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MTK The Writist

~ my blog and journal

MTK The Writist

Tag Archives: 2012

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Heretical Thoughts at the End of the Last Baktun

21 Friday Dec 2012

Tags

1950, 2012, 62, 9/11, anti, avant, baktun, black, Christian, day, edge, Elections, end, garde, heretic, heretical, hindu, iraq, islam, jfk, Karthik, last, lbj, m.t., maya, mayan, mlk, mtk, of, okc, rfk, society, thoughts, war, white, wtc, years

HereticalThoughtsMTK2012001

Posted by mtk | Filed under conceptual art

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The Triple Kiss and the Side Effects of Slow Motion

19 Wednesday Dec 2012

Posted by mtk in baseball, essay, journalism, sport

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

2012, Cardinals, crazy, critique, David, definition, hd, high, hunter, kiss, Kozma, League, Ma, mlb, moments, motion, National, NCAA, nlcs, overcranking, pence, Pete, referee, replay, review, screwball, series, slow, slow-mo, sports, St.Louis, triple, umpire, video, volleyball, weird

I refer to this broken bat double which swerved into play, as:

The Triple Kiss

This excellent .gif of The Triple Kiss is by @CorkGaines

Hunter Pence knocked in three runs when this ball left his broken bat after a crazy series of three collisions – the last of which caused it to swerve in the air and bound past the outstretched glove of the shortstop.

Second-year Cardinals shortstop Pete Kozma, who was very well positioned, reacted at lightning speed, but was caught going the wrong way for a fraction of a second because the third point of contact changed the ball’s direction.

The Triple Kiss happened in less than half a second. Watching it live, as broadcast, I had no idea the ball hit the bat three times; not until seeing it like this.

I knew it was a broken bat hit, my shoulders slumped at the same instant that Kozma jumped – and then suddenly, the ball took a crazy turn in the air and, as if it had eyes, bounced past the outstretched glove of the recovering Kozma, on the second base side.

The Triple Kiss was significantly faster than the human eye … even the highly trained eyes of a ballplayer, or an umpire. It affords us the opportunity to discuss the intense amount of new information that slow motion yields.

Slow motion was originally known – in analog filmmaking – as overcranking, a method by which the speed of the film was altered through handcranking the frames. Overcranking was first used in sports as long ago as the 1930’s in the coverage of boxing matches.

It took a long time for overcranking to become slow motion and in that time we got pretty used to it. We allowed slow motion to creep into our observation of games with such ease and normality that the NFL, NBA and MLB now all stop play to incorporate it as a tool in evaluating what has actually taken place.

But yesterday, after a fascinating conversation with an NCAA referee in another sport, David Ma, I began to wonder whether there’s a measurable visual side effect of using high definition slow motion when trying to call a game.

A paranoid part of me also began to wonder whether we’ve already begun what sci-fi feared: letting machines that are ‘more than us’ run our most human aspects.

David Ma believes we should alter the rules of instant replay review so that any referee or umpire using video replay should NOT be allowed to use the slow motion effect in the review.

Ma says, “I have no problem with the use of multiple camera angles for the review, but video review referees should not be allowed to use slow-motion.”

Ma believes there is a significant effect on the field when calling games with video review that includes slow motion, which he refers to as akin to “refereeing under a microscope.”

He points out that no human being could possibly see some of the things that slow motion reveals. In fact, Ma believes referees are already changing the way they call a game because of the presence of the super-slow-motion of HD:

“In pro football now there’s mandatory booth review on any score and in the final two minutes … if you’re a ref and you know that, why would you make a call? The camera can see everything you can’t so you’re most likely going to be wrong!”

Ma speaks with the authority of knowing what it’s like to have to make a call with a super-slow-mo eyeball looking over your shoulder: “With HD slow motion, by far, most of the time the referee’s call is going to be wrong.”

It opens up a discussion about what our perception of real-time is. For example would an umpiring or refereeing crew allowed only to watch the replays in real-time be more effective within the state of play? Ma believes assuredly yes.

This process by which we have accepted the super-slow-mo eyeball as the authority has taken place without significant consideration of the side effect – a human response to the presence of a machine that can see things we can’t.

But perhaps more significantly, the use of slow-mo in sports coverage points out that despite the presence of a tremendous amount of data being added to the information of the events of real-time by slow motion, it’s an effect we’ve subconsciously accepted without critique as a part of our capacity to watch something that has happened.

To David Ma, we’ve stepped onto an escalator which will take us to the point where it will be impossible for a human being to call a game.

I argued that perhaps the refereeing crew could judge the play on the basis of human terms: take in all the data, including the super-slow-mo stuff, and then the video review ref might say: ‘Well, sure we can see that under scrutiny, but there’s no way we could have seen that in real-time’ – thus overriding the machine.

But David Ma reminded me who pays the bills:

“The broadcast media, which is putting out incredibly detailed HD video in super slow-mo will grab that ref by the collar and say, you’re calling it like the nation just saw it, now.”

It rang true. But not one to make an issue of the problem without offering a solution, Ma says the only smart fix is to take slow-mo away from the refs. Alter our use of video replay to remove slow motion.

It’s a bold idea designed to keep the real-time on the field … well, real.

But there would emerge the huge issue that we, the fans, would have the access to all this information that the super-slow motion yields and would be stuck with an unresolvable dispute against the call made by humans trapped in a real-time consideration of events at hand.

The best example – when such frustration peaked – is the now infamous “intertouchdownception” that gave the Seattle Seahawks a victory in the waning seconds over the Green Bay Packers by virtue of a Hail Mary pass that was impossible to call with the human eye and replacement refs and the current NFL rules and the tacit agreement that management isn’t calling interference on Hail Mary’s (lol).

intertouchdownception

One of the refs on the field who signaled touchdown still believes he made an acceptable call as per one reading of the rule book. Fans remain unconvinced.

CBS, the widest, slowest form of sports broadcasting, interviewed two of the replacement refs a few days later.

If, as Dave Ma suggests, we were to remove slow-motion from the toolbox for referees, could we as fans accept the difference of our view being an enhanced view from that of the refs?

Would we hound the refs for their inability to see what only a machine can see?

Or could we embrace the idea that we are keeping machines out of what is a fundamentally human exercise – sport.

In games like tennis and cricket, slow motion is used to define where or when a fast-moving object or person is at a given moment: the ball on or outside the line, the bat past the line before the ball strikes the wickets and so on.

The absolute exclusion of the slow motion effect would be a pointless exercise. However, it may be that the exclusion of slow motion from video review in certain situations would help keep the game real.

Image

winter passion flower

18 Tuesday Dec 2012

Tags

2012, desmond, flower, Karthik, m.t., mtk, oakland, passion, street, winter

winterpassionflower2012

Posted by mtk | Filed under flora, North Oakland, photography

≈ Leave a comment

Image

Western Span of Bay Bridge, Muni Lines, Lamps at sunset

05 Wednesday Dec 2012

Tags

2012, Bay, bridge, Karthik, landscape, lines, m.t., mtk, MUNI, October, photography, span, sunset, western

BayBridgeMuniLinesandPalmsSF2012

Posted by mtk | Filed under photography, S.F., SF Bay

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Great White Egret, Egretta alba, Oakland Estuary

21 Wednesday Nov 2012

Tags

2012, alba, egret, Egretta, estuary, great, Karthik, m.t., mtk, oakland, white

Posted by mtk | Filed under fauna, Oakland, photography

≈ Leave a comment

Image

self portrait in studio

19 Monday Nov 2012

Tags

2012, Karthik, m.t., mtk, portrait, self

Posted by mtk | Filed under North Oakland, self portrait

≈ Leave a comment

Image

new avatar photo

13 Tuesday Nov 2012

Tags

2012, autumn, avatar, contemporary, Karthik, late november, m.t., m.t. karthik, mtk, now

Posted by mtk | Filed under North Oakland, self portrait

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Ladybug Beetle, Oakland

08 Thursday Nov 2012

Posted by mtk in fauna, North Oakland

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

19, 19-spots, 2012, beetle, black, ladybug, oakland, orange, spot

Pretty sure this is the 19-spot, Harmonia axyridris of the Family Coccinellidae – known as the Asian Ladybug.

Looks like it got smeared with dust or flew through light spider webbing. Maybe it just escaped a spider. I let it back out into the garden.

Election Day 2012

06 Tuesday Nov 2012

Posted by mtk in elections

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

2012, day, election, Karthik, mtk

I’ve voted in every election since 1984, eight times for President. I’ve voted for a handful of Senators, and dozens of Representatives, Propositions and candidates for lower office, including judges.

I have voted in Texas, New York and California and once voted absentee from Taiwan – when I cast possibly the most distant vote for Ann Richards for Governor of Texas.

I covered elections for George magazine, Pacifica Radio and local newspapers and went through the Florida Fiasco of 2000 with writers and colleagues in New York City who were also covering the Election.

I covered Bush vs. Kerry for Pacifica and particularly KPFK radio 90.7fm, Los Angeles.

Today, it doesn’t feel good to vote. Not pointless, because the propositions here in California are a strong form of democracy and represent the political will of our State, but basically I feel as though most of the votes I ever cast did nothing to progress our nation on what I consider to be the best path.

At 45, I grow more isolated in my worldview.

Well, off to vote.

My vote:

Yes on Propositions 30, 34, 37, B1

No on Propositions 32, 38, A1

FOR:

Incumbents President Barack Obama and Representative Barbara Lee

Ranked Choices, Oakland City Council District One: 1.Raya, 2.Kalb 3.MacCleay

Rebecca Kaplan, Oakland City Council

Mary London, School Board

Barbara Parker, City Attorney

Rebecca Saltzman, BART Board

Buster and Panda World Series Parade

01 Thursday Nov 2012

Posted by mtk in baseball, S.F.

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

2012, baseball, Buster, Francisco, giants, MVP, pablo, parade, Posey, San, Sandoval, series, trophy, world

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1931 Packard 840 Deluxe Eight

01 Thursday Nov 2012

Tags

1931, 2012, 840, car, deluxe, eight, Francisco, giants, mayor's, mayoral, Packard, parade, San, sf

Posted by mtk | Filed under photography, S.F., vehicles

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Gallery

Hall of Famers SFGiants WS Parade

31 Wednesday Oct 2012

Posted by mtk in baseball, S.F.

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

2012, Big, Cepeda, Clark, Dave, famers, Gaylord, giants, Hall, hey, Jon, Juan, kahuna, kid, Marichal, Mays, McCovey, Miller, mlb, of, Orlando, parade, Perry, Righetti, say, series, sf, the thrill, Will, Willie, world

This gallery contains 6 photos.

with Marty Lurie on the Plaza at Public House before WS Game Three

27 Saturday Oct 2012

Posted by mtk in radio

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

2012, AT&T, Carter, from, from oakland, game, house, Karthik, Lurie, m.t., Marty, mt, mtk, oakland, park, public, series, three, world

ALL YEAR LONG I HAVE HUGE … OK NOT HUGE, BUT ALL KINDS OF LITTLE DIFFERENCES WITH THIS GUY AND YOU KNOW WHAT HE DOES?

He invites me on the radio to talk about it.

and last Saturday he let me wear the Championship Ring from 2010. wow.

Marty Lurie, radio host who joined KNBR early in 2010 after working to cover the A’s, was immediately a lucky element for the Giants. He and I stood exactly where we are in this photo two years before, and bore witness during the run that finally made the Giants World Series Champs in San Francisco. Marty walked in … and we won.

For decades a criminal defense attorney, and at that a New Yorker, Mr. Lurie became a historian of the game of baseball independent of what he does now for KNBR. If anyone must, Marty Lurie must be associated with the cross-country relationship the Giants have that reaches back to the Polo Grounds in New York City.

But by providence and timing, Marty has grown into a unique role with the World Series Champs and is now an important member of the San Francisco Giants team.

Mr. Lurie’s an excellent radio interviewer whose competence is a direct result of his research. I loved watching him at the Public House in Game 5 against the Braves back in 2010. He sat down to score the game and pulled out a yellow legal pad to do it. He’s a baseball nerd trained as a lawyer!

Mr. Lurie’s interviews of baseball players and managers on Talkin’ Baseball, which he’s been conducting season-long for three years now, are a growing chronicle of the game.

So Marty Lurie is an attorney who can discuss both leagues’ histories very effectively. He brought a whole lot of AL contacts over to KNBR  the first year and was eager to share with us NLers the value of certain stories from the lesser league.

But slowly over the past three years, he has joined the stewards of the Giants Championships of 2010 and 2012 who, taken collectively, have become arbiters of SF’s first time championship memories. (full disclosure, GBC hopes to be included in that group of stewards)

Marty, I’m saying it here for the first time: You’re the only lawyer I really like.

Thanks for letting me wear the Championship Ring and for doing such a bang-up job behind the mic.

sincerely,

“M.T.”

and, in 2010: “Carter from Oakland”

(just pissed off a whole lot of lawyers I know who think me and them’re “real close”).

The Triple Kiss

23 Tuesday Oct 2012

Posted by mtk in bats

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

2012, bat, broken, champions, change, crazy, direction, double, Francisco, giants, hunter, kiss, Kozma, League, mlb, motion, National, nlcs, overcranking, pence, Pete, rbi, San, slow, slow-mo, triple

I refer to this broken bat double which swerved into play, as:

The Triple Kiss

This excellent .gif of The Triple Kiss is by @CorkGaines

Hunter Pence knocked in three runs when this ball left his broken bat after a crazy series of three collisions – the last of which caused it to swerve in the air and bound past the outstretched glove of the shortstop.

Second-year Cardinals shortstop Pete Kozma, who was very well positioned, reacted at lightning speed, but was caught going the wrong way for a fraction of a second because the third point of contact changed the ball’s direction.

The Triple Kiss happened in less than half a second. Watching it live, as broadcast, I had no idea the ball hit the bat three times; not until seeing it like this.

I knew it was a broken bat hit, my shoulders slumped at the same instant that Kozma jumped – and then suddenly, the ball took a crazy turn in the air and, as if it had eyes, bounced past the outstretched glove of the recovering Kozma, on the second base side.

The Triple Kiss was significantly faster than the human eye … even the highly trained eyes of a ballplayer, or an umpire. It affords us the opportunity to discuss the intense amount of new information that slow motion yields.

Slow motion was originally known – in analog filmmaking – as overcranking, a method by which the speed of the film was altered through handcranking the frames. Overcranking was first used in sports as long ago as the 1930’s in the coverage of boxing matches.

It took a long time for overcranking to become slow motion and in that time we got pretty used to it. We allowed slow motion to creep into our observation of games with such ease and normality that the NFL, NBA and MLB now all stop play to incorporate it as a tool in evaluating what has actually taken place.

Machado Doubles, Scores vs. A's 1080HD

16 Sunday Sep 2012

Posted by mtk in baseball, North Oakland

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

09/16, 2012, 3B, A's, Athletics, Baltimore, baseman, Karthik, m.t., Machado, Manny, mtk, O.com, oakland, Orioles, third, vs.

Machado Doubles, Scores vs. A’s 1080HD

16 Sunday Sep 2012

Posted by mtk in baseball, North Oakland

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

09/16, 2012, 3B, A's, Athletics, Baltimore, baseman, Karthik, m.t., Machado, Manny, mtk, O.com, oakland, Orioles, third, vs.

New Bay Bridge Toll Booth Operations Center

30 Thursday Aug 2012

Posted by mtk in North Oakland, photography, S.F.

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

2012, Bay, booth, bridge, center, Karthik, m.t., mtk, oakland, Operations, sf, toll

Barry Zito, Lou Seal and Baby Panda at the Yard 1080HD

07 Tuesday Aug 2012

Posted by mtk in pitchers

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

2012, AT&T, august, baby, Barry, delivery, giants, Hector, lou, mlb, panda, park, sanchez, Seal, sfg, Zito

M.T. Karthik, 2012

03 Friday Aug 2012

Posted by mtk in conceptual art, journal entries, North Oakland, Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

2012, Karthik, m.t. karthik, mtk

Over the past 200 days, I’ve populated this blog with 200 posts.

Many are backdated – material collected over the past thirty years – but I’ve also posted three to five times a week in 2012, with mostly photographs of baseball games, flora, fauna and landscapes.

There’s a distinct and deliberate difference in the work of these last five years from the work before. In my 40’s, my work is decidedly less political, more image-oriented and produced with and for the plastic, digital fluidity of the inter-webbed world. This is by design.

I do not wish to be known as a political artist.

I promised myself decades ago I would work socially on political matters until I turned 40, when I hoped to turn the mantle of activism over to a younger generation. I have helped this happen and documented its occurrence.

When I was 15 I wrote that I’d make these changes to process when I turned 40, including the addition of filmmaking – which I waited decades to take seriously.

At 15, watching the first of the Macintosh computers come out, I also knew that new media would arise over the years. My generation was the very first to own a personal computer or send an e-mail.

I have tried to be judicious about studying and using tech. I do not play games.

Of new media, Youtube has been the most interesting to me. I started my first Youtube account at 40 and have several now which I use to embed videos to this site.

Continuing my methods over the past year, at 45, I joined Facebook and Twitter during seminal years for both companies. I observed closely as Twitter was given tax-breaks to move to San Francisco and FB created its massive IPO.

I’ve deactivated my account on FB and will not post there again.

I will continue to use Twitter in concert with this blog. I’ve come around on Twitter. I still decry the tax break created and approved by Ed Lee, David Chiu and the SF Board of Supervisors, but I am a Twitterer and will remain so.

The work until I turned 40 is represented here by posts of work I produced between 1981 and 2007. It’s detailed and requires time to sift through. I’ll continue over the years to add work from the past and to edit the contemporaneously written material describing work from my 20’s and 30’s.

I hope to leave behind a sound record of what I consider my work via this blog.

I dream of a reader willing to consider the continuity of thought here as a kind of single expression of a humanistic free radical living in the latter half of the 20th century and the dawn of the 21st. I am lonesome because of my work.

I like blogging and after some years of experimentation, I believe in WordPress as the best free way to do it.

Thanks to any visitors in advance; I love comments, likes and interactions. I am blessed that my site gets visits from many many different countries around the world. You are welcome here.

I remain, M.T. Karthik, author, artist, producer and director in pursuit of art, culture and change.

Is This Melky Cabrera’s Last Basehit as a Giant?

02 Thursday Aug 2012

Posted by mtk in bats

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

2012, a, A's, base, cabrera, Francisco, giants, hit, last, melky, mlb, San, sf

Is This Melky Cabrera's Last Basehit as a Giant?

02 Thursday Aug 2012

Posted by mtk in bats

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

2012, a, A's, base, cabrera, Francisco, giants, hit, last, melky, mlb, San, sf

Can't Stop Looking at the Milky Way

31 Tuesday Jul 2012

Posted by mtk in photography

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

2012, alessandro, alps, bella, della, milky, switzerland, way

as shot in the Alps recently

The milky way shines at night at around 1 AM, on the Stanserhorn, in the Alps in this photograph by Alessandro Della Bella, 26 July 2012, in Switzerland

 

 

Can’t Stop Looking at the Milky Way

31 Tuesday Jul 2012

Posted by mtk in photography

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

2012, alessandro, alps, bella, della, milky, switzerland, way

as shot in the Alps recently

The milky way shines at night at around 1 AM, on the Stanserhorn, in the Alps in this photograph by Alessandro Della Bella, 26 July 2012, in Switzerland

 

 

Hoagy LeChamp

06 Friday Jul 2012

Posted by mtk in fauna, North Oakland

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Tags

2012, Hoagy, LeChamp, swimming, turtle

Bees in Slow-Mo

04 Wednesday Jul 2012

Posted by mtk in fauna, North Oakland

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

2012, bees, motion, mtk, oakland, slow

Angel Pagan in 1912 NY Giants Jersey vs. Cubs

03 Sunday Jun 2012

Posted by mtk in baseball, photography, S.F.

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

1912, 2012, angel, AT&T Park, Chicago Cubs, consecutive, franchise100, hit, home, jersey, mlb, new york giants, ny, pagan, record, san francisco, San Francisco Giants, sf, versus, vintage, vs., year

GiantsCubs06022012 045
GiantsCubs06022012 046
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GiantsCubs06022012 237
GiantsCubs06022012 276
GiantsCubs06022012 268
GiantsCubs06022012 269

 

Melky Cabrera in 1912 NY Giants Jersey vs. Cubs at AT&T Park

03 Sunday Jun 2012

Posted by mtk in baseball, S.F.

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

100, 1912, 2012, AT&T Park, cabrera, cain, Chicago Cubs, jersey, matt, melky, mlb, new york giants, ny, san francisco, San Francisco Giants, sf, versus, vintage, vs., year

1912 NY Giants Jersey with blue pinstripes for Throwback Jersey Day.

also, check out the crazy image where a bubble blown by a kid behind home plate floats in front of the catcher (or appears to from my pov) just as a pitch comes in low for a ball. The result is Melky, catcher and ump all seem to be looking at this little bubble in the strike zone instead of a baseball.

Melky Cabrera in 1912 NY Giants Jersey vs. Cubs at AT&T Park

03 Sunday Jun 2012

Posted by mtk in baseball, S.F.

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

100, 1912, 2012, AT&T Park, baseball, cabrera, cain, Chicago Cubs, jersey, matt, melky, mlb, new york giants, ny, san francisco, San Francisco Giants, sf, versus, vintage, vs., year

1912 NY Giants Jersey with blue pinstripes for Throwback Jersey Day.

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also, check out the crazy image where a bubble blown by a kid behind home plate floats in front of the catcher (or appears to from my pov) just as a pitch comes in low for a ball. The result is Melky, catcher and ump all seem to be looking at this little bubble in the strike zone instead of a baseball.

Gallery

Matt Cain in 1912 NY Giants Jersey vs. Cubs at AT&T Park

03 Sunday Jun 2012

Posted by mtk in baseball, photography, S.F.

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

100, 1912, 2012, AT&T Park, cain, Chicago Cubs, giants, jersey, matt, mlb, new york giants, ny, ny giants, san francisco, San Francisco Giants, sf, vintage, vs.versus, year

Matt Cain in 1912 NY Giants Jersey vs. Cubs at AT&T Park

03 Sunday Jun 2012

Posted by mtk in baseball, photography, S.F.

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

100, 1912, 2012, AT&T Park, baseball, cain, Chicago Cubs, giants, jersey, matt, mlb, new york giants, ny, ny giants, san francisco, San Francisco Giants, sf, vintage, vs.versus, year

GiantsCubs06022012 138
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Matt Cain
Matt Cain
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M.T. Karthik

Unknown's avatar

This blog archives early work of M.T. Karthik, who took every photograph and shot all the video here unless otherwise credited.

Performances and installations are posted by date of execution.

Writing appears in whatever form it was originally or, as in the case of poems or journal entries, retyped faithfully from print.

all of it is © M.T. Karthik

a minute of rain

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QYLHNRS8ik4

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