Category: 2010s

  • The East Cut, San Francisco: When a PR Agency Renames Your Neighborhood

    The East Cut, San Francisco: When a PR Agency Renames Your Neighborhood

    Imagine that the name of your neighborhood, which has been established for over a century, doesn’t sit well with a local business association. To drum up more interest in the area–to clean things up and make it spiffy–they change the name.

    That’s what has happened in San Francisco, where an area was recently rebranded “The East Cut” by a marketing agency. They even whipped up a cute little logo that looks vaguely reminiscent of the Black Flag band logo. They even managed to tell Google Maps that this area should be called The East Cut, not because any real person actually calls it The East Cut, but because the business association and their PR agency thought it would be a fun idea. Thus: The East Cut.


    But when it comes to the naming of other streets and areas, it’s instructive to remember that this type of thing happens all the time. The name “Hollywood” was largely (but not completely) invented in the early 20th century to drum up interest in the Hollywoodland real estate development in Los Angeles.

    Streets have long been named by property developers, with input from public services such as fire and police. That’s why many older communities have streets with names like Carol, Laurel, Charles, and so on–the names of developers’ children.

  • Incredibly High Guiyang City Skyscraper Fake Waterfall

    A new waterfall cascading down the side of a skyscraper in China’s Guiyang City falls an amazing 108 meters (or 354 feet). This is nearly the same height as Zambia’s famous Victoria Falls (354 feet) and higher than Lower Yosemite Falls (320 feet) and Yosemite’s Vernal Fall (318 feet).

    Costing about 800 yuan ($118) per day to pump the water to the top, this fake waterfall will only be turned on for special occasions. In addition, Cheng, the property manager, says that the fall will only be turned on briefly, for about 20 minutes at a time, and that it uses recycled tap water, rainwater, or “water from other sources,” whatever that means.

    Lower Section and Collection Area

    The Guiyang City skyscraper’s waterfall, like all waterfalls fake or real, has a collection area at the bottom in order to recirculate the water back to the top. “Collection” is a loose term here, as water begins to fan out and mist toward the bottom.

     

  • Alex Prager’s Cinematic Dreamspaces

    I will not name the well-established artist who I’m sure Alex Prager’s work is often compared to, but I will say that, like that artist, she does spin off of vintage cinematic ideas.  As MOMA’s bio says, she takes cues from Douglas Sirk and Alfred Hitchcock.

    Irene 2010, Alex Prager

    Great access point to her work, but she takes it further.  It’s like what Hitchcock or Sirk would have done if the studios had let them slow down and wallow in the moment, instead of racing ahead with the narrative.

    Alex Prager Compulsion
  • Disneyland Matterhorn Cutaway, 2012

    A nice, recent cutaway drawing of the Matterhorn at the Anaheim, CA Disneyland.  This graphic, from the February 8, 2012, Orange County Register, shows remodels to the Bavarian-influenced concrete “rock.”

    One of the most notable and largest changes was filling in many of the large openings, including the large one that allowed passage of the now-discontinued Skyway.

    This cutaway also shows the secret Matterhorn basketball court.

  • Kim Jong Il Houses and Compound

    Even to me, it seems funny that you can locate the house of a feared dictator and killer and all-round Bad Boy merely by entering a few coordinates into Google Maps:

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