inferno, Mark Twain, Jack London, Bukowski, George Pelecanos, Chuck Palahniuk's new book (whenever it comes out), Writing for Profit and Fun by Thomas Lennon, Steve Martin's book, Rodney Dangerfield's book, All The Rave: Inside Napster, Four Hour Chef, most of the Hunter S. Thompson books I own besides Hell's Angels, Fear and Loathing in LV, Great Shark Hunt, Everything is Perfect When You're a Liar, The How of Happiness (among other self help books), Save the Cat!, Don Winslow's books, David Thorne's two books, Pat Riley's Book, Jackie MacMullin's "When The Game Was Ours", Shaq's book, Phil Jackson's book (whenever it comes out), Chuck Klosterman's books, Patton Oswalt's book, The Steve Jobs book, whatever audiobooks are on my iPod that haven't listed yet and some of Neal Stephenson's books.  I didn't count, but that's about 3 years of just reading for me.  Just if I stopped and began reading, that would be so many god damned hours of reading.  I love audiobooks because it scales down reading from days and weeks to hours.

Movies to watch: I scaled it down from 140 movies and TV shows to 36 movies and 24 TV shows.  Most of the TV shows are British TV shows, whose seasons are usually 6 episodes long.  So, 60 movies/TV shows NOT INCLUDING what is currently on TV that I watch.  So you can add about 3-4 hours per week of TV to those numbers.

Twitter Accounts I follow: I recently scaled it down from 500 twitter followers to about 350.  If people are reading this and are finding out I don't follow them anymore (friends, etc.) it's because I don't find enjoyment from your tweets, intellectually or comically.  Following twitter accounts and keeping up with the trends can take endless ours of my life.

Places to Eat: Every new place in Boston/Cambridge/Somerville that are trendy and delicious.  I think according to my Thrillist, there are about 200 restaurants that I have not been to, but have probably showed some interest in going to.  Eating at these places would probably take about an hour, maybe a half an hour if I was lucky.

Podcasts: Adam Carolla Podcast: 90-100 minutes episodes every week day, Adam and Dr. Drew podcast: 60 minutes twice/three times a week, Nerdist: 60 minutes maybe twice a week, This American Life podcast: 60 minutes a week, Girl on Guy podcast: 90-120 minutes once a week, Aoki's House: 1 hour per week, Basketball Jones Podcast: 40-60 minutes every week day, Dave Ramsey podcast: 40 minutes per day, Dada Life: 60 minutes per month, Dr. Drew podcast: 60 minutes twice a week, Baseball Tonight Podcast: 40 minutes per week day, Bill Simmons' B.S. report: 60 minutes 2-3 times a week, Film Vault: 90 minutes once a week, Dyro Podcast: 60 minutes a week, Tiesto podcast: 60 minutes a week, Hardwell podcast: 60 minutes a week, Grantland Sports podcast: 40-60 minutes 3 times a week, ARIYNBF (look it up): Total 150 minutes a week in 2 podcasts, the White Panda's panda waves: 60 minutes per month, Bill Maher's podcast: 70 minutes a week.  And that's it.  That is so much listening to do in a month.  It's overwhelming, but I enjoy every one of those podcasts.  I need to scale down those podcasts even further to get to the music portion of my ipod.

Magazines: Wired, GQ, and I still get ESPN magazine even though I'm not paying for it anymore.

This is what I mean: I get too engulfed in consuming media that I forget to sit down and create for myself.  I'm happy that I got into gardening because it will literally produce something over time and won't just give me a headache after all the time I spend on it.  The time it took me to write all of those out and figure out what each of those will suck out of my life is about 90 minutes.  I listened to 2 podcasts in that time.  That's gross.

Want to know what's even the worst part?  I haven't even put in the time I spend making meals, driving to and from places, doing chores, exercising, watching sports (3+ hours per event) and going out on weekends, oh, and JOB SEARCHING!  The absolute worst part is that I feel like I'm stuck if I ever want to get into something new or want to go out and learn something.  I always feel I'm stuck in a routine that I have a hard time breaking.

I'd love to live in a world where I could get paid to consume all this media.  I know it's over my head, but I can't find a solution to most of these kinds of things.  I cut down my Netflix queue based upon what movies I could talk with my friends about.  I stopped going out and drinking for sports games I don't care about.  I started deleting podcasts I don't think I would enjoy or would see as a waste of an hour.  It's a process, but I just need to take the steps to eliminate the waste in my life, as depressing as that sounds.

Monday, April 29, 2013

Day 11: First 10 songs on iPod Shuffle and Explain

Okay here it goes.  I won't leave anything out, even if it's embarrassing.

1. Step by Step theme song
This song is the theme song from a TV show I used to watch from ABC's TGIF lineup.  This show was on after Family Matters.  Usually has a nice stream of orchestra instruments.  Plus who doesn't love the idea of a family at an amusement park?


2. Loverboy - Almost Paradise (Ann Wilson & Mike Reno)
This song is a 1980's slow-love duet that seems to only work when there is a lot of heartache and an empty car.  When I hear this song I think of some movie.  I googled it, and apparently it's from Footloose.  Go figure.


3. Elton John - Guess That's Why They Call It the Blues
I first remember buying the Elton John Greatest Hits double album and listening to this song a lot when I worked at the gas station during high school.  Classic rock songs about heart ache seemed to dominate those years more than anything.  It's a very nice song, with a nice harmonica breakdown that compliments the piano very well.


4. Gene McDaniels - Master Puppeteer
I don't think I've ever heard this song completely.  But I do like Gene McDaniels' songs.  They have a nice "keep happy while your doing laundry" vibe to them.  There is nothing like this out there currently.  But then again, most musicians don't have any big bands work with a singer nowadays.  No video could be found of this song.

5. Buckethead - Wishing Well
I like Buckethead.  Most people don't bother giving him a listen after seeing what he dresses like.  But his guitar riffs are just soothing to listen to while doing nothing at all.  Most of his solo stuff would be great soundtrack songs for a movie about two former lovers away from each other trying to cope with loneliness.  This particular song I haven't listened to in a while, might make me tune into Buckethead while working on my blogging or other writing projects.


6. Lynyrd Skynyrd - That Smell
I was in college when I first heard this song.  I might've been in high school but I never tied it to the makers of Sweet Home Alabama before college.  Clearly this song is about some crazy 70's partying that went overlooked.  I don't know what the exact "smell" is, other than the stench of being a redneck with a ton of drugs.  Most of which is probably heroin or whatever people in the 70's used to inject in their arms.

7. CunninLynguists - Brain Cell
I first learned about the CunninLynguists sometime around 2007 when I was listening to Immortal Technique and underground hip-hop.  They rap about growing up in projects and trying to make something out of a ghetto lifestyle.  This song has a nice trumpet wailing in the background, along with the repeated line "living in the world no different from a cell" which is off of a different song of their's.  This sounds a little depressing, but most of their songs do.  It's an acquired taste.


8. Eminem - Amityville
Wow.  Haven't heard this song in quite a while.  This is off of Eminem's second album "The Marshall Mather's LP".  This song was part of the album that not only put Eminem into the limelight, but also propelled him into controversy about rapping about homophobia, murder, wife-beating, rape and all that stuff.  This song usually goes unnoticed since the rest of the album is so good and is full of hits.  I remember listening to this song during my middle school years when lots of stories about hate crimes in middle schools were happening.


9. Rage Against the Machine - Microphone Fiend
Oh hell yes!  This song is probably one of my favorite Rage jams.  Tom Morello just kills it on the guitar riffs, De La Roche has the lyrical presence of a journeyman rapper, while the bassist and drummer both provide excellent rhythm.  All of Rage's endings to their songs are such a great part.  Anyone who is either bobbing their head or going all out moshing to this song is a friend of mine.  I can see myself listening to this song while bulletting down Rte. 140 in my old SHO to school.  Still gets me in the mood after all these years.


10. The Talking Heads - Life During Wartime
This song either reminds me of a 1980's basement party where there's one person dancing like it's Disco.  It has a very Disco sound, so that statement makes sense.  It also feels like it belongs in a Tarantino movie about someone planning a weird heist.  I can't understand a word, but I like the harmonica in it.  The world needs more harmonica.