Ten Things I’ve Learned About Seattle


Shortly after I moved to Seattle from Boston, I wrote up a brief “Things I’ve learned so far” post. All that stuff is still true.

That being said, I’ve been living here for nearly two years now. Today, I’d like to supplement that post with a few things I’ve learned about this city, which I have come to love.

1. The traffic is comically terrible – Traffic in Seattle is a Kafkaesque nightmare from which you can scarcely hope to escape. Traffic patterns are almost completely unpredictable; one day you can cruise easily down the 520 bridge, and the next day, during that exact same time period, you can be backed up for hours. It doesn’t help that Seattle drivers seem to be terrified by snow, rain, and mild curves in the road, prompting them to slow to a crawl anytime they encounter any of the above. One of my most maddening Seattle experiences is being stuck in awful traffic for 45 minutes, only to arrive at the origin of that traffic: nothing. No root cause. Just people slowing down because they don’t like to drive too fast on the highway around curves. That being said, the Washington state’s Traffic Twitter account is amusing and useful. It provides a window into the madness that commuters face every day.


2. This place is frickin’ beautiful – Hopefully you can glimpse some of this beauty from my photos, but yeah, the Puget Sound area is gorgeous. I can’t remember any other time in my life, other than my brief trip to New Zealand, during which I could witness postcard-quality images on a daily basis.

3. The income inequality is significant and stark – I don’t think tensions here have grown to San Francisco-esque levels, but in Belltown, the inequality is as obvious as ever. Homeless sleep under storefront awnings every night. As I was leaving my garage last night, I saw some dude foraging in my apartment’s garbage container. Meanwhile, luxury apartments are shooting up left and right. It’ll be interesting to see how the whole thing plays out.


4. The food is still amazing, but… – Spending more time here has definitely made me appreciate the food scene here even more, especially compared to the food scene in Boston, which I can’t help but look back on with disenchantment and disappointment. The food here is just better, and you can get more per dollar than in lesser cities. But it’s not all great. While many styles of food are well-represented, the BBQ is pretty lacking in the city, as is the Chinese and Korean cuisine (although there’s some great Thai, Vietnamese, and Japanese to be found). For some quality Chinese/Korean, I often need to head into parts north or to the East Side.


5. Construction is everywhere – From where I sit right now as I type this blog post, I can see (unassisted) no fewer than six construction cranes in my field of view. The real estate market here is about to explode, helped in no small part by Amazon’s plans to dramatically expand its workforce and urban footprint. This place is going to look and feel dramatically different five years from today.

6. There is no infrastructure to handle snow – In Boston, fleets of trucks dispatched by private towing companies would roam the streets at night, making the roads navigable for regular cars. Here, that just doesn’t happen. When it snows, the city shuts down, schools are cancelled, a State of Emergency is declared, etc. Beware snow’s ability to totally mess with your plans. On that note…

7. Seattle makes you soft – I lived in Boston for my whole life, and while it’s not at at all the most challenging weather environment, I went through dozens of brutally harsh winters and scalding hot summers. Seattle, despite its constant spritzy rain, is fairly temperate throughout the year. As a result, experiencing actual extreme temperatures after staying here for awhile can be a more jarring, unpleasant experience than usual.


8. Christmas just doesn’t feel the same – My brother brought this up when he was visiting me in Seattle for Thanksgiving: the one thing you really can’t get on the West Coast is the “feeling” of Christmas. How to define that feeling? I’m not sure. It’s the feeling of freshly fallen snow on the ground outside, silently coating the nearly-empty streets. It’s the warmth of a fire in a brightly lit house with a freshly chopped tree, and some hot soup or hot coffee waiting for you. It’s the smell of pine needles and wreaths and fruitcakes. It’s the sound of expertly-sung Christmas carols echoing through the halls. It’s the feeling I get walking through the white streets of Harvard Square on a December evening. I can’t really fully define the feeling of Christmas. But it’s not the feeling I get when I see families gathered at the Pacific Place mall to enjoy the fake snow that falls from the top floor of the atrium.


9. I love the dress code – People basically wear whatever they want. On the East Coast, if you dress business casual or wear a suit, you are professional and appropriate. Here, that kind of dress is considered formal. It’s fun to work in a part of the country where people are allowed (encouraged?) to wear jeans and flip-flops to work.

10. There’s something happenin’ here. What it is ain’t exactly clear – Between Macklemore being poised to sweep the Grammys, Microsoft making one of the biggest acquisitions in its history, Amazon getting people talking about its drone program, and a bunch of our local/celebrity chefs continuing to gain notoriety and win awards, it feels like Seattle is having a “moment” right now. It’s an amazing city full of entrepreneurial vigor and it’s incredibly exciting to be here during this formative period. While Boston will always be my home, I’m glad to be part of the Seattle during this time of my life.

Here’s hoping that 2014 brings even greater adventures.

My 10 Favorite Online Reads of 2013

I didn’t spend nearly as much time reading as I wanted to this year. More responsibilities at work, changing responsibilities at /Film, and my new interest in creating original video work have all consumed a great deal of time and energy. But just as 2013 was a fantastic year for film, it was also a great year for quality online journalism and storytelling.

I have a reading backlog that’s a mile long, but here are the things I did read that I can unequivocally recommend:

Murder by Craigslist by Hanna Rosin – By far, the single most riveting piece of writing that I’ve read all year. This piece is so good that I could not put it down until I finished it, even through a dinner and grocery shopping afterwards. The conclusion is totally unexpected and, in some ways, even uplifting. If you read one article from this blog post, make it this one.

Diamonds Are Bullshit by Rohin Dhar – This article explores how/why diamonds are not only artificially inflated, but how their elevated status has been completely manufactured by the diamond industry.

I’m still here: back online after a year without the Internet by Paul Miller – Paul Miller spent a year without internet as an experiment to see how his life would improve. In some ways, it did. But it turned out not to be the Thoreau-style utopia he was hoping for.

How Laura Poitras Helped Snowden Spill His Secrets by Peter Maass – By now, a significant number of people on this planet know who Edward Snowden is. Fewer know about Laura Poitras, the award-winning filmmaker that has put her livelihood in jeopardy to help tell his story. Great reporting by the Times.

A Day Inside Comic-Con’s Hall H: Worshipping the Ultimate Movie Church by Todd VanDerWerff – There’s nothing super timely about this piece – it could’ve been written in any of the past few years, save for some of the specific pop culture references. But it is such a perfect distillation of the agony and ecstasy of attending Comic-Con that I can’t help but recommend it.

The Gay Guide to Wedded Bliss by Liza Mundy – As gay marriages have become more mainstream and widely accepted, the resulting family units may have a lot to teach heterosexual couples on how to be more functional.

Copernicus on the Science of Gravity by Andy Howell – An illuminating exploration on the where Gravity gets the science right and wrong (as told by an actual astronomer), and why Cuaron might have made those choices.

What Is It Like to Earn a Living Through Poker? by Michael Shinzaki [Quora post] – A fascinating reflection on the working life of a guy who regularly made $40,000 a week. A great supplement to Jay Caspian Kang’s similar piece on this lifestyle.

The Story Behind Why AOL CEO Tim Armstrong Fired an Employee in Front of 1,000 Coworkers by Nicholas Carlson – Carlson provides some fascinating context behind one of the most public tech firings of the year.

Sylvester Stallone’s Career Tells A Story of Going the Distance by Matt Singer – Few people are as good as Matt Singer is at wringing meaning out of a celebrity’s career choices. This exhaustive retrospective at Stallone’s career is both amusing and illuminating.

Honorable Mentions

And Then Steve Said, “Let There Be an iPhone”
Kanye West Knows You Think He Sounded Nuts on Kimmel
The Secrets of Bezos: How Amazon Became the Everything Store
Good Cop, Bad Cop: An Oral History of the Shield
Damon Lindelof Explains the New Rules of Blockbuster Screenwriting

Re-Appreciating Scott Pilgrim vs. The World


Sometimes, I make an essay that’s just for me. This Scott Pilgrim vs. The World appreciation was one of those times.

No one was begging me for my updated take on the film, but while I was doing some research for an upcoming video I’m working on (with the help of Edgar Wright), I felt compelled to revisit Scott Pilgrim and some of its themes. In truth, I also used the essay as a way for me to get a handle on some things going on in my own life. I’m glad it’s resonated with so many other people.

As of this writing, about 15 hours after publication, the video has received about 28,000 views. It was getting a decent number of hits at /Film, but then Edgar Wright tweeted it and it was posted at the still-massive Scott Pilgrim Facebook page, where it received a staggering 7.6K Likes. That’s what really helped tip this thing, I suspect. 

In the past couple of months, I’ve made a bunch of different videos that have received varying amounts of attention through different means. I’m hoping to publish a future blog post that sums up some of these findings, so look forward to that. 

The Largest Video Store in the World


This past weekend, I shot this short film about Scarecrow Video, the largest independent video store in the world, which is fighting to survive in the era of Netflix and Redbox. This video was shot using a Black Magic Pocket Cinema Camera, a 20mm f/1.7 Panasonic lens, a $50 Polaroid hand-held rig, and a Sennheieser wireless microphone feeding into a Zoom H4n. In other words, the total equipment cost for this thing was less than $2400. It’s an amazing time to be a filmmaker.

One year ago, I had pretty much no idea how to shoot or edit a video. Today, after hundreds of hours of reading cinematography blogs, watching Lynda online video tutorials, and shooting dozens of practice videos, I’m having my first video project debuted at slashfilm.com (plus getting featured on Slate and The Dissolve). It’s been a long, arduous, rewarding journey, but it proves my theory that if you are willing to give up all of your free time and a significant chunk of your sanity, you can learn how to do something cool.

The video took about 2.5 hours to shoot and 10 hours to edit/grade. Your thoughts on it are welcome.

My Very First Video Essay: an Analysis of The Fountain

I recently decided to try my hand at editing a video essay. For my topic, I chose one of my favorite films of all time, Darren Aronofsky’s The Fountain, which has been the topic of many conflicting interpretations in the past. The primary objective of the essay was just to share my thoughts on the film’s plot and to provide some other assorted thoughts on the symbolism in the film’s imagery.

I learned a lot about what it takes to edit and share a video during the process (more of that will probably come in another post). The whole thing took me probably 8 hours from conception to the point when I exported the video. A few thoughts and reflections on the process:

Knowing the source material backwards and forwards is essential – To prepare for the essay, I watched the film several times and took copious notes and timestamps to be able to access things easily.

Music is hard – I threw a few tracks from Mansell’s superlative score onto the video, but I really don’t think I did them justice. In future videos I hope to improve the way I mix the sound on these things so that it makes more sense with the structure of the essay.

Keep the clips you use from the film as short and tight as possible – Most video essays I’ve seen will cut to literally a single line from a character and then cut back to something else. In my opinion, this can be too short – sometimes, I want to luxuriate in what is going on in the original film. But I may have overshot it with this one. The scenes I use from the film may have gone on for a touch too long in a couple of instances.

I was gratified that Aronofsky saw fit to tweet the essay. I hope he found it worthy of his attention. Check out the /Film link for a bunch more discussion on this underappreciated film.

some #thefountain musings:http://t.co/qdHc6o6crq
— darren aronofsky (@DarrenAronofsky) December 7, 2013