Forwarded from Isu
Shitty word
All my crazy thoughts. To know more just check the channel believe me you won't be disappointed.
For any comments and suggestions
👉🏽👉🏽👉🏽 @richyshit
https://www.tg-me.com/richyshit
All my crazy thoughts. To know more just check the channel believe me you won't be disappointed.
For any comments and suggestions
👉🏽👉🏽👉🏽 @richyshit
https://www.tg-me.com/richyshit
Telegram
Shitty words
All my crazy thoughts. To know more just check the channel believe me you won't be disappointed.
For any comments and suggestions
👉🏽👉🏽👉🏽 @richy101 and @ironmade1
For any comments and suggestions
👉🏽👉🏽👉🏽 @richy101 and @ironmade1
winta
https://addisfortune.news/tea-art/
Hm. I had no idea this article existed until just now.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WOhUmmbDiAk
Planning
My partner interviewed Basazenew for one of our university assignments several weeks ago.
We had to do an in-depth tale about two people in the area we researched.
Lately, I'd been thinking and complaining about the terrifying scale of problems we find in our site research and the expectation there is for us to look at the problems through just one set of glasses: architecture.
I'm no longer focusing on social solutions in my architectural projects. I'm kind of tired of censoring work for academic presentations and proposing one-dimensional approaches that I have major doubts about. And the only social solution that I believe works is really radical and can't be translated into 'space'.
If it's not that, I don't know how to break down and translate the information we find into tangible research results.
So, seeing another group translate some of the findings in a clearer way using the same 'architectural tools' encouraged me somehow.
A few days ago, I did this short video from the brief version of the story that Basazenew gave us. I feel like I may have gotten some events or dates wrong. But it's been a while since I played with my sand, so listening to some rock music while doing a university assignment at around 3 a.m was pleasant.
-w
By: @wintaassefa
Planning
My partner interviewed Basazenew for one of our university assignments several weeks ago.
We had to do an in-depth tale about two people in the area we researched.
Lately, I'd been thinking and complaining about the terrifying scale of problems we find in our site research and the expectation there is for us to look at the problems through just one set of glasses: architecture.
I'm no longer focusing on social solutions in my architectural projects. I'm kind of tired of censoring work for academic presentations and proposing one-dimensional approaches that I have major doubts about. And the only social solution that I believe works is really radical and can't be translated into 'space'.
If it's not that, I don't know how to break down and translate the information we find into tangible research results.
So, seeing another group translate some of the findings in a clearer way using the same 'architectural tools' encouraged me somehow.
A few days ago, I did this short video from the brief version of the story that Basazenew gave us. I feel like I may have gotten some events or dates wrong. But it's been a while since I played with my sand, so listening to some rock music while doing a university assignment at around 3 a.m was pleasant.
-w
By: @wintaassefa
YouTube
On Basazenew Ξ Sand Art Video by Winta Ξ Addis Vlogs
My partner interviewed Basazenew for one of our university assignments several weeks ago.
We had to do an in-depth tale about two people in the area we researched.
Lately, I'd been thinking and complaining about the terrifying scale of problems we find…
We had to do an in-depth tale about two people in the area we researched.
Lately, I'd been thinking and complaining about the terrifying scale of problems we find…
11.12.19
Day’s Notes
It's a very cold and damp morning. The sky is overcast and it’s raining lightly. My university lies a little past the Lideta church. And since today is the annual Lideta celebration, the road along the church gets hopelessly blocked, long queues form in minibus stations that are usually free, the minibusses that do show up charge double the fare and it’s just a nightmare to make it to campus in those conditions.
So, I leave earlier than usual to beat the early churchgoers there.
But as I sit cozily snuggled up between two strangers in a hastily made minibus seat, I could tell that I may look back at today as one of the good old days.
The air in the minibus is already clogged, and they take a different route. So, for a moment, I consider the possibility that all of the strangers I'm rammed in between are staged actors. It’s very visible that I’m carrying a laptop, a phone, and earphones. So, if they take me somewhere I don’t know and threaten me to give them what I have, they’d make an okay profit with what they’d get. Not enough to split among all of them and make them happy. But still.
I guess I've become a little too paranoid.
Now, I could see some of them talk to each other but I'm not really listening to what they’re saying.
I'm listening to Impending Doom instead. And because I could only listen to Impending Doom at eardrum-risking volumes, I suspect that my fellow passengers are listening to some Impending Doom as well.
The minibus is emptier now.
I stopped typing in the last paragraph because we reached the minibus's final destination before I realized it. I missed my stop. So, I had to walk in the rain to another stop. I hate umbrellas so it was time for a good sky shower. The dozens of people who opted out of walking in the rain snuggled up under bridges and building shades.
But on my way to this minibus, I saw something that could have been a cloud or fog go in front of the tallest building in Ethiopia yet. I found that amazing. So, I risked taking out my phone in such a crowded area to take a few hurried shots. The pictures were not very good but I like that they exist.
The public shower may not have been a good idea since I have something like a cold developing. But despite the cold and dampness, this felt like a nice, cozy morning. It felt like I was already looking back at it as some fuzzy memory.
-w
By: @wintaassefa
Day’s Notes
It's a very cold and damp morning. The sky is overcast and it’s raining lightly. My university lies a little past the Lideta church. And since today is the annual Lideta celebration, the road along the church gets hopelessly blocked, long queues form in minibus stations that are usually free, the minibusses that do show up charge double the fare and it’s just a nightmare to make it to campus in those conditions.
So, I leave earlier than usual to beat the early churchgoers there.
But as I sit cozily snuggled up between two strangers in a hastily made minibus seat, I could tell that I may look back at today as one of the good old days.
The air in the minibus is already clogged, and they take a different route. So, for a moment, I consider the possibility that all of the strangers I'm rammed in between are staged actors. It’s very visible that I’m carrying a laptop, a phone, and earphones. So, if they take me somewhere I don’t know and threaten me to give them what I have, they’d make an okay profit with what they’d get. Not enough to split among all of them and make them happy. But still.
I guess I've become a little too paranoid.
Now, I could see some of them talk to each other but I'm not really listening to what they’re saying.
I'm listening to Impending Doom instead. And because I could only listen to Impending Doom at eardrum-risking volumes, I suspect that my fellow passengers are listening to some Impending Doom as well.
The minibus is emptier now.
I stopped typing in the last paragraph because we reached the minibus's final destination before I realized it. I missed my stop. So, I had to walk in the rain to another stop. I hate umbrellas so it was time for a good sky shower. The dozens of people who opted out of walking in the rain snuggled up under bridges and building shades.
But on my way to this minibus, I saw something that could have been a cloud or fog go in front of the tallest building in Ethiopia yet. I found that amazing. So, I risked taking out my phone in such a crowded area to take a few hurried shots. The pictures were not very good but I like that they exist.
The public shower may not have been a good idea since I have something like a cold developing. But despite the cold and dampness, this felt like a nice, cozy morning. It felt like I was already looking back at it as some fuzzy memory.
-w
By: @wintaassefa
an album
I've been talking about this 'Christmas' album intermittently for almost a year now. I could learn a lot about attention to detail and the cohesiveness of a final product from Josh Garrel's charming but technically refined album. But I don't knit where to start.
And since it's Christmas season again, I would love to share some of the music I've been treating myself to and wish you have a lovely Christmas as well.
To me, today is just a reminder of the season in which a personal Hero and Savior was born. And what a glorious birth to celebrate indeed.
-w
I've been talking about this 'Christmas' album intermittently for almost a year now. I could learn a lot about attention to detail and the cohesiveness of a final product from Josh Garrel's charming but technically refined album. But I don't knit where to start.
And since it's Christmas season again, I would love to share some of the music I've been treating myself to and wish you have a lovely Christmas as well.
To me, today is just a reminder of the season in which a personal Hero and Savior was born. And what a glorious birth to celebrate indeed.
-w
And here, I have classmates doing the kind of work I happened to quit some time ago
This feels like our entire housing course summed up in a fun cartoon strip. Please let me know if you find the artists who worked on this project.
-w
-w
Asking Questions
So, I complained about my architecture homework under Kurzgesagt's new video. And a classic internet fight took place under it-and that distracted me from my homework even more.
There were a few white supremacists, people calling others names, someone writing in all-caps: it was digital mayhem.
Then, I expanded on the topic-which had been haunting me for some time now-and made a video. After all, if a topic is not this polarizing, why waste our breath on it in the first place, right?
But click-baity title and angry comments aside, I felt the need to pose the questions raised by my housing professor, the young people in the AU conference I happened to attend, and that cautious Kurzgesagt video.
I'll leave the rest to this video-essay to explain.
-w
https://youtu.be/N4OMBeDYxmY
So, I complained about my architecture homework under Kurzgesagt's new video. And a classic internet fight took place under it-and that distracted me from my homework even more.
There were a few white supremacists, people calling others names, someone writing in all-caps: it was digital mayhem.
Then, I expanded on the topic-which had been haunting me for some time now-and made a video. After all, if a topic is not this polarizing, why waste our breath on it in the first place, right?
But click-baity title and angry comments aside, I felt the need to pose the questions raised by my housing professor, the young people in the AU conference I happened to attend, and that cautious Kurzgesagt video.
I'll leave the rest to this video-essay to explain.
-w
https://youtu.be/N4OMBeDYxmY
YouTube
how babies are killing our 'future' (there I said it.)
Asking Questions So, I complained about my architecture homework under Kurzgesagt's new video. And a classic internet fight took place under it-and that dist...
