ASK TREESHIP whats your favorite gilmore girls episode

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hey treeship this isn't a 'question' but i like how "all i want" is your favorite LCD soundsystem song, because that is also my favorite song of theirs

thanks kevin. i like that you like that song too. the lyrics always get to me, and i love that he takes the risk of ratcheting up the volume on that squeaky synth part toward the end, which adds a bit of noisiness and imperfection -- "character" -- to it.

Treeship, Saturday, 18 May 2013 02:40 (eleven years ago) link

I wonder, who wrote The Book of Love?

Aimless, Saturday, 18 May 2013 02:46 (eleven years ago) link

idk but it is long and boring, no one can lift the damn thing.

Treeship, Saturday, 18 May 2013 02:47 (eleven years ago) link

alright. moody and introspective rap about relationships, and he's from jersey, too.

dylannn, Saturday, 18 May 2013 18:19 (eleven years ago) link

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N9sOcpFsyPg

now, how about this?

dylannn, Saturday, 18 May 2013 18:24 (eleven years ago) link

right off the bat, i like the repeated tupac line as the refrain. and those cheap sounding synths are strangely bleak, and fit the song well. B+

Treeship, Saturday, 18 May 2013 18:39 (eleven years ago) link

Treeship, what are some of your favorite diners?

los blue jeans, Wednesday, 22 May 2013 00:31 (eleven years ago) link

http://www.americanadiner.com/

i eat at this place pretty often... more often than makes sense for my budget. they have good craft beers there, or at least a couple, so it's not the most diner-y diner out there, but when i go for lunch i'll have like a turkey sandwich with coffee and then it seems more like a diner.

Michigan seems like a dream to me now (Treeship), Wednesday, 22 May 2013 01:47 (eleven years ago) link

also there is pies and thighs, a brunch place in williamsburg that i like a lot. and this place in greenwich village that i can't remember the name of but their coffee is amazing and the vibe is sort of "french." i do not like pj's pancake house in princeton even though that's a local favorite.

Michigan seems like a dream to me now (Treeship), Wednesday, 22 May 2013 02:08 (eleven years ago) link

Ooh, swanky place. I went there with my dad about 13 years ago. I agree that it's not much of a real trad diner but it is pretty good.

los blue jeans, Wednesday, 22 May 2013 03:18 (eleven years ago) link

three weeks pass...

Los Blue Jeans: i just remembered the name of a diner/brunch place i wanted to recommend before but forgot the name of. Sullivan street bistro in greenwich village. Amazing coffee and french fries. Really comfortable couchlike seating.

Treeship, Wednesday, 12 June 2013 22:56 (ten years ago) link

three weeks pass...

Much of the criticism leveled at Lin would apply equally to Beckett, Hemingway, Camus, and any minimalist or writer concerned with ennui. So maybe it's the critics who say Tao Lin is "too detached" and "hates language" who need to read more and not the people responding to those critics who say, essentially, "it's not trying to do what you seem to think fiction is supposed to do."

― Treeship, Monday, July 8, 2013 11:42 AM (8 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

treeshit

― puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Monday, July 8, 2013 11:44 AM (8 hours ago) Bookmark

乒乓, Tuesday, 9 July 2013 00:04 (ten years ago) link

That's not a picture of me, ftr

Treeship, Tuesday, 9 July 2013 00:50 (ten years ago) link

It has your name on it though! You should send in a correction.

the mod urn dance (seandalai), Tuesday, 9 July 2013 00:57 (ten years ago) link

I don't know how to interpret your comment.

Treeship, Tuesday, 9 July 2013 03:11 (ten years ago) link

I'm still accepting questions by the way.

Treeship, Tuesday, 9 July 2013 03:16 (ten years ago) link

what's your favorite william vollmann novel or novellike non fiction?

dylannn, Tuesday, 9 July 2013 05:14 (ten years ago) link

have you ever had a homosexual experience?

dylannn, Wednesday, 10 July 2013 00:50 (ten years ago) link

1.) i am ashamed to say i haven't read anything by william vollman. he is "on my list" though. my plan is to start with europe central. do you think this is a good choice?

2.) i have never had a homosexual experience. i believe sexuality is something like a continuum and that categories like "straight" and "gay" are far to rigid to describe most peoples' sexualities. that said, i have never even found myself attracted to a man at all really and so probably believe in the continuum argument not due to my own experience but because a world in which everyone is in some sense "queer" seems preferable to me to a world in which certain sexualities are identified as normal and others as "deviant". so... yeah, i am attracted to women and my sexual history, um, reflects that. gay dudes have given me their phone numbers in the past and things like that though so maybe i seem like i might be gay to some people who knows.

Treeship, Wednesday, 10 July 2013 04:08 (ten years ago) link

what's the last good non-fiction book you read?

markers, Wednesday, 10 July 2013 04:22 (ten years ago) link

i re-read nabokov's short biography-ish book on gogol recently and that is a great book. also, i read and reviewed curtis white's "the science delusion" and enjoyed it, although not as much as my review probably indicates. http://www.tottenvillereview.com/romanticism-for-the-21st-century-curtis-whites-the-science-delusion/

Treeship, Wednesday, 10 July 2013 04:34 (ten years ago) link

will instapaper

markers, Wednesday, 10 July 2013 04:35 (ten years ago) link

you might be interested in the science delusion because there is a long section at the end devoted to defending the legacy of german idealism to a non-academic audience which is a relatively rare thing to see.

Treeship, Wednesday, 10 July 2013 04:36 (ten years ago) link

i'm gonna go read yr review now.

one more question: how many books do you average a week?

markers, Wednesday, 10 July 2013 04:37 (ten years ago) link

one maybe? less some weeks if i am reading the internet a lot. i've read four books in the past three days though so it varies.

Treeship, Wednesday, 10 July 2013 04:38 (ten years ago) link

two of those books were really, really short. (sam pink's rontel and ben lerner's angel of yaw.)

Treeship, Wednesday, 10 July 2013 04:39 (ten years ago) link

europe central is aight but

vollmann pox in order

1-- imperial
2-- the atlas
3-- butterfly stories
4-- the ice-shirt
5-- rainbow stories
6-- argall
7-- fathers and crows
8-- the royal family
9-- kissing the mask
10- poor people

dylannn, Wednesday, 10 July 2013 05:47 (ten years ago) link

Treeship do you like to dance?

^do not heed if you rate me (wins), Wednesday, 10 July 2013 12:14 (ten years ago) link

And if so what do you think is the best music to dance to

^do not heed if you rate me (wins), Wednesday, 10 July 2013 12:15 (ten years ago) link

I don't dance very often because i'm not good at it. I'm very impressed by people who are good at dancing though, and admire them.

Treeship, Wednesday, 10 July 2013 19:14 (ten years ago) link

tree, is your email under your name a good way to contact you?

dylannn, Monday, 15 July 2013 06:29 (ten years ago) link

yeah. that is my main email account.

Treeship, Monday, 15 July 2013 12:06 (ten years ago) link

I liked the episode with Joel from BJM in it.

Elvis Telecom, Monday, 15 July 2013 12:10 (ten years ago) link

It's hard to go wrong with the gilmore girls.

Treeship, Monday, 15 July 2013 14:08 (ten years ago) link

treesh have you read any david foster wallace and if so what do you think of his sort of 'persona' in his nonfiction material?

Treeship, do you really watch Gilmore Girls or are people having others on?

c21m50nh3x460n, Tuesday, 23 July 2013 23:12 (ten years ago) link

i have a complicated relationship with david foster wallace. he is a writer i do not like to read because -- i think i mentioned this before on the tao lin thread -- his reflexive self-doubt, impulse toward intellectualization, and sad awareness of (or obsession with) the difficulty of earnest, direct communication once you reach a certain level of "knowingness," remind me of the way i think and write, but in his case this personality seems to have led him to become severely depressed. So basically, while I admire a lot of what he did I think reading him, especially the footnotes, is a chore. I haven't even made it all the way through Infinite Jest. I think I would like him more if he didn't kill himself and I didn't read (most of) the biography, but now the specter of dfw the suffering guy I relate to lurks too conspicuously behind the texts for me.

Treeship, Tuesday, 23 July 2013 23:30 (ten years ago) link

stuff like big red son -- how he knows the ins and outs of the discourse surrounding the porn industry so thoroughly that he can't really, or doesn't really, take a stance on it, and winds up being overwhelmed by the sheer number of ways he can think about this issue, this expo, etc -- are really tough for me to read, but i think they are good. he reminds me a little of kierkegaard, who advocated that picking sides -- a clear story -- is just something you have to do at a certain point, even if you can see two, five, seven sides of an issue. dfw doesn't ever really do that in his essays and that is why they are so honest but also why they are suspended in this weird, uncomfortable place of indecision. from what i have read.

Treeship, Tuesday, 23 July 2013 23:36 (ten years ago) link

crimsonhexagon, i have not seen an episode of gilmore girls for many years but i think i have seen most of them that were syndicated as my mom would watch it often when i was younger.

Treeship, Tuesday, 23 July 2013 23:37 (ten years ago) link

the reason i ask is because i identify some similar species of eartnestness vs anomie and an attempt at synoptic perspective in your posts. i am not sure that dfw does not always synthesize these multiple perspectives, certainly he does in his essays on tennis (very good) and kafka (not quite so good). maybe he does in those essays where he is confronted with something that he does not really cathect in any serious way, but contemplates it with undue seriousness anyway (cuz he is getting paid? idk why the topics were chosen in some instances). i don't think dfw's illness and suicide derived from his 'personality' in the sense of certain intellectual anxieties and consequent unfulfilments and that such ideas are fed by the morbid interest in recreating the dead person golem-like from the tissues of their writing and thirdparty anecdotes.

he also seems very american, not just the midwestern awshucksiness but his work ethic, clarity of purpose and faith in the essential truth-seeking utility of the essay form or novel form. and perhaps you are similar (if internet-discursive rather than essayistic). maybe i am more interested in the phatic nonsense, idiolect, obliquity elements of meta-ilx these days. so it is conceivable that i have mistaken a degree of strategy about the way you post whereas this is really 'just you' and the ardently expressed wish to understand yourself and the world is not some sort of 'treeship project'.

Selena Gomez is very Neotenous for Caucasoids (Nilmar Honorato da Silva), Wednesday, 24 July 2013 00:58 (ten years ago) link

http://treo.typepad.com/.a/6a0120a6002285970c014e88cc629f970d-500wi

Aimless, Wednesday, 24 July 2013 01:03 (ten years ago) link

The Treeship Project, now appearing at the Pitchfork Festival on the Orange Stage

waterface, Wednesday, 24 July 2013 01:15 (ten years ago) link

xp, in some sense my insistence that my online persona is "just me" is an exaggeration, as there is always a degree of calculation in how people position and present themselves in any social field, especially one like ilx, where most of the posters are quick witted, culturally savvy, and looking to make sure (however unconsciously) that they always come across as being these things. what i mean to say, i guess, is that i don't think that my ilx persona is more calculated than anyone else's and i think it tracks pretty closely to the way i am in real life. there too, the way i behave is probably a calculation: an expression of my convictions on the one hand -- i think it's important to be fair minded and i don't generally like jokes that intend to humiliate people -- and also, less flatteringly, of wanting people to like me/think i am smart/witty, etc. so while i agree that the statement "this is just what i am like end of story" is disingenuous, i also think the degree of speculation accorded to me and how i choose to present myself is something that i haven't tried to encourage by acting in some sort of theatrical manner that is completely unlike how i would act in real life.

in terms of my posts attempting a "synoptic perspective" in my posts, i think that is probably due to the fact that i am basically an academic at heart but who, for various reasons, is not in grad school and doesn't have many outlets to talk about questions concerning art and culture and like to use ilx to do that. so in order to encourage discussions i try to take seriously what people say and respond to that rather than just try to one-up them. so even when i am just posting on the more superficial, chatty threads i don't want to start zingfights, usually, because that's not the aspect of ilx i value, personally.

i hope that is an adequate response to your comments.

Treeship, Wednesday, 24 July 2013 01:21 (ten years ago) link

i value waterface's zings though. i think he is funny at least 50% of the time.

Treeship, Wednesday, 24 July 2013 01:23 (ten years ago) link

what is the appropriate amount of tension to accompany an exchange of ideas that ensures that exchange was of value and worthwhile?

Mordy , Wednesday, 24 July 2013 01:49 (ten years ago) link

it depends. i think discussions with a lot of tension can be good. i personally might tend too much toward trying to find common ground with other posters, although not usually to the extent that i allow my positions to be diluted. more on the level of rhetoric. but really, there are more advantages than drawbacks to this approach if your goal is not just to communicate your own opinion, but to figure out what other people think and why they think the way they do.

Treeship, Wednesday, 24 July 2013 01:54 (ten years ago) link

it depends. i think discussions with a lot of tension can be good. i personally might tend too much toward trying to find common ground with other posters, although not usually to the extent that i allow my positions to be diluted. more on the level of rhetoric. but really, there are more advantages than drawbacks to this approach if your goal is not just to communicate your own opinion, but to figure out what other people think and why they think the way they do.

― Treeship, Tuesday, July 23, 2013 Bookmark Flag Post Permalink


It's interesting you should say that, because I go in the opposite direction--both online and in person (with some exceptions). The funny thing is that ever since I can remember, I treated ideas as disposable. In other words, I saw no real intrinsic value in them, only ways of quantifying a given datum, e.g. So, there were and are very few ideas I hold on to or which are dear to me. I am more interested in truth, and it goes along with what you said about David Foster Wallace. If there is no truth or no opinion or no conclusion that can be arrived at, my simple answer is to say "I don't know". But that has to do a lot with my own agnosticism and the qualities I am partial to, which lead me to admire certain types of people, such as Richard Feynman, who said:

"I think it's much more interesting to live not knowing than to have answers which might be wrong. I have approximate answers and possible beliefs and different degrees of uncertainty about different things, but I am not absolutely sure of anything and there are many things I don't know anything about, such as whether it means anything to ask why we're here. I don't have to know an answer. I don't feel frightened not knowing things, by being lost in a mysterious universe without any purpose, which is the way it really is as far as I can tell".

So, this got me in trouble a lot of times. Every kid asks a lot of questions, and I was no exception. So when my teacher once complained that I just ask way too many questions my guardians never thought much of it (which is to be expected). But when writing essays at school or university, and even debating things online or in person, people would say, "What's your point?" And I would say, "My point is we simply do not know". And I've always found it so strange that people seem to get offended or upset about this. They insist on my having an opinion, on choosing sides, otherwise I'm a hack or appear like I do not know what I'm talking about. So I gladly assume the role of the ignorant.

But back to your point. I used to rather challenge all ideas and opinions, and this is sort of a social blunder that sometimes drives people away. People interpret it as divisive, so I understand where you're coming from. But I also cannot be disingenuous. As I get older, I seem to be more passive about it and just, like yourself, figure out what others' opinions are or I am more interested in the person laying out her or his worldview rather than myself getting involved. I think it is a very introverted thing to do: try to understand the world and people without actually participating in it. So I become an observer. I sometimes take the Wilde approach of trying to make a joke or make people laugh while stating a thought that has a truth-value. It hardly sparks a conversation about that particular thought, though, and I sometimes wish it would. It is interesting to see how others react. As you might guess, I was often called a contrarian or accused of "not liking anything". So one learns to be quiet a lot and just write it all down, especially as I get older

I guess both our ultimate goals are similar: to figure out what people think and why they think the way they do. It's hard to tell the difference between how each of us react on our respective ends, though, if that makes sense. I would want all communication to be fluid, for both parties to be active, and not hold anything back, because in that process, it is possible one finds one's own missteps which one thought weren't there (read, conscious of the self and how others perceive us). So I try not to hold on to an idea for the sake of the idea; or to quote Feynman again, I try not to fool myself, even though I am the easiest to fool.

You seem like a cool guy, Treeship.

c21m50nh3x460n, Wednesday, 24 July 2013 02:52 (ten years ago) link


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