Monday, December 15, 2014
Lucas Museum - Chicago Museum Campus
Today I'm visiting Chicago's museum campus
Home of
Soldier Field
Mc Cormick Place
The Adler planetarium
The Shedd Aquarium
The Field Museum
and soon, The Lucas Museum
But wait, the critics say it will spoil the view.
View of what?
It'll replace this freaking parking lot.
Spoil the view for who?
Lake Shore Drive and the IC tracks are west of here.
The Critics say, It's a blob, it's too big, it's to unconventional.
Well you want unconventional?
When it was unvieled in 1967
Chicago's Picasso was hugely unconventional
Now it's a picture postcard chicago Landmark
The critics would have Lucas fans go down to the vacant Micheal Reese Hospital site
For what?
There isnt' shit down there.
Hello?
Put Lucas's museum of modern pop culture
Where all the Museum goers can get to it.
On the Museum Campus
"Chicago Video Log","David Moskow","Chicago's museum campus","Soldier Field","Mc Cormick Place","Adler planetarium","Shedd Aquarium","Field Museum","Lucas Museum","parking lot","Lake Shore Drive","IC tracks",blob,unconventional,Picasso,postcard,chicago Landmark,"George Lucas","Micheal Reese Hospital","pop culture",Museum,"Luke Skywalker","Princess Leia","Darth Vadar","Star Wars","The Empire","Death Star","The Force"
Saturday, November 15, 2014
Long Form TV Shows - Notes
longform, long-form — TV programming that is longer than an hour in duration; a TV movie or miniseries; “The company specializes in longform production.”
Fargo
Walking Dead
Sopranos
The Wire
Orange is the New Black
Game of Thrones
Fargo
Walking Dead
Sopranos
The Wire
Orange is the New Black
Game of Thrones
Tuesday, November 11, 2014
Pullman - The story of America
The story of Pullman is the story of America. It's a story of vision, success, betrayal, bitter hardship, decline and eventually rebirth.
Vision
George Pullman learned about tight sleeping quarters while working on the Erie canal.Back in America on an painful overnight train ride Pullman envisioned his future. George would go on to build luxury overnight rail cars.His next vision was of a town for his workers.
Success
In 1882, George Pullman built a company town complete with residences, churches,schools,parks, library, shops and hospital. All Pullman homes had indoor toilets,running water & gas. Advantages not found in other working class areas of the city.
Hardship
Pullman's town prospered for fourteen years until the depression of 1894.In an effort to maintain profits, Pullman cut wages, but not rent or prices in his company town.
Betrayal
His failure to lower workers cost of living while lowering their wages led to the Pullman Strike. To break the strike he called on his friend Grover Cleveland. Federal troops were brought in and killed 40 workers. Upon his death in 1897, George Pullman was so dispised, his body was moved to Graceland cemetary under the cover of darkness. To prevent desecration of his remains, his body buried under 18 inches of reinforced concrete.
Decline
The last rail car rolled off of the Pullman line in 1981. On December 2, 1998 the Pullman factory and clock tower burned.
Rebirth
Since the fire, the clock tower has been rebuilt. A walmart opened. Homes are being rehabed. The clock tower site now a state and city historic site - is becoming a National Park.
So go down to Pullman and take a walking tour. We can learn alot about ourselves by looking at the past
----------------------------------------
"Chicago Video Log","David Moskow","pullman district",Pullman,"Erie canal",America,"rail car","company town",churches,school,parks,,"Pullman Strike","Grover Cleveland",Federal troops","reinforced concrete",walmart,"National Park"Graceland Cemetery
Monday, October 27, 2014
Frank Lloyd Wright - Oakpark Tour
Join Therese, Andre'and myself, as we take a video tour Oak Park. The highlights were: Frank Lloyd Wright's Home and Studio, the Jerusalem Cafe', Unity Church, Frank Lloyd Wright's mistress's house and a half a dozen homes designed by the architect.
I gave Andre' the camera and let him have at it. He did great. Therese was a little befuddled by my lack of direction, but I assured her she would do fine and she did. Great job Therese.
Normally I script the shoot before I shoot it. That way I know what the story is. This time we shot, then I figured out the story. I took most of my cues from Therese's narrative. Working in reverse was harder for me, and took a little longer but, the shooting felt more natural and comfortable.
So it took a week to edit, and now it's going up on Youtube. I hope you like it. Click through on the jpeg above or the tags below to see the video on YouTube.
Oak Park,"Chicago Video Log",Hemmingway,"Frank Lloyd Wright","Jerusalem cafe",Falafel ,"Unity Temple","reinforced concrete","Prairie style",chimney,pug,"axe-murderer","Julian Carlton",Mamuh,Taliesin,architecture,Architect,"Walking Tour"
Saturday, October 25, 2014
E-Man: The Infectious Disease Superhero - Notes for my Halloween costume.
E-Man is the one man Infectious Disease Swat Team. E-Man can Treat the Ill, Calm the Hysterical and Decontaminate the Scene. In a single bound.
E-Man's Secret Lab in Evanston, Il., surpasses CDC, World Health, and all Universities labs combined.
Superpowers: Compassion. Cleanliness. Able to Decontaminate with a Wave of his Glove.
Supervacines: Developed in secret, his cape is a Supervacinator, able to inoculate by looking at it. No shot required. Child friendly!
Women, children and dogs like him. Men fear him.
E-Man's Secret Lab in Evanston, Il., surpasses CDC, World Health, and all Universities labs combined.
Superpowers: Compassion. Cleanliness. Able to Decontaminate with a Wave of his Glove.
Supervacines: Developed in secret, his cape is a Supervacinator, able to inoculate by looking at it. No shot required. Child friendly!
Women, children and dogs like him. Men fear him.
Thursday, February 27, 2014
Chicago Public Art
Art is language and public art is public speech.
Jonathan Jones
The Guardian
Join me as I tour Chicago's Public Art
from The Daley Plaza to The Adler Planetarium
First stop, the Daley plaza at Washington and Dearborn.
Unvield in 1967 The Picasso was Chicago's first real piece of modern public art
On that day business as usual changed for Chicago's public spaces
Prior to the Picasso Chicago's outdoor sculptures
were monuments of historical figures from the past
With the Picasso Chicago now had High Art as Public Art
Chicago had elevated it's cultural standing
At that moment, Chicago became world class.
Two blocks south at Adams and Dearborn
Federal Plaza features Alexander Calders Flamingo
The Calder is landed on a large plaza
next to Mies van der Rohe's -Kluczynski Federal Building
Flamingo allows you to roam around, through and underneath of it
On the way to the museum campus at Roosevelt and Columbus
I pass through Agora by Magdelena Abakanowicz - aba can o vitch
In ancient greece the Agora was the main gathering place in town
The greeks Agora was the center of artistic, spiritual and political life.
Chicago Agora feels primal, primitive and somewhat ancient
The headless, armless figures speak to ones intellectual self
Chicago's Shedd aquarium beckons vistors
with Stephan Balkenhol's bronze Man with Fish
Welcoming the tourists the fountain informs the viewer of what's to come
It stands watch at the aquarium after all
The Adler Planetarium, last stop, end of the line
Henry Moore's stellar cast bronze sundial
Man Enters the Cosmos
Conceptualy fits it's location
Like Man with Fish
Cosmos informs that this is a Planetarium
Cosmos signifies man's knowledge of the Universe.
"public art","Jonathan Jones","The Guardian",Chicago,"Daley Plaza","Adler Planetarium","The Picasso",modern,"Alexander Calder","Mies van der Rohe","Kluczynski Federal Building",Agora,"Magdelena Abakanowicz","Shedd aquarium","Stephan Balkenhol","Man with Fish","Adler Planetarium","Henry Moore","Man Enters the Cosmos"
Friday, February 21, 2014
Chicago Bridges
The indian proverb says:
Life is a bridge, cross over it but build no house on it
Well that's india
This is chicago
and these are my favorite bridges
The canal street bridge is a railroad bridge
That crosses the south branch of the chicago river
And it's got a house on it
Always thought they should use that house as a movie location
Like some secret agent crib
Tiny on the outside
Deceptively large and techy on the inside
Brilliant
18th Street Bridge
If you cross the tracks by the Canal Street bridge
and head north
You come upon a pair of mammoth railroad bridges
The St Charles Air line bridge which is down
And the Baltimore and Ohio Chicago Terminal bridge
which is permanetly up
Notice the huge counterweights
These are bascule bridges
Bascule bridges are drawbridges with a counter weight
Another historic bridge is the Cherry Street bridge
It connects North Avenue to Goose Island
Because of the large counter weight
It could be mistaken for a Bascule Bridge
But it's actually a Swing Bridge
It used to open for river traffic
like a big door rotating to the east
If look underneath you can see the old turntable
The Lincoln Park Pedestrian Overpass
Allows pedestrians in Lincoln Park to cross over
Lake Shore Drive to North Ave Beach
and the best ever blizzard photo
was shot from the Overpass
The Damen Ave Bridge
Is an Arch Suspension bridge
with no latteral braces between the arches
which makes for a very clean & modern design
when it was first built it was red
Now it's gray
I guess gray doesn't fade like the red
The Nichols Bridgeway Connects Millenium park
to the Modern Wing of the Art Institute
Designed by Architect Renzo Piano
The design is clean and elegant
And it's got some killer views
Architect Frank Gehry's sepentine BP Bridge
Connects Millenium park to Maggie Daley Park
Now under construction the rehabed park is gonna include
an meandering ice skating ribbon
a children's play area
climbing walls
And a great lawn
I can't wait to see it
By visiting Chicago's bridges
We look back at a great city's past
and we look forward to it's future
"Life is a bridge",india,chicago,Canal Street railroad bridge","chicago river","St Charles Air line bridge","Baltimore and Ohio Chicago Terminal bridge",counterweights,"bascule bridge",drawbridge,"Cherry Ave bridge","Goose Island","Swing Bridge","Lincoln Park Pedestrian Overpass","Lake Shore Drive","North Ave Beach","Damen Ave Bridge","Nichols Bridgeway","Millenium park","Renzo Piano","Frank Gehry","BP Bridge","Maggie Daley Park"
Monday, February 10, 2014
Chicago Tribune Tower: Fragments of History
The Chicago Tribune has a rock collection
no, not that kind of rock collection
Robert R. McCormick was the Chicago Tribune's
editor, publisher and owner
In Belgium 1914 world war one
while working as a war correspondent
McCormick grabbed a stone
from a bombed Ypres Cathedral
This was the start of
The Chicago Tribune's rock collection
Fragments from around the world
are embedded in the facade of tribune building
Petra - Arabia
The ancient city of Petra is now a World Heritage site
Omaha Beach - Normandy
The spearhead of World War Two's Normandy invasion.
Pearl Harbor - Hawaii
December 7th 1941 - A date that will live in infamy.
Washington - Mount Rainier
54 Miles from Seattle -
Mount Rainier is considered one of the worlds most dangerous volcanoes.
Arizona - Petrified Forest
Home of the Petrified Forest National Park
Colorado - Mesa Verde Cliff Dwellings
Dating back to 400 AD
The Pueblo People's home.
Mesa Verde is the largest archaeological preserve in the united states.
Reims Cathedral - France
If you were king of France
Reims or Nortre Dame was where you were coronated
World Trade Center
911 - 2001
Roman Ruins - 455 BC
All great empires fall.
The Berlin Wall
And some walls come down
The Great Wall of China
And some walls never fall
Union Stock Yards Gate
The world has a past
And Chicago has a past
as seen in the Chicago Tribune's Rock Collection
You can learn allot about a city
and the world
by looking at it's past
"google earth","Tribune Tower","Chicago Video Log","rock collection","Robert R. McCormick","Chicago Tribune",Belgium,"Ypres Catherdral",Petra,Arabia,"World Heritage site","Omaha Beach",Normandy,"normandy invasion","Pearl Harbor",Hawaii,Washington,"Mount Ranier",Seattle,volcano,Arizona,"Petrified Forest",Colorado,"Mesa Verde",Pueblo,"Reims Cathedral",France,"Nortre Dame","World Trade Center",911,"Roman Ruins","Berlin Wall","Great Wall of China","Union Stock Yards
Wednesday, February 5, 2014
Chicago's Brewery Tied Saloons
In 1884 chicago's saloon licence fees were steeply raised
rather than close saloon owners went to the brewiers for financial help
The only catch for the owners was they were Tied to the Brewer's beer.
Hence the name
Tied house
Our first tied house
Is now a coffee house
at Belmont and Leavitt
It's a Starbucks in a Schlitz House
Schlitz bucks
Or at least it will be
When they finish the inside
and move out of the trailer
We're down on the southside in morgan park
at the Carribean Lounge
Another Schlitz house
Like much of the Southside
This one has seen better days
In it's hey day
Chicago had 166 breweries
prohibition Killed Edward R. Stege in 1923
Three Stege Tied houses still exist
Our first Stege house is at 24th & Western
Notice the Stege Sun Emblem
The building appears to now be apartments
Our second Stege house is at 24th & Washtenaw
It was hard to tell if this was in fact the Stege house
until Therese spotted the Stege Sun Emblem
Up top on the side of the house
Still on the south side
Our third Stege house was at 23rd & California
Therese was excited to see the tile work on the stoop
Sorry Terese
The sun emblem up top is missing too
Back on the northside
We have another Schlitz house at Divison and Wood
The Schlitz Globe was easily identifieable
We're saving the best for last
Schubas is a working bar
With a bar in the front
A stage and ballroom in the back
And a private room up stairs
Many fine original fixtures
are all in working order
We're at Southport & Henderson
at the Southport lanes
This is a nice place
Bar in the front
Billiards in the back
And a bowling alley
Who knew?
So that was a nice little tour
You can tell a lot about a city
by looking at it's past
"Chicago's Tied houses",chicago,saloon,brewerys,Schlitzbucks,"coffee house",Belmont,trailer,"Schlitz house",Stege,Schubas,"Southport lanes",Billiards,"bowling alley"
Monday, January 27, 2014
Chicago's Post Office Murals
During the great depression
Many post offices built
as part of Roosevelt's New Deal
were decorated with murals
of the "American scene."
Several survive in Chicago
The Morgan Park Post Office
is far south
at 1805 W MONTEREY AVE
in chicago's Morgan park neighborhood
It's a red brick building
on a stone base
with stone entryway & cornice
Inside there is a mural titled:
Father Marquette – 1674
The painting by artist J. Theodore Johnson
depicts father Jacques Marquette
with native chicagoans
smoking a peace pipe
Marquette was a french jesuit
and the first european to winter in Chicago
The Forest Park Post Office
is just west of Chicago
near the DesPlaines river
at 417 Desplaines Ave
Its a lackluster brick and stone building
But inside is a wonderful painting
Titled: The White Fawn
Painted in 1940 by artist Miriam McKinnie
it depicts a local 1880s excursion boat
called the White Fawn
that took sightseers
up and down the Des Plaines River
The Uptown Station Post office
is in Chicago's uptown neighborhood
at 4850 N Broadway
between Foster and Lawrence
It's a beautiful grey brick and stone building
With eagles flanking
soaring bronze doors
Inside are two ceramic tile murals
depicting poet Carl Sandburg
and architech Louis Sullivan
by artist Henry Varnum Poor
The Lakeview post office
in Chicago's Lakeview Neighborhood
at 1343 W Irving Park
is a brick building
with rounded corners
and double high stainless windows
Inside is the classic New Deal mural
titled Chicago: Epoch of a great city
and it's a great mural
with scenes from the stockyards
from industry
from science
The Great Chicago Fire
and the phoenix rising from the ashes.
Oh, and that's the artist throwing the switch
Harry Sternberg painted himself into this
must see mural
Pioneers like Marquette
Boats on the Des Plaines
the poet Carl Sandburg
the architech Louis Sullivan
and the rise of the great city of chicago
are all depicted in Chicago's Post Office Murals
"great depression","post offices","Roosevelt's New Deal",FDR,"New Deal",WPA,"American scene",Chicago,"Morgan Park Post Office","Morgan park","red brick",stone,"Father Marquette – 1674","J. Theodore Johnson","Jacques Marquette",native,"peace pipe",Marquette,"Forest Park Post Office","DesPlaines river","The White Fawn",artist,"Miriam McKinnie","Uptown Station Post office",eagles,bronze,"ceramic tile",poet,"Carl Sandburg",architech,"Louis Sullivan","Henry Varnum Poor","Lakeview post office",Lakeview,"Irving Park","Chicago: Epoch of a great city",stockyards,industry,science,"Great Chicago Fire","the phoenix","Harry Sternberg","Chicago Tour"
Monday, January 20, 2014
Richard Sherman - LOB - Legion of Boom - Rant
So who is Richard Sherman?
If you saw the Niners Seahawk game
He's the Seahawk cornerback
who went off on Micheal Crabtree
in front of a stunned Erin Andrews
Richard Sherman said:
When you try me with a sorry reciever like Crabtree
that's what you are going to get
Don't you ever talk about me
Don't you open your mouth about the best
Or I'm gonna shut it for you real quick
I was like
What is this?
Professional wrestling
Then I was like, LOB?
What the what?
Well sometimes in football
part of a team is so good
they get a name
Like back in the day
Pittsburg had the Steel Curtain
Now Seattle has the Legion of Boom
And they have a spokesman
Richard Sherman
Friday, January 17, 2014
All Time Rivalries
On the radio this morning
Mike and Mike were talking about rivalries
Kind of ironic cause Greeney and Golic
are kind of rivals themselves
Kind of like a David & Goliath
Cept in this case
Goliath is more likeable than David
they were talking about
the big game this week
New England vs Denver
More on that in a bit
People love a great rivalry
How about Ali vs Frasier
Back when I was a kid
those were three must see fights
ending with the thriller in manilla
Then there's Coke vs Pepsi
I'm ok with either
as long as it's a pepsi
I'm just saying
iPhone vs Android
I love my ZTE Android
my hands are too big for an iPhone
I'm just saying
Ok so who's the better quarterback
Brady or Manning
We'll see this weekend
When New England goes to Denver
for the AFC Championship
I'm going with Denver in Denver
Doesn't mean that Brady's better than Manning
I'm just saying
Wagers, Breakfast & Superbowl Prediction
Every year I get in a football pool
It's a confidence pool
Each week, I pick winners of every game
and assign points
based on my confidence of the pick
Pretty sure the team will win
High points
Not so sure a team will win
Low points
So at the beginning of the season
I made a side bet with this fella winny
I took the lead in week one
and had him all season
after 16 weeks
with 14 to 16 games a week
thousands of points
on the last week
he catches me
and beats me by three points
three points
so breakfast at sparky's was on me
sparky's is up in Skokie
It's a breakfast and lunch kind of place
I had been eyeballing the place for years
I'd drive past and say to myself
I've gotta try that place sometime
I had the breakfast special
So did Winny
For this year's outdoor superbowl
I'm picking Denver and San Francisco
with San Francisco winning in the cold.
Manning sucks outdoors
and did you see Kapernick in Greenbay?
"football pool", "confidence pool", winners, game, team, win, season, sparky's, Skokie, breakfast, lunch, superbowl, Denver, "San Francisco", broncos, 49ers, Manning, Kaepernick
Saturday, January 11, 2014
Ten Things That Might Disappear In Our Lifetime
1. The Post Office
No way
Man that's un-american
I've got envelopes
I've got stamps
I send letters
I pay bills by Mail
2. The Cheque
No way again
I've got a checkbook
I write checks
I think some tea party banker started this roumor
3. The Newspaper
Ok - This one I kind of agree with
I get most of my news from yahoo twitter or buzzfeed
4. The Book
I loaded the kindle app on my tablet
Downloaded a book
Hated it
Went out and got the book
5. The Land Line Telephone
Yep - I agree with this one
My homephone is magicjack internet phone
only 19.95 a year
And I've got my kick ass ZTE Andriod phone
Yeah - land lines are history
6. Music
Nope - I don't agree with this one
Maybe the music industry will change or die
But you can't party without tunes
7. Television
Not a chance
Programing now is better than ever
TV's are better than ever
and people are dumber than ever
so it all just fits
8. The "Things" That You Own
Well this one is kind of goofy
it's refering to data
Things are moving away to the cloud
Which is fine
Just means I can get my shit from anywhere
9. Joined Handwriting
I guess some schools no longer teach kids how to write by hand
Gotta admit if I'm writing something
Im punching some keys
Unless it's my grocery list
that I do by hand
10. Privacy
Yeah not shit
I completely agree with this one
The Goverment listens to my phone
Hackers probably have all my info from my Target card
and facebook has been weirding me out lately
They keep surveying me on place I've been months ago
How do they know that I love Sabatinos
Friday, January 10, 2014
Ten Things That Will Disappear In Our Lifetime - Original Chain Email
Note: This is the original email content, some of which I agree with, some, not so much.
Ten Things That Will Disappear In Our Lifetime
This is USA oriented, but Canada & the rest will not be far behind..Whether these changes are good or bad depends in part on how we adapt to them. But, ready or not, here they come.1. The Post OfficeGet ready to imagine a world without the post office. They are so deeply in financial trouble that there is probablyno way to sustain it long term. Email, Fed Ex, and UPS have just about wiped out the minimum revenue needed to keepthe post office alive. Most of your mail every day is junk mail and bills.2. The ChequeBritain is already laying the groundwork to do away with cheque by 2018. It costs the financial system billions of dollars a year to process cheques. Plastic cards and online transactions will lead to the eventual demise of thecheque. This plays right into the death of the post office. If you never paid your bills by mail and never received them by mail, the post office would absolutely go out of business.3. The NewspaperThe younger generation simply doesn't read the newspaper. They certainly don't subscribe to a daily delivered print edition. That may go the way of the milkman and the laundry man. As for reading the paper online, get ready to pay for it. The rise in mobile Internet devices and e-readers hascaused all the newspaper and magazine publishers to form an alliance. They have met with Apple, Amazon, and the major cell phone companies to develop a model for paid subscription services.4. The BookYou say you will never give up the physical book that you hold in your hand and turn the literal pages. I said the same thing about downloading music from iTunes. I wanted my hard copy CD. But I quickly changed my mind when I discovered that I could get albums for half the price without ever leaving home to get the latest music. The same thing will happen with books. You can browse a bookstore online and even read a preview chapter before you buy. And the price is less than half that of a real book. And think of the convenience! Once you start flicking your fingers on the screen instead of the book, you find that you are lost in the story, can't wait to see what happens next, and you forget that you're holding a gadget instead of a book.5. The Land Line TelephoneUnless you have a large family and make a lot of local calls, you don't need it anymore. Most people keep it simply because they've always had it. But you are paying double charges for that extra service. All the cell phone companies will let you call customers using the same cell provider for no charge against your minutes6. MusicThis is one of the saddest parts of the change story. The music industry is dying a slow death.Not just because of illegal downloading. It's the lack of innovative new music being given a chance to get to the people who would like to hear it. Greed and corruption is the problem.The record labels and the radio conglomerates are simply self-destructing.Over 40% of the music purchased today is "catalogue items," meaning traditional music that the public is familiar with. Older established artists. This is also true on the live concert circuit. To explore this fascinating and disturbing topic further, check out the book,"Appetite for Self-Destruction" by Steve Knopper, and the video documentary, "Before the Music Dies."7. TelevisionRevenues to the networks are down dramatically. Not just because of the economy. People are watching TV and movies streamed from their computers. And they're playing games and doing lots of other things that take up the time that used to be spent watching TV. Prime time shows have degenerated down to lower than the lowest common denominator. Cable rates are skyrocketing and commercials run about every 4 minutes and 30 seconds.I say good riddance to most of it. It's time for the cable companies to be put out of our misery. Let the people choose what they want to watch online and through Netflix.8. The "Things" That You OwnMany of the very possessions that we used to own are still in our lives, but we may not actually own them in the future. They may simply reside in "the cloud." Today your computer has a hard drive and you store your pictures, music, movies, and documents. Your software is on a CD or DVD, and you can always re-install it if need be. But all of that is changing. Apple, Microsoft, and Google are all finishing up their latest "cloud services." That means that when you turn on a computer, the Internet will be built into the operating system. So, Windows, Google, and the Mac OS will be tied straight into the Internet.If you click an icon, it will open something in the Internet cloud. If you save something, it will be saved to the cloud. And you may pay a monthly subscription fee to the cloud provider. In this virtual world, you can accessyour music or your books, or your whatever from any laptop or handheld device. That's the good news. But, will you actually own any of this "stuff" or will it all be able to disappear at any moment in a big "Poof?"Will most of the things in our lives be disposable and whimsical? It makes you want to run to the closet and pull out that photo album, grab a book from the shelf, or open up a CD case and pull out the insert.9. Joined HandwritingAlready gone in some schools who no longer teach "joined handwriting" because nearly everything is done now on computers or keyboards of some type (pun not intended)10. PrivacyIf there ever was a concept that we can look back on nostalgically, it would be privacy. That's gone. It's been gone for a long time anyway.. There are cameras on the street, in most of the buildings, and even builtinto your computer and cell phone. But you can be sure that 24/7, "They" know who you are and where you are,right down to the GPS coordinates, and the Google Street View. If you buy something, your habit is put into azillion profiles, and your ads will change to reflect those habits.. "They" will try to get you to buy something else. Again and again.All we will have left that can't be changed are "Memories".
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