Want to get better sound with your phone camera?

Just did a first test of the Mikme BlackSilver microphone and was impressed. An easy to use, palm-sized mic that will wirelessly (via bluetooth) deliver fairly high-quality sound to your phone camera.

Just place the mic on a surface near the subject(s) or have somebody in the frame hold it, then record video and audio to your phone with the free app (compatible with iPhone and Android).  I won't bore you with the specs, which make sense only to audio geeks. Suffice to say, in the twisted, confusing world of microphones the Mikme has a surprisingly good quality packed into a small, stand-alone unit at a reasonable price. Barb's first reaction was, it looks cute, too.

Should note, however, I am referring to the Mikme BlackSilver model, not the BlackGold which is a different and more expensive beast. In the US the BlackSilver with 4GB memory model (good enough for 98% of uses) is available through B&H Photo/Video in New York City for $219. An 8GB version is $249. I have ordered from B&H for years. Good product availability, reliable delivery, and their after-sale service has always been top-notch.

Below is a sample of what the BlackSiver version sounds like. Took the mic out of the box, charged it, turned it on, then pushed one button to begin recording - as Barb was getting ready for bed. No, I didn't shoot a video of Barb undressing for bed. Did you really expect me to do that? Get real.

Instead you'll hear a 7 minute recording in the manner as I plan to use the mic, which will also let you hear what your videos can sound like instead of using your built-in phone mic. The Mikme eliminates the problem of recording sounds - voice or whatever at a distance. In the real world, that would be any sound you want to record that is more than 2 feet from your phone. In those situations a remote mike should always make your video sound better. Unfortunately, available equipment needed to get that good quality sound into your phone has either been of negligible benefit, or a hassle to drag around, set up, and use (expensive, too). Not convenient for vacation or family gatherings where you don't give a shit about making a Hollywood-style production. The Mikme looks to be the easiest to use and most versatile mic I have yet seen for getting high quality sound into videos.

Hear more sound samples on the Mikme site.

News you probably missed.

248 million. Stripped naked. At 10:37 PM or AM, nobody remembers for sure because we were with three administrators who were still receiving federal paychecks to manage nobody at the National BS Disallowal Authority and thus had nothing to do, so we decided to guzzle whiskey at a pub. The drunken admins decided to announce disclosed that the department had successfully and, by god, accurately managed to group every US citizen 18 years of age and older into five indecipherably useless characterizations: 1) Liberal or conservative. 2) Democrat or republican. 3) Intelligent or dumb. 4) Hard-working or lazy. 5) Aware or ignorant.

Chief Administrator Francios Sarhenschy praised his furloughed employees, who are currently in desperate search of food, car and rent money for their families, with having accomplished the classification of millions of US souls. Data analysis experts have hailed the results for having a mind-blowing 37.6% accuracy.

The NBSDA's next task, provided staff opt to return to their jobs rather than muttering "Screw this gawd damned federal shit!!" is to determine how every dumb-ass humanoid posting on public comment boards are able to classify across a dozen categories, with self-proclaimed 100% accuracy, both individuals and entire swaths of people whom they have never met nor barely know anything about.

Should be fun to see those results. In case you can't recognize sarcasm, I'm blowing smoke and bullets at on-line commenters who do such ridiculous things.

7 percent! Uh, really? You are gazing at the number of US adults who watch TV series episodes ranked #1 through #3 (by share). Impressive? Jury is still deliberating. (Note: Viewer share and actual numbers watching are not equivalent.) What about TV series episodes ranked #4 through #20? At best, around 6 percent have watched #4 to #7, dropping to a low 4 point-something percent for #12 through #20. Scanning the charts from #1 to #20, one doesn't notice a precipitous difference in rankings because all are braced by an abysmally low reference point. Viewer share of shows ranked below the top 20? Yeah, right. Do the words "essentially invisible" make sense?

Such shining results make it is easy to understand why Hollywood's hype advertising concentrates on "most watched" and "best new show". Forced to mention actual viewer numbers, rather than viewer share, it would be damned tough to build excitement when more than 95 percent of US adults could give a rip about watching all but a handful of shows, and even then.....

114 million. Seniors guzzle checks, needed sex. The number of US adults who are currently retired, or will retire shortly, is somewhere north of 114,000,002 (Barb and I are now also members thus, the 2). Given the known number of eligible working adults, while being armed with intent to maintain current Social Security obligations for retirees during the next 15 years while adding only mandated COLA adjustments, auditors have determined that in the near future Social Security taxes will need to be increased to more than 30 percent. Holy crap. Obviously (now, not at the time), retirees should have had unprotected sex more often, when we were doing such things. Opportunity lost. We needed more young asses and elbows running around our house back then, to pay for today's Social Security checks now.

There is an alternative which has repeatedly bailed this country out of difficult times throughout two centuries: Significant immigration of working-age adults and their children. Makes me wonder why US citizens are fixated on border walls and tossing out people who went through hell to arrive here, when the better choice would be to improve and streamline our immigration process to unleash these willing workers so we won't bury our children and grandchildren in a mountain of debt to pay for retirees income. But noooo, that would be too easy and cost effective.

Facebook. Fricking daily. How boring would life be if you didn't have good friends re-posting from nowhere somewhere gif's containing pithy 5 to 12 word phrases that portend to be the holy gospel regarding inordinately complex political and social issues. To further drive home the inadequately analyzed point attempting to be made, said friend thoughtfully adds their deeply considered analysis atop the gif, such as "Yes", "So true", or "I agree."

To what end? Cut and paste is lazy. Thinking and writing for yourself takes time and effort. Don't fret, we want to hear from you. Your thoughts. Beliefs. In your words and style. Anything less is useless bull shit.

Charley nailed it. I won't belabor columnist Mr. Reese's article, released February 3, 1984 by the Orlando Sentinel. Go read it. You can send trivial baubles my way to express your appreciation.

The critical point made is there are 545 people in our Congressional, Executive and Judicial branches who decide what our policies, laws, regulations and taxation will be. Our government functions as it does because our representatives want it to be that way. They can make no excuses for a current state of affairs because they create and exercise sole control over what will effect the lives of 325 million citizens. What have our esteemed representatives delivered recently?

Mid-term elections in which donors spend 5.2 billion dollars and who of course never expect, much less ask to receive a smidgen of special consideration for their investment. National Parks lay in trash-strewn shambles. Corporations report millions to billions in profits per quarter, yet somehow need tax incentives and breaks to be competitive. An increase in funding for military operations (really, really bad guys are really, really hiding under every real rock) which all told cost more than the next 10 largest military budgets combined...but the troops did get a 6% raise to their measly pay. Yeah! This years mind-bogglingly "small-ish" military funding increase would, if redirected to a different purpose, pay a full year tuition for every student attending a public university in this country. Mergers and acquisitions galore arrive that reduce competitiveness in multiple categories of business, are heartily endorsed, then deemed as magically increasing competition. Representatives and their staffs preferred method to debate complex, critical issues is now undertaken via tweets and sound bites derived from murky-sourced surveys, while simultaneously denouncing the press for having somehow misquoted their seven word statement.

They want it that way

Final take. Below are a few suggestions. I own all errors and misconceptions, whether found or perceived.

Just because somebody doesn't conform to your view of the world doesn't mean they are evil, or bent on destroying life as you know it. 

We frequently have more in common than first words reveal. Carelessly tossing people into narrowly defined buckets precludes our desire to listen, learn, and understand..

Our differences often nestle within small details about how to accomplish the big goals that we share.

Become a party of one. Divorce yourself from all party dogma. The downside is your primary ballots will look sparse. You just bumped into a cost of setting your unleashed sprit free.

Above all, don't accept the premise of a statement. Dig deep to learn what your representatives actually want, and for whom.

How many job offers have you turned down? Have regrets?

Listed below are job offers I received that came with a "How soon can you start...tomorrow?" condition attached, and decided to decline the job offer.

UPS manager: Worked at UPS part-time while attending classes at the University of Washington. Near the end of my sophomore year UPS made an offer. Finish my final two years at a University of California business school in LA. UPS would pay all tuition, books, fees, and housing expenses. After graduation, I would work in management positions at UPS for a minimum of three years.

Regrets: None. Had no interest in getting a business degree, or living anywhere in the vicinity of LA for any period of time.

NBC News director: While attending Western Washington University the television production professor, who held a top management job at NBC News before retiring, made a tempting offer. He offered to call friends in New York to get me a position. Said I would never look for a job for the rest of my life. He outlined the benefits (of working in NYC): Great pay. Generous retirement plan. Invitations to the best parties. New York City. He was brutally honest about the downsides, too: Would live in many cities before reaching NY. If married, would get divorced. If remarried, would get divorced again. Long work days, with lots of pressure. New York City.

Regrets: Mostly none. Was seriously dating Barb by that time. Knew she would never like the downsides of the directing job. Besides, getting married to Barb was the best decision I ever made. Have never regretted the decision for a nanosecond. However, ooh gosh. My second love was directing TV shows, and wondered over the years if I had the right stuff to be the director in a NYC network news studio. Make the long journey to da big time, ya know.

University professor: A month before graduating from Western Washington U, the head of the visual communications department secretly met with me a half-dozen times. He wanted me to become a professor, and replace him as department head after he retired. 

Regrets: None at the time. At moments since, wondering what if? Have never liked cigars, blazers or cardigans, which at the time was the seemingly mandated uniform of professors. Yeah, silly reason to drag up from the cellar. Less silly was the resulting drama had I pursued a position. A professor only a couple years my senior, and with whom the student-me had had prolific unresolved arguments with, also had her eyes on the department head position. I think I probably would have won that battle, but the go-or-no-go decision that kept creeping back into my brain was those gawd-damned frickin cardigans. Shit. Couldn't imagine my ever wearing one. Not even in my grave.

Chevy general manager assistant, pay raise: Gave 4 weeks notice that I would be quitting my car dealership job to go help Barb build her/our audiology biz. On the final day (at the dealership, not THE final day EVER), the GM grabbed my shirt and insisted I tell him how much of a raise I was holding out for. The irony is - if his offer had come 3 weeks earlier there's a good chance I would have taken it. But, nope. So Barb and I jumped with all feet into the abyss.

Regrets: None. Learned a ton about sales, accounting, psychology, dealing with big corporations (GM, Chevy, big banks) and regulators. However, I still refer to my car dealership job as the best worst job I have ever had.

Is it possible you and I have more in common than first glance suggests?

Every year British retailer, John Lewis, releases a Christmas time ad that is anticipated in England as much as Americans look forward to seeing new Super Bowl ads.

Having watched this years John Lewis ad, I understand why Brits become excited. It is an amazing combination of sound and visual delight that I cannot watch without tearing up.

The ad features Elton John signing a deeply personal song, for himself and us. Within the expressions and sounds I see a message of understanding, tolerance and above all, aspiration. That at our core we all share one hope, despite being billions in numbers and opinions.

But that's my take. Watch and decide for yourself what you feel and think.



Bless, The Animals

The Sunday church service would be held outdoors. Among the highlights was to "bless the animals".

My first thought: "It should be the other way around." 

Considering what we've done to animals, though, I don't know why an animal would bless us.

But what do I know? Maybe Barb's church is right. I haven't attended a church service in 50 years.

I found my church when I was 15 years old.

Alone, in a forest.

If my core beliefs were dinner.

Want to understand my beliefs about nearly everything in life without having to put up with me in person?

All derive from sources including family and friend, male, female, history, plus animals and plants. Liberally slathered with the nasty gauntlet seeping daily from my mind.

The dinner as promised, representing the core...

The first course is Robin Willams.

The side dish is Lenny Bruce.

The main dish is George Carlin.

And if you aren't feeling sufficiently sauced yet...

The after-dinner drink is Thomas Jefferson.

See a pattern? I think comedians have the best grasp on what matters in this world.

It also proves, as should be obvious, that Barb is an incredibly patient, considerate lady.

Honest officer, I didn't do it.

With all the talk about supporting police, or condemning what police have done, thought I would add a perspective from someone who has had guns pointed at his head by police officers.

I'll start with a balancing statement: While growing up in my parents house in West Seattle, a cop was our next door neighbor. When Barb and I bought our first house, on a short dead end street also in West Seattle, our next door neighbor was a cop. When we bought our second house, that one in Ashland, our neighbor was a cop. A cousin married a cop. As did my niece.

That's five cops total, in case you lost track already, who were neighbors, friends and relatives.

I've been stopped for speeding eight times during my life. Five times the cops let me go with only a warning. Five. More often than I deserved. In every instance I had been clocked going more than 20 miles per hour over the speed limit. That's not even speeding when you are driving that fast. It's brazenly flaunting the law with a who-gives-a-shit, up-you-and-yours attitude.

Amazingly, the three cops who cited me also cut me some slack and wrote tickets for only 12 to 14 MPH over. All were very polite and professional as they did their duty. In fact they were so polite, I couldn't stop myself from reflexively saying "Thank you" each time they handed me a ticket. And each time I would gaze in the rear view mirror as the cop climbed back into his cruiser, thinking "Why the hell did I just thank a cop for giving me a ticket? Are you that dense a dumb fucker?"

I've been surrounded by police for much of my life. I know there are a ton of good cops around. I met them and their cop buddies in our homes, at parties, and in neighborhoods I blasted through at excessive speeds.

           o           

I have also experienced cops from a different perspective. I have been stopped five times by police for reasons that had nothing to do with my driving habits. Shit, how many in total have I been stopped throughout my life? You figure it out. I lost track. 

Was stopped three times while walking, twice while driving. And I don't mean, I was pulled over by a cop. I was intercepted from multiple angles by four or five cops in their patrols cars, working in unison to apprehend me.

In two instances they had their guns pulled while crouching behind their patrol car doors. I wish I could tell you where on my body they were aiming, but you don't really think about that kind of shit when multiple guys with badges have guns pointed at you. Well, I wasn't prepared to think about it, at least. Maybe it would be different for you.

"Put your hands up!", says one cop.
"Get out of the car!", yells another.
I reach for the door handle to get out.
"Keep your hands up!", a cop repeats.
"Get out of the car! Now!", says the other.
With an obvious tinge of frustration, I ask a question which seems reasonable, "How the hell am I supposed to do both at the same time?"

I receive no answer. What was abundantly clear is the cops expect me to be spread eagle with my hands on the car roof, in a hurry. All those people who say you just need to follow an officers orders and you won't have a problem? Obviously they have never been in that situation. Believe me, such assurances are not top-of-mind when guns are being aimed at you. I don't care how innocent you are, the idea of blind compliance simply doesn't occur to you at that moment.

I have been stopped three times in similar fashion while walking down a sidewalk, though the officers rested their hands on their guns rather than drawing them.

"What's your name?"

Okay, a series of hard knocks means I've become a veteran of police stops. For good or bad, my belief in our Bill of Rights boiled to the fore. These cocksuckers stopping me for no good reason sure as hell aren't going to intimidate me into forgetting my constitutional rights. I hope.

"Let me see your ID."
"No. Why did you stop me?"
"What are you doing?"
"Why did you stop me?"
Where are you going?"
"Why did you stop me?"
Who are you meeting with?"
"Why did you stop me?"
"I said, show me your ID!"
"No. Not until you tell me why you stopped me."
Our conversation deteriorates from that point. Shall I need say, the situation becomes rather terse?

I feel compelled to mention at this point that you absolutely haven't lived until you have been questioned and frisked by a group of cops. Okay, I know this is old news to many of my minority friends, but to my white brethren who have lived a very prissy life, there is nothing quite like being center ring in a circus of five cop cars blocking traffic on a busy street, getting frisked while people driving by are gawking through their car windows gauging how nasty a criminal you must be because, well, you're surrounded by a bunch of cops and we all know what that means. It's an experience that you'll never forget. I highly suggest trying it at least once. Though I know from prior experience that being pulled over at least three times would offer a far better lens through which to view your experiences. The first couple times will likely be disorienting, so it will take going through the process a few times before you can fully appreciate the show.

By now you are probably wondering why I was pulled over and questioned so many times. It's a reasonable and salient question. In every instance it was a case of mistaken identity. Every damned time.

The first occasion was because a twenty-something white guy with brown hair, driving a white sedan, robbed a 7-Eleven a couple miles from where I was driving. That was the extent of the description which lead to my being shoved against a car door and frisked by a Seattle cop. Ironically, a separate group of cops who had caught the robber announced the capture on their radio while I was being frisked. Four cops disappeared instantly. The fifth, who had been frisking me, quickly walked away without comment.

By then I had gathered my composure and was no longer utterly befuddled by what was happening. I had morphed to frustrated. Plus, facing only one cop voluntarily retreating because I meant nothing to him also helped me regain confidence. "Hey! What the hell is going on?"

He brusquely told me what had happened, the suspects description, then drove off. No apology. No nothing. You remember the police motto, "To Protect and To Serve"? On that day I lost some of my faith in that motto. Wouldn't be the last bit lost, though.

While working in car sales I sold a car to the Medford Chief of Detectives. He's a hell of a nice guy, who seemed to enjoy me, too. We struck up a conversation when I saw him in a store a few years later. We spent a moment catching up on our lives. After a while, I couldn't resist asking, "I've been stopped a few times recently by your office buddies. Always in the same area of town, and nobody will tell me why. It's getting kind of old. Have an idea why this is happening?" He paused. "Yea, you fit the description, really closely, of a drug dealer we've been trying to catch. Give me your license and plate numbers. They won't bother you again." We were both laughing about the absurdity of my being stopped so often. Which I imagine for him was an old hat story that goes with the job. I just felt lucky that by selling a detective a car, I had made a friend who with a few words would soon make my increasingly frequent encounters with the police stop.

           o           

Black lives matter. No, you dumb shit. All lives matter. I can't believe anybody would argue, much less attempt to win, an argument for either point of view. Both statements are true at face value, and after a period of reflection.

Gone missing in the raging contest of catchy tweetable phrases, however, are the nuances that lie between. Human lives are involved, which means that self-declarations that one point of view is good, therefore the other point of view is bad, are inherently headed towards inadequate conclusions. And unfortunately, there are always some who are wiling to twist like a snake in effort to prove that a binary conclusion can be found. It's so much tidier that way.

Every time a black man gets shot, out come the warriors for each camp. When the furor of the latest death recedes, inevitably, the warriors move on to savage the next victim while family and friends of the black man whose life was taken not just by the police, but by the warriors, are left to figuring out how to move on.

Two more tasks done. Freedom almost comes calling.

We've been busy wrapping up loose ends since selling the audiology practice last December. Two [more] milestones have been achieved. And not a day too soon as far as I'm concerned. I'll take it as a birthday gift.

We cleaned out the storage unit that housed spare business gear and records. Phew. One nagging monthly bill is done and gone. Below is the almost-there shot, with Barb celebrating. After shedding all that deadweight in the storage shed, Barb still thinks she has four pounds to rid from her frame. Damned perfectionist.

Here's the "finished, let's board-up-this-frickin'-place" shot.

In the last two weeks we also resolved all outstanding insurance claims. Yep, your medical insurance company will string out paying your medical providers for up to 6 months when they can (and not much can be done about it by the provider). Imagine if after putting in a weeks work your employer said they'll send a paycheck to you in 6 months.

Now you have a sense of what medical providers deal with. Constantly.

Also, since all electronic insurance payments have finally cleared the bank, I gleefully closed all our checking, savings, ACH, and merchant accounts that we had with the big-bank thieves. Finished moving the last of our accounts to local banks today - who don't do all the nasty, shit-head things that big banks do to people.

Made a point, though, of thanking many of the branch employees for their fine service and smiles over the years. They are the poor souls caught in the middle between putting food on their table and screwing people over by following management "orders".

By the way, I'll go preemptive here: Don't dare tell me, "Well, they can always quit if they hate what they are doing so much!" To which I'll respond, "Bull shit". When you have bills to pay and make the money they do, it isn't always easy to just walk away from a job. Put the blame where it deserves to be. Not on the employees. Put it on upper management where it belongs.

Enough of this. Barb and I are on our way to discovering what it is like to not have the hassle, and joys, of owning a business (our new part-time recording play-thing doesn't count as a business in the same sense). Feels strange right now, but am enjoying what our increasingly simplified life has been like during the last few months.

Your are a nuanced individual, so please don't be a political mime.

While glancing through my facebook feed, I realized that virtually nobody expresses their political beliefs in their own words. Though I suppose many think that is what they are doing.

What one most often finds, though, is a brief introduction, such as "I support (or oppose) candidate or policy (whatever)." Then comes a link to what someone else wrote, or a link to an image that someone else created, which supports the declaration made in the introduction. In the most egregious examples of avoiding an expression of their own thoughts, the author proceeds to the cut and paste large sections lifted from a linked article.*

Really? I get it. To a degree. Few of us can write like Hemingway. So don't worry. Write in your own words and I'll muddle though the slop - because we're friends.

It is also well known people don't click on Facebook links. I get that, too. But what I don't get is why you would waste an opportunity to grab my attention by devoting so much effort to an article (or image) that anybody could find if they were interested. Isn't it better to write your own thoughts, rather than miming someone else's? After all, the only reason I see your posts on FB is because we are friends of some nature. So make your case in your own words to your friend sitting here. I'l pay attention because I know you and care about you. Then, because you have intrigued me enough that your thoughts are worth delving into further, feel free to add links that you feel I'll find informative and interesting.

What it comes down to is, I follow you because I want to hear what you have to say. Your snarled up phrases and lousy spelling and horrific grammar doesn't matter to me one whit. I find it all very charming. It reminds me of you, the person I hear and recognize deep in my bones, because I know that is what I would hear if I were standing with you while sharing a beer, or hanging out in a park. I would much rather hear you, than to divine what your political mime is trying to say. Show me your nuanced self, and I'll like and respect you even more.

* There's a fine line between fair use and plagiarism. While the chance of becoming embroiled in a lawsuit claiming plagiarism due to a FB post is exceedingly low, much of what I see being copied by a few people I follow would readily fall into plagiarism territory.