Wednesday, April 26, 2017

They Get Your Dreams for Free...


"I had a friend once who told me that the worst mistake you could make is to think that you are alive when really you are asleep in life's waiting room/ The trick...is...to combine your waking rational abilities with the infinite possibilities of your dreams....because if you can do that you can do anything. Did you ever have a job that you hated?...worked really hard at...long hard day at work finally you get to go home, get in bed, close your eyes...and immediately you wake up and realize that the whole day at work had been a dream...it's bad enough that you sell your waking life for..for minimum wage but now they get your dreams for free."

The above excerpt is from the movie, Waking Life. If you have not watched this movie before, I suggest you watch it today. This movie is life changing as it is a deep philosophical movie, that touches on existentialism, free will, lucid dreams, and perception. As the characters ponder life, they do so with rich ideas, and the film is presented in an organic fashion. The director, Richard Linklater recruited a talented team of artists to paint over each individual frame in a unique process known as interpolated rotoscoping.


Watch Waking Life on Amazon Prime
A synopsis of the movie, with questions (and spoilers) is available at
http://www.philfilms.utm.edu/1/waking.htm 

After watching Waking Life, do you believe the existentialist idea that even though there are six billion people in the world we as individuals can make a difference? Explain your answer.

#WakingLife #ics119 #Philosophy 

Tuesday, April 25, 2017

Viva Lost Wages, Not If You Have a Choice



"Bright light city gonna set my soul/ Gonna set my soul on fire/ Got a whole lot of money that's ready to burn.." Ready to burn huh? Ok, Elvis maybe you had the money to burn but not me, I thought as the song, Viva Las Vegas  played in the car. "Here you are, the Queen of the strip." the Uber driver muttered. Stepping into The Bellagio, the over-the-top butterflies hung from the ceiling, purple, pink, yellow. "Wheel, of Fortune!" the slot machine rang out. Vegas wasn't built by winners, it was built by people depositing money into its lavish slots, tables, bets, and everything they could place a wager on. Ahhhh! Vegas the adult playground, I relished in the fun about to be had.

Have you ever been to Vegas and wanted to make sure you went home with a extra cash in your pocket? And wanted to know what had the best odds? Slots, roulette, craps, blackjack, or poker?

It may be difficult to beat the odds but smart gamblers can at least play games in a way that will reduce the house edge to give themselves the best chance to win.

  1. Learn how to play Poker. You will take on other players and skilled Poker players can win in the long run. 
  2. Play higher denomination slots. The payback is set to a lower amount on penny and nickel slots and a higher amount on the dollar slots, so you can reduced the house edge by playing higher-denomination slot machines.
  3. Avoid table games with big advantages for the casinos. Any bet on a roulette table, for example, carries at least a 5 percent house edge. Those are odds you cannot beat. Other games with high house edges include Caribbean Stud and Let it Ride. 
  4. Play blackjack. The house edge on this game is less than 2 percent if you make the best plays and wagers. To play blackjack well you must study the game to learn all the best plays, such as always doubling down on 11 and splitting sevens against a dealer upcard of six. You can buy laminated cards that list the best plays. These can even be found in many casino gift shops
  5. Give craps a try. The game can be confusing at first, but with a house edge of less than 2 percent it is one of the better games for beating the odds. When playing craps avoid the "inside bets"—that is, those bets located on the inside of the craps felt layout. Stick to pass line or don't pass bets with full odds. The casino will allow you to place an odds bet after a point number is established with the dice that will pay the true odds. For example, if the point number is four you will be will be paid 2 to 1 on an odds bet that a four is rolled before a seven.



"Cover all the hardways." I said throwing four $5 chips to the dealer to cover each one of the four hardways. "Off on the come out roll," I acted like I knew what I was doing. The night before the dealers had given me a lesson on the best way to bet craps. "Let's go shooter." I said as the man with the Australian accent began to roll. A hour an a half later he continued to roll, a shooter he was, I smirked. But his luck ran out, with his first crap I got paid out and walked away with $1500 playing the hard ways as I was taught, you got to love Vegas.

Next time you go to Vegas, try covering the hard ways when you play craps hopefully you will have some luck. 

Tips to win big:

#LasVegas #craps #ics119 #ElvisPresley #TheBellagio #TheHardways 


Thursday, April 20, 2017

Creative Nonfiction





Entering the dimly lit café she pulls open the door, slowly. Soft jazz plays in the background. Black high heels, paired with a green blouse, and a pencil skirt drapes her frame as she walks to a table. A gold chain with a diamond cross pendant dangles from her neck. It provides the faith, she needs to believe in on the days that are rough. Today, is not one of those days, she thinks, as she holds onto the cross rubbing it tightly.

He must be in the café, she thinks as she looks around. Her eye's glaze over the room. People at tables sip there coffee, and eat their lunch while paying her no mind. She sits down at an empty table. 

In his mind flashbacks invade. Gripping the tree her hands hold on in a tight grasp, he clutchs her hips while his, "anyone sitting here?" the woman asks. What a sultry voice, an accent of an exotic destination, he thinks, while sinking back to reality.......


An example of a piece of a story I wrote, in this genre creative nonfiction is one's own way of telling a story. And doing it in a way of piecing scenes together, in this genre you want people to hear the characters, and see the scenes being presented. With hearing and seeing the character in the story one can create their own impression of the character by the way the character speaks or by the actions presented by the character or the mood of the story.

What is creative nonfiction?
  • It is better to show then tell, is the basic building blocks of the creative nonfiction genre, a way of writing in scenes. The writer uses real life situations that are not made up, and writes stories presented in a creative way. 
  •  The cardinal rule of creative nonfiction is, "You can't make this stuff up!"
  •  Writing in scenes represents the difference between showing and telling. The lazy, uninspired writer will tell the reader about a subject, place, or personality, but the creative nonfiction writer will show that subject, place, or personality, vividly, memorably—and in action. In scenes.
Do you have a story to tell? Of course you do, we all do, as we all are living our life experiencing things everyday, so why not tell a story creatively. Try it today, write in scenes piece your story together with convo, paint your characters with words and set the scene with mood, tell your story with creative nonfiction today. Go!

#ics119 #creativenonfiction #writers #literaryjournalism

Monday, April 17, 2017

Tropical Island Street Art




On this tropical island in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, on the island of Oahu I sit back and bask in the warm sun. The coconut trees sway as we sip mai tai's with our toes in the sand. It's a wonderful life here on these Hawaiian islands. I wonder when someone first steps off the plane, if they know about all the street art that line our streets. Under the coconut trees, and beneath the high-rise condo's, I wonder if those new to walk O'ahu's street have any idea of the street art that cover our walls?

How lucky we are to have such talented artists on our beautiful islands, not only do they bring there lovely works of art to our streets, but they all have a passion to spread the love of street art.

Take a walk down to Kaka'ako and enjoy all the murals you see.

The mural map link is here. 

#streetart #graffiti #urbanstyleofmind #ics119 #PowWowHawaii

Wednesday, April 12, 2017

Social Media Campaign calendar



Allow me to re-introduce myselfy...my name is...


Pink lip-gloss lathered on our lips, it matched the ensembles we wore. Jeans skirts on the both of us, she wore a white top, and I wore a black top. Our tan lines shown, but all we cared about was our golden skin from hitting the beach earlier that day. Black heels dug into the uneven cement street as we walked to the entrance to talk to a bouncer. We had no ID to get in, but that didn’t matter we weren’t even old enough to get in to the biggest rap concert of 1997, featuring the Wu-Tang Clan. Not only were we too young, it was sold out. It didn’t stop us, nothing did. At the prime age of 16 turning 17 with no care in the world, operation admission into the Wu-Tang concert was about to commence.

It was one of those things, where we had to go.  On a hot humid night, we approached the entrance, “how much it cost?” I asked the bouncer. “Sold out,” he says. Yeah right, I thought. My best friend and I were not going to let that minor detail bum our night. Talking to the bouncer I asked, " Hey, do you know OC?," He was one of my bouncer friends who was the head bouncer of all the clubs. He ended up knowing him, and next thing he said, "eh, put your hand out." He placed the green band on each of our wrists. We coolly walked towards the door, gliding thru the entrance. As soon as we got in we jumped up and down and cheered, "Yes!"

Wu-Tang Clan came on fashionably late as any rap group would. The venue was packed, hot and we couldn’t see over the heads of the packed crowd. “Damn, how we gonna see?” I asked my friend. We looked throughout the venue and wondered where can we get the best view? As each rapper came on the stage we frantically tried to find our best vantage point. My eyes locked on a big speaker directly across the stage. “Right there, lets climb on it and stand on it.” I said. We climbed on the big speaker and had the best view in the house; it was as if we were on the stage with the Wu-Tang clan.

Every time I see the Itz Yours video that has clips of The Wu-Tang’s concert we attended I always look for us, in back on top of the big black speaker directly across the stage. I see my friend and I dancing up a storm enjoying the sold out concert that we had no tickets to, no 18 year old ID, but our love for hip-hop got us admission into the best rap concert of 97’. Operation get in Wu-Tang concert mission complete.

With a love of hip-hop, a passion for graffiti, poetry, creative non-fiction, my path has lead me to where I am today. Whether I have gone thru good or bad has built character. I wouldn’t take any of it away, I cherish the battles I have gone thru in my life as those have built my successes.  I don’t measure success by how much money one has; I look at success as being measured by the value of one's character.  What we do for others is one’s true wealth. 

My values are relevant to my audience because my audience are passionate people who hold the same belief system as I. We want what is most important, life experience. How that is achieved best is by going thru shit, basically living. Each day we wake up and we think whatever it's only another day, but each day is another opportunity, imagine that…. Another opportunity to live and learn about what is most important in your life.

What have you done to achieve what you wanted when obstacles stood in your way? How have you overcome failed attempts? How have you been triumphant?


It’s Yourz video, look for us in the back we are standing on the BIG Speakers. 

No matter what obstacle lie in your way don’t stop; don’t give up on what you want in your life. Tap into your passion let it guide you to get you what you want and how you want it. Where there's a will there is a way. The best things in life are free and it isn’t til’ you experience failure can really know what success is, and it isn’t how rich you are, it isn’t the big house, the nice car. You tell me what success is to you? 

Saturday, April 1, 2017

My Ideal Influencer

My ideal influencer would be an activist, and analyst personality type. A passionate person who has love for creative media and presents it in a way that is rather unique. This person would have an emphasis in street arts, whether street photography, graphic design done with a urban twist, writing presented in a creative non-fiction style. A style that is shaped by their love of hip-hop, graffiti, poetry, creative non-fiction, vintage street photos, street photography.

My personal brand or genre would be an "urban style of mind." This would be to inspire others to create street art, write creative non-fiction, write poetry, take street photos, write screenplay, or just live with an urban style of mind. What that means is to think outside the box, to push your limits. Not to be subjected by the normalcy of society which makes one think that have to stick to the script. Fu*k the script. Rip it up, and right your own script and do it in black Sharpie.

My target audience will be those who are not afraid to push the envelope when it comes to any type of creation in creative media. These are graphic designers, videographers, writers, journalists, grafffiti artists any one with the power to create, and that is everyone. If you can pick up a pen, type in a computer, brainstorm thoughts to create something profound, write a screenplay that can make people think and ask questions these are the people I seek to cross paths with.

My ideal influencer sets them self apart because they are not held to a cookie cutter mold that has been falsely created for them. They are creators of their own destiny that are not held to societies standards. None of that worries them, none of that matters, what matters the most is getting their point across.

Hashtags to be used:
#UrbanStyleOfMind
#StreetArt
#StreetPhotography
#Graffiti
#StreetStyle
#CreativeNonFiction
#Fu*kTheScript
#PushYourLimits
#ThinkOutsideTheBox

My google alerts are: street art, graffiti, hip-hop, creative non-fiction, street photography