Now that I’m here in Newfoundland, I’ve got to shift my focus, and concentrate quite intensely on getting a job.
I’ve been working on moving everything from my apartment to my parents house (as a temporary storage area) for an entire month now.
Last Friday (April 23rd, 2010) I was able to catch some fireworks with my camera. I experimented with shutter speeds and produced some interesting results.
One night, Mike and I decided we would walk from Toronto to Niagara Falls, and videotape it.
Scott, Adri, Shaina & I take a walk on Good Friday, 2010. It was a really warm day, but the countryside is really yet to start turning green. Here are some shots I took from the walk.
It was a beautiful day, albeit a cold one. So I took the camera out for a walk.
The Watermelon Woman & Cheryl Dunye’s Critique of Feminist Film Theory. Dunye takes aim at societal & academic hegemony in her film “The Watermelon Woman.” In this essay, I illustrate how she does it.
Say what you want about Richard Dawkins, but don’t tell me he skirts questions like Senator Fielding
Here’s Reggie doing his thing in a die hard commercial. Fantastic, as usual.
I had a chance to pull all the footage off my video camera I took down to New Orleans in February. Here’s a semi-random sampling/preview of the footage I obtained.
In February of 2010 I joined Professor Stephen Svenson along with a few other volunteers down in New Orleans, LA.
on another issue, here’s the first video in a series of reports on the climate debate that seems to be raging all ’round us.
It’s an image which shows the Eagle lunar lander sitting exactly as it did the day the astronauts left it.
(Essay for MM3B03 @ McMaster). Not quite a decade ago, the internet was very much understood to be about people getting connected to websites of special interest, business, or both. These sites had very little in the way of interactivity, and so the web was perceived to be, by and large, a static environment…
Monkey-See-Monkey-Don’t: A Review of Media Effects Research and its Implications for Violent Videogame Mythology is a literature review covering research done on the effects of videogames, with a specific focus on violent ones. Written for Doctor Faulkner’s 3rd year Communications Course (MM3K03) at McMaster.
A few pictures from New York City in December of 2006.
Some of my earlier digital image work.
For Stefan Sinclair’s “History and Philosophy of Computing” (MM3B03) course at McMaster. Coding time: upwards of 100 hours solid. Facebook account with at least 30 friends required! …View Site
After I took the Multimedia 2A03 (Advanced Multimedia) course at McMaster, I decided I wanted to be a teaching assistant for that class. I ended up getting the job. I taught in the winter 2008 session and was asked to come back the following year for the winter 2009 session. It was a great experience from which I learned a lot and am very happy I had! …View Site
The folks over at the McMaster Nuclear Reactor put on a competition in celebration of their 50th anniversary. The objective was to redesign their dated website. …View Site
It took a creative group of four individuals to make this website, of which I’m very proud. Kayla carefully stitched the slightly-over 500 images together. I programmed the guts of the carousel. Dave took care of the content. Josh took care of some content, provided the inspiration which became the site’s design, and he spent hours with aggrevating code grunt-work. …View Site
The Digital Games course at McMaster was a fun one to take. It was taught by Professor Andrew MacTavish. I worked with three other group members to produce this website on the history of graphic design. Everyone did a great job and I like the overall ‘feel’ achieved with both the design and content. …View Site
