JessicaRulestheUniverse.com

Personal blog of Jessica Zafra, author of The Collected Stories and the Twisted series
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Archive for March, 2013

Star Trek: The Wrath of the Cumberbatch

March 22, 2013 By: jessicazafra Category: Movies 5 Comments →

Aaaaaaaaaaaa he’s using The Voice! They’re dooooooomed!

Journalism 2013: Cheesy Heart and Kris Yapping

March 21, 2013 By: jessicazafra Category: Current Events 15 Comments →

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Thanks to Boboy for the alert.

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By the way we’re doing a podcast interview with Lorna Kapunan, legal counsel of James Yap (and Hayden Kho) in April. Don’t know if she can discuss That Case, but do send in your questions. We met her when we did a project with the Women’s Business Council of the Philippines (women who kick ass) and set the interview before her client hit the headlines again.

The Pen onscreen

March 20, 2013 By: jessicazafra Category: Places, Traveling No Comments →

The Peninsula Manila recently launched its first ad campaign in a gazillion years. Entitled Pen Moments, it was produced by Ridley Scott Associates and directed by Jean Claude Thibaut and Anthony Crook, with still photography by Russel Wong.

And in case you’ve ever wondered when the LUXE City Guide to Manila is ever coming out, it has, sort of. The travel guide publisher in partnership with the Peninsula Hotels has produced PenCities, an online lifestyle journal spanning the nine Peninsula cities, including Manila. Visit PenCities Manila and make your own suggestions.

Auden for Wednesday: The years shall run like rabbits

March 20, 2013 By: jessicazafra Category: Books 2 Comments →

Our favorite Audens

1. As I Walked Out One Evening (You heard that line in Before Sunrise.)
2. Musée des Beaux Arts

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“In Breughel’s Icarus, for instance: how everything turns away
Quite leisurely from the disaster…”

3. Funeral Blues

4. O Tell Me The Truth About Love

When it comes, will it come without warning
Just as I’m picking my nose?
Will it knock on my door in the morning,
Or tread in the bus on my toes?

5. Pretty much everything.

Peace and quiet and coffee

March 19, 2013 By: jessicazafra Category: Food, Places 5 Comments →

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Or as much peace and quiet as one can find at a mall, assuming there’s no marching band on the premises. We like the casual, relaxed atmosphere at Brida’s cafe on the second floor of Power Plant Mall in Rockwell. It’s at the end of the hall, between Topshop and Smart, by the big windows. And beside The Spa, so it always smells nice.

We like sitting there with a book, a coffee, and Brida’s excellent pineapple upside down cake, or Tres Leches, or cheese roll.

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Gigi the owner is frequently on hand to make recommendations. (Yes, this photo was taken on Ash Wednesday.) Our favorite lunch items are the chorizo pasta, the pulled pork sandwich, and the Brie, jam and fruit plate.

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This cheesecake is intense.

The business of literature is the business of making culture.

March 19, 2013 By: jessicazafra Category: Books 3 Comments →

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British Library, London, 2011

Several years ago, I met with gaming guru Kevin Slavin, a man who could be assumed to be an enemy, one who might ridicule the stasis of the book. At the end of our coffee, he fell quiet for a second and then said that what books have in common with games is that they reward iteration. The more you play, the more you read, the better you get at it, the more fun you have. The way I have integrated that into my own mode of thinking is: In games you get to wonder what door to walk through; in books you get to wonder what the character was thinking, walking through that door. You get to imagine the color of the door, the material, the kind of doorknob, whether it was warm or cold to the opener’s touch.

The lack of video, the lack of audio, the lack of ways to change the forking outcomes of plot (what is rather crudely referred to as “interactivity”) is a feature of literature, not a bug. And, as it turns out, books are interactive. They’re recipes for the imagination. Conversely, video is restrictive—it tells you what things look like, what they sound like.

Books withstood the disruption of new modes of storytelling—the cinema, the TV set. And books have been the disruptor themselves many times, disrupting the Roman Church and upending the French aristocracy, the medieval medical establishment, then the nineteenth-century medical establishment. So the assumption at one extreme end of the Silicon Valley cosmology, that long-form text-only narrative is ripe for disruption (witness Tim O’Reilly’s skepticism in his Charlie Rose talk, see the continual framing of the book as akin to the horse-drawn carriage, see any number of start-ups offering multimedia platforms designed to replace books), is borderline foolish.

A business born out of the invention of mechanical reproduction transforms and transcends the very circumstances of its inception, and again has the potential to continue to transform and transcend itself—to disrupt industries like education, to drive the movie industry, to empower the gaming industry. Book culture is in far less peril than many choose to assume, for the notion of an imperiled book culture assumes that book culture is a beast far more refined, rarefied, and fragile than it actually is. By defining books as against technology, we deny our true selves, we deny the power of the book. Let’s restore to publishing its true reputation—not as a hedge against the future, not as a bulwark against radical change, not as a citadel amidst the barbarians, but rather as the future at hand, as the radical agent of change, as the barbarian. The business of literature is blowing shit up.

This is wonderful. On the business of literature by Richard Nash in VQR. Via Boing Boing.

Speaking of literature, we’re waiting for our volunteer book reviewers to cough up. Deadline’s over, we’re sending waves of guilt in your general direction.