DEAD TELEVISION

I was gifted a 60″ television, something I would have never bought for myself.

It was older, which is part of the reason it was a gift, but it didn’t age well. It died this past week.

You don’t just “toss” a 60″ television though. It’s not really something you can leave on the curb, and there’s also e-waste recycling things to deal with.

Today, though, the TV is gone, and my life feels a little bit lighter. When off, it’s just this black monolith taking up space, mentally and physically.

I used the 1-800-GOT-JUNK folks, and they were great. Sure, a wee bit overprices for the TV and the other few items they took away, but it’s all gone, and the guys were super nice. Literally like, had a good laugh with them.

In a round about way, thinking less about televisions and “entertainment” and more about people. Bummer that it took the death of this giant TV to arrive at that place, but it was a good lesson learned.

Say no to gifts over 60″ in size.

WALKING

Since getting hurt over the summer from running, I’ve turned to walking. Lots of walking. Basically 10 miles per day of inentional “start my watch and go” sort of walking. This week I walked 82 miles.

Thanks, Norah for this one.
From Bradley
Another from Bradley.
Even updated my Strava.

DO IT FOR A DECADE

This is so spot on, from Joan Westenberg, from their piece “There is Only One Hack: Do it for a Decade.”

Social media rewards visible bursts of activity. You can post about your new productivity system, your ambitious goals, your monk mode month, locktober etc. You get likes and followers for performing optimization. But you don’t get progress.

When I think of how I started a music blog in 2001, I sometimes get confused, like… wait, was it really that long ago?

All the different people I worked with, the oppurtintues that came up, the things I fucked up, made up, and made right… I can’t believe that next year it’ll be 25 years of somehow still being in the game.

It’s absolutely not about arriving, or outrunning a bear – you just have to run faster than you friends, and never stop, I guess.

(link via Bradley Spitzer)

HYPER-SPECIFIC WRITING WITH AI

Listened to this on mydrive home today, and it was just fun hearing all the different zigs-and-zags on the subject of AI, particularly that a lot of writing that used to be on a subject (like “how do I write a good newsletter?”) can now tailored via AI to be specific about the platform you want to use, the style in which you want to write it, and all sorts of other hyper-specific points in a way that no single “how to” article could ever provide.

And that’s fascinating to me.

THE MINIMAL LIFE

Finding this post from Jeremy Maluf is gonna be bad.

If you didn’t know, there was a point in my life where I was “The Bike Nerd.” I had a Tumblr for it, where I would post photos similar to the above.

One morning in 2010, in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, I woke up, took my bed apart, left it on the curb, and rode away. I rode to Rutherford, NJ that day, about 31 miles, on my single speed bike.

I’m not saying I have the itch to get rid of everything and bike across the country again, but I’m not not saying it, either.

THE MOST WONDERFUL TIME OF THE YEAR

October 1st is here, along with crisp morning air, a long walk, and coffee from a local joint called Four Monkeys.

This time of year is magic for me. Since I’ve been working in the “music biz” since the mid 2000s and all, things always slowed down around this time. The flow of press releases, big news, tours, the overall volume of information kinda calmed down, and I always try to form these months around that, even though it’s a different era.

The world ain’t gonna form around my vibes, so I will bring the vibes I need, in both work and personal life, and that means being more present, more morning walks, less stressing about the things I have no control over.

STREAMING WILL EAT ITSELF

The streaming music platforms will soon follow the lead of the streaming video platforms and continue to raise their rates, which I’m sure will be helped along by the record labels that increase their licensing fees because they want as much of the action as the video streaming platforms.

The whole ecosystem will eat itself, and we’ll all go back to pirating music again (but the cool kids will keep buying vinyl and CDs and digital copies off of Bandcamp).

I’ve been seeing it mentioned in comment threads on some of the sites that have posted about Disney raising the rates again, notably MacRumors and I think something similar on The Verge. Monthly rates will continue to go up. Meanwhile, external hard drives and basic MP3 players are cheaper than ever on Amazon. It’s inevitable.

ART VS POLITICAL NONSENSE

A blog is a wonderful time capsule, for both the good and the bad. This from a recent email newsletter from the German band Elder:

Unfortunately, the timing for this release coincides with the change in tariff policies of the US government. Our (Stickman, based in Germany) uses a number of services to ensure the cheapest possible worldwide shipping, but all of them are currently not servicing the US while they re-tool themselves to handle the current situation.

As such, before these tariffs went into effect we only managed to get 100 copies of the EP into the US! If you are in the States and want to get your hands on one, you will need to order either via Armageddon Shop or Echodelic, both of which have only 50 copies.

We know that techincally tariffs shouldn’t affect vinyl as it falls under the banner of “informational materials”. Our shipping partners are not currently servicing the US and our hands are tied. Apologies for that.

Hope to look back on this post five years from now and shake my head at the current state of political affairs.

And holy heck, that album art is soooo good.

STREAMING PLATFORMS FILLED WITH FAKE MUSIC

You have to be on the streaming platforms!

The streaming platforms:

Deezer says it now receives over 30,000 fully AI-generated tracks daily, marking a sharp increase from the 20,000 figure it reported in April and the 10,000 it disclosed in January when it first launched its proprietary AI detection tool.

It’s hard enough to stand out from the crowds on the social media platforms when competing with actual musicians and bands. Now you throw in 30,000 AI-generated tracks EVERY DAY and you’re just buying lottery tickets and hoping for the best, you’re literally swimming upstream just trying to buy those lottery tickets in the first place.

Go play shows. Busk. Stream live. Do whatever you gotta do to get in front of actual humans, create fans, get their email address, rinse and repeat for years.

THERE IS NO RULE THAT SAYS WE HAVE TO STAY ON SOCIAL MEDIA

If we can go back to vinyl records and film cameras, we can go back to blogs and RSS feeds.

The common excuse is that no one will go back to blogs or RSS feeds. Yet we never say the same about film cameras or people that buy vinyl records. Sure, if we mean people as in everyone, then sure, no one will go back. But vinyl sales continue to rise, and people keep taking photos with film cameras.

Do we need permission from the masses before we do something that might bring us joy?