Friday Inspiration 442



Friday Inspiration 442

I just want to say that Keanu Reeves continues to seem like a really nice guy (video)

As a person who has read a lot of adventure writing over the years, and has come up with a handful of ideas for adventure stories, I have to say, this one, in which Ben Buckland attempts to walk across Switzerland relying on maps he had strangers hand-draw for him, is genius. (thanks, Felix) (gift link)

I have only been following Dave Pollot for a few weeks, but I love his whole upcycling-of-thrift-store-paintings-into-remixed-works portfolio—I have a story about buying an upcycled piece of art that I’ve been trying to get out of my head for a couple years now, and this hits that same part of my feelings.

This is a wonderful quick illustrated essay about being seen reading a book, and why we might or might not want that to happen: A Man Powerwashing vs. A Woman Reading

I don’t really need to re-write the only paragraph that goes with these mind-blowing (and beautiful) meander maps of the Mississippi River: “In 1941, Harold Fisk was hired by the Mississippi River Commission to embark on a years-long study of the river’s movements, a project which would entail the procurement of over sixteen thousand sediment core samples to reveal the presence of soil deposits over time. The map was published in 1944 as a series of fifteen panels, each showing a time-lapse history of the river’s undulations in recent centuries. Seen together, the panels capture a restless body whose breadth may surprise those who only ever see it fixed in one place, wherever that is.”

I have not seen this book in its final form yet, but as I understand it, it’s a Dirtbag Diaries anthology in book form, with photos, and I am excited to get my hands on it: States of Adventure: 30 Outdoor Adventure Stories About Finding Yourself by Getting Lost (I am a little biased, as I do have a story in there, Go West, from back in 2010.)

For no reason other than I have become addicted to watching this lately, here’s the riveting first 9 minutes and 14 seconds of Drive, a movie I am astonished to learn is now 13 years old. (Bonus: if you are looking for a song to put on repeat to help you focus on writing/drawing/whatever, here’s a link to the background song, “Tick of the Clock” by Chromatics)

I’m not switching this newsletter to Substack, but if you are on Substack and prefer reading things there, or have a friend who loves Substack and you think might enjoy this newsletter, I have started putting the content from this newsletter there: https://semirad.substack.com/

And finally, I made this series of slides for Instagram, compiling some of the things people have said about Ultra-Something so far (if you haven’t picked up a copy, here’s where you can do that):

Buy the book through these retailers or at your local bookstore:

Bookshop | Amazon (paperback) | Kindle | Barnes & Noble | DFTBA (signed copies) | Gumroad (ebook) | Fact and Fiction (Missoula, MT) | Elliott Bay Book Company (Seattle) | Tattered Cover (Denver) | Boulder Bookstore | Powell’s

--

Semi-Rad

Writer, artist, filmmaker, columnist for Outside Magazine. My newsletter about creativity, adventure, and enthusiasm goes out to 15,000+ subscribers every week.

Read more from Semi-Rad
thumbnail from 3 ways to defend your mind against social media distortions

Friday Inspiration 448 As much as we all at know, deep in our hearts, that social media isn’t real life, it’s interesting to hear some experts talk about how we can keep it from distorting our perspective (also, there’s an ad in this video from about 00:50 until 2:10, if you’d like to skip it)(video) Sure, Shohei Ohtani is impressive as a baseball player because he’s able to succeed at a high level as both a pitcher and a hitter (and base-stealer), but how many other MLB players have ever...

Illustration: Here Be Dragons

I Stopped To Read Some Signs And Let Me Tell You I have run and bicycled a certain one-mile section of the paved riverfront multi-use path in my hometown probably at least 200 or 300 times. A handful of times, I have thought to myself, “I should really stop and read some of these historical plaques along the trail.” I believed there to be two or three of them, and in four years, I never made the minuscule effort to pull off the trail even once for the 60 to 90 seconds required to read them. A...

thumbnail from How I Became A Cruiser Bike Guy

Friday Inspiration 447 I don’t usually put my own videos in this space, but I decided to make my “How I Became A Cruiser Bike Guy” essay into a video, and it seems to be resonating with a few people on YouTube, so I thought I’d share it here. (video) Pretty interesting piece about the “top thinkers” of 1974 trying to predict what the world would be like in 50 years, and what they got right and what they got wrong. One prediction: “commuting for business purposes would go out of style. It...