Salt Future

August 29th, 2010


We did it! 3800 miles and a lot of crappy (see: great) motels + food without a single problem. It was pretty much everything I expected it to be. My car has never been more awesome. I’ll post more thoughts and pictures as they come to me and as the video editing begins, but the main thing I must stress is the overall consensus reached by Liz, Mike, and me: words and pictures (moving or still) will probably never fully translate what it was like to be out there on the Bonneville Salt Flats. It was the type of pure experience that can best be summed up by Mike’s short but useful observation: “Livin’, man.”

We’ll see how this affects the final narrative construction of the project. School starts on Wednesday!


Huge high fives for Mike and Liz, photo- and videographers for the whole trip and new members of the exclusive “I have driven Eric’s car across a giant field of salt” club. Great work, guys.

Unlimited

August 18th, 2010

Here’s the updated projected itinerary for the Limited Edition Road Trip (Leg 2):

August 21 (Saturday): Chicago, IL to Lincoln, NE (518mi)
August 22: Lincoln to Cheyenne, WY (448mi)
August 23: Cheyenne to Dinosaur, CO (303mi)
August 24: Dinosaur to Bonneville Salt Flats, UT (288mi) + FILMING
August 25: FILMING
August 26: FILMING (half day) + Salt Flats to Rawlins, WY (439mi)
August 27: Rawlins to Pukwana, SD (597mi)
August 28 (Saturday): Pukwana to Belmont, WI (496mi)
August 29: Belmont, WI to Chicago (175mi)

This is what it looks like on a map:


View Larger Map

Travel tips welcome — what games should we bring to play in the car? Music to listen to? Other secrets for long hours on the road? I’ve already loaded the iPod playlist with Kelly Clarkson and Soulja Boy…

Untitled Utopia Story Part II

August 13th, 2010

It was so hot last night that I actually slept with my fan. No, not like that, like this:

I had just done laundry earlier in the evening, so I didn’t even bother putting sheets on the bed. I figured the bare mattress would be a bit cooler, and it was. All things considered, I give last night a 6 out of 10.

The Limited Edition contest (previous entry) ends TODAY at 11:59:59pm CDT!

Below, a continuation of the short story I started writing a while ago… if it sucks, let me know and I’ll stop.

Legend has it that the planet entered a state of instant, permanent peace when the news broke. All forms of struggle just ceased. Two of the biggest factors in human history, money and religion, became obsolete overnight. We had finally buried God.

One of the big, collective fears the human race shared as we approached the milestone of infinite life (people saw it coming for some time) was that it would be available only to the super-rich, people who could afford a stake in eternity. Essentially, the worry was that nothing would change: if everyone gets to live forever, clearly the planet would be overcrowded in no time, so they must be planning on regulating it or making it monstrously expensive or something. Hell, the place was already overflowing long before they discovered the treatment. I’m not too clear on the specifics, but I guess the Global Assembly of Superiors was one step ahead of us all — they rolled it out smoothly, and everyone got their forever injections.

I finished getting dressed, swallowed my breakfast, and carefully descended the stairs from my apartment down to the street. It was one of those summer days that instantly negates your hygienic routine upon your first step outside. It didn’t help that every nerve on my body was tense, but I’m certain the humidity would have had no problem working alone — my clothes clung to my damp skin as if they were just as scared as I was to go anywhere.

The sole regulation imposed by the GAS was that all citizens must reach age 30 before eligibility, and they must receive the treatment on their official day of birth. And, as I said, it was my 30th birthday, so just like everyone else I was scheduled to claim my reward for making it that far.

I watched my fellow citizens as I strode up the hill toward the medical center and was reminded why I was so frightened. These people were all so, very bland. The immortality treatment successfully rid us of death by old age and terminal illness. No more heart attacks, strokes, cancer, peaceful goings-in-the-night. People still died, though, “naturally” — no injection’s going to stop you from getting flattened by a bus or choking on your own vomit. The result? Our entire planet is covered with the most boring, play-it-safe people who have ever lived.

Pop-Up Art Loop!

August 10th, 2010

It looks like I’ve been selected to show the LE prints as a part of the Chicago Loop Alliance’s Pop-Up Art Loop program! That’s cool. Basically, they take empty storefronts in downtown Chicago and let artists install their work in the windows. I’m not sure if it was started as a response to the shaky economy and its effect on businesses (putting them out of it) or what, but I think it’s a great program for property owners to be involved in, and for artists to get excited about.

Regarding getting excited, the E-Waste comment boards have been awfully quiet this summer. I’ve decided to try and reanimate the intelligent discussion my readers and I are used to around here with a contest:

Why does downtown Chicago have so many empty storefronts?

The “best” answer (as judged by me for humor, creativity, accuracy, inaccuracy, most cute animals involved in answer) will receive a free set of prints! Contest open to all Chicago residents. Entries from outside Chicagoland are eligible for victory but will be required to remit a $12 packing and shipping “victory tax.” Contest ends this Friday (the 13th!!). When posting your answer, be sure to use a valid email address in case you win. I’m looking at you, “notjohn@boredinthelibrary.com”

Summer is great, I really like it

July 29th, 2010

I just got back from a short stay on the West Coast. I was showing Liz around for what was her second visit to California, the first of her adult life, and her first-ever trip to southern California. Highlights were plentiful, but I think the most relevant tale to tell here has very little to do with anything:

My mom made us a delicious apple pie, but she didn’t have any vanilla ice cream to go with. She’s sort of lactose intolerant, so there wasn’t even milk in the house to drink with the pie. Being my mom, she offered to run to the store to get some ice cream for us. Being an adult, I ignored my burning desire to eat a whole tub of ice cream and told her that such a trip was unnecessary. She joked that she had some Klondike Bars that we could eat with the pie, and I called her bluff. I grabbed a steak knife and sliced the chocolate shell off the vanilla ice cream and voila-la-mode! It was pretty great, because then we had all these chocolate flakes to eat too.

Back in Chicago, I have a lot that I am about to start working on and I’m very excited about it all, but I don’t want to forget about the Limited Edition prints. I spent enough time making ‘em for “Christ”‘s sake. I think if I was ever in a real band, I would not like touring as much as recording — once I finish a project, I am fully satisfied with my accomplishment and ready to move on. That attitude is good for the ego, bad for the wallet. The call for a part-time Baskauskas publicist remains open. If you start working now, I will guarantee 15% of art-based income for the rest of our working relationship, as well as free entry and cheese at all art events involving me forever. Incentives will be offered.

Tomorrow: Part I of my futuristic sci-fi utopia tale!

Long Distance Relationship

July 14th, 2010

ericbaskauskas.info/LE
ericbaskauskas.bigcartel.com

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It’s been a long time coming, but at least I’m a day earlier than I expected. Extra special thanks to Liz for helping with the web design. News on art show/birthday extravaganza coming soon!

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