#year 1 episode 5: Shape in Grove Park
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Year 1 - Episode 5 : The Shape in Grove Park
Notes in messy order:
Warning ! long post !
Cecil, your hypnosis trick isnt working on me. Cool ok, historical shape ok cool, blood circle is a great addition
the green market "um ? how about we sell fruits now ?" Whaaaaaat, i could never imagine that. WHAAAAT ????? insane dude, super controversial.
Nightvale scorpion lets goooo and of course. Something horrible happens LMAOOOOOOO SECOND HEAD IS BETTER YO WHAT THE FUCK ?????? FUCKED UP MOM ?
"there s a real turrantula problem" insane fear "teach a spider to read, stop the madness" WHY IS CECIL WHISPERING IN MY EAR ??? BITCH ?
oh god, sponsor message head in hands brother we just want a huddle man. plus wednesday got canceled i feel like there is morse code
Rida Hayworth ? is she like important ANGEL SAID IT NO CAP
oh what happen shape "in their super human mercy" YA MAN I WAS THINKING THAT TOO cecil ? what is happening ? yo why are you being so self aware ?
ok fall show. seems normal So far, so good ok, not as normal but not the worst seems like you are trying to recute for the military but ok, cool beans
Of course, the green market. Wow incredibly informative
On the moon ? CARLOSSSSSSS <3333333 flat earther cecil, insane "We try" humans in a nutshell
the opposite of americans way of teaching i love that for math and english DUDE WHY ARE THEY BANNING ASTROL PROJECTION WTF modified sumarian let's go
EXISTANTIAL DREAD :D ! ok it's just about the shape now :) FUUUUUUCK DUDE CECIL wait maybe a W WHY DOES EVERYONE DIE ??????????
weather soooong “:♡.•♬✧⁽⁽ଘ( ˊᵕˋ )ଓ⁾⁾+:•∴ this is actually a really good song ? i really enjoy it
existantial dread p.2 i dont think so but ok cecil, your life is meaningful. "we do not have answer. i'm not even sure we have questions" wow, that s kinda powerful goodnight cecil
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Podcast Challenge: April Recap
The Adventure Zone
Current
Kept updated with new episodes - got a new TTAZZ and we started Season 2, getting into TAZ: Amnesty in earnest!
This water monster is awesome and I’m so excited to get into a longer arc; I’m already highkey invested in Aubrey and Duck and I’m sure Ned will grow on me (Merle certainly did)
Alice Isn’t Dead
Current
We got teasers for Season 3, the live show, and then the start of S3!
Really happy this show is back, I forgot how much I loved its creepy mood and Jasika Nicole’s unreal voice
I’m very excited to see Keisha get to take action as opposed to just hunting information this season, and to have Alice by her side finally
The Bright Sessions *NEW* *CAUGHT UP*
Started this month!
Also caught up this month!
I binged this whole thing and fell deeply in love with these characters
I really really love all the representation - of sexuality, mental illness, struggles with addiction, survivor abuse, and so much more, and all of them feel so real and dealt with so honestly, and all in the context of a cool superpowers story
Can I Pet Your Dog? *NEW*
Started this month!
Episode 1-5, out of 141 currently
This show is super cute and such a silly and happy thing to listen to
Ear Hustle
Current
Finally the start of S2!
This is a really powerful podcast; they do such an extraordinary job with all of their interviews and creating the soundscape and everything, and if anything this season just seems even more in-depth than the last
The Flop House
Episode #24-#38/Movie Minute #26, out of 256 episodes currently
I really hope the audio will improve in the near future - it’s gotten better, but there’s still episodes where I go in and out of being able to hear them, or one of them will obviously be too far from or too close to the mic.
We moved from 2008 to 2009; I was reminded that The Dark Knight and the first Iron Man came out in the same year, which was bizarre
The McElroy Brothers Will Be in Trolls 2
Current
No new episodes
My Brother, My Brother, and Me
Episode 120-138, out of 404 currently
We’re slooooooowly getting to where MBMBAM actually becomes really good. I moved from twenty-doz to Twenty-DIRT so we’re officially within five years of current time, and I relived Obama’s reelection
Sawbones
Episode “Hysteria” - “Radiation Therapy” | 14/227 episodes currently
Was psyched to see hysteria in there, since I actually know a lot about that one!
In general this show continues to be both hilarious and instructive - and make for good stories I can pass on in the right company
Shmanners
Episode “Holiday Special: Valentine’s Day” - “Weddings: Attendance” | 9/113 episodes currently
Travis and Theresa are sweet, but they’re telling me very little that I don’t know - I wonder if it might actually get better once we get further into the show and we get past some of the more obvious topics
The Thrilling Adventure Hour
Episode #45-#70, out 220 where the podcast ended plus specials
I’ve fallen deeply in love with the Sparks Nevada storyline - I love all of the side characters and the world they’ve constructed.
The new War of the Worlds segment I’m not crazy about - I find it kind of difficult to follow because there’s a weird balance of plot but mostly just fast talking comedy
I’m also rapidly losing patience with the Captain Laserbeam segment, although I found the BatAquaman character hilarious, so if we can get a few more side characters like him to make regular appearances then I’ll enjoy it more
Beyond Belief continues to be a good time and my second favorite segment after Sparks Nevada
Welcome to Night Vale
Restarted from the beginning!
Currently posting reviews for each episode as I listen to them, see them here: Pilot | Glow Cloud | Station Management | PTA Meeting | The Shape in Grove Park | The Drawbridge
Episode 1-6, out of 127 currently
Really happy to have this show back in my life, I’ve missed it
Within the Wires
Current
No new episodes
Wonderful!
Episode 4-9, out of 31 currently
It’s growing on me, a little bit - but it’s still definitely a podcast to listen to while doing other things
The goal for May is to catch up with this podcast, because I’ve realized there really aren’t that many episodes (comparatively, I mean - certainly a lot less than The Flop House or MBMBAM)
#tal listens#taz#alice isn't dead#the bright sessions#cipyd#ear hustle#the flop house#the mcelroy brothers will be in trolls 2#mbmbam#sawbones#shmanners#tah#wtnv#wtw#wonderful!
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No one asked for this, but here you go anyway, the shejustcalledmeafish list of Favorite Weather listed in order of appearance
Episode 2 - Glow Cloud - The Bus is Late by Satellite High
Episode 4 - PTA Meeting - Closer by The Tiny
Episode 5 - The Shape in Grove Park - Jerusalem by Dan Bern
Episode 7 - History Week - Despite What You've Been Told by Two Gallants
Episode 17 - Valentine - Neptune's Jewels by Mystic
Episode 19a - The Sandstorm (A) - Eliezer's Waltz by The Ventura Klezmer Band
Episode 19b - The Sandstorm (B) - Eliezer's Waltz by Disparition
Episode 30 - Dana - The Lethal Temptress by The Mendoza Line
Episode 33 - Cassette - Big Houses by Squalloscope
Episode 43 - Visitor - Cover Me Up by Jason Isbell
Episode 44 - Cookies - Haunted by Maya Kern
Episode 45 - A Story About Them - Pretty Little Head by Eliza Rickman
Episode 46 - Parade Day - Take Up Your Spade by Sara Watkins
Episode 47 - Company Picnic - Stupid by Brendan Maclean
Episode 50 - Capital Campaign - Ghost Story by Charming Disaster
Episode 51 - Rumbling - Echo in the Hills by Carrie Elkin and Danny Schmidt
Episode 54 - A Carnival Comes to Town - Bremen by PigPen Theatre Co.
Episode 60 - Water Failure - Just Like My Heart by Fault Lines
Episode 69 - Fashion Week - Evelyn by Kim Tillman and Silent Films
Episode 70a - Taking Off - Pyramid by Jason Webley
Episode 73 - Tryptich - The Heroine by Unwoman
Episode 100 - Toast - Second Song by Joseph Fink
Episode 106 - Filings - All or Nothing by The Dream Masons
Episode 116 - Council Member Flynn, Part 3 - Animal Skin by Bryan Dunn
Episode 140 - A Blood Stone Carol - Draggin' Me Down by Travis Love Benson featuring Yol The Moon
Episode 151 - The Waterfall - Always Right by Anne Reburn
Episode 166 - Delta - A Prayer for the Sane by Danny Schmidt
Episode 173 - The Hundred Year Play - Shallow Eyes by Brad Bensko
Episode 195 - Silas the Thief, Part 1 - Drink from the Well by Stöj Snak
Episode 197 - The Life of Frank Chen - Blacksnake by Charming Disaster
wtnv relisten but it’s just the 29 episodes i liked the weather enough from to listen to on the regular
#these are just my super favorites#most of the weathers are really good#but like not insanitymaking like these#also this is just all personal preference#don't get mad please#yeah so i keep most of these in a playlist called forecast#feel smart about that#we're gonna pretend i didn't spend way too long on this#the links should be right but if they're wrong i don't care#also whoops i can't count
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Speak Here
Speak Here: The Spa, the Station, the Space in-between
The Spa
A sharp right turn and I depart from the rows of tightly stitched houses into a valley of beige towers and parkland. The pavement switches from grey stone to yellow brick. A line of hedges rises to my waist, cordoning pedestrians away from vehicles. Bollards, bars, and bumps collaborate to narrow the cars to one lane. This bend from The Avenue onto Willam Road leads downhill from an integrated urban fabric to a stark modernist plain. This is the boundary between the private dwellings of Tottenham and the housing estate of Broadwater Farms, known by its residents as ‘The Farm.’ Built in 1967, this complex houses an estimated 3,800 people in a cohort of residential towers and low-rise blocks. The buildings balance on concrete stilts, straddling a hollow ground floor of dimly-lit, desolate parking lots. The excess parking is evidence of an imagined middle class lifestyle, which contrasts from the realities of the low-income families and pensioners who live here. This spatial miscalculation has been adapted by residents as a covered short cut between buildings and a shelter from the rain. I spot a group of teenage boys standing in an empty parking space. They have their hoods up, perhaps to gain privacy from the security cameras perched on nearby lampposts.
I pass two small playgrounds and a grassy courtyard with benches – all are empty. Signs direct me to the enterprise office, community centre, and health clinic, all three of which are closed on this Saturday afternoon. As I follow the curve of Willam Road, I notice a bus stop and directly opposite, a long barn-like building. The drawn blinds and metal doors make it difficult to decipher the interiors. In one window sits an electric “Nail Spa” sign beside a pair of plastic hands, each nail modeling a different colour. I knock on the door and am greeted by a buzzing group of women and girls. The salon owner, Dionne is attaching fake eyelashes to a client, her friend Tony is standing by the microwave heating up a soup, and two young girls are waiting for their mother to return from her errands.
Dionne invites me to take a seat by the girls. I introduce myself and explain that I am researching the march to the local police station in response to Mark Duggan’s death this past August. Tony expresses disdain for the journalists who have been lurking around The Farm, probing for details of the violence and is eager to recount the overlooked peaceful events. Both Tony and Dionne were friends of Mark, and they helped organize the march from The Farm, gathering people in one of the main courtyards make signs and begin the walk (See Fig. 1). They were confident that the police were expecting them as they believe that the Farm is consistently monitored. Tony points to the lamppost across the street, ‘See that camera? The police can see us right now.’ Over the past thirty years, they have lived with a heavy police presence that shapes the narrative of The Farm, witnessing episodes of violence and participating in demonstrations. The women did not premeditate the route, but rather followed their usual path to the High Road. To command attention, they walked down the middle of the road, and upon arriving at the station, blocked vehicles from passing. After several hours of waiting, their demand for a high level officer to speak with Mark’s family members was unmet. Crowds amassed and latecomers set off the violence.
As we talk, chairs are reconfigured as visitors come and go and beauty services shift, the teenage boys I had seen earlier peer in to say hello, and a young woman drops off flyers for her church party (See Figs. 4 and 7). As the only semi-public, hang-out space open on this Saturday afternoon, this small room takes on multiple roles: it becomes a place for people to stop by for a visit, to share food, to publicize events.8 An hour passes, and I leave with the mother who returns to retrieve her girls. They offer to lead me along the same path as they marched to the police station. It is a twenty minute walk that winds up and down narrow residential corridors, avoiding the four-lane, fast- moving traffic of Bruce Grove (See Fig. 6). As we turn off The Avenue onto Sperling Road, we pass a corner with a fish and chips shop and a mini-market, where they stop to buy snacks. We make quick turns down Moorefield and onto St. Loy’s, landing on High Road, half a block north from the station. Along our walk, the built forms and ensuing street life does not seem relatable to the spatial lexicon of The Farm. There are no swaths of unused or empty spaces. Shoulder to shoulder two-storey homes offer ‘eyes on the street’ to the houses they face and the many people walking by (Jacobs 1972). Illuminated corner shops with large glass storefronts and displays that spread onto the sidewalk offer a clear sightline to the activity inside and blur the border between the commercial and the public realms. This walk to the high street frames the Estates as a sealed enclave, with a distinct spatial language not in dialogue with the surrounding area.
The Station
With my back to the police station, I can see identical billboards: one is across the High Road, perched on a roof; the other on eye-level, pinned to the side of small brick building on the corner with Chestnut Road. They feature a close-up photograph of melting margarine in a landscape of green beans, paired with the invitation to ‘go for it.’ The High Road is the commercial vein of Tottenham, the area most devastated by the riots. On either side of the station, the streetscape is pockmarked with storefronts shuttered with plywood, while an assortment of 99p stores, betting agencies and mini- marts are open for business. In this context, the dual margarine ads seem insensitive to the recent physical and economic loss. Lampposts lining the road are dressed with ‘I Heart Tottenham’ flags, part of the local council’s campaign to restore “community, consumer and investor confidence.” I turn around to face the station’s solid, 4-storey red brick mass. Security cameras line the facade and closed beige blinds, similar to those lining the Broadwater Estates shops, belie which parts of the station are currently in use. The building wears a skirt of iron fencing at the street level, with dust ruffle of grey metal grates that block access to its basement. Over the front door, a loose metal gate hangs over the glass like a suspicious eyelid. Upon entering the station, I take a seat on a chair that is attached to the wall. There are two men waiting ahead of me, one lingers by the phone booth in the far corner and the other is seated beside me. The waiting room has a similar footprint as Dionne’s spa, but lacks opportunities for eye contact between strangers (Figure 5). The layout’s control logic and sparse furnishings favor efficacy over intimacy. I face a blank wall, while to my right, a mother and teenage daughter make sobbing pleas to the officer through a plexiglass panel. The young officer explains he cannot take any action, and advises her to consult a private debt collector. As I try to avoid their crying faces, my attention turns to a single stale chip in the windowsill next to me. The bright fluorescent lights overhead and security cameras in all corners do not make for an appetizing place to eat a meal. When my turn arrives, I step up to the counter and speak through a small metal speaker. I ask if I can meet with a Safer Neighborhoods liaison for the Broadwater Estates. While the officer retreats to consult his colleagues, I notice that there is a large sticker branding our communication interface. It reads:
‘SPEAK HERE Sonic Windows Communication Hygiene Security
TEL: (01424) 223864’
The label embodies a modernist design ethos of order through separation, and person- to-person exchange as potentially harmful. When the officer returns, he slips me a memo paper with the address of the Tottenham Station secretary and instructs me to write a letter. She will then pass my request to the appropriate department (See Fig. 9). In this public reception area, both publicness and privacy are in short supply: the space for communication is confined to a sterile metal circle in earshot of others and a prescription size piece of paper is the invitation to speak further.
The Space In Between
Public space can offer a gradient of openness and intimacy. Setback from the total exposure of the street, the spa and the station function as semi-public rooms in response to everyday needs for social exchange and claims of citizenship. In ‘The Public Realm,’ Richard Sennett forwards a concept of closed and open systems that shape built form. He argues that closed systems although ‘harmonious,’ are stagnant and irresponsive to patterns of use. Whereas open systems are ‘incomplete’ and ‘unstable,’ and can lend themselves to adaptation over time (Sennett 2008). Inherent in the open system is the possibility for a conversation between spatial form and individual use: a mutuality that circumvents structures from becoming irrelevant and posits public space as a conduit for expression, exchange and change.
In the march to the police station, women and children appropriated the street as a public communication line, exposing layers of irresponsive systems in built and social form. Learning from this spontaneous appropriation of space between the spa and the station, it becomes evident that a public realm rooted in an open systems approach is needed to offer a more generous invitation to ‘speak here.’ A way to mitigate the hard boundary between the neighborhood and the Estates, the street as a potent form of public space and ‘cityness’ (Sassen 2005). Could a mediating line of communication along this path expand transparency, communication and offer a public form ‘made‘ by its users (Sassen, 2005)?
References
De Sola-Morales, M. (2011) ‘The Impossible Project of Public Space’, In Favour of Public Space: Ten years of the European Prize for Urban Public Space, Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona and ACTAR: Barcelona.
Broadwater Farm Exhibition: Heroes and Homemakers, viewed 20 October, 2011, <http:// www.broadwaterfarm.info>.
Hall, S. (2001) ‘To Economise and to Localise: Austerity and a real life view of the Bankside Urban Forest Project’, unpublished conference paper submitted to the Economy Conference, Wales School of Architecture, 6-8 July.
Haringey Council, viewed 25 October, 2011, <http://www.haringey.gov.uk/index>. Jacobs, J. (1972). The Death and Life of Great American Cities. Harmandswoth: Penguin. Lefebvre, H. (1984) The Right to the City Oxford: Blackwell.
Lewis, P. (2011) ‘Tottenham riots: a peaceful protest, then suddenly all hell broke loose’, The Guardian 7 August, viewed 3 November, 2011, http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/aug/07/ tottenham-riots-peaceful-protest.
Low, I. (2011) ‘Elemental Chile: Alejandro Aravena and the South African Experience’, in Architecture South Africa, Jan/Feb.
‘Moving On: Building a Better Future for Haringey’, Haringey People (October-November 2011), p. 16.
Sassen, S (2005) ‘Cityness in an Urban Age’, Urban Age, Bulletin 2 Autumn, viewed 3 November, 2011, http://urban-age.net/0_downloads/archive/Saskia_Sassen_2005- Cityness_In_The_Urban_Age-Bulletin2.pdf.
Scott, S. (2011) ‘The voices of Tottenham are being marginalised’, The Guardian 16 October, viewed 20 October, 2011, http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/oct/16/voices- tottenham-marginalised.
Scott, S. (2011) ‘If the rioting was a surprise, people weren't looking’, The Guardian 8 August, http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/aug/08/tottenham-riots-not-unexpected.
Sennett, R. (2008) The Public Realm, unpublished paper for QUANT.
Space Syntax Limited (2011) ‘First Findings: 2011 London Riots location analysis, Proximity to town centres and large post-war housing estates,’ 15 September, viewed 25 October 2011, http://spacesyntaxnetwork.files.wordpress.com/2011/09 ssx_2011_london_riots_20110922.pdf.
1 Broadwater Estates is built on a river basin of reclaimed agricultural lands. To avoid potential flooding, the residences hover one-storey above the ground, leaving a layer of dank, empty space at the street level. In a Google street map of the area, Broadwater Estates is a grey void – no streets bisect this mass of city, its footprint is proportionate to nearby parks.
2 Originally built for offices, this structure now houses four small shops, which includes a catering business, a hair salon, a grocer and a hardware store, as well as an arts and crafts workshop that is open on weekdays.
3 Haringey Council
4 Inside the spa, there are thresholds of publicness and privacy. Upon entering, you can take a seat in a row of chairs, where you can watch the manicures and nail drying taking place. More private procedures such as piercing and waxing take place on a bed in the far corner, that can be curtained off for privacy. When not in use, the curtains are drawn and the bed becomes another place to sit or lounge.
5 Mark Duggan was a 29-year-old man who grew up in the Broadwater Farm Estates until the age of 13. Although he did not reside at the Farm as an adult, he was integrated into the social life and was regarded as an “elder,” a well known community figure within the estates.
6 Mark’s family learned of his death from a television newscast, rather than being informed directly by the police. The motivation behind the march was to demand an official acknowledgment by high-ranking police officers of Mark’s death in police custody and to draw attention to the police’s failure to communicate with members of his family before releasing his name to the press.
7 In his article about the demonstration outside the police station, Guardian journalist and Tottenham resident Stafford Scott articulates the frustration of protestors with the police’s lack of open communication: “All we really wanted was an explanation of what was going on. We needed to hear directly from the police. We waited for hours outside the station for a senior officer to speak with the family, in a demonstration led by young women,” (Scott 2011).
8 When I return the following Saturday for a manicure, I am able to talk in more depth to Dionne about the history of her shop and the different community functions her business plays. Dionne rents her shop from the Enterprise Centre of the Haringey Council at a subsidized rate. She hopes to relocate to a bigger space so that she can accommodate the number of visitors she has stopping by each day, in addition to her customers. She explains that the teenage girls like to come site at the shop to learn how to paint nails, to get life advice, and to have a place away from their families to socialize.
9 ‘Moving On: Building a Better Future for Haringey’
10The waiting area perpectuates everyday tragedies due to over-determined, under-considered form. For example, there is nowhere to privately to cry and there is no graceful way in which an officer can hand you a tissue.
11 I returned to the police station three times, I wrote one letter, made two phone calls and in total spoke to four officers. Unfortunately, I was never able to speak with an officer able to address my inquiry about the policing strategy of the Broadwater Estates and any community communication strategies.
12 An example of planned optimism is embodied by the public housing design by Elemental in Santiago, Chile, in which half of the house is built to the highest quality that the budget allows, but the infrastructure and footprint will facilitate improvements and expansion as the inhabitants improve their economic status and their housing needs evolve (Low 2011).
13 An initial report by the Space Syntax Group finds a relationship between areas where riots occurred and proximity to post-war housing estates. The Group specifically correlates the outbreaks of violence to the frustration and isolation caused by the “over-complex, under used spaces” of modernist architecture (Space Syntax Group 2011).
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Year 1 - Episode 5 : The Shape in the Grove Park
Thoughts and remarks:
I wonder in the series if they are going to start being plot heavy soon.
I have a hard time imagining people really getting into a series where only random things happen. I hoping for continuity too. Maybe soon
I was surprised he went the route of existancial dread. I find it really interested seeing what happened in his head, because in a way, he only talks for other people. It's nice hearing him speaking freely about him mind.
This was a surprisingly short episode i feel like, usually these take me quite some time, but not today. I don't think i have much to say about today, again, hoping for plot to kick in soon.
oh and the music was fucking great on that episode. Might down load it
#liveblogging#welcome to night vale#night vale liveblog#year 1 episode 5: The Shape in the Grove Park#thoughts and remarks
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