tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-57910360607657013412024-03-07T21:32:28.386-08:00Show & TellPaul Lukashttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01569493938573591538noreply@blogger.comBlogger13125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5791036060765701341.post-66936979424589279492013-09-27T13:34:00.000-07:002013-09-27T13:36:47.481-07:00Show & Tell Participants from Sept. 11, 2013<center> <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/65516705@N00/9970433676/" title="IMG_4425.jpg by Uni Watch, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3801/9970433676_af2fefbb0f_c.jpg" width="500" height="657" alt="IMG_4425.jpg"></a></center>
<p>Mira Cook works for a modern dance company. In 2012 she traveled to an isolated Russian mining town about five hour southeast of Moscow, where she'd hired to teach hip-hop dance workshops to the local residents. While there, she suffered a nasty bout of menstrual cramps. She hadn't brought along any painkillers, so she asked for help from her Russian chaperone, who obtained a small bottle of pills from the local grocery. They worked quite well -- so well, in fact, that Mira made a point of getting more of them during a return trip to Russia. The writing on the bottle is in Cyrillic, so Mira isn't sure what the drug even is. "But I'm pretty sure it's not, like, a horse tranquilizer or anything like that," she says. "I recommend it." <i>(Photo by Alie McNeil)</i>
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<p>David Ashby moved to New York a little over a year ago. "All I had was a suitcase," he says. "I had no real plan — I just wanted to move to New York City. My parents were convinced I'd end up dead or homeless." In an effort to avoid those fates, he bought a copy of <I>NYC: An Owner's Manual</i>, which he hoped would help him navigate his new home. But it turned out he didn't need it: During his flight to New York, he bumped into an old high school friend he hadn't seen in years. The friend offered to let David sleep on his couch, and a series of additional lucky breaks followed. So he acclimated to New York, just fine, even without the book. "But I keep it on the bookshelf as a reminder of what I brought with me," he says. <i>(Photo by Alie McNeil)</i>
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<p>Tony Limuaco is from Guam, which is home to <a target="new" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cycas_circinalis">a type of cycad</a> — a plant that, according to Tony, "can survive anything." Its fruit is full of cyanide, but people in Guam have figured out how to process it in a way to make it edible. "You'll see it served at religious festivals," says Tony. "It'll be in the back room, as opposed to the roast pig in the front." He picked these two pieces of fruit in the parking lot behind a Wendy's in 2006 and has been saving them since them for a special — or dire — occasion. "This is desperation food," he says. <i>(Photo by Alie McNeil)</i>
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<p>We conclude, as usual, with Show & Tell host Paul Lukas — me. This installment of Show & Tell took place on Sept. 11, so I decided to share an object related to my experience of the 9/11 attacks of 2001. I lived in Brooklyn at the time, just as I do now (my aparatment is about two miles from Ground Zero). In the hours after the Twin Towers fell, there was a big call for blood donors. I’d never donated blood before, but it seemed like a good idea, so I did it. As it turned out, there was no need for extra blood after all, because there were no survivors at the towers — only victims. But the hospital system always needs blood anyway, and I was surprised by how good it felt to donate, so I went back and did it again two months later (the minimum time they allow between donations). During that second visit, I filled out the paperwork to receive my blood donor card. With a couple of exceptions, I’ve continued to give blood every two months for the past dozen years. Every single time, I’ve thought about Sept. 11, and how if my blood ends up helping even one person, then at least a little good will have come out of the tragedy.
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<p>And now some sad news: I'm sorry to report that this will be the last installment of Show & Tell for a while. We've had a good run at Freddy's, but it's starting to feel like the project has run its course, so it's going to go on hiatus for a bit. My hope is that Show & Tell will resurface a few months down the road at a new venue, and perhaps with a rejiggered format.
<p>Show & Tell wouldn’t have been possible without the help of a great many people, and I'd like to thank them now. First and foremost, my thanks to Donald O'Finn and everyone at Freddy's, who provided me with a great venue at no charge. My thanks also to Heather McCabe, who helped get me in the door at Freddy's and later served as Show & Tell's audio engineer and biggest booster.
<p>I'm also grateful to Kirsten Hively, who was involved with Show & Tell right from the beginning in 2010, and who later designed the excellent S&T logo. She also served as the S&T photographer several times.
<p>Several other people graciously offered their photographic services, including Cameron Blaylock, Ari Friedman, Brad Heck, Saskia Kahn, Deb Klein, Nechama Levy, Alie McNeil, and Willow O'Feral. All of them gamely took on the daunting task of shooting in Freddy's back room, where the lighting is, shall we say, very challenging. I'm grateful for their help and for their photographs, which will remain here on this site.
<p>Most of all, I'm thankful to all the people who shared their objects and stores at Show & Tell. Some only participated once, while others became regulars (hi, Adel!), but all contributed to the great spirit of object-based storytelling that Show & Tell came to embody. It's been a pleasure and a privilege to document all their stories.
<p>See you soon. — <i>Paul</i>
Paul Lukashttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01569493938573591538noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5791036060765701341.post-17275489989196936012013-07-17T09:24:00.002-07:002013-07-17T16:05:11.244-07:00Show & Tell Participants from July 10, 2013<center><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/65516705@N00/9300130149/" title="IMG_4405.JPG by Uni Watch, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5510/9300130149_4e876bd388_c.jpg" width="500" height="702" alt="IMG_4405.JPG"></a></center>
<p>Nechama Levy owns and manages a bike shop called Bicycle Roots, which opened in June and whose launch was partially crowd-funded. People who gave $35 received a T-shirt, cap, and water bottle, like the one from which she's drinking in the photo shown above. The bottles were ordered in mid-May and were supposed to be delivered within two weeks, but the whole thing turned into a drama, as the bottles were mistakenly sent to the wrong address, then mistakenly sent back to the manufacturer instead of being forwarded to the proper address, and so on. Nechama: "I was like, arrgghh!" The bottles finally arrived a few hours prior to this installment of Show & Tell, so Nechama decided use one of them to tell this story. Here's <a target="new" href="http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7442/9300141859_73e90b803e_b.jpg">a closer look</a>. <i>(Photo by Alie McNeil)</i>
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<p>Eric Frank was running his fingers along the spines of some books at the University of Rochester library two years ago when he encountered something that felt like wood, not like a book. He reached into the shelf and pulled out this combination thermometer/barometer. On the back of the gadget were <a target="new" href="http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3705/9300098927_8a27038c0e_b.jpg">two Post-its</a>, which said:
<blockquote>"Remember when we watched Shutter Island in Hoyt after all those creepy things kept happening to us?"
<p>"No, I have a bad memory."</blockquote>
Eric was intrigued enough by this to take the device for himself. "They make me interested in the object because of the feelings and thoughts assigned to it," he says. "Also, the barometer dial has terms like 'Unsettled' and 'Stormy,' which is how you feel most of the time in college." <i>(Photo by Alie McNeil)</i>
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<p>While attending college at the University of Michigan, Max Frank (yes, Eric's brother) befriended a woman named Mallory, who was a bit troubled: she was always high, she drank hydrogen peroxide, and on and on. One day Mallory crashed on Max's couch, so Max went out for a walk, during which he found this abandoned doll, which was <a target="new" href="http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5512/9300078979_8999fe8bb8_b.jpg">made in Israel</a>. It was dirty and a bit bedraggled — one eye was closed, one shoe was missing. Just like Mallory! Max took the doll and cleaned it up. As Mallory drifted out of his life, Max says, "the doll became Mallory." <i>(Photo by Alie McNeil)</i>
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<p>Greg Guthrie attended college at Vanderbilt, where he and some friends attended a "Casino Night" event. Frustrated by the slow pace of their winnings, they decided to set up their own mini-casino within the event. Greg ran back to his dorm and retrieved this set of dice, which he and his friends used to run a rigged dice game over in a corner of the room. People were only betting raffle tickets, not real money, but still, "We were scamming the whole crowd," Greg says. He and his friends ended up with hundreds of raffle tickets and used them all to try to win a big TV for their room. "But we didn't win," says Greg. "We were crushed!" <i>(Photo by Alie McNeil)</i>
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<p>When Ari Friedman was two years old, his mother made this book for him. It's an amazing object, hand-sewn from various pieces of cloth. The interior pages features assorted animals, each one with a zipper or buckle or snaps or some other type of open/close mechanism. (You can see these pages <a target="new" href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/65516705@N00/sets/72157634675213993/">here</a>.) Although the book seems like a remarkable keepsake, Ari has lost track of it several times during his life. "It disappears from my life and then comes back," he says. "I just found it again a few months ago. I'm not letting go of it this time." <i>(Photo by Alie McNeil)</i>
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<p>Alie McNeil (who took all the other photos for this installment of Show & Tell) loves her hometown of Columbia, Missouri. During a recent trip home to visit her family, she picked up this deck of cards, which features notable spots around Columbia. You can get a better sense of the cards <a target="new" href="http://farm8.static.flickr.com/7410/9309449018_371ec77ba0_o.png">here</a>. As she talked about the cards, people in the Show & Tell audience started asking her which spots were assigned to certain cards in the deck. The two of clubs, for example, is <a target="new" href="http://www.yelp.com/biz/booches-billiard-hall-columbia">Booches Billiard Hall</a> ("They're closed on Sundays," says Alie, "so they put a sign on the door that says, 'See You in Church!'"). And the three of clubs is Alie's high school. "Our mascot was the kewpie," she says. Alie was off for another visit to Columbia two days after this installment of Show & Tell. <i>(Photo by Paul Lukas, using Alie's camera)</i>
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<p>We conclude, as usual, with Show & Tell host Paul Lukas — me. I normally wear this T-shirt only once a year, on the last Saturday of July. That's the date of the annual volunteer firemen's chicken barbecue fundraiser in my hometown of Blue Point, Long Island. (The event is promoted more heavily <a target="new" href="http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3709/9302837286_a274f72047_b.jpg">on the back of the shirt</a>.) I began attending the firehouse barbecue with my family when I was a kid and have made a point of continuing to attend each year as an adult, even though my parents no longer live in Blue Point. I always bump into old friends (and occasionally old enemies), and it's a nice way for me to feel connected to the town, if just barely. I bought this shirt at the 1990 barbecue and have kept wearing it to the event each year since then. The T-shirts they currently sell look nothing like this one, and invariably some old-timer spots me, nods approvingly, and says, "Oooh, haven't seen one of those shirts in a while." That always makes me feel good, like I still have some Blue Point cred. <i>(Photo by Alie McNeil)</i>
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<p>That's it for this round of Show & Tell. Big thanks to all who attended, even bigger thanks to the participants, and bonus thanks to Alie McNeil for the photography and to Heather McCabe for handling the audio. Show & Tell will be hiatus for August, so our next show will be Wednesday, Sept. 11, 8pm, in the back room at <a target="new" href="http://freddysbar.com/">Freddy's</a>. Hope to see you then.
Paul Lukashttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01569493938573591538noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5791036060765701341.post-49404064192498227292013-06-17T15:05:00.000-07:002013-06-17T15:05:02.576-07:00Show & Tell Participants from June 12, 2013<center><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/65516705@N00/9044430866/" title="IMG_4367.jpg by Uni Watch, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7362/9044430866_604766531b_c.jpg" width="500" height="749" alt="IMG_4367.jpg"></a></center>
<p>When Karen Yeh was five or six years old, she began saving the fortunes from her fortune cookies. Nearly 25 years later, after averaging about four Chinese restaurant meals per year, she now has about 100 of the fortunes, which she keeps in a little clear plastic box. She won't accept or collect fortunes from other people -- only from her own cookies. Some of her favorite fortunes include "To exercise the body is to purify the soul" and "Do not mistake temptation for opportunity." She also likes the old trick of adding "in bed" to the end of a fortune: "You constantly struggle for self-improvement — in bed" and "Adventure can be happiness — in bed." She read these "in bed" fortunes with a gentle sense of innuendo that felt just right. <i>(Photo by Alie McNeil)</i>
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<p>Beau Dodson's parents traveled a lot for work, and he spent much of his childhood being raised by his grandparents. When he was about 10 years old, he was poking around his grandparents' house and found these portraits of his parents and family, which had been taken in December of 1987. (You can get a closer look at the photos <a target="new" href="http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7292/9044422106_2eaed1eb56_b.jpg">here</a>; Beau is the baby in the center.) The photos made Beau realize how much he missed his parents, so he took the photos, which he now carries around in his wallet. His other thought upon seeing the photos was, "I can't wait until I have long hair and a beard like my Pops." As you can see, he's taken care of that now that he's an adult. <i>(Photo by Alie McNeil)</i>
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<p>Aaron Jacobs has been dating a great girl, but she recently announced that she'll be leaving New York for another job in six weeks. So Aaron made up a list of fun things for them to do during the short time they have left together. One item on the list, which they did on their way to Show & Tell, was to go to a Goodwill shop and buy "crazy gifts" for each other. She bought him this cat-themed vest, which still had its Goodwill price tag ($8 — kinda pricey for Goodwill!). It was a big deal for Aaron to share this story, because "Normally I don't share — not even French fries." <i>(Photo by Alie McNeil)</i>
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<p>Brendan Schlagel received this light meter as a Christmas gift from his father and stepmother when he was in high school. "I like it because it's a small, kind of beautiful mechanical object," he says. "It symbolizes how I got started in photography. Now I've moved on to filmmaking and writing." He used to meter to confirm that the light in Freddy's back room, where we conduct Show & Tell, is pretty crummy. <i>(Photo by Alie McNeil)</i>
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<p>Morgan Doninger says his grandfather "didn't care about baseball and didn't read the <i>Daily News</i>." But he knew that Morgan was a big baseball fan. So in 1973, when Morgan was five years old, his grandfather bought the <i>Daily News</i> each Sunday during the baseball season and saved the Mets and Yankees posters that the newspaper was giving away. At the end of the season, he presented the full set of posters to Morgan, who still has them. "That was the kind of thing he did," says Morgan. <i>(Photo by Alie McNeil)</i>
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<p>The shirt that Haisi is wearing was made by her mother about 40 years ago in China. "She's really, really talented," says Haisi. "She'd make all her own clothes and then, when they went out of fashion, she'd give them to me, because we're the same size." She explains that her mother intentionally made the sleeves a bit short "for ease of working," because she was always working hard with her hands. <i>(Photo by Alie McNeil)</i>
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<p>Alie McNeil, who took all the other portraits for this round of Show & Tell, has a grandmother who developed an interesting hobby late in life: She found the little toy cars that her children had played with while growing up and decided she liked them. So she started buying more and more of these little cars and made shadowboxes out of them. Before Alie moved to New York, she asked and received permission to take one of the cars with her as a keepsake. She chose a little police car. (Here's <a target="new" href="http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7433/9070937686_20f5c66434_c.jpg">a closer look</a>.) "It looks kind of old, which I like," she says. <i>(Photo by Paul Lukas, with Alie McNeil's camera)</i>
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<p>We conclude, as usual, with Show & Tell host Paul Lukas — me. This installment of Show & Tell took place just a few days before Father's Day, so I chose an object related to that. Here's the deal: In 1973, when I was nine years old, I got the idea that our family should go to see the Mets on Father's Day. So I saved up my allowance (25¢ a week) until I had enough to cover the cost of my father's ticket. But I hadn't really thought very far ahead on this project, because I didn't have enough to pay for my own ticket, or my Mom's, or my brother's. So my father had to pay for those. He also had to pay for parking, pay for hot dogs and soda, drive through holiday traffic to and from the game, and so on. In other words, this wasn't exactly the most thoughtful Father's Day gift. But my father never complained, and he seemed to enjoy the day. Forty years later, I still have my ticket stub, which you can see more clearly <a target="new" href="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1286/560190136_b875f7e992.jpg">here</a>. <i>(Photo by Alie McNeil)</i>
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<p>That's it for this round of Show & Tell. Big thanks to all who attended, even bigger thanks to the participants, and bonus thanks to Alie McNeil for handling the photography. The next installment of Show & Tell will be Wednesday, July 10, 8pm, in the back room at <a target="new" href="http://freddysbar.com/">Freddy's</a>. Hope to see you then.
Paul Lukashttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01569493938573591538noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5791036060765701341.post-33950029593825733442013-05-12T06:28:00.000-07:002013-05-12T17:52:52.942-07:00Show & Tell Participants for May 8, 2013<center><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/65516705@N00/8727903423/" title="a_DSC3475.JPG by Uni Watch, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7455/8727903423_9a1ff501df.jpg" width="500" height="388" alt="a_DSC3475.JPG"></a></center>
<p>When Jonny G. was about 14 or 15 years old, he was poking around the house and found this "Ident-A-Kid" card made that his parents had made for him when he was three. (You can get a closer look at it <a target="new" href="http://farm8.static.flickr.com/7304/8733934510_da7b70cf27_o.jpg">here</a>.) He had a friend who kept a baby photo of his girlfriend in his wallet, and who decided he wanted childhood photos of his other friends as well, so the friend took Jonny's card and kept it until Jonny "couldn't deal with him having it anymore," at which point Jonny took it back. But then the friend wanted it again and took it, and then Jonny took it back, and now the card has passed back and forth between them about five times. "I kind of enjoy the tradition of it," Jonny says. <i>(Photo by Ari Friedman)</i>
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<p>Nechama Levy's dog, Spotless, died about a year ago at the age of 14. She had found him as a stray when he was about three months old and had tricked him into following her home by leaving a trail of dog food that let do her home, "Hansel and Gretel-style." Spotless shed a lot, so she gathered up a bunch of his fur from her apartment and put it in this jar, which she keeps on a shelf, along with his ashes and a doggie sweater. "He was a very special dog," she says. "He made a lot of trouble in his life, but none of his shenanigans ever did him in." <i>(Photo by Ari Friedman)</i>
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<p>"I like scarves," says Allie C. She especially likes this one, a Hermès model that her husband and kids gave her as a birthday present. She likes the parrots on the scarf because she's obsessed with <a target="new" href="http://www.brooklynparrots.com/2006/03/greenwood-cemetery-parrots.html">the parrots in Green-Wood Cemetery</a>; she likes the tigers on the scarf because she thinks of her husband as "my tiger"; she likes the leopard cubs because they remind her of her children; and she likes the squirrel in the lower-right corner because the squirrel is "my absolute all-time favorite animal." After telling the scarf's story, Allie showed the many ways she can wear it: as a headband, as a turban, as a tube top, as a sash, even as a skirt. "My Mom always taught me that an elegant woman wears silk scarves," she says. <i>(Photo by Ari Friedman)</i>
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<p>Ari Friedman had always wanted a pinhole camera. He got this one from a friend who'd decided that he had "too many cameras" and was giving a few of them away. It uses 4"-by-5" film — "the biggest I've ever shot," says Ari. There's no viewfiender, and the exposures have to be quite long (sometimes several minutes), so every shot is a bit of a crapshoot. This, combined with the film being fairl expensive — about $2 per shot — has led Ari to use the camera only sparingly. Still, he's intrigued by it and loves the photos he's taken with it. "It produces a very distinctive look," he says. "The first time I used it and developed the negatives — wow." Footnote: Ari took all the other photos for this installment of Show & Tell, but he used a digital Nikon for those, not the pinhole. <i>(Photo by Nechama Levy)</i>
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<p>Andie B. went to Russia about a year and a half ago to celebrate her birthday. She found that the Russian equivalents of bodegas routinely sell small glass containers of vodka for about 75 cents. (You can get a closer look at them <a target="new" href="http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7283/8729021388_ecded786a9_c.jpg">here</a>.) The vodka isn't particularly good, but she brought back a bunch of it anyway, in part because the empty containers serve nicely as beverage glasses. "So you finish the crummy vodka, and then you have a glass forever," she says. <i>(Photo by Ari Friedman)</i>
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<p>Heather McCabe's friend Russell recently gave her this little "last rites" packet that had belonged to his now-deceased mother. The card inside the packet reads, "I am a Catholic. In case of accident, call a priest." (You can get a closer look at it <a target="new" href="http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7336/8731919212_672e04e4f5_b.jpg">here</a>.) Russell gave it to Heather as sort of a private joke, because they've both strayed from their strict Catholic upbringings. Then again, there's some question as to how strictly Catholic Russell's mother was, since she never filled out the information on the card. Such packets are not uncommon — you can even buy one <a target="new" href="http://www.amazon.com/Last-Rites-Notification-CATHOLIC-accidence/dp/B0084NLY9G">on Amazon</a> — but Heather nonetheless finds it highly amusing. "It's just so bizarre and generic," she says. "I almost want to get in an accident, just so someone will find it." <i>(Photo by Ari Friedman</i>)
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<p>We conclude, as usual, with Show & Tell host Paul Lukas — me. This installment of Show & Tell took place just a few days before Mother's Day, so I was thinking a lot about my Mom, who had been an artist before she settled down with my father. When I was about 11 years old, she brought home this wooden thingie from a junk shop and hung it on the wall of our living room. She explained that it had been part of a chicken coop (the little "doors" are where the feed would be inserted), but I just thought it was stupid. Why couldn't we have pictures on the wall like normal families? As time went on, though, my Mom's aesthetic strongly influenced my own, and I came to view the chicken coop piece as one of the more beautiful things in our home. When my parents sold their house and moved to a small apartment in 2004, they had to get rid of a lot of stuff, at which point I claimed the chicken coop piece. It now hangs on the wall of my apartment — a nice piece of home décor, and an even nicer reminder of how my Mom taught me to appreciate unconventional things. <i>(Photo by Ari Friedman)</i>
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<p>That's it for this round of Show & Tell. Big thanks to all who attended, even bigger thanks to the participants, and bonus thanks to Ari Friedman for handling the photography. The next installment of Show & Tell will be Wednesday, June 12, 8pm, in the back room at <a target="new" href="http://freddysbar.com/">Freddy's</a>. Hope to see you then.
Paul Lukashttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01569493938573591538noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5791036060765701341.post-13458237414910238452013-04-11T08:38:00.000-07:002013-04-11T08:38:23.178-07:00Show & Tell Participants from April 10, 2013<center><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/65516705@N00/8639483529/" title="showandtell_april-2.jpg by PermanentRecord, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8387/8639483529_a7a45154d5_z.jpg" width="500" height="527" alt="showandtell_april-2.jpg"></a></center>
<p>When Ron U. was 12 or 13 years old in suburban Buffalo, he and a friend began tramping through the woods and through garbage dumps in search of beer cans. This was a start of his beer can collection, which at one point numbered about 700 cans. He later sold most of them but has kept about 75 cans, including this Krueger can from the mid-1930s (here's <a target="new" href="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8540/8639481559_d1b7da3b1b_b.jpg">a closer look</a>). "Krueger was <a target="new" href="http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/first-canned-beer-goes-on-sale">the first brewery to sell beer in cans</a>," he explains. "So if you collect beer cans, right away you learn about Krueger. That's why I've kept this one -- it's sort of touchstone." <i>(Photo by Saskia Kahn)</i>
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<p>Roman Prystajko has an unusual job: He travels around the country installing bus-washing machinery ("Just like a car wash, but really big," he says). He's currently in New York, working on a project at LaGuardia Airport. While stuck in a traffic jam near the airport, he glanced out the window and saw Mt. Calvary Cemetery. He was intrigued by the juxtaposition of the gravestones in the foreground and the Manhattan skyline in the background, so he pointed his phone out the passenger window and took a photo (here's <a target="new" href="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8389/8639544341_8c88c2cf5e_h.jpg">a closer look</a>). "They say New York is the city that never sleeps, but I call this photo 'The City That Sleeps Forever,'" he says. "I think it's maybe the best photo I've ever taken." <i>(Photo by Saskia Kahn)</i>
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<p>Kirsten Hively visited Istanbul in 2007. She wanted to explore the city via its wide variety of public transit methods -- ferries, trams, buses, funiculars -- so she purchased this little yellow gizmo with a small metal disc thingie on the end, which is the Istanbul equivalent of a MetroCard: The gizmo comes pre-loaded with a set amount of value, and then you press the metal surface onto an electronic receptor when boarding a public conveyance, which deducts the appropriate fare. Kirsten had meant to purchase about $15 worth of fares, but she end up with $50 due to a language misinterpretation, so there's probably some value left on the device. That's one reason she's kept it for so many years -- after all, she might go back to Istanbul one day. But there's another reason: "Whenever there's something I'm keeping track of and making sure not to lose -- a wallet, a cell phone -- I have a hard time letting go of it, even when I don't need it anymore." <i>(Photo by Saskia Kahn)</i>
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<p>Andi Bee does a lot of animal rescue work. She recently rescued a kitten and gave it to one of her neighbors, but the kitten somehow disappeared. She helped the neighbor look all over his apartment for the kitten, to no avail. Before giving up, she took her dog, Melly, down into the neighbor's basement, thinking the kitten might be hiding down there. Sure enough, Melly soon sniffed out the kitten and all was well. Andi was so proud of Melly that she brought her to Show & Tell -- an unusual object to talk about, but Melly <a target="new" href="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8244/8640585244_65a8a0db42_b.jpg">didn't seem to mind</a>. <i>(Photo by Saskia Kahn)</i>
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<p>We conclude, as usual, with Show & Tell host Paul Lukas -- me. The recent Jewish holiday of Passover prompted me to tell this story: When I was growing up, our family wasn't religious, but we always had matzos in the house during Passover. I loved to take a big sheet of matzo, slather it with butter, sprinkle on some salt, and devour it. That's precisely what I was doing one afternoon when I was about nine years old, when I heard a car door closing shut in our driveway. It was my Mom — home from work more than an hour earlier than usual. And there I was, about to be caught with contraband matzo (I wasn't supposed to be eating between-meal snacks, "It'll ruin your appetite," blah-blah-blah). There was no time to run to the garbage can or the toilet, so I reached over on a nearby shelf, lifted the cover off of our family game of Scrabble, slipped the matzo inside, and then went and greeted my Mom. The next morning, before I left for school, I retrieved the incriminating mazto and disposed of it. But the inner box cover and board had been sullied with a few butter stains. Decades later, those stains are still there -- timeless documents of my transgression. And here's a little epilogue: In 2007, I wrote <a target="new" href="http://www.nysun.com/food-drink/bread-circus/51327/">an article about the Streitz matzo factory</a> in Manhattan. While interviewing the company’s vice president, I told him the Scrabble story. He listened, thought for a moment, and then said, “That’s a shame to waste a good matzo like that.” <i>(Photo by Saskia Kahn)</i>
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<p>That's it for this round of Show & Tell. Big thanks to all who attended, even bigger thanks to the participants, and bonus thanks to Heather McCabe for running the audio and to Saskia Kahn for once again serving as the Show & Tell shutterbug (check out more of her photography <a target="new" href="http://www.saskiakahn.com/">on her web site</a>, and then hire her!). The next installment of Show & Tell will be Wednesday, May 8, 8pm, in the back room at <a target="new" href="http://freddysbar.com/">Freddy's</a>. Hope to see you then.
Paul Lukashttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01569493938573591538noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5791036060765701341.post-363356684456884512013-03-14T21:07:00.002-07:002013-03-17T11:17:52.926-07:00Show & Tell Participants from March 13, 2013<center><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/65516705@N00/8558936244/" title="showandtell_march013-10.jpg by PermanentRecord, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8244/8558936244_1f4fa1c1c0_z.jpg" width="500" height="506" alt="showandtell_march013-10.jpg"></a></center>
<p>Ari Friedman was visiting the Cloisters nine months ago when he noticed a book, called <i>The Paris Edition</i>, that someone had left behind on a bench. He picked it up and saw that a note was taped to the cover. It said, "Traveling Book: I am not lost -- I'm on a journey." The book had been registered as part of <a target="new" href="http://www.bookcrossing.com/">BookCrossing</a>, a project that lets people share books and track their progress as they're passed from person to person (here's the BookCrossing page <a target="new" href="http://www.bookcrossing.com/journal/add/085-11085513">for the book Ari found</a>). Interestingly, Ari says he wasn't much of a reader before that day at the Cloisters, "but this book got me back into reading." At the end of his Show & Tell presentation, he gave the book to someone in the S&T audience, so now the book is off on the next phase of its journey. <i>(Photo by Saskia Kahn)</i>
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<p>"I'm not a successful person in athletic competition," says Nachema Levy. But in 2007 she entered an <a target="new" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alleycat_race">alleycat race</a> -- basically an informal, unauthorized bike race, usually set up by bike messengers -- and was the top female finisher, for which she won this Manhattan Portage messenger bag. It's the only race she's ever won, and she credits her victory to "being ballsy, not fast," because she took the most direct route, even though that meant she was biking on a highway alongside speeding cars. Seven days later she was run over on her bike by a garbage truck and, as she puts it, "kind of lost my taste for competition." <i>(Photo by Saskia Kahn)</i>
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<p>2004 was an eventful year for Matt Kimmett: He got divorced, quit two jobs, and booked himself a ’round-the-world tour. He soon found himself in Las Vegas, where he was annoyed to discover that his hotel room at the Tropicana Casino did not have an ashtray, even though he'd specifically booked a smoking room. So he wandered down to the lobby and grabbed this ashtray. Instead of leaving it behind when he moved on, he decided to take it with him because, as he puts it, "you might need an ashtray when you're traveling." The ashtray eventually accompanied him to Australia, Asia, and Europe, as he continued on his worldwide tour, and got plenty of use along the way. He now wants to bring things full-circle and return to Las Vegas, where he plans to leave the ashtray where he found it at the Trop. <i>(Photo by Saskia Kahn)</i>
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<p>David Rondinelli has been a big fan of the actress Rose McGowan -- like, a <i>really</i> big fan -- ever since he saw her performance in the 1995 movie <i>The Doom Generation</i>. "She holds a special place in my heart," he says. "I felt like we shared a lot of similarities." So he was excited when he got to see McGowan making an appearance at the 2011 New York Comic Con. She was taking questions from the crowd, so he asked her a question ("If we took all the bad-ass characters you've played and brought them all together for a fight, which one would end up standing on the corpses of all the others?"), which was apparently such a good question that it brought a round of applause from the other fans in attendance. He also told McGowan he'd loved her ever since he'd seen her curse someone out in a movie, so she obligingly cursed him out in response. When it came time for him to have McGowan autograph a photo of herself, David asked her to use a line she used in the film <i>Jawbreaker</i>: <a target="new" href="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8375/8557831665_81d20271ba_h.jpg">"Fate has decided, my dear, that you will be cool."</a> <i>(Photo by Saskia Kahn)</i>
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<p>Adel Souto recently got in the habit of sitting on his couch and meditatively combing his beard with this pocket comb. It was part of a larger, long-term project of self-transformation through a program of humble living and self-denial of things like sweets and tobacco. Eventually, he says, the program was so successful that his "third eye" opened and a stream of creative productivity poured out of him: He wrote an entire philosophy book in one day (although it has not yet been published); he wrote two entire articles in his head while on the subway (he shopped them around but found no takers, apparently because he used racially charged language); and he experienced "a purple light emitting from my chest, a state of bliss, and eight full-body orgasms -- without ejaculation" (a claim that prompted several very curious inquiries from members of the Show & Tell audience). He doesn't attribute all of this to the pocket comb, but the comb was a step in the process. "All the things the mystics say are true," he says. <i>(Photo by Saskia Kahn)</i>
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<p>About six years ago, Saskia Kahn (who took all the other photos for this round of Show & Tell) decided she needed a winter coat, so she purchased this coat made by the North Face. "It seemed very cool, very Brooklyn," says Saskia, who grew up and went to college in Brooklyn. But now she finds the jacket problematic: "It's so embarrassing. I wear it when I work on these photo shoots in Manhattan, and I look like a Brooklyn girl, not a Manhattan girl, with my hoop earrings and my North Face jacket. It even has stains on it that look like cum stains!" (They're actually just wax.) So why doesn't she just get another jacket? "I hate shopping," she says. <i>(Photo by Heather McCabe)</i>
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<p>We conclude, as usual, with Show & Tell host Paul Lukas -- me. On May 18, 1999, my car got a flat tire. I took it to one of those flat-fix places, where a worker inspected the tire and pulled out this screw (you can get a better look at it <a target="new" href="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8101/8557830247_b2e62497de_z.jpg">here</a>). As I looked at the screw, an art project formed in my mind: I would save this screw, along with all subsequent objects that gave me flat tires, and mount them in some sort of framed display, with little labels noting the date and location of each flat tire. I envisioned the screw being accompanied by a nail, a piece of glass, a random scrap of metal, and so on, and the end result would be a document of my history of flat tires. I was pretty pleased with this idea (probably <i>too</i> pleased) because, as a writer, I'd never been good at creating visual art, and I thought this project would be just the thing to get me started down an artistic path. Just one problem: In the nearly 14 years since the screw was extracted from my tire, I haven't gotten another flat. In most respects, this is a good thing. But on some level I find it mildly frustrating. <i>(Photo by Saskia Kahn)</i>
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<p>That's it for this round of Show & Tell. Big thanks to all who attended, even bigger thanks to the participants, and über-special thanks to Heather McCabe for running the audio and to Saskia Kahn for serving as this month's Show & Tell shutterbug (check out more of her photography <a target="new" href="http://www.saskiakahn.com/">on her web site</a>, and then hire her!). The next installment of Show & Tell will be Wednesday, April 10, 8pm, in the back room at <a target="new" href="http://freddysbar.com/">Freddy's</a>. Hope to see you then.
Paul Lukashttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01569493938573591538noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5791036060765701341.post-23568407391395495522013-02-22T06:20:00.000-08:002013-02-22T08:34:10.398-08:00Show & Tell Participants from February 13, 2013<center> <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/65516705@N00/8495863281/" title="Show-and-tell-4.jpg by PermanentRecord, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8383/8495863281_bd6cee19f7.jpg" width="500" height="401" alt="Show-and-tell-4.jpg"></a></center>
<p>Courtney Coumo loves Halloween, even more than Christmas. This past Halloween, she bought a pair of giant, pointy ears and decided to be the Elf That Steals Things That People Lose. But then Hurricane Sandy hit on Oct. 28, "and my plan kind of went to shit," she says. She had come to terms with the idea that there would be no Halloween this time around, but then on Oct. 31, amidst all the hurricane damage, she saw a kid dressed up like Superman, which renewed her Halloween spirit. She put on the ears, walked around her neighborhood, and even went to the Brooklyn Museum, all the while garnering a range of very positive responses. "It was one of the most memorable experiences of my life," she says. "So the lesson is, no matter what the hell happens, just wear the freakin' ears." <i>(Photo by Kirsten Hively)</i>
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<p>Coree Spencer began wearing this black hair band on Oct. 3, 2012, which is the day she moved to New York from California. Since then, she's gotten a job, been fired, and suffered from severe depression, but she has always worn the band, either in her hair or on her wrist. She has a box of other hair bands, but she's stayed with this one. "There have been times," she says, "when it felt like this was the only thing holding me together." <i>(Photo by Kirsten Hively)</i>
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<p>Sam Baumel acquired this stick in North Carolina in December of 2011. It has spent most of its time since then in his car, where it's occasionally come in handy. One time he used it to fish his keys out from under the seat; another time he used it to poke a hole in the ground "to bury something before crossing the Canadian border." Asked what this something was, he says, "Illegal drugs, which were retrieved 48 hours later." <i>(Photo by Kirsten Hively)</i>
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<p>Valerie Bronte and her best friend love the movie <i>Beastmaster</i>, in which Rip Torn wears <a target="new" href="http://www.uni-watch.com/wp-content/uploads/Screen-shot-2013-02-21-at-10.34.35-PM.png">a ring with an eyeball</a>. The best friend happens to be a jeweler, so she made Valerie this eyeball-ish ring. The unusual thing is that the dark part of the ring is coprolite, which is a fancy term for fossilized dinosaur scat, and the white line running through the center of it is a trilobite, making for a double-fossilized piece of jewelry. <i>(Photo by Kirsten Hively)</i>
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<p>In 2008, Nell Constantinople was working on a documentary film in Peru. While there, a shaman convinced her to try the Peruvian <a target="new" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ayahuasca"><i>ahahuasca</i></a> process, which is essentially a psychoactive drug trip that supposedly purges demons and leads to spiritual enlightenment -- or, in Nell's case, leads to intense vomiting and extended illness, which she had not expected. As someone said to her at the time, "You clearly had a lot of demons to get rid of." While she was recuperating, the shaman's helper -- an eight-year-old boy -- gave her this lizard toy that his mother had made for him. "He meant it as a comforting tool," she says, "but to me it represents fragility and mortality." <i>(Photo by Kirsten Hively)</i>
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<p>These old fraternity calendars belonged to Mary Kathryn Bedlock's father, and date back to the time when he and Mary Kathryn's mother both attended Arkansas State University in the 1960s and ’70s. The women in the photos include friends of her mother and aunt from that period, and Mary Kathryn loves the outfits they were wearing. "The fashions are so relevant, even today," she says. She had considered turning the photos into collages, as part of an art project about family heirlooms, but now she's decided to keep them intact. <i>(Photo by Kirsten Hively)</i>
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<p>David Rondinelli came to New York in 2006 and wanted to make new friends. At the suggestion of his brother, he joined a local rugby team -- an unusual choice for David, who was never all that athletic. As it turned out, he not only made new friends but also lost 30 pounds and won this "Most Improved" award in 2008, which he particularly proud of. "I was always a bookworm-ish type," he says, "so it was pretty inspiring to be part of this athletic culture." <i>(Photo by Kirsten Hively)</i>
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<p>Nechama Levy is wearing a <i>khata</i>, which is a traditional Buddhist scarf. It was given to her in 2005, after she went for a hike outside a town in northern India and ended up getting lost in the jungle for three days. She eventually found her way back to the town, by which time she'd become something of a local celebrity -- half the town had been out looking for her. When she left the town to move on with her travels, many of the local residents came out to see her off, and they presented her with the scarf. She explains all this goodwill like so: "They didn't want to be known as the place where the American died." <i>(Photo by Kirsten Hively)</i>
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<p>Nicole Reber is holding her copy of <i>Lunch Poems</i> by Frank O'Hara. "It's one of my favorite books of poetry, and the book that made me want to be a poet," she says. After talking about the O'Hara for a minute or so, she launched into a reading of one of his poems from the book, "Ave Maria," which is an exhortation for the mothers of America <a target="new" href="http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/171382">to let their kids go to the movies</a>. <i>(Photo by Kirsten Hively)</i>
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Emma Williford loves this "sand swirly thing," which keeps reconfiguring into new sand patterns as it's rotated. "You can stare at it for hours," she says. "It even glows in the dark!" It was in her parents' house throughout her childhood, and then she annexed it at some point during college. These days she uses it as an oversized coaster. It's now showing its age -- there are some worn spots. "One day it'll crack," she says. "I'll cry." <i>(Photo by Kirsten Hively)</i>
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<p>We conclude, as usual, with Show & Tell host Paul Lukas -- me. I acquired this copy of the Rolling Stones' 1972 LP, <i>Exile on Main Street</i>, about 30 years ago. In that time, the back cover has developed a bunch of scratches <a target="new" href="http://www.uni-watch.com/wp-content/uploads/stones.png">centering around a small indent</a>. This is because I also own a copy of the Stones' 1971 LP, <i>Sticky Fingers</i>, whose cover design <a target="new" href="http://fretym.files.wordpress.com/2013/01/rolling-stones-sticky-fingers.jpg">featured a real zipper</a> (it was later changed to just a photo of a zipper). Since I shelve my LPs alphabetically by artist and chronologically within artist -- which is really the only way -- these two LPs have always been next to each other, and the <i>Sticky Fingers</i> zipper has gouged a little divot into the <i>Exile</i> cover over the years. Whenever I'm in a used record store, I look at old copies of <i>Exile</i> to see if they have the same scratches, and they often do, which makes me feel connected to the larger subculture of record geeks who file their LPs the same way I do. <i>(Photo by Kirsten Hively)</i>
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That's all for this time. Big thanks to all participants, and bonus thanks to Kirsten Hively for the photos and to Heather McCabe for handling the interstitial music. The next installment of Show & Tell will be Wednesday, March 13, 8pm, in the back room at <a target="new" href="http://freddysbar.com/">Freddy's</a>. Hope to see you then.
Paul Lukashttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01569493938573591538noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5791036060765701341.post-1317220318217846622013-01-17T09:56:00.000-08:002013-01-19T17:37:18.144-08:00Show & Tell Participants from January 9, 2013
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<p>"When I'm depressed, I drink, and when I drink, I buy things I don't need," says Julie Threlkeld. One such episode took place in December of 2010, when she purchased an autographed eight-by-ten-inch glossy photograph of the actress Morgan Fairchild. The Post-it attached to the photo is from Fairchild's personal assistant and reads, "So sorry -- as Morgan hasn't had your possum stew, she doesn't feel comfortable endorsing it." Julie has no recollection of what this is referring to but was so mortified by the experience that she changed her PayPal password, so now she can't make impulsive online purchases. <i>(Photo by Willow O'Feral)</i>
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<p>Willow O'Feral -- who took all the other photos at this installment of Show & Tell -- moved to New York City last spring and quickly joined an all-female afro-samba band, in which she plays the bass drum. Through a series of unlikely connections, her band got to warm up the crowd for the Rolling Stones during their recent shows in Brooklyn and Newark. Everyone in the band had to wear one of these gorilla masks -- a nod to the cover design of <a target="new" href="http://www.rollingstone.com/assets/images/album_review/rolling-stones-grrr-1352751343.jpeg">the Stones' latest compilation album</a>. Interestingly, Willow and her bandmates weren't paid. "It was less glamourous than you might think," she says. "We only played for about five minutes at each show. Those were the fastest five minutes of my life. It was an insane, bizarre experience, which is perfect, because I mostly moved to New York to have insane, bizarre experiences." <i>(Photo by Brad Heck)</i>
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<p>Anita Flores hates to waste food. Her office held a pizza party a few hours before she was heading to Show & Tell, and there was some pizza left over, so she took one of the pizzas with the intention of giving it away, perhaps to a homeless person, on her way to Show & Tell. But this turned out to be more difficult than she had expected. At one point she put the pizza down next to a sleeping woman on a subway platform, but a transit worker scolded her ("You're just gonna encourage them"), so she took the pizza and went in search of another recipient. After several other abortive attempts, she eventually threw away the pizza, leaving her with nothing to show for her efforts except the empty box and a Show & Tell story. <i>(Photo by Willow O'Feral)</i>
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<p>When Sam Davison was growing up, he was obsessed with the Beatles and the Supremes. His love of music took a quantum leap at age 10, when he received his first Discman. "I look back fondly on this, much like someone would look back on their first album, because I could bring my music with me. This was my best friend!" He especially liked the little window on the cover, which allowed him to see the CDs spinning inside the machine, and soon realized that some CDs may actually have been designed with this in mind ("Certain CDs looked cooler as they spun than others"). The Discman broke when Sam was 13, but that turned out to be a case of fortunate timing: "My bar mitzvah happened and I got an iPod." <i>(Photo by Willow O'Feral)</i>
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<p>Sabine Bernard and her mother and sister always engage in some sort of Christmas craft project together. When she went home to Portland, Oregon, for the holidays last month, they decided to make terrariums. Unfortunately, Sabine's terrarium was ruined by TSA workers during her trip home. She's tried to make up for it by making this tiny terrarium in a little glass vial, which she wears as a necklace pendant. <i>(Photo by Willow O'Feral)</i>
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<p>Here's another Christmas-related story: Emily Thenhaus's father is a bit of an eccentric when it comes to stocking stuffers. "He always gives gifts appropriate for a five-year-old," she says. One year, for example, he filled everyone's stockings with salted nuts. Another time, he hid his own car keys in his own stockings and then got very excited, pretending that they were the keys to a new car. (He actually did this on more than one occasion.) This past Christmas he got Emily this box of neon-colored clay. "I think he mainly just likes having an excuse to shop at the St. Louis Museum of Art gift shop," she says. <i>(Photo by Willow O'Feral)</i>
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<p>Tony Limuaco grew up in Guam, where his mother used the coconut cutter that he's sitting on. (That's the proper way to use it, but you can get a clearer view of it <a target="new" href="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8222/8384403651_4d8dc99cdd_b.jpg">here</a>.) Tony's uncle made it decades ago out of an old swing set and some rebar. When Tony made a recent trip home to visit his mother, she slipped the coconut cutter into his luggage, where it made for an interesting X-ray image at the security gate in Honolulu. Fortunately, the TSA official on duty happened to be a Pacific Islander and recognized the object as a coconut cutter right away. Once Tony finally got it home, he took it to one of those grinder trucks to have it sharpened, "but the guy didn't know what to do with it." <i>(Photo by Willow O'Feral)</i>
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<p>In the early 2000s, Adel Souto held a series of short-term jobs -- at a bookstore, at a head shop, at a plant nursery. During this period, Adel, who is right-handed, decided to keep a left-handed journal, just as an exercise. The entry for Dec. 17, 2002, reads: "Today is a good day to die. Ask anyone. They will let you know by tomorrow." Fortunately, Adel did not take this self-advice. <i>(Photo by Willow O'Feral)</i>
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<p>Francisco is a fairly serious jiu jitsu competitor. "It's my form of therapy and meditation," he says. During a recent tournament, he took on an opponent who was larger and more skilled than himself. He performed well but lost when the opponent executed a move that hyper-extended Francisco's elbow. He feels no shame in having lost to a superior competitor -- on the contrary, he now wears this elbow brace "like a badge of honor." <i>(Photo by Willow O'Feral)</i>
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<p>When Kevin Fong was 11 years old, his grandfather suffered a heart attack. During a hospital visit, the grandfather gave Kevin his Walkman. "It was the last gift he ever gave me," says Kevin. "That's when I knew he was going to die." Sure enough, the grandfather died about a week later. <i>(Photo by Willow O'Feral)</i>
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<p>We conclude, as usual, with Show & Tell host Paul Lukas -- me. Shortly after moving to New York City, I attended the 1987 Halloween Parade in Greenwich Village. Someone in the parade was handing out tiny zip-lock baggies, each of which contained a quarter and a little slip of paper that read, "In Case of Emergency, Call This Number." The number turned out to be for a runaway crisis hotline. My quarter, for whatever reason, had a hole drilled through it, so I put it on my keychain. I liked the idea that it would be my "emergency quarter," just in case I was ever down to my last 25 cents. The quarter, which was minted in 1981, has been on my keychain ever since and has gone literally around the world with me. Due to the hole, it weighs slightly less than a conventional quarter, so I often wonder if it would even work in a pay phone or soda machine. I could find out easily enough -- I happen to own a few coin-operated gadgets and could test the quarter in one of them -- but I don't really want to know. Sometimes the question is more interesting than the answer. <i>(Photo by Willow O'Feral)</i>
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That's it for this round of Show & Tell. Big thanks to all participants, and extra-special thanks to Willow O'Feral for serving as this month's Show & Tell shutterbug.
The next installment of Show & Tell will be Wednesday, Feb. 13, 8pm, in the back room at <a target="new" href="http://freddysbar.com/">Freddy's</a>. Hope to see you then.
Paul Lukashttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01569493938573591538noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5791036060765701341.post-28682381735331376342012-11-17T19:08:00.000-08:002012-11-25T03:33:44.143-08:00Show & Tell Participants from November 14, 2012<center><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/65516705@N00/8194014877/" title="Show_and_Tell-18.jpg by PermanentRecord, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8486/8194014877_73fd7b9912.jpg" width="500" height="472" alt="Show_and_Tell-18.jpg"></a></center>
<p>Billy Ganun's parents live in Breezy Point, one of the New York City neighborhoods that was hardest hit by Hurricane Sandy. While helping with the relief and clean-up efforts, he found these Mardi Gras beads under his parents' house. They're apparently left over from the neighborhood's annual Mardi Gras party, and they're a powerful reminder of Breezy Point's newfound hurricane-related connection to the city of New Orleans. Billy started wearing them while continuing his clean-up work and got some positive feedback. "An old lady said she liked that I was wearing ’em, so I'm gonna keep doing it," he says. "It's a reminder of where we want to get to, as opposed to where we are now." <i>(Photo by Kirsten Hively)</i>
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<p>Willow O'Feral was walking on a California beach one day when she found an abstract piece of something or other, which she turned into the pendant for a necklace. She originally thought it might be "some kind of <a target="new" href="http://farm9.static.flickr.com/8200/8195351126_c8dfe0e1fe_o.png">weird mask</a>," but an engineer friend later told her that was part of an electrical insulator. "It's always felt talismanic to me, because it represents trash being transformed and the ocean spitting it back," she says. "I don't wear it every day, but on days when I need strength, like when I'm applying for a job." <i>(Photo by Kirsten Hively)</i>
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<p>Adel Souto fell in love with someone over the internet. When they met in person, they sealed their bond and indulged their shared passion for transgressive adventure by trespassing into an abandoned steel mill in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, where Adel took this circular sheet from a gauge that measured, well, something. (You can get a closer look at it <a target="new" href="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8343/8195117338_3e9afdbb0d_h.jpg">here</a>.) The two of them eventually lived together for three years. And although it didn't end well, Adel still has fond memories of that day at the steel mill, which he describes as "an amicable break-in." <i>(Photo by Kirsten Hively)</i>
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<p>Faith Rowald was spending some time in Bethlehem (the one in Palestine, not in Pennsylvania) in 2008 when two Swedish friends gave her this mug, which features lots of <a target="new" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dalecarlian_horse">Dalahäst horses</a> — a Swedish icon. "The horses look magical and happy, which is what Sweden basically is," she says. "It's my favorite mug, even though it got chipped when the shelf it was sitting on fell down. I use it for mint tea and hot chocolate." <i>(Photo by Kirsten Hively)</i>
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<p>Brad Heck's uncle was an engineer who helped build space shuttles for Honeywell. Among his inventions was this differential for the shuttle's autopilot system. (You can get a better view of it <a target="new" href="http://farm9.static.flickr.com/8063/8194244249_11326ed299_o.png">here</a>.) His uncle's engineering career came to an end when he found religion and decided to become a minister, which led to the break-up of his marriage. The differential has several moving parts and is very satisfying to handle. Fiddling with it, Brad says, "is a very good way to get your mind in order. I don't find God in this; I find man in this." <i>(Photo by Kirsten Hively)</i>
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<p>Michael George's younger brother, Johnny, is something of an information and culture sponge and likes to share what he knows with Michael — or impose it upon him. For example, Johnny has given Michael six binders (so far) of home-burned CDs containing year-by-year breakdowns of what Johnny considers to be important or notable music, including several CDs' worth of music from 1975. Michael has hinted to Johnny that he has neither the time nor the inclination to listen to all of this, especially since his tastes don't always line up with his brother's. Johnny's response: "Well, how else are you going to learn?" At the end of his Show & Tell presentation, Michael passed the CD around and invited any interested party to keep it. "Johnny's never gonna know." <i>(Photo by Kirsten Hively)</i>
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<p>Diane George — no relation to Michael George, above — took a trip to China some years ago and fell in love with a little dog figurine at a local market. (Here's <a target="new" href="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8205/8197114809_ddc8943262_c.jpg">a better view of it</a>.) She was happy to pay the seller's asking price — $5 — but her Chinese friend was embarrassed by her lack of haggling and insisted on dickering the price down to 50¢. Interestingly, the figurine is <a target="new" href="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8210/8197116055_fa079b57aa_z.jpg">stamped on the bottom with "Made in Japan,"</a> which is very unusual for something sold in China. It also got Diane thinking about how much ground the figurine has covered: "It's brass, and Japan doesn’t have a lot of mineral wealth, so the materials must have come to Japan from somewhere else, and then it went to China, and now it's in New York." <i>(Portrait by Kirsten Hively; dog photos by Diane George)</i>
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<p>Six months ago, Andrew Lederer had triple-bypass surgery. The doctors sent him home with medicine that was supposed to help his heart get back to normal, but he found that he wasn't feeling much better. After several weeks, it was discovered that they had prescribed the wrong medicine, and that he was essentially taking roughly one-fifth the dose he should have been taking. Fortunately, the error was corrected and he's now feeling much better. He brought the correct and incorrect medicines with him. <i>(Photo by Kirsten Hively)</i>
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<p>Haisi Hu loves the story of <a target="new" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akira_Yoshizawa">Akira Yoshizawa</a>, the man who helped popularize origami in Japan. He lived much of his life in poverty and made, by his own estimation, over 50,000 origami pieces, none of which he ever sold. Inspired by his example, Haisi has learned how to make origami pieces, including this black stallion, which took her about four hours. <i>(Photo by Kirsten Hively)</i>
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<p>We conclude, as usual, with Show & Tell host Paul Lukas — me. About two weeks prior to this installment of Show & Tell, I fractured my wrist and forearm in a bicycle accident. I'm on the mend, but along the way I'm learning to deal with all sorts of new limitations. One thing I immediately realized was that I could no longer use dental floss. I vaguely remembered hearing about some little gizmo that has a piece of floss stretched between two prongs, so I went to the drug store and sure enough, there was a whole section devoted to this product category. I was amazed by all the varieties — different shapes, different colors. I eventually chose a 90-pack of <a target="new" href="https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/51GQxU-NjFL._SX270_.jpg">Rite Aid Flossups</a>, in part because the curvy handle <a target="new" href="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8347/8195305550_eed44afccc_c.jpg">reminds me of a sperm cell</a>. (When your arm is broken in two places, you have to take amusement where you find it.) Frankly, I have no idea why anyone with two fully functional arms would use this type of product — it's much less satisfying than getting in there and going to work with a real piece of floss — but I sure am glad it exists. <i>(Photo by Kirsten Hively)</i>
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<p>Big thanks to all participants, and extra-special thanks to Kirsten Hively for stepping in on short notice as this month's Show & Tell shutterbug.
<p>Show & Tell will go on hiatus for December, but we'll be back with a new installment on Wednesday, Jan. 9, 2013, in the back room at <a target="new" href="http://freddysbar.com/">Freddy's</a>. Hope to see you then.Paul Lukashttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01569493938573591538noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5791036060765701341.post-16065698688448169832012-10-14T09:27:00.000-07:002012-10-14T15:54:14.876-07:00 Show & Tell Participants from October 10, 2012<center><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/65516705@N00/8083884342/" title="_MG_1739.jpg by PermanentRecord, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8330/8083884342_fc080cfff0_z.jpg" width="540" height="519" alt="_MG_1739.jpg"></a></center>
<p>Drew Valente wasn't planning to participate in Show & Tell, but then his girlfriend, with whom he was sitting in the audience, rooted around in her bag and found this "Get Out of Hell Free" card, which someone had left under the windshield wiper of their car in New Haven a few years ago. (You can get a closer look at the card <a target="new" href="http://farm9.static.flickr.com/8464/8086590336_da648b14de_o.png">here</a>.) The back of the card has a series of Bible verses and the URL for the web site <a target="new" href="http://needgod.com/004.shtml">NeedGod.com</a>, which features an online survey. Drew took the survey on his phone just a few minutes before presenting the card and reported that the results were, "You are a bad person." <i>(Photo by Cameron Blaylock</i>)
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<p>Anita Flores has, as she puts it, "a long history of wearing pants with an elastic band." She started wearing sweatpants in high school and kind of got hooked on them in college, where she wore them around campus — a social faux pas she now regrets ("One you start dropping food on them, they basically become a napkin"). She eventually swore off sweatpants altogether but made an exception for the pants she's holding in the photo, which she purchased during a trip to India. "These don't count," she said, "because they're from another country." <i>(Photo by Cameron Blaylock)</i>
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<p>For years, Andy Cai only drank wine and had no interest in beer. Then, nine years ago, he tried a pint of Fuller's London Pride, which he liked so much that it turned him into a discerning beer aficionado and home brewer. He hadn't had Fuller's in several years and was surprised to see it on tap at Freddy's, where Show & Tell takes place. So he ordered a pint and used it to tell the story of his wine-to-beer conversion. <i>(Photo by Cameron Blaylock)</i>
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<p>When Robin Eisgrau was growing up, she was fascinated by the 1980 film <i>Times Square</i> — in part because of its new wave soundtrack, in part because it seemed to capture the excitement and danger of Manhattan, and in part because it featured the actress Robin Johnson ("It was the first time I'd been aware of an actress named Robin"). She finally saw the movie recently at Anthology Film Archives, after which she went out and made the long-overdue purchase of the two-LP soundtrack — even though she no longer owns a turntable. She also checked in on the career of Robin Johnson, who, as it turns out, went on to become <a target="new" href="http://www.robinjohnson.net/kfwb.html">a traffic reporter for a Los Angeles radio station</a>. <i>(Photo by Cameron Blaylock)</i>
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<p>Mel Daly says she has "a great fear of not having access to food." So she always has a travel fork — or better yet, as you can see above, <i>two</i> travel forks, both of which fit into one case — on her person. She feels better knowing that she's prepared for a "a lifeboat situation," as she puts it, plus she likes that the travel forks are more environmentally friendly than the plastic utensils that typically come with take-out. <i>(Photo by Cameron Blaylock)</i>
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<p>We conclude once again with Show & Tell host Paul Lukas — me. Several years ago a friend of a friend heard I was interested in unusual objects and gave me this copy of <i>Martha Stewart Living</i> in Braille. Just about anything in Braille is interesting, because the pages are so tactile and the characters seem so indecipherable. But a Braille version of <i>Martha Stewart Living</i> is extra-fascinating, because it seems like such an unlikely thing for a blind person to be reading. If you want to know more, a fairly detailed examination of this Braille issue of <i>MSL</i> can be found <a target="new" href="http://www.uni-watch.com/2011/12/22/%E2%80%98i-see%E2%80%99-said-the-blind-man-as-he-picked-up-the-hammer-and-saw/">here</a>. <i>(Photo by Cameron Blaylock)</i>
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<p>Big thanks to all participants, and doubleplusthanks to Cameron Blaylock for the photos. Speaking of which, we need a photographer for next month's Show & Tell, which will be on Wednesday, Nov. 14. So if you'd like to be the official Show & Tell shutterbug for a month (or longer), <A HREF="mailto:plukas64@gmail.com">please get in touch</a>.
Paul Lukashttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01569493938573591538noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5791036060765701341.post-24731133087182945332012-09-20T06:29:00.000-07:002013-03-17T11:26:56.578-07:00Behold the New Official Show & Tell Timer<center><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/65516705@N00/8006076544/" title="IMG_1934.JPG by PermanentRecord, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8170/8006076544_fe3968612f_z.jpg" width="533" height="640" alt="IMG_1934.JPG"></a></center>
<p>Show & Tell's format allows anyone to talk about an object of personal significance for up to three minutes. The time limit has never been strictly enforced — there's no gong that sounds at the three-minute mark, no trap door that opens up beneath the speaker — but the idea is to keep things moving, let everyone have a turn, and discourage extended theatrics.
<p>For the first 21 months of Show & Tell's existence, those three minutes were measured by a three-minute hourglass timer that I had purchased in the fall of 2010. It was a handy little device, literally and symbolically, and I liked the idea of each speaker — as well as the audience — being able to see the sands of time slipping away during a presentation.
<p>As I was preparing for this month's Show & Tell event on Sept. 12, however, I couldn't find the timer. I probably left it behind at Freddy's back in August, or maybe it just fell out of my bag at some point, or whatever. In any case, it was gone. There was no time to procure a new one, so the digital timer that I use in my kitchen was pressed into emergency Show & Tell service. It was fine from a functional standpoint, but it lacked the charm of the old timer.
<p>So the other day I went out and got myself a new three-minute hourglass timer (along with an extra one, in case I lose the new one). As you can see in the photo shown above, it has the added bonus of matching the color scheme of this web site. It will make its Show & Tell debut at Freddy's on Oct. 10. Hope to see you there.Paul Lukashttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01569493938573591538noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5791036060765701341.post-15560825596943471322012-09-14T13:29:00.001-07:002012-09-15T06:20:12.778-07:00Show & Tell Participants from September 12, 2012<center><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/65516705@N00/7985868547/" title="jokercard.jpg by PermanentRecord, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8036/7985868547_44cac52453_c.jpg" width="500" height="759" alt="jokercard.jpg"></a></center>
<p>Andrew Linderman was training to be a stand-up comedian when he was told "the secret of comedy," which is that every comic must carry a Joker on his or her person. If someone asks you for a Joker and you don't have one, you have to pull your pants down. Andrew dutifully went and purchased a deck of cards, removed one of the Jokers, and put it in his wallet. He later found out that the whole thing was a hoax, but he keeps the Joker in his wallet anyway, as a reminder of his training. <i>(Photo by Deb Klein)</i>
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<p>After years of wearing cheapo sunglasses that she invariably lost, Sarah Lasko felt she was ready for expensive shades that she wouldn't be able to afford to lose. "I saw it as a symbol of becoming a grown-up," she said. So her father bought her these designer sunglasses for her birthday — and then she promptly lost them while traveling. But then she got them back! She says the sunglasses cost about $300, making them "the fourth-most expensive thing I've ever owned." You can see her wearing the sunglasses <a target="new" href="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8174/7985867743_2c1a2edd33_c.jpg">here</a>. <i>(Photo by Deb Klein)</i>
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<p>There isn't a whole lot to say about this peach that Lisa Madison got from her CSA, except that it's one of the most stupendously gigantic peaches ever. It was grown by "Farmer Phil" in Lebanon, Pennsylvania. Lisa also brought a bunch of CSA peppers, which she generously gave out to the Show & Tell attendees.
<i>(Photo by Deb Klein)</i>
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<p>A few years ago, Heather McCabe had to get some paperwork certified by a city agency, which meant she had to show her I.D. to a clerk at a window. But instead of providing her own I.D., she gave the clerk an I.D. card for Jesus Christ (with the eye color listed as "Heavenly"), which she had purchased at a novelty shop. The clerk nonetheless approved the paperwork. <i>(Photo by Deb Klein)</i>
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<p>Faith Rowold was involved in a relationship with a journalist who frequently traveled for work and sent her love letters, which she kept in books, in her purse, and so on. Unfortunately, he recently broke up with her, and now she keeps finding his notes in the various places where she'd stashed them. She brought one of them with her to Show & Tell. <i>(Photo by Deb Klein)</i>
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<p>While Elana Haviv was backpacking in India, several people told her she "looked like Krishna." Hoping to find the connection that people saw, she purchased this baby Krishna figurine. <i>(Photo by Deb Klein)</i>
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<p>We conclude with Show & Tell host Paul Lukas — me. I inherited my grandmother's toaster when she died in 1980. It's an unusual toaster, because it doesn't have a knob to depress. Instead, you just drop the bread into the slot and it trips an internal lever that activates the toaster and causes the bread to "float" down. I love toast, I love my grandmother, and I love that I think of her every morning when I use this toaster. It was made in the early 1960s, which means I've now owned it longer than she did, but I still think of it as hers. <i>(Photo by Deb Klein)</i>
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<p>Big thanks to all participants, and extra-special thanks to Deb Klein for handling the photo duties this month. See you all on Oct. 10.
Paul Lukashttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01569493938573591538noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5791036060765701341.post-90516826722729858462012-08-28T09:54:00.001-07:002012-09-14T13:03:26.370-07:00Show & Tell Participants from August 22, 2012<center><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/65516705@N00/7865714514/" title="emma williford.jpg by PermanentRecord, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8285/7865714514_e46e94dc38_c.jpg" width="500" height="624" alt="emma williford.jpg"></a>
<p>Emma Williford holding a zebra tooth that she found in Africa.<br>
<i>(Photo by Cameron Blaylock)</i>
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<p>Barbara Lynn Cantone holding a shiv disguised as a comb.<br>
<i>(Photo by Cameron Blaylock)</i>
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<p>Pete Wagner holding a cast iron skillet that had once belonged to his grandmother.<br>
<i>(Photo by Cameron Blaylock)</i>
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<p>Rebecca Short holding a Swiss army knife given to her while she was in the Girl Scouts.<br>
<i>(Photo by Cameron Blaylock)</i>
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<p>Noa Cooper holding a personal massage device that's often mistaken for a sex toy.<br>
<i>(Photo by Cameron Blaylock)</i>
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<p>Danielle LaSusa holding a pair of sunglasses given to her by her fiancé.<br>
<i>(Photo by Cameron Blaylock)</i>
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<p>Jill Yoe holding a piece of folk art that reminds her of her home in Mississippi.<br>
<i>(Photo by Cameron Blaylock)</i>
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<p>Daniel Short holding a broken compass given to him by his father.<br>
<i>(Photo by Cameron Blaylock)</i>
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<p>Heather McCabe with a cigarette box holding her cats' fallen whiskers and claw casings.<br>
<i>(Photo by Cameron Blaylock)</i>
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<p>Jeff Long holding a reproduction of a 1982 Nike sneaker he was once obsessed with.<br>
<i>(Photo by Cameron Blaylock)</i>
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<p>Big thanks to all participants and attendees, and extra-special thanks to Cam for taking the photos. The next installment of Show & Tell will be on Wednesday, Sept. 12, 8pm, at <a target="new" href="http://freddysbar.com/">Freddy's</a>. Hope to see you then.
Paul Lukashttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01569493938573591538noreply@blogger.com0