Thanks Peter, Doug and Barry. I had to miss hearing the radio slot! - I had committed to going to a reading. But I got some good reports from other ears.
I am still kind of blown away by the instant global access to the program via the web. What magic to think you can be 'live" on a small college radio station and heard simultaneously through out the world on the Internet. (I know this is not exactly new - but when it happens to yourself for the first time, 'it is new'!) And not only can it be 'as it happens' but it can be accessed (this one in a couple of weeks) and be made 'live' again at a listener's own leisure.
The whole world becomes an 'audible sensorium' - the content of which, obviously, is going go to mirror all, as well - the good, bad and the ugly. But, as long as we can offer art and poems (which we can acknowledge can also be various 'good, bad and ugly', etc., Internet radio is not a bad place to whistle over and beyond the traditional and media hierarchical fences. I say.
Stephen Vincent
http://stephenvincent.net/blog/
Peter Ciccariello <[log in to unmask]> wrote: Love those Haptics Stephen, they remind me of Mark Tobey's "White Writings".
- Peter Ciccariello
On Thu, Mar 13, 2008 at 11:33 AM, Douglas Barbour
wrote:
> Hope it went well, Stephen, & assume it did. I was at a meeting at
> that time, but will try to catch it later...
>
> Like the 'Angel' photo added to your blog...
>
> Doug
>
> On 12-Mar-08, at 6:37 PM, Stephen Vincent wrote:
>
> > Stephen Vincent interviewed by Richard Kamler on Art Talk,tonight ,
> > @ 7:30PM (San Francisco West Coast Time) on KUSF @ 90.3FM, or
> > streaming live on kusf.org and/or download the show you want to
> > listen to at your leisure
>
> Douglas Barbour
> [log in to unmask]
>
> http://www.ualberta.ca/~dbarbour/
>
> Latest book: Continuations (with Sheila E Murphy)
> http://www.uap.ualberta.ca/UAP.asp?LID=41&bookID=664
>
> to rid me of
> the ugh in
> thought
> i spell anew
> weave the world
> out of the or
> binary
>
> bpNichol
>
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