What's a blog, anyway? Coriolistic Anachronisms - A Vancouver Blog

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Apr 19
   Vintage! This is a random post. The year was 2007...

There’s this large library, filled with millions of books. We pick one up, generally a scary, tension-loaded story, and we start reading. As the plot unfolds we become nervous and stressed, identifying with the distressed protagonists and forgetting that we have control on our reading. We begin to turn pages faster, our movements harsh and our breathing shallow. Then suddenly we tear the corner of a page off. We grab a roll of scotch tape and reattach it, and we keep on reading. Another page is torn. Out comes the tape. This repair is a little less precise. Then it happens again, and again. Pages now get torn and taped back in carelessly. Corners are poking out, entire paragraphs disappear, pages stick together, massive use of tape makes the book swell and the cover crack. But tape manufacturers comes out with a new kind of better, fully transparent tape. So we buy it and keep reading, tearing and taping. The book’s condition gets worse. A new tape dispenser is introduced, allowing us to hold the book with one hand and read on while taping back with the other; the dispenser has tripled the cost of our tape but we keep buying. More tape is needed now because reading with one hand makes us clumsier. We never stop reading and destroying books. The tape companies grow bigger. They start advertising and promoting books because tape has become an integral part of reading. So we go to the library and pick up a new book.

[Sound of a vinyl record scratched by the record player’s needle]

Oh, wait a minute. I don’t think I ever explained my analogy. The library is our body. Books are health and mental issues. The tape manufacturers are doctors and pharmaceutical companies. Tape itself is modern medicine.

About the author: He lives in Downtown Vancouver with 100,000 other readers. Organic tape is very trendy around there. And still nobody wonders why they need it in the first place. Copyright 2007. Printed in Canada on taped recycled paper, 347 body parts. The end.

 

2007-04-19 11:01 • Posted in Schtroumpfissime:

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  • 1 - Anonymous says:

    « We live in a repressive society.
    It seems as if all the fun had gone out of life.
    We don’t laugh much anymore, we worry. A lot.
    So unhappiness. So pills. So cancer, mental sickness of all kinds and serial
    killers at large. »

  • 2 - Amber says:

    « I look at your site every few days and it makes me feel closer to Van, a city I never expected to miss as much as I do. Also gives me a nice study break. Never would have guessed that Vince from LC would be my tie to Van as I’m living in Leeds. Thanks, V! »

  • 2.1 - Vince answers:

    « My pleasure, Amber! It’s always flattering to be someone’s study break. ;-) Van says hi! »

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We now go back to current chronological entries:
Random Entry: Tropical Vancouver  
 Next: The blog is online! | Previous: Windy day
Jan 7
)arrow All right, I’ve already had the question asked once, so let’s throw water at the fire before it evens starts: what on Earth is a blog???

Rather than explain it myself, I did a quick review of already posted web definitions, and I kinda like this one:
)oquote A blog is a personal diary. A daily pulpit. A collaborative space. A political soapbox. A breaking-news outlet. A collection of links. Your own private thoughts. Memos to the world.Your blog is whatever you want it to be. There are millions of them, in all shapes and sizes, and there are no real rules.In simple terms, a blog is a web site, where you write stuff on an ongoing basis. New stuff shows up at the top, so your visitors can read what’s new. Then they comment on it or link to it or email you. Or not.Since Blogger was launched, almost five years ago, blogs have reshaped the web, impacted politics, shaken up journalism, and enabled millions of people to have a voice and connect with others.And we’re pretty sure the whole deal is just getting started. )cquote

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2005-01-07 16:36 • Posted in Quotes:

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