japan film movie kurosawa disaster catastrophe chaos violence murder
✖ Via

Rashomon by Akira Kurosawa, 1950.

More on Aphelis.



• Apr 03, 2011 link notes tagged: Japan  film  movie  Kurosawa  disaster  catastrophe  chaos  violence  murder 
technology photograph vintage bw oil oil_spill history disaster nature machine man catastrophe natural_catastrophe
✖ Via

Wikimedia Commons: Lakeview #1 oil gusher, Kern County, California, USA, after the well had partially subsided, the derrick removed, and the well surrounded by a sandbag berm. Photo by W.C. Mendenhall, US Geological Survey, 1910

The Lakeview Gusher Number One was an immense out-of-control pressurized oil well in the Midway-Sunset Oil Field in Kern County, California, resulting in what is regarded as the largest oil spill in history, lasting 18 months and releasing 9 million barrels (1.4×106 m3) of crude oil. In what was one of the largest oil reserves in America, pressure built to an extreme due to the quantity of crude oil in the area. (wikipedia)



• Oct 29, 2010 link notes tagged: technology  photograph  vintage  BW  oil  oil spill  history  disaster  nature  machine  man  catastrophe  natural catastrophe 
communication technology catastrophe animal destruction death responsability shock image representation human oil bp british_petroleum disaster copyright fair_use constitution media press freedom zapruder
✖ Via Boston.com / The Big Picture: A Brown Pelican is seen on the beach at East Grand Terre Island along the Louisiana coast on Thursday, June 3, 2010. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

I first found this photo over at Washington’s Blog. The post where it appears makes a (short) argument about the ban of media coverage apparently imposed by BP and US officials and the alleged suspension of the 1st Amendment of the US Constitution it represents. At the very end of the post, the author seems to put forward a legal argument supporting the publication of such pictures as the one shown above:

In addition, use of such images is also protected under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. Specifically, reproduction is protected under the “Mai Lai/Zapruder line of cases”, since:

(1) The images are of historical significance;

(2) They show facts which cannot be conveyed effectively in any other manner, and

(3) Therefore the Constitution trumps copyright law. (more)

Now, what exactly are those “Mai Lai/Zapruder line of cases” ? It’s not a law, but a “line of cases” and it could plausibly be used to challenge the ban of some media access to the site of the catastrophe (see The New York Times: “BP and Officials Block Some Coverage of Golf Oil Spill”). More thoughts about this over at Aphelis.



• Jul 14, 2010 link notes tagged: communication  technology  catastrophe  animal  destruction  death  responsability  shock  image  representation  human  oil  BP  British Petroleum  disaster  copyright  fair use  constitution  media  press  freedom  Zapruder 
art technology bp disaster environment nature animal catastrophe oil petroleum illustration illustrator artist escher
✖ Via The New Yorker: “After Escher: Gulf Sky and Water” by Bob Staake, July 5th, 2010

About Bob Staake:

Bob Staake (born September 26, 1957 in Los Angeles, California) is an American illustrator, cartoonist, children’s book author, and designer. He lives and works in Chatham, Massachusetts on the elbow of Cape Cod. (wikipedia)

I first came to know Bob Staake through this video, were he demonstrates how he uses a subtraction process in Photoshop 3.0 to create his illustration. Visit his official website (and discover a lot more about his art).



• Jul 01, 2010 link notes tagged: art  technology  BP  disaster  environment  nature  animal  catastrophe  oil  petroleum  illustration  illustrator  artist  Escher 
art illustration humor critic animal human disaster ecology environment oil bp catastrophe nature technology representation
✖ Via The New Yorker: “Five Weeks Later…” by Barry Blitt, June 7th, 2010

Previously on Skandalon : Barry Blitt, British Petroleum



• Jun 10, 2010 link notes tagged: art  illustration  humor  critic  animal  human  disaster  ecology  environment  oil  BP  Catastrophe  nature  technology  representation 

What DeLillo understood, long ago, is the end of the world would be experienced not as the end of the world but rather as a way of thinking and talking about the end of the world. What he understood is that the toxic cloud that has our name on it would be defined by its lack of definition; that we would never have as much information about it as we need to have or that someone else has; that it would turn into a free-floating void, exactly as withholding as it is encompassing; that it would become part of the landscape and that the landscape would become part of it; and that, of course, there would be footage, endlessly recycled but ultimately inconclusive.
No, Don DeLillo has never written about what about BP, Transocean, the MMS, and our thirst for oil have wrought in the Gulf of Mexico. But 25 years ago he imagined the name for a disaster that would come with its own excruciating and tantalizing Zapruder, and that would allow us to talk it — and ourselves — to death:
The underwater toxic event.
✖ Via Esquire: “Black Noise: How to Define a Gulf Disaster Beyond Definition” by Tom Junod, June 1st, 2010

Jacques Derrida developed a similar idea about the 9/11 attacks. See Philosophy in a Time of Terror

Tom Junod is an American journalist. He’s also the author of the excellent piece : “The Falling Man” (which is also the name of a great novel by Don DeLillo)



• Jun 02, 2010 link notes tagged: DeLillo  Derrida  art  author  catastrophe  communication  destruction  disaster  event  language  name  nature  novel  reality  representation  technology  BP 
✖ Via Multiple Source: Draplin Design, The Christian Science Monitor, The Aquaman Shrine.

Thanks to Innovation Is Dead for the photo of the BP gas station.



• Jun 01, 2010 link notes tagged: art  catastrophe  communication  death  design  disaster  illustration  image  nature  oil  public relation  technology  BP 
environment united_states art disaster ecology energy hack news oil photograph technology bp
✖ Via

Fotoglif: “Welder Raymond Vanwinkle of Magnolia, Texas, works on the BP Pollution Containment Chamber” May 3rd, 2010, REUTERS/Sean Gardner

“Welder Raymond Vanwinkle of Magnolia, Texas, works on the BP Pollution Containment Chamber at Wild Well Control, Inc. in Port Fourchon, Louisiana May 3, 2010. Energy giant BP Plc, its reputation battered by a catastrophic oil spill threatening the U.S. Gulf shore, said on Monday it was working to stem the gushing undersea leak and promised to pay for the cleanup and compensation claims. BP is working on to try to seal the ruptured well with an undersea containment system that would capture the leaking oil and channel it to a tanker on the surface.”



• May 05, 2010 link notes tagged: Environment  United-States  art  disaster  ecology  energy  hack  news  oil  photograph  technology  BP 
animal catastroph disaster industry nature news oil technology bp
✖ Via Boston.com / The Big Picture: “Oil spill approaches Louisiana coast” April 30th, 2010. AP Photo/The Sun Herald, William Colgin
“Two brown pelicans and a flock of seagulls rest on the shore of Ship Island as a boom line floats just offshore Thursday, April 29, 2010 in Gulfport, Miss. Several hundred yards of boom line has been set up on the north side of the island to try and contain the oncoming oil spill. Crews are placing the boom in different areas on Coast waterways to help protect against an approaching oil slick in the Gulf of Mexico.” (more)

The photo is related to the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig explosion.



• May 03, 2010 link notes tagged: animal  catastroph  disaster  industry  nature  news  oil  technology  BP 

[A “cosmology episode” is] An incident in which “people suddenly and deeply feel that the universe is no longer a rational, orderly system”. “People…[generally] act as if events cohere in time and space and that change unfolds in an orderly manner. These orderly cosmologies are subject to disruption. And when they are severely disrupted, I call this a cosmology episode (Weick, 1985: 51-52)…What makes such an episode so shattering is that both the sense of what is occurring and the means to rebuild it collapse together. Stated more informally, a cosmology episode feels like vu jàdé—the opposite of déjà vu: I’ve never been here before, I have no idea where I am, and I have no idea who can help me.
✖ Via “The collapse of sensemaking in organizations : The Mann Gulch disaster” by Weick, K. E., Administrative Science Quarterly, Vol. 38, No. 4, p. 633-634, Dec. 1993 [PDF]
“The purpose of this article is to reanalyse the Mann Gulch fire disaster in Montana described in Norman Maclean’s (1992) award-winning book Young Men and Fire to illustrate a gap in our current understanding of organizations. I want to focus on two questions: Why do organization unravel? And how can organization be made more resilient?”

About the author: “Karl E. Weick (born October 31, 1936 in Warsaw, Indiana) is an American organizational theorist who is noted for introducing the notions of “loose coupling”, “mindfulness”, and “sensemaking” into organizational studies. He is the Rensis Likert Distinguished University Professor at the Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan. He earned his bachelor’s degree at Wittenberg College in Springfield, Ohio and his Ph.D. in organizational psychology from Ohio State University in 1962.” (wikipedia)



• Apr 29, 2010 link notes reblogged from leftoverfest  [via] tagged: communication  community  organization  disaster  order  sense  cosmos  universe  lost  catastroph  human  anxiety 
technology communication diffusion energy ocean tsunami earthquake disaster data visualization news
✖ Via National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration: “Preliminary forecast model energy map” following Chile’s Feb 27th 2010 earthquake

Learn more about the NOAA on Wikipedia.

I first became aware of this forecast model via Boing Boing



• Feb 27, 2010 link notes tagged: technology  communication  diffusion  energy  ocean  tsunami  earthquake  disaster  data  visualization  news 
news catastrophes nature earthquake disaster chili destruction
✖ Via

The Big Picture - Boston.com: “Earthquake in Chile” Feb. 27th, 2010. Phptp by Marco Fredes for Reuters

“At 3:34 am local time, today, February 27th, a devastating magnitude 8.8 earthquake struck Chile, one of the strongest earthquakes ever recorded. According to Chilean President-elect Sebastian Pinera, at least 120 people are known to have been killed so far. The earthquake also triggered a Tsunami which is right now propagating across the Pacific Ocean, due to arrive in Hawaii in hours (around 11:00 am local time). The severity of the Tsunami is still not known, but alerts are being issued across the Pacific.” (more)



• Feb 27, 2010 link notes  [via] tagged: news  catastrophes  nature  earthquake  disaster  Chili  destruction 
photo building disaster catastroph destruction world news death media
✖ Via

Boston.com / The Big Picture: Earthquake in Haiti - A view of the badly damaged presidential palace - the center portion formerly 3 stories tall - after an earthquake in Port-au-Prince, Haiti on January 13, 2010. (REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz)



• Jan 14, 2010 link notes  [via] tagged: photo  building  disaster  catastroph  destruction  world  news  death  media 

There’s a ticker on top of every page on YouTube that links to disaster relief via Oxfam. Not to be outdone, Google has created a disaster relief page, containing the most recent news about Haiti and information on its hospitals. You can easily donate to UNICEF and/or CARE, and SMS shortcodes are provided; text “HAITI” to 90999 to donate $10 to the Red Cross and text “YELE” to 501501 to donate $5 to Yele Haiti’s efforts.
✖ Via The Huffington Post: “The Web Is Flat — The World Responds To Haiti’s Earthquake Online” by Jose Antonio Vargas, Jan 13th, 2010.

So does Tumblr.



• Jan 14, 2010 link notes  [via] tagged: technology  communication  disaster  catastroph  Twitter  Tumblr  world  news  social  network  diffusion 
✖ Via Garrison Dean on Vimeo: “2012: THIS IS A DISASTER”

Check Garrison Dean’s blog.



• Jul 11, 2009 link notes tagged: movie  trailer  catastroph  disaster  humor  hack  video 

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