I like to make things with people in mind.
I love history, but it’s a difficult hobby to maintain (how do you even practice a history hobby?). For years, Anna and I have been talking about creating informal history-focused events, where friends could come and learn about history in a non-intimidating (and even fun!) way. We mentioned this to our friends at The Brooklyn Brainery and they encouraged us to do it!
So in September 2011, Anna and I founded The Society for the Advancement of Social Studies, a monthly lecture series designed to both entertain and enlighten. Our official motto is “All the history you knew but forgot, and all the booze you need to forget it again”.
Each month, a guest speaker, Anna, and I teach short lectures on topics pertaining to one event. Past events have include The Crusades and The Civil War. We also keep it fun with games and themed drink specials (to ensure maximum knowledge gained, of course).
I think we’ve hit on something, because on the first Tuesday of each month, over 100 attendees come to hear us talk. We’ve even been written up in various blogs, including Brokelyn, and in Time Out New York’s magazine.
Two things about the advertising industry: being on Agency Spy is usually not a good thing, and the industry is full of agencies with interesting names.
On my last days at Tribal, I create the Agency Obfuscation Game with some coworkers. Each phrase took an agency name and obscured it with hints, homophones and bloated word choice. This also marked my first appearance in Agency Spy, which was a good thing.
After taking a Surprisology class at LifeLabs, Einav Jacubovich and I decided that we needed to surprise our friends.
We sent mysterious postcards to 7 of our friends requesting their participation in a New York Dinner Adventure. The postcards each had an abstract photo on it, an assignment to bring a food, and a random street corner to meet us.
On the night of August 30th, we brought our unsuspecting friends from a random street corner and on to the Brooklyn Bridge. We stopped in the middle, set out picnic blankets, and announced that dinner was served.
Our guests were surprised, so mission accomplished! We then ate our delicious feast on the bridge with an unbeatable view of New York as tourists and locals gawked.
Recently, I entered AND WON Revel’s first monthly challenge. Revel is a mobile app that turns sets of instructions, called challenges, into adventures and experiences that can be shared by friends or strangers.
The challenge (co-authored by Jason!) we created was titled Play by the Rules. You can read all about it and us here.
One of my favorite classes in college was called “Color” and based on the work and ideas of Josef Albers. I wanted to use what I learned them, combined with what I’ve learned about color from marketing and psychology to teach a class exploring the abtract topic.
In July, I taught a course at The Brooklyn Brainery called Color! (is Awesome Even If You’re Not an Artist). The course explored color across a variety of topics—the science, psychology, history, and culture of color.
Here are some fun facts I learned:
For the 100th anniversary of the New York Public Library, Jane McGonigal, with Natron Baxter and Playmatics created an overnight scavenger hunt in the Stephen A. Schwarzman Building called Find The Future- The Game.
I was chosen as one of the participants in the game, where I would spend the night locked in the New York Public Library, complete tasks based on items on exhibit in the library, and collaborate on writing a book. Using a QR code reader app, I ran around the library with a team, unlocking codes from items including Jack Kerouac’s harmonica and The Declaration of Independence. Then, I would write short stories based on writing prompts based on the items, including writing rules for a unique approach based on Kerouac’s “Spontaneous Prose.” Others, too, would write their own version and a bookbinder set our contibutions in to a physical book.
As the night wore on, the delirium from being awake for 20+ hours began to set in. Quests were abandoned for activities like “Freeze Tag in the Foyer” and absurd photo shoots.
At the end of the night, however, everyone reconvened to celebrate the creation of a physical book, based on the collaborative story writing, to be a part of the NYPL permanent collection.
This year, Einav Jacubovich and I teamed up to create two entries in to the Cannes Young Lions Competition over the course of one week.
We were given the challenge to increase college student participation in SIFE, an international organization that connects marketing and business students with charitable causes.
Einav and I knew that business and marketing students need both education and experience to compete in today’s job market. To make SIFE meaningful to students, we showed that SIFE would give them real business experience by positioning SIFE groups as real start-up businesses.
For the Cyber competition, we demonstrated this through banner ads and a social media plan, which can be viewed here.
For the separate Media competition, we created an action plan that used media dollars to support the SIFE business experience and make it more attractive to students. Our entry is posted below.
In collaboration with Social Media Week 2011, No Right Brain Left Behind called upon professionals in creative industries to brainstorm solutions to creativity crisis happening in US schools today.
I lead the Tribal DDB submission during this week-long challenge. Our approach was to address the disconnect between class objectives (doing well on standardized tests) and the individual educational needs of the students. The team decided to work within the system and update a rapidly antiquating element: the textbook.
By working with publishers to create dynamic lessons tailored to students, Tribal DDB saw an opportunity to extend publishers’ business offerings while greatly benefitting students, calling this innovative program: LIVINGBOOKS.
LIVINGBOOKS inspires students through evolving, personalized lessons by customizing existing publishers’ content through a dynamic template that self-edits to reflect its readers’ interests. It generates study guides and tests that help students internalize information in a way that encourages creativity by relying on their input.
I stumbled upon “Genuine Authentic Hand Painted Signs” while in search for some much-needed caffeine in San Francisco last weekend.
Inside The Summit (a tres trendy coffee shop with beautifully architected wooden walls and full of dozens of laptop drones), the walls were full of beautiful handcrafted signage and I, now equipped with a seriously strong coffee, was happy. What can I say, I’m a sucker for typography.
What I connected with came from the inspiration for the pieces:
We’ve had customers use the phrase “more authenticity”, in describing what they were coming to us looking for in a sign, while providing us with digital files to work from, which themselves bore no particularly hand wrought characteristics. What is it about what we do that implies to our clients, or to their clients, something genuine and authentic?
As someone who works with the brand side of social media, I know too well about the difference request for authenticity and the actual experience. It seems that too frequently, there’s a lot of enthusiasm for being something, like authentic or genuine, without doing something.
We’re hoping, through this show, to call people’s attention to their own standards for genuineness and authenticity, and to spark some conversations about how they (and we) do or don’t manifest or recognize them. Or, at the very least we’ll decorate the place with a slew of genuine authentic hand painted signs.
Mission accomplished, guys.
This December, due to my inordinate obsession with holiday cheer, I wrangled some friends together to create a corny chain email. Each day, someone in the group had to send out a little present for everyone based on the 12 Days of Christmas song.
Here’s what happened:
December 1: A partridge in a pear tree
My take: A pair of trees donated on our behalf to the Arbor Day Foundation and the Partridge family!
December 2: Two turtledoves
Alicia’s: Really, what is a turtledove? And a Dove coupon!
December 3: Three French hens
Lily’s: After telling us all about her chicken inspirations, then shocked us all when she went a little too far.
December 4: Four calling birds
Theo’s: A real, live, analog conference call date!
December 5: Five golden rings
Anna’s: A lovely, Christmastime story.
December 6: Six geese a-laying
Alex’s: Six geese laid low!
December 7: Seven swans a -swimming
Lyndsey’s: Seven swan facts, a trippy Japanese video, and adopted us all swans!!
December 8: Eight maids a-milking
Einav’s: The (rained out) Brunch-Time Milk Block Party!
December 9: Nine drummers drumming
Jess’: An awesome (9-video-long) drumming playlist
December 10: Ten pipers piping
Mike’s: A song made from 10 overlaid tracks (play it over Bing Crosby for full-on Christmas joy)
December 11: Eleven ladies dancing
Kate’s: Whiskey Kate emerged and shared some favorite songs
December 12: Twelve lords a-leaping
Andrew’s: A sensory experience. Oh lordy.
Starting October 1, I will be TV-less and boy, am I excited.
A year ago, I remember exploring the rise of people giving up television in favor of internet television. Recently, a study found that now about 800,000 American households now watch TV only via the Web. That’s crazy and interesting and that’s not why I’m giving up television.
Recently, my friends and I all discovered that we had the same issue: TV was taking up a lot of our time. Now, I don’t think I watch TV, much but the hours add up quicker than you think. An hour after work one day, an hour before bed another, and on and on. There are some days I come home and I’m so tired that all I can do is watch TV, and that stinks.
However, I’m not anti-TV. I think that it’s an invaluable medium that provides a good amount of entertainment or education. But when I find myself turning it on just to pass the time, I feel like a vegetable.
Here’s what I’m hoping to gain:
This is not meant to be considered “an experiment” or anything like that. It’s really just a choice, and I’m choosing to opt out of owning something that has a negative effect on me. We’ll see how it goes.
Birthdays come with a lot of rules.
#4 is my favorite. You get one day of the year to do WHATEVER you want so it has to count. This year, I pretty much only had one birthday wish: I wanted Baked Alaska.
I have no idea where I heard of Baked Alaska, but I’ve been passively searching for this traditional American dessert for the last 5 years or so. It’s a composite of all of my favorite desserts in ONE, plus it takes it up a notch with the thrill of defying science by putting ice cream in the oven (!!!!).
APPARENTLY I’m in the minority with my obsession with Baked Alaska, because while you can find 139+ places that have Banh Mi, there are only 3 restaurants in the 5 borough area that actually still make Baked Alaska.
My BA came from Giorgio’s of Gramercy and contained: walnut sweet bread, espresso gelato, flamed meringue, and strawberry coulis. It was amazing and, BECAUSE IT WAS MY BIRTHDAY, Giorgio’s also threw in chocolate covered strawberries, a piece of Espresso Cheesecake and a piece of S’more Bread Pudding. Nice.
Birthday boys and girls, if you want to test your hand at Baked Alaska and share this amazing dessert with deserving people, try this really simple recipe:
Ingredients
1 layer sponge cake
1 qt. ice cream
4 egg whites
1/2 c. sugar
1 tsp. vanilla
1. Beat egg whites until nearly stiff, beat in sugar gradually, add vanilla and beat until stiff.
2. Place a board at least 1 1/2 inches thick between 2 pieces of corrugated paper; cover top with waxed paper.
3. Place round of sponge cake on board, heap ice cream quickly on top, leaving a 1 inch margin of cake all around; cover thickly with meringue.
4. Brown quickly in very hot oven (450 degrees).
Serve at once with chocolate, caramel or fruit sauce, if desired.
I was able to play with Zach Lieberman + Golan Levin’s Manual Input Station a few months ago.
It made me realize how much real time interaction creates an exceptionally joyful experience because it really appeals to people’s curiosity and desire to play. When the user gets to control their own experience and then experiment with it, it creates a totally unique + personal effect. Some of my favorite work right now is reflecting this interest for discovery and real-time reactions through the use of technology, which is saying something because the original Manual Input Station was devised in 2004.
And what else I love is the simple way Zach describes his goal: “he wants you surprised”.
2 weeks ago, I got my first taste of internet fame via a single-serve subject blog called Cool Planner Hair, Dude. Though it didn’t rival This is Why You’re Fat or Selleck Waterfall Sandwich, it was wild to watch a silly site get 1,000 hits in
While looking for a bread recipe today, I came across this. Summer can’t come quickly enough.
Blackberry Tom Collins Cocktail Recipe
Ingredients
3 lrg. Blackberries
1/2 oz Fresh Lime Juice
1 t Sugar
2 oz Gin
3-4 oz Club Soda
1. Put blackberries in a highball glass, add lime juice, and sugar and muddle (you know, smash it all together with a pestle or something similar)
2. Add ice, then pour in gin and club soda. Stir, garnish with a couple cut blackberries if you’d like, and enjoy.
Under My Skin - Gin Wigmore
The song in my head today. But it keeps making you want to start singing some Cole Porter, doesn’t it?
The existence of affordable, interesting, and crazy random classes at the new Brooklyn Brainery makes me infinitely happy. I signed up for the Scents & Sensibility classes, which excite me due to my newfound obsession with perfumes.
NBC just reported that H&M cuts up unsold clothes and curbs them. I’ve known about this for a while thanks to a lucky find one day where a friend and I ended up with a handful of accessories that were still new and with tags. I thought this was shockingly wasteful, especially in a city where homelessness is so prevalent.
I’m so glad that the media has discovered this. Currently, H&M is dealing with the backlash in real time on their Facebook page, but consumers are extremely upset about it. Furthermore, the company is claiming that this is “an incident”, while I originally found the boxES in March.
March is the most depressing month, so come on down to S.A.S.S. and feel better about your lot in life by learning about the the Great Depression. We’ll tell you all about the dust bowl, the unique way New York City dealt with these trying times and give a handy overview of the whole ordeal so you can impress people at cocktail parties with your historical knowledge.
Does that sound too fun to handle?! Well suck it up, because we’re also holding a free raffle for some FANTASTIC bindle stick prize packages.
DJ Kate Pilgrim will be gracing us with her presence, check out her sage advice on live shows at:
http:// pilgrimsofsound.wordpress.c om/
AND, as always, stick around after the lectures for some fun times with the good folks of Crappy Cinema Council. See what they are all about here:
http://crappycinemacouncil.com/
Love reading? Here are more details:
S.A.S.S. Presents: The Great Depression
The Depression: An Informative Overview
A real-live history graduate student lets us know what actually went down (besides the stock market, I mean) during the Great Depression.
The Dust bowl? More like the SUCKS bowl, amiright?
Get up close and personal with wheat fields and their issues during the early 1930s.
New York City and the Bear Market Blues
A lot of stuff happened in New York during the Great Depression. You wanna know about it, right?
This is the best titanic andrew wk party hard gif I have ever seen.
Special SASS Announcement:
As if our February lecture wasn’t getting your blood pumping enough, we’ve teamed up with Williamsburg’s own Brooklyn Fox Lingerie to bring you a very sexy raffle. On Tuesday, February 7th, come by SASS for some awesome lectures (including the history of underwear!!!) and enter to win a $50 gift certificate from Brooklyn Fox. Tickets will be $2 for 1, $5 for 3.
Brooklyn Fox is a bra fitter for all kinds of ladies, carrying sizes from AA- G cups. They carry stunning and unique high-quality lingerie that is also super wearable.
Plus, they’re really really friendly. Their staff will help you find whatever you need (like, your proper bra size. Or if you need a very special present for a very special person) and will even answer your questions on their site or on Twitter.
Basically, Brooklyn Fox totally rules. There are some pictures of what you can adorn yourself with above- perfect for whatever you have on your calendar for Valentine’s Day…or for just looking and feeling smart and sexy any day. So enter our Brooklyn Fox raffle at SASS and see if you get lucky!
Josh is a self proclaimed renaissance man with a passion for cheap wine and expensive bourbon. Most recently, he claims to have received an honorary PhD in Geological Astronomy from an online course that we are pretty sure doesn’t exist. Nonetheless, his interest in the history of marriage and how it has changed over the centuries in western civilization makes him the perfect man to fill your brains with useful matrimonial facts.
So strap on the old ball and chain and come on down to Public Assembly to learn about the ever evolving nature of getting hitched (plus the origins of underwear and stories of scandalous historical affairs). We’ll be there with our friends with benefits Dottie Dynamo and Buffalo Trace!
Dottie ran away from Indiana to start stirring up trouble in the big bad city four years ago. Now she spend her nights covered in glitter, and her days clawing her way out of a cubicle. She has a love of all things obscure and wishes people still dressed like it was the 40’s and 50’s (hello garter belt!).
Come see Dottie shake her groove thing on February 7th at A Very Sexy SASS! And then stimulating your brain with our lectures about underwear through the ages, sexy scandals from days gone by, and how the definition of a “perfect marriage” has changed throughout the years. We’ll see you there!
What you need to know:
This month we’re getting you in the mood for Valentines day with some very sexy history…learn about underwear through the ages, sexy scandals from days gone by, and how the definition of a “perfect marriage” has changed throughout the years.
ALSO as a special treat, we are thrilled to announce that DOTTIE DYNAMO, “The lovable bundle of tits n’ trouble,” will be performing some incredibly sexy Burlesque numbers throughout the evening.
Check her out here: http://dottiedynamo.com/
AND THERE’S MORE: After the last lecture of the evening, there will be a free half hour of Buffalo Trace Whiskey at the bar, followed by the hilarious stand up stylings of the Crappy Cinema Council.
They live on the internet here: http:// crappycinemacouncil.com/
****SASS is free as always which means that the lovely Ms. Dynamo is performing for us pro bono. Please consider bringing a few dollars for her tip jar.****
Love reading? Here are more details:
A Very Sexy SASS with Burlesque and Booze
Sexy Scandals of Yester-Year
Titilating tales of famous and infamous couples whose indiscretions became gossip fodder for the masses.
A Brief History of Marriage
Say “I do” to SASS and come hear how the institution of marriage has evolved over time.
Undies through the Ages
Ever wonder what people wore if they knew they were going to get lucky in 1650? Find out in this whirlwind tour of western undergarments from the beginning of time to present day.
What you need to know:
So you’ve heard the rumor, right? About how the world is supposed to be destroyed at the end of 2012? Well, come to our January lecture and find out why everybody keeps saying this! You’ll learn what Nostradamus has predicted for the future, how all those wacky doomsday cults are preparing themselves for the big moment, and why the Maya calendar has got people all riled up as of late.
Love reading? Here are more details!
Prepare yourselves for the impending SASSocalypse!
Nostradamus and the Things He Said
Forget what you heard on the History Channel and come learn the real deal about this famous guy who liked to predict lots of scary things.
Would You Like Some Kool-Aid?
Jonathan Soma returns to SASS to inform you of why you should most definitely NOT drink the kool-aid and other interesting facts about doomsday cults.
Who are the Maya and Why Does Their Calendar Know Everything?
The Maya long count calendar supposedly predicts that the apocalypse will occur in December of 2012. We’re taking you back to the steamy jungles of ancient Mexico to find out what the Maya themselves had to say about all this mess.
Due to a last-minute scheduling shuffle, Dan Veksler won’t be speaking tonight on the USSR. But now, we have something even better!
Soma will be teaching us a section from his famous Foreign Alphabets class! Tonight, we get to learn what was going on in all those crazy propaganda posters with our new lecture on The Cyrillic Language. Tonight! At Public Assembly.
What you need to know:
December’s lectures will cover the history of Russia from the start of imperialism to the fall of the Berlin Wall. Come learn about crazy czars, rad revolutionaries, pissed-off peasants, and demanding dictators. Oh yeah, and our guest lecturer is a real-live Russian guy who knows more facts than you can shake a beet at.
Noble Comrad DJs Yolki and Palki will be providing you with auditory pleasure throughout the evening.
Love reading? Here are more details!
In Soviet Russia, S.A.S.S. teach YOU!
Imperial Russia: The Craziest Place You Ever Heard Of
Russia is giant, cold, old, and doesn’t know if it lives in Europe or Asia. This means that it’s history is quite distinct from that of any neighboring countries. Our first lecture will present you with overview of pre-revolution Russia and the brilliant nutcases who told everyone who lived there what to do.
Eff This, We’re Sick of Farming Potatoes for You!
See what made the oppressed majority finally rise up and take matters into their own hands, and listen to the fascinating account of the revolutionary years that lead up to the formation of the U.S.S.R.
More Than Kin, and Less Than Kind
Pay attention to this one, it’s relevant to current events! Our final lecture will cover the history of the Soviet Union, and what it was like for the men and women tryin’ to make it happen out there on the steppes.
The Society for the Advancement of Social Studies and Public Assembly are pleased to announce that meetings will take place every first Tuesday of the month.
Party time, excellent.
Reema is a Middle East specialist and a terrible bowler. Her current obsession is the history of New York, from the draft riots and Typhoid Mary to Robert Moses and the transformation of Brooklyn. Reema and New York have been dating for four years now, and it’s starting to get serious.
Come on down to Public Assembly on November 8th and Reema will inform your inquisitive minds as to the events and struggles going on in New York City during the Civil War. We’ll also be discussing the events leading up to the war AND the whole damned thing (each in 20 minutes or less!).
Even more: there’s also going to be a themed cocktail, a BEARD OFF, and sweet spun tunes by Mr. DJ Phury after the events.
Which is really cool and exciting except when you realize how weird things you say sound in print. But we’re really flattered and apparently influenced by the Brooklyn Brainery (who actually happen to be helping us run the show) and 3rd Ward (but we don’t really know because we can’t afford to take a class of theirs).
Also, this is what happens when you don’t have a scanner (click for the whole thing):
What you need to know:
November’s lecture will be “Happy 150th Anniversary, Civil War!” which means we’re gonna take all ya’ll on a fun and in formative journey so as to reacquaint yourself with the war between the states. We’ll teach you all about the causes, major battles and after-effects of this big, bloody, mess of a war. Also, we’re bringing you an in depth report on how those crazy Yankees in New York City handled this whole situation.
Be sure to stick around afterward for some libations and intellectual digestion as your ears are soothed by the funky grooves of DJ Phury.
What you also need to know:
We will be celebrating the fantastically outlandish facial hair of the civil war by having our very own Historical Beard Off. Please wear your finest beard/mustache/sideburns/fake beard if you wish to participate.
Soma has way too many hobbies, and forgets about each of them after two weeks. He rationalized them all by founding Brooklyn Brainery. He’s never met a cannibal, but knows enough man-eating puns to make it an enjoyable experience before he’d be consumed.
Come have an enjoyable experience with us this Monday, the 17th as we share the stories of Real and Scary Historical Halloween! Cannibals, serial killers, and mummies- we’re going to take you down to spooky town at 7pm in Pete’s Candy Store!
What you need to know:
We are excited to announce that our next lecture will be “Real and Scary Historical Halloween,” so get ready to be creeped out by things that aren’t just in your imagination. You’ll be introduced to a cornucopia of ancient corpses, figure out which islands/basements to avoid if you don’t want to be eaten by cannibals, and learn exactly what it is that makes serial killers so special.
Last month’s meeting was standing room only, so show up early to get a good spot and take advantage of Pete’s awesome happy hour.
Love reading? Here are more details!
Real and Scary Historical Halloween
Mummies of the World
Whether nature made them by accident, or people made them because people do weird things, mummies always provide a rare glimpse of life in the olden days. Become familiar with the different icky ways mummies are made, and get ready to meet some dead celebrities.
Serial Killers: Qu’est Que C’est?
Serial killers are nuts! Learn what separates them from boring regular murderers, and hear stories of some of the past’s most infamous creepsters.
Cannibals and the People they Eat
Could you ever bring yourself to eat another person? Our special guest lecturer, the learned Jonathan Soma, will help you make an informed decision by teaching you about cannibals who live everywhere from the jungles of South America to suburban basements.
Glenna loves history so much that she talks about it for a living! By day, she teaches social studies at a high school in Downtown Brooklyn. By night, and any spare time she can find, she waits for callback to “Jeopardy” and gets competitive about trivia.
Glenna will be sharing the stories of Eleanor of Aquitaine and Other Sexy Ladies of the Crusades at our first meeting on September 26th. Be sure to Like us on Facebook, sign up for the mailing list and obvs show up to Pete’s for our first meeting!
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW:
Our first expedition will be The Holy Crusades, in which we will explore how Christianity got its groove back and then promptly lost it. You’ll study the exciting 500 years of history in 15 minutes or less, learn about Eleanor of Aquitaine and her femme cohorts, and discover the debacle of the Children’s Crusade.
Love reading? Here are more details!
The Holy Crusades: how Christianity got its groove back and then promptly lost it.
Byzantium to Bummerville
Over 500 years of history artfully boiled down into a delicious and easily digested, condensed-soup of an overview. Learn the major causes of the Crusades, what went down in Jerusalem, and how these medieval battles pertain to modern day relations in the Middle East.
Eleanor of Aquitaine and Other Sexy Ladies of the Crusades
While the menfolk were all going about stabbing things (typical), these babes were busy deciding the fate of the newly formed Christian states. Taught by a real live high school teacher…it’s the history lesson you always dreamed of!
The Children’s Crusade: The Goonies Times 30,000
When professionally trained warriors fail, it’s time to send in the unarmed pre-teens. You’ll want to give your undivided attention to our fascinating account of this odd and unfortunate event.
Do you know how much Kim Kardashian’s engagement ring cost?
Get that shit outta your head, and replace it with some historical facts that are guaranteed to impress people at cocktail parties/bars/the internet!
Nicoletta de Denaro, Goodby, Silverstein & Partners
Hairdressers - better than any focus groups.
When the new section of the High Line in New York City was getting ready to open in June 2011, Korean-born artist Hyemi Cho worried that she would lose her privacy due to the proximity of her apartment to the new span. Instead of giving into the fear, she painted art for her window that gave the illusion that she was peeking out and waving from behind the curtains