san francisco
Brandophilia
I just cannot get enough Steward Brand. For instance, I love this frank assessment of fame—the right kind of fame—from a new Chronicle profile:
“There’s almost no downside to being well-known for a long time,” Brand says. “Nobody is going to steal my identity. Old friends lead to new friends and one recycles people into new functions over time.”
And this, too:
[Brand’s wife Ryan] Phelen tells the story of Brand’s 70th birthday last December. What kind of gift do you get a man who hates big parties and gets the latest gadget before everyone else? Phelen set up a Web site and filled it with passionate discussions from his closest friends. “I gave him words. Words and thoughtful conversation,” she says.
I’m reading Whole Earth Discipline in bits and pieces. It’s a funny book—a more direct descendant of the Whole Earth Catalog than I’d realized. It doesn’t seem to be in any particular order, and doesn’t seem to make any single grand argument. Rather, it’s just this sequence of loosely-connected idea-chunks, each marked with a gray bullet point, all fascinating. Like non-fiction David Markson!
Finally, I love Brand’s concise self-definition:
What do I usually do? I find things and I found things. Things I find include tools, ideas, books, and people, which I blend and purvey. Things I’ve founded and co-founded include…
(Insert list of epochal institutions and zeitgeist definers here.)
Blade Runner in San Francisco
This Flickr gallery created by Britta Gustafson is a delight. She imagines Blade Runner set in San Francisco—which was of course the setting of Philip K. Dick’s original story “Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep.”
In the reimagined movie, where does Deckard live? How about creepy gene-engineer J. F. Sebastian? All the answers are here.
“Such a pretty city! All it needs is a few gratuitous fireballs.”
I love this genre. More movie location-scouting via Flickr, please.
Wild kitchen
This, from Katie Kwan, is one of the most San Francisco things I have ever seen, in the best possible way. A rogue restaurant, one night only, in the back alley of a bike shop. A super-foodie menu featuring weird charcuterie. Pickleweed tempura! (I want some!) And—best of all—a bit of documentation and reflection.
Yeah yeah, glimpse of the numinous, etc. etc.
Listen, I know it’s totally American Beauty to be moved by this little video, but that’s okay—I won’t tell if you won’t. To be clear, you are looking at flower petals dancing on an invisible spider web. I KNOW.
And Lauren is right: Erik Satie makes everything sound like magic.
Building an imaginary tower
Over at robinsloan.com, as part of my Kickstarter book project, I just posted a behind-the-scenes look at the evolution of an illustration. This one, in fact:
And, nerds take note, it involves Processing! Which, just between you and me, was probably not 100% necessary—but, as I’ve said before, one should always be looking for excuses to use cool tools.

