There is a certain worldview that takes the stance that people are nothing more than densely compressed living murals of random information, agents of contiguous hypermemetic data transfer created, sustained, and ultimately destroyed by the flow of particulate knowledge around and through us. Every observable interaction is in reality an extension of the intangible, Rutherfordian elastic collision of information. This with the caveat that the currency of exchange in this scenario can be arbitrarily introduced or removed from system at specific "endpoints," namely: people.
Umm... bullshit.
However, it is an idea that deserves some degree of consideration. Here is a phenomenally self-indulgent litany of what I consider to be my biggest influences. Did I say self-indulgent already? I did. Good, then there won't be any surprises.
Six things that make me, me (that you can go experience for yourself!):
Penny-Arcade: What can I say? I'm a sucker for dick-jokes. In recent years though, it's been Tycho's newsfeed that I draw amusement from, with the comic serving almost as a beautifully illustrated afterthought. I don't play video games very often and when I do they're usually several years out of vogue, but Penny-Arcade exists within a larger pop-culture framework than the subset they lampoon, and as a web generation business model these guys are one of the most cited success stories. Jerry's propensity for weaving candid, intelligent, and often hilarious observations with the aforementioned juvenile humor is nothing short of amazing, and whenever my own flowery verbosity trends toward the absurd, that's me wanting to be more like Penny-Arcade.
Roald Dahl: It was through the suggestion of a friend (Thanks Drew!) that I reconnected with my favorite childhood author in adulthood, adding his autobiographical works and his more mature themed writing to my personal library. Dahl had a way of handing me puzzle-piece syllogisms one brilliant concept at a time. Their resultant construction suggested that children were in fact superior to adults in many respects; our eyes were open to the world's hidden magic and our inherent morality wasn't plagued with compromise. I had naively assumed he only worked well within those strictures, but as it turns out the man knew a thing or two about telling a story, period. Dahl treats readers- children or not- as inherently intelligent, and the end of "The Giraffe, The Pelly, And Me" almost makes me cry every time I read it.
Firesign Theater- The term "Stream of Consciousness" gets thrown around quite a bit in literature, in film, in comics and in theater, but these Proctor and Bergman radio plays I randomly discovered in High School (thanks Dad!) push the boundaries of the term well beyond anything I've ever encountered, and push the boundaries of comedy in the process. Complex, intelligent, and blissfully absurd, each subsequent listening revealed another layer of hidden brilliance (and complete mastery of every aspect of aural presentation.) What Monty Python was for most people The Firesign Theater was for me. I'm also a fan of their writing style, tightly woven, carefully scripted non-sequitur comedy written and delivered so as to seem completely improvised.
A Thurber Carnival- This one is also my Dad's fault. When I was six I went with him to rehearsals for "A Thurber Carnival," and I fell in love with both the theater and Thurber's brand of reality-muted absurdism. My mom had just bought me "Where The Sidewalk Ends" and Thurber was the other side of the coin. A Thurber Carnival opens as a sort of Proto-Laugh-In, and artfully dances across a series of very mature themes leaving an alternating series of punch-lines and "wait, what?" moments in its wake.
Terry Pratchett- I came to Terry Pratchett late, not picking up Good Omens until High School and not getting into Discworld until after college. Still, no single author has influenced my writing style more than Pratchett. He is the world's single most gifted living author. If Firesign is the nonpareil of joke-density in radio, Pratchett's writing should be likened to a neutron star. The Discworld is replete in its splendor as a model of imperfection, seamlessly transitioning between the fantastic and the familiar. I like a lot of authors' works; I love Terry Pratchett's.
Free Enterprise- On the opposite end of the same scale as Terry Pratchett, Free Enterprise is Mark Altman and Robert Meyer-Burnett's geek comedy I happened across in college, and it's dialogue insinuated itself into every facet of my daily speech. Think of it as Swingers meets The Big Bang Theory (obviously I'm perfectly positioned in the center of that Venn Diagram.) The cumulative effect of this film on my life is virtually incalculable- and I could do an entire article on what the 90's snapshot in the film says about the vagaries of geek culture. Actually, that's not a bad idea.
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