Things are nice and quiet in our Belmont apartment at the moment. There is a jet passing somewhere overhead, the cats are playing outside my office door so the bells on their collars are going jingle-jangle-jingle in a muffled sort of way, my computer tower is whirring softly on the floor beside me and the only other sound is my fingers punching away at the keyboard. It’s a pleasantly tranquil feeling to be rounding out what was a largely hectic year.
If you take a look at my personal timeline, you’ll see that 2007 was a big year for me. I completed my Master’s degree from MIT and promptly began working there as a Communications Director for CMS and the fledgeling Singapore-MIT GAMBIT Game Lab, as well as worked as a TA for the Interactive Narrative course at MIT in the fall, gave presentations at multiple conferences (SCMS in Chicago, MIT5 in Boston, FuturePlay in Toronto), guest-lectured in multiple classes… All in all, it was a great way to ramp up the academic part of my career. Other personal highlights included Laura and I getting an apartment of our own (woo-hoo!), adopting two rambunctious kittens, attending the Austin Game Developer’s Conference and the 2007 Festival for Cartoon Art at OSU, seeing Beowulf in 3-D with Espen Aarseth (a somewhat famous media scholar, for those of you unfamiliar with the name), and being in the wedding party of one of my bestest friends on the planet.
The sum total of this is the constant replaying of two songs in my head, both by Tori Amos: “The Closing of the Year” from the Toys soundtrack and “Pretty Good Year” from Under the Pink. Right now iTunes has a close third up as a free download, “My Dear Acquaintance (A Happy New Year)” by Regina Spektor, who I’d rank right up there with Vienna Teng as the true inheritors of Tori’s vibe.
Mercifully, MIT shut down from Dec. 24th through New Year’s Day, so I’ve had a little end-of-the-year time to get my affairs in order before wading back into the mire that is the day-to-day business there. I never would have thought that it would be more challenging to work at MIT than to be a student there, but that is most definitely the case. I’m still looking at PhD programs, but it looks like I won’t start that until 2009 I have this wonderful once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to be doing amazing work at the game lab, and a shortage of time to spend examining doctorate programs, so I’ve deferred that project for at least another year. This may well mean that I’ll wind up going to Ohio State for my PhD, but we’ll see what happens.
Christmastime was fantastic this year; I managed to get both of the big things that Laura wanted for Christmas, which was awesome, plus I found this fantastic Rudolph-style Gloomy Bear for her stocking that is probably now my favorite Christmas decoration evar, right up there with the Santa hat on my dragon skull (which, alas, did not happen this year due to the Santa hat going AWOL during the move). For myself, it was a very HD Christmas, which makes me extremely happy; when we moved into the new place I had to buy a TV for myself for the first time ever, so I ponied up the extra scratch and picked up a Vizio 42″ 1080p LCD HDTV from Costco. It’s not the greatest TV in the world (we hung it over the fireplace in our living room, which looks awesome but doesn’t have the greatest viewing range, turning the blacks to grays if you go too far left or right of it) but it definitely had the most bang for the buck at the time. Coupled with the HD-DVD add-on drive for my Xbox 360, I’ve been getting into the HD scene pretty passionately. When the smoke had cleared after the holiday, Laura and I had been gifted with The Ocean’s Trilogy, The Bourne Ultimatum, Stardust, Shrek the Third, Pan’s Labyrinth, The Fountain, and all five of the Harry Potter movies. Granted, some of these were presents from me to us, but still… I also picked up on the after-Christmas sales a surround-sound system for my Xbox for $100, which has pretty solid customer reviews, given its bargain-basement price. We don’t currently have a surround sound system at all, so I saw this as a great entry level point. I also have a little Christmas money now to put towards something else, although I’m deliberating between a GPS, a PS3 (to keep the HD theme going) and this utterly amazing leather bag that my friend Ariel recommended to me earlier. I keep coming back to the bag, but we’ll see what they unveil at MacWorld; I keep hoping that there will be some kind of iPhone GPS system announced, but, like I said, we’ll see.
As far as New Year’s resolutions are concerned, all the standard ones still apply: lose weight, be better with money, publish that novel, publish more in general, earn that PhD, etc., etc. I’m making progress on at least some of these fronts; one of my favorite Christmas gifts was a copy of Jamie Oliver’s new Cook with Jamie, a ‘cooking for dummies’ style of text from one of my favorite celebrity chefs. If I can get better in the kitchen, I figure that would do wonders for both my waistline and my budget, but I’ve been trying to get up to speed there for about five years with little progress. Hope conquers all, I suppose. I have a couple of other irons in the fire that may become realities this year, but, as always, we’ll see. I don’t like to talk too publicly about these projects, assuming they may never come to fruition, but maybe there will be some more conferences and other things showing up on my calendar soon.
Have a very happy New Year, everyone! Be safe, and I’ll post more soon!
After researching transmedia storyworlds at MIT, guiding Microsoft in its CTO/CXO's think tank, co-founding Microsoft Studios' Narrative Design team, and exploring the future of entertainment and media as the Creative Director and a Research Fellow for USC's Annenberg Innovation Lab, I'm now the Creative Director for USC's World Building Media Lab, a storyteller, a designer, a consultant, and a doctoral student in Media Arts and Practice at USC's School of Cinematic Arts. more »
The opinions put forward in this blog are mine alone, and do not reflect the opinions of my employers.