Take a look at the video and see Adi's great work in the colorful, growing mountains.
Friday, February 25, 2011
New Ra Ra Riot
Friend of the magazine, contributor and member of Sirocco Research Labs, Adi Goodrich, recently helped out on the new Ra Ra Riot music video for the song "Too Dramatic". off their 2010 album The Orchard.
Labels:
Adi Goodrich,
Ra Ra Riot,
The Orchard,
Too Dramatic
Friday, February 18, 2011
New Radiohead Video for 'Lotus Flower'
Check out Radiohead's newest song Lotus Flower off the new album, The King of Limbs and maybe their strangest video ever. Thom Yorke gets down in black and white a la Street Spirit (Fade Out) days. The video is mainly a stare-at-the-camera-and-sing-to-the-audience confessional, like a really drunken version of Janelle Monae's Cold War video.
Watch Yorke look both like he's tripping out and also like he has to go to the bathroom a little. Either way, what's obvious is the guy can still swing those hips.
It's a great, dark, hypnotic song and comes at the perfect time for me. I was just wondering what Radiohead was up to, and apparently it's the same things as they always are—making wonderful music.
Labels:
Chicago,
Jettison,
jettison Quartelry,
lotus flower,
magazine,
Radiohead,
video
Monday, February 7, 2011
Lil Wayne is a Packers Fan?! For Real?!
Saturday, January 22, 2011
Check out Jettison on your iPad

Jettison Quarterly is now available on the iPad. While we're still working on our template apps, you can still view the magazine by taking the iPad online and heading to the Jettison website. It's a small step for now, but a huge leap from where we started.
A tablet device is really the ideal format to read Jettison: the pictures look awesome, you can sit back and enjoy the articles, you can take it with you, and now, best of all, you can watch our videos too (something that print still cant do)!
Take a look and bookmark Jettison today!
Saturday, January 15, 2011
New Jettison Issue Out Now!

The winter issue of Jettison Quarterly is out now.
For the new issue, we talked to the folks at CHIRP, hung out with Light Pollution, and took a long drive to Lone Tree, IA for a fun-filled night of scotch, scotch and more scotch—all single malt of course.
Check out great pieces, profiles and conversations with MCA 12x12 artist Jessica Labatte, the thought provoking Sabrina Raaf, Kansas City-based artist Colin Leipelt, and Arcane Bolt (We're the first, but probably wont be the last to interview these guys).
Dont miss our profile on Pumping Station: One and meet Chicago's hacker community.
Best of all, we've got a new website that makes it easier to jump around and we've got VIDEO! Check out our video of a night in Lone Tree at Bob's Bar.
Big things coming this year for Jettison and we're starting off with a BANG! If you want to get Jettison release notices in your email, Subscribe here.
Thursday, December 30, 2010
Sirocco Research Lab Screens 'Red Moon' in Chicago Tonight

Remember when we did that beautiful profile on Sirocco Research Labs in our summer issue this year? Well, the creators of a seriously awesome short film titled Red Moon are in Chicago this week to screen their film at Co-Prosperity Sphere in Chicago's Bridgeport neighborhood.
Red Moon is a werewolf story set on a Soviet submersible. Filmed and produced in Los Angeles, we met up with Sirocco while we were out working on the West Coast. They made us dinner, showed us around their studio and talked with us in-depth about starting their own production company and making movies.
Not to be missed, the screening begins at 9 p.m. and will include a showing of Red Moon and Cleo in the Universe. Both films are excellently done, with beautiful set design and costume work. Jettison will be there and you should be too.
Co-Prosperity Sphere is located at 3219 S. Morgan Street. After the screening, the Sirocco crew will be dancing the night away with music provide by Bryan John Appleby and Clique Talk.
Labels:
Cleo in the Universe,
film,
Issue No. 6,
Jettison,
Red Moon,
Sirocco Research Labs
Sunday, December 19, 2010
Higher Calling
Image Credit: The Kindling Group“As a [documentary] filmmaker I set off to look at faith in the US with a keen eye—to ask challenging questions and a critical approach— but I also wanted to balance this with a warm heart— respect and understanding,” said Danny Alpert, director for the series and executive director of the Kindling Group.
Alpert was raised in a self-described, “suburban, Jewish cocoon” and at the age of 15 moved to Israel in what he said his parents, “saw as the fulfillment of their Jewish identity.”
These unique experiences lead Alpert to consider becoming a rabbi. However, eight months from beginning a pre-rabbinical program Alpert realized it was not his calling.
“From that moment—through travel, school, living in a region at war, marriage, parenthood—I learned that the ideas, peoples and individuals in this world are never simple and moved away from my religious observance,” Alpert said.
In order to create a film that was at once critical and respectful, Alpert enlisted a group of talented filmmakers whom also are practitioners of the different faiths explored in the film.
“The point was not only to find a crew of outstanding professional quality— which I fortunately did—but also to find the right people for this project. Religion is not easy—people have strong feelings and it comes with its own baggage. I wanted to find people who I know would look critically and ask the hard questions, but who also had respect and understanding of faith and the faithful… It was not an easy search, but I was blessed to find a talented and dedicated team in Yoni Brook, Alicia Dwyer, Maggie Bowman and Musa Seed,” Alpert said.
While the film follows those who are called by their God, Alpert found that the power behind these stories, as they play out on film, is in the relationships these young clergy-in-training make with other people. He also found hope in the generation’s attitude of wanting to have its cake and eat it too: They want to lead prayer and listen to hip-hop, to use humor as a tool to connect alongside prayer and preaching. They fully embrace their religious lives and at the same time, they are unwilling to sacrifice their identity as young, modern Americans.
The Calling follows Shmuly Yanklowitz and Yerachmiel Shapiro, two rabbis in training, each facing their own personal struggles despite a shared faith, which reminds viewers that the experience of religion is vast and personal.
Tahera Ahmad and Bilal Ansari are both students in the Hartford Seminary’s Muslim Chaplaincy program in Connecticut. However, their familial and religious experiences differ immensely from one another. Bilal is an African-American father of four whose accomplishments include lecturing to prisoners and at-risk youth. Tahera is a recently engaged, strong-headed woman whose undertakings focus on the Arabic language, Qur’an recitation, Islamic studies and other goals from her suburban Chicago community.
Jeneen Robinson is a single mother, who struggles to raise her young son, supplementing her income with an acting career, while studying to become an ordained minister in the African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church. Steven Gamez is learning to become a Catholic priest, a role that differs from the others in its commitment to celibacy. And finally, there is Rob Pene, a Christian rapper of Samoan heritage, who has committed his time as a mentor to young people. He offers his support to underprivileged young men in his community, and teaches science at a public school.
While The Calling is a compilation of seven individual stories, together these subjects complete a larger narrative—one that speaks of the nuanced religious climate Americans experience today. With all of the shared goals for community development recognized on film, as well as points of extreme opposition between them, The Calling is a film that does not seek to answer, but rather question what religious leadership, and therefore faith, means today.
The Calling will air on the PBS series Independent Lens Monday, Dec. 20 and Tuesday, Dec. 21, 2010 at 8 p.m. CST.
- Brittany Hayford for Jettison Quarterly
What’s your Calling?
In conjuncture with the film, Kindling Group has created an interactive project that brings the dialogue from the big screen to your computer screen. The website at http://whatsyourcalling.org/ continues the discussion with videos, interviews and articles organized into thirty different themes. From art, education and family to balance, identity, and transformation, there is surely a conversation to participate in, or something new to learn about. The site allows users to engage in a multitude of dialogues in a “Join the Conversation” section, where users can post their reactions, questions, or stories. The site also functions as a base for activity. The website has partnered with other organizations in an attempt to get users involved in their communities through the, “Service Call to Action” section which provides links to like-minded institutions.
What’s your Calling?
In conjuncture with the film, Kindling Group has created an interactive project that brings the dialogue from the big screen to your computer screen. The website at http://whatsyourcalling.org/ continues the discussion with videos, interviews and articles organized into thirty different themes. From art, education and family to balance, identity, and transformation, there is surely a conversation to participate in, or something new to learn about. The site allows users to engage in a multitude of dialogues in a “Join the Conversation” section, where users can post their reactions, questions, or stories. The site also functions as a base for activity. The website has partnered with other organizations in an attempt to get users involved in their communities through the, “Service Call to Action” section which provides links to like-minded institutions.
* Jettison's Winter Issue will be released in early January. Click here to sign up for a FREE subscription and see our full interview with Director Danny Alpert in the new issue, as well as other great content.
Labels:
Danny Alpert,
Documentary,
faith,
Independent Lens,
Ira Glass,
Multi faith,
PBS,
Religion,
The Calling,
The Kindling Group
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