DIY


12
Mar 12

Shock and Awe

For the past ten years, Ethan Rafal has been travelling the country, documenting the nation’s struggle to come to terms with 9/11 and the subsequent wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

A former skate videographer, Rafal opted to abandon his first love to pursue photography in an attempt to grapple with the traumatic events that changed the nation. For much of the country, the last decade of war has largely been a distant experience, especially in light of the continuing economic problems at home, but for Rafal, the war hits much closer to home.

In Shock and Awe, Rafal collects five years of photos taken after 9/11. As he explains it, “Five years later, after photographing war and losing several friends to it, I rediscovered this early material. It held acute personal significance, as it was the remains of my youth. But, I also believed it might provide a window into the early stages of national moral and corporeal collapse that seemed everywhere around me. I decided to engage this project full-time. I wanted to revisit the country I had once known. I wanted to tell the unheard story of the decaying American homeland and its relationship to war.”

“My subjects are as much a reflection of myself as they are products of this time. But, I too am a product of this time, and it has been my primary task to reclaim my story and myself from the fog that is the last decade,” he adds. “Ultimately, this work is autobiographical, and it is my hope that in my search you see yourself, too.”

Rafal is currently raising funds on Kickstarter to print the first edition of his book, which will recreate the look and feel of his original hand-made journal.

For more information on the project, check out the video below and if you’d like to help out, head over to Kickstarter and donate what you can now, but hurry, the fundraising deadline is today at midnight.


21
Dec 11

It’s about Gloggin Time!

Now that the holiday season is in full swing, why not try spicing up your parties this year with some spiced wine – oh badump ch!

With the smell of cloves, cinnamon, and cardamom wafting through the air nothing screams, “Fuck yea, it’s the holidays” quite like Glogg, or Swedish mulled wine.

Thanks to the fantastic Ms. Durrett, our very own Captain Outreach, we here at Pluck have had access to a delicious Glogg recipe and I suppose it’s time to finally share.

For one bottle of cheap big red wine:

  • a splash of vodka
  • 4-5 pieces of whole cinnamon sticks
  • 20 cloves
  • a small piece of fresh ginger, peeled
  • 1 tsp of cardamom, whole if you can find it or the powdered one will do
  • half an orange peel
  • 1 tsp sugar

Crush the cardamom and break the cinnamon sticks. Pour all the spices in a glass jar with a lid and pour over the vodka. Let it steep overnight.  Strain the vodka to filter out the spices and pour it into a pot with the wine.  Add sugar to taste and let the wine simmer. Never let the wine boil.

Enjoy.

-Eugene


8
Dec 11

Oh, those rebellious youths

With all this recent chatter about Occupy Wall Street over at Pluck Magazine as well as our upcoming in-depth series on student debt, I thought it only fitting that we briefly examine the role youth have played in social movements throughout history.

Aside from being genetically dispositioned to automatically becoming a snot-nosed rebellious shithead at the age of 13, it seems that youth are at the forefront of nearly every cultural, political, and economic movement in recent decades. (Think rock and roll, the Baader Meinhof, hip hop, the free-speech movement at Berkeley, punk, anti-war movements, etc.)

With every generation, a teenager’s lifestyle exists to piss somebody off – the current youth-led Occupy Wall Street movement is certainly no exception. But where did this concept of youthful rebellion come from? I certainly doubt children in Dickensian London with their faces permanently blackened by the soot of the chimneys they lived and worked in were having these cheeky thoughts of sneaking out, staying up late, and trying to do their hair in crazy ways.

I’m certainly not qualified to answer that question, so fortunately for all of us comes the documentary “Teenage,” which is based on the book of the same name by Jon Savage. Drawing on the book, the documentary examines the invention of teenagers. From flappers in the 20s to the delinquents of the 40s, the movie explores the travails of youth as they seek to define themselves against the social, political, and economic backdrop of their decade. In particular, “Teenage” focuses on WWI to WWII when the concept and term of “teenager” was finally coined.

Have a look at the fantastic trailer below or pick up the book. Meanwhile if you haven’t read our own youth-driven perspective on Occupy Wall Street have a look here and here. Finally, stay tuned to Pluck Magazine, because come January, we’ll be diving into one of the most pressing issues facing our generation – student debt.

TEENAGE teaser from Teenage on Vimeo.

- Eugene


3
Nov 11

Fall Daydreams – Enjoy A Fire

My fall daydream involves fires- smoky little things, made of damp leaves and moldy kindling from some scrubby deciduous forest, as October chill sets in.

In places of the world where seasons move from very warm to very cold, fires are still, despite electric heating or steaming radiators, a mark of the times. Older homes from eras past can be easily identified by the number of fireplaces they sport- usually one per bedroom and often another for cooking. Though warming a house with a fire is less common in America these days, kids in sweatshirts still light bonfires and drink beer on cold nights, and hot tubs and coffee tables are now both enhanced with flames.

Building a fire from scratch is a tough, primeval task that is going to scratch up your hands and make you swear loudly, at least the first go-around. But the reward is that same sense of satisfaction that early homo sapiens got from roasting mammoth eons ago.

Act out your own fall daydream and build a fire the hard way here.

-Matt


27
Sep 11

We Were Programmers Once…And Young

When Steve Jobs announced he was stepping down as CEO of Apple a few weeks ago, his legacy of iPhones and iPads and iMacs- and his cult of personality- was the first highlight in every news story. Less talked about were his younger years, when he sported a bit more hair and a less monochromatic wardrobe.

Before he became a consumer electronics guru, Jobs was a kid in Northern California looking to make enough money for a pilgrimage to India. Relying on his buddy Steve Wozniak to learn the technical aspects of programming, he spent his days working for video game company Atari while he planned his route towards enlightenment. Returning from his trip as a Buddhist, he found a certain form of nirvana, as he and Wozniak built the Apple I, a home-made personal computer. Though it lacked some of the grace of the company’s newer models (see the first version below), the Apple I was sold around Palo Alto for $666.66.

The Apple I entered a field filled with kid geniuses. Just as the dot-com bubble rested on the shoulders of young web designers with venture funding, and the social media world grew out of college parties, the personal computing industry was a world full of young men, garages, and basements. It was this formative environment of the 1970′s that would shape the careers of everyone from Bill Gates to pioneering computer hacker John “Cap’n Crunch” Draper.

At the end of the day, much of Apple- not to mention Microsoft, Hewlett-Packard, and countless other corporate tech ventures- was started by kids looking to test their abilities, make free phone calls, and have fun. Despite their self-seriousness today, it’s worth looking back at their humble origins. We all start somewhere, after all.

Steve Wozniak’s device for making phone calls for free. (1972)

Ah, the business computer that works for your business- if you have four desks available. (1973)

The first computer to run Bill Gates’ software. (1975)

The Apple II, notable for the free copy of the game “Breakout” that came with every model. (1977)


15
Sep 11

Back To School/Work: Forget the Blackberry, Use Paper

When Rahm Emanuel was Chief of Staff of the White House, he had a to do list meeting every morning with 10 senior administration aides. There, they would review a stack of note cards, each listing a priority for the President, from which cards would be added or subtracted daily depending on what was accomplished and what had yet to be done. Throughout the day, the NY Times reports, Emanuel also carried around a notecard to do list in his pocket, “obsessively” crossing off tasks as he and others finished them. For a man who on average “talks with 50 people a day by telephone and sends hundreds of e-mail messages,” it was a tried and true system.

The research assistant in my old office was highly organized in a similar manner. She eschewed her outlook calendar completely, or any other digital organizer for that matter, turning always to her trusty notebook scheduler to jot down her day’s items.

Some might think it an anachronism, but I’ve noticed this tendency amongst highly organized people to revert to a physical to do list.

Jocelyn K. Glei, writing for The99Percent.com, has said “a key part of remembering what I have to do is physically writing it down.”

Recent psychological studies have echoed this thinking, but perhaps not in the way you’d think. Dustin Hax, for LifeHack, researched psychological studies on writing and memory:

“So here’s what happens: in one psychological test involving students watching a lecture on psychology (psychologists who work in academia have a virtually unlimited supply of research subjects — their students!) students who did not take notes remembered the same number of points as the students who did take notes. That is, the mere act of taking notes did not increase the amount of stuff they memorized. Both groups of students remembered around 40% of the information covered in the lecture (which as a professor makes me sad, but I guess that’s the way humans work). But the students who had taken notes remembered a higher proportion of key facts, while those who did not take notes remembered a more or less random assortment of points covered in the lecture.”

Removing noise and boiling things down to key facts is perhaps the definition of getting organized, as applicable here to day to day life as it is to test taking.

So as you get ready for work or school this fall, consider the physical scheduler. Buying one won’t give you the discipline to use it everyday, but for $1.65 at Muji, it can’t hurt to try. Alternatively, you can pick up 100 index cards at Walgreens for $1.29.

-Nico


13
Sep 11

Back To School/Work – Fall Cleaning

With Fall just around the corner, it’s probably a good time to wash off all the dirt that the open windows and fans have blown into your apartment before you shut them permanently against the blistering cold of winter.

All the accumulated dust from the summer can really become a bother, especially when you’ve been indoor for several days with nothing to breathe but artificially heated air mixed with thousands of friendly dust mites and other microscopic critters that have come to hang out with you over the past few months.

Here are a few tips:

-Clean up the damn place. With all the summer adventures, you’ve probably accumulated quite a few trinkets – sand tracked in from the beach visits, random flyers, assorted useless mementos. Toss what you don’t need, store the rest, and give the place a good ol’ scrubbing. Pay extra attention to the windows and the drapes as dirt, dust, and grime will likely have built up there given all the time the windows have been left open.

-Store all those light summer clothes that you won’t be needing them for the next seven months to make room for all those bulky coats and sweaters.

-Throw a dinner party to get rid of all that extra food you’ve collected. That frozen fish you got from that awesome fishing trip…yea, time to get rid of it and share the wealth at the same time.

-Unclutter your email inbox. With the plethora of summer events and special email lists, you’re probably receiving far too many emails with titles like “Endless Summer,” “The Latest from Ibiza,” and other Summery titles. Chances are you haven’t opened any in several weeks now, so why bother with the clutter, just unsubscribe.

-Load up on roach traps because you’re not the only one that likes to be warm in the winter. You could be having many uninvited guests over the next few months, so it’s always advisable to keep some nice welcome gifts for them on hand.


7
Sep 11

Goodbye, Summer: Build A Boat and Float Away

Ernest Biegajski, father, sailor, veteran, came home from the war in 1936 and decided to sail a barrel across the Atlantic.

The world press loved it- United Press International sent updates to newspapers across the country and the world (he even landed a mention in Australia) as Biegajski plotted his trip. It seemed that his sailing barrel, which he called “Nuda”, struck a chord with the public. Somewhere, amidst the bankers and businessmen and barbershops that received the updates, was a nation’s fascination with floating away on the high seas. Even Modern Mechanix magazine got caught up in the excitement, and featured a drawing of Biegajski’s barrel ripping through the tides on its cover.

The coverage of the barrel boat started to wane, however, after its maiden voyage on the Great Lakes when it had trouble getting out of the Buffalo harbor and had to be rescued by the Coast Guard.

Undaunted, Biegajski was at it again in 1937, determined to depart Buffalo and sail Lake Erie towards Cleveland. The papers were there, too, ready to cover the launch. It seems, at that point, that Biegajski truly floated off into history- it’s unclear whether he made it to Cleveland, or points beyond.

But Biegajski was an inspiring figure, and his dedication to making his barrel sail makes him a role model to many garage inventors. In some way or another, his quest can be seen as an early ancestor to the guitar boat, the duck boat, the bike boat, and the vintage car boat.

As the summer heat fades, there are still enough warm afternoons left to launch your own boat construction project. There are few carpentry tasks simpler than cutting pieces of plywood, let alone one single sheet. Take a cue from Mr. Biegajski and try your own single-sheet plywood boat, courtesy of carpentry whiz Derek Diedricksen.

If you’re on the West Coast and searching for a place to take your new craft (i.e. perhaps a crystalline lake in the mountains?), take a look at our easy weekend escapes from the Bay Area. Just remember Mr. Biegajski’s lesson- even the best laid plans can sink, so bring some life jackets.

-Matt


16
Aug 11

Real Life Superheroes

Similar to yesterday’s post on random acts of kindness, it turns out that brave individuals who selflessly risk bodily injury to fight crime and keep our streets safe while wearing superhero costumes really do exist.

GQ recently did an amazing feature on the emerging trend of real life superheroes. According to the article more than 200 people across the United States are donning costumes and hitting the streets to keep people safe against muggers, drug dealers, and thugs.

Since most of them lack training and are essentially ordinary folks with jobs and families, these heroes range in efficacy and motivation.

For instance there is the Dark Guardian in New York City, “who specializes in chasing pot dealers out of Washington Square Park by creeping up to them, shining a light in their eyes, and yelling, ‘This is a drug-free park!’”

Then there’s Master Legend of New Orleans, who is a bit of a mixed bag. He’s “always drinking” and “believes he was born wearing a purple veil and has died three times.” He also nearly beat a man to death after he saw him trying to rape a girl.

In between these extremes there’s Knight Owl, Red Dragon, Pitch Black, Ghost, and a host of others who look like they stepped out of a comic book convention and onto our streets.

To read more about the exploits their exploits and what makes these folks tick, especially the mild-mannered day care worker who becomes the hulking six-foot behemoth known as Phoenix Jones at night, head over to GQ to read the full article.

-  Eugene


8
Aug 11

True Adventures – Anthony Nicaj

Several months ago, my co-worker, Anthony Nicaj, told me he was leaving the online publication where we both worked to walk across the country.

“Uh-huh,” I said trying to mask my incredulity.

He went on to explain his plan to buy a kind of modified stroller to carry his belongings and of his route through the northern United States which he planned to take during the most destructive flood and tornado season in history.

Naturally, I was a bit skeptical, but I have been gladly proven wrong. Starting in New York, Anthony has already made his way to Wyoming, Kerouacing his entire way there.

Have a look at his Flickr site as he documents his travels through the heart of America meeting complete strangers who share his unwavering optimism. In his photos, one can plainly see his love for life, his sense of adventure, and the endless supply of hospitality from the complete strangers that he encounters on the road.

If this doesn’t restore your faith in humanity or inspire you to walk across the country, I don’t know what will.

Have a look at a few of my favorites below and be sure to head over to his site to the rest.

-Eugene

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