Month: May 2026

  • She’s Gone

    She’s Gone

    We lost Mimi last night. She would have been nineteen (!) in July and had slowed down considerably over the past six months. No pain, just a gradual fading out until she finally stopped breathing at around midnight. 

    Mimi has been with us since 2008 where she was thrust into Izumi’s arms at an Oakland shelter. “She belongs with you” said the lady and that was that. 

    We called her Mimi (the Japanese word for ear) because of her expressive ears. She was a good dog, who lived a full life. She saw Julia and Tyler grow into adults, traveled with us all around the world (necessitating a Christmas Eve visit to the home of the top National Finnish Veterinarian authority) and literally led us up some stairs to discover our beautiful neighborhood here in NYC. Many of the friends we have here, we met through Mimi and the other dogs in the neighborhood.

    We will miss her terribly but are thankful for everything she taught us and are happy to know she is now resting.

  • Refreshingly Human

    Refreshingly Human

    No AI Involved

    The dance sequence at the end of this video directed by Romain Gavras is amazing. Precision chaos is the only way to describe it.

  • Big Sound – Small Space

    Big Sound – Small Space

    Wow. I was really excited to blog about Evan & Luke’s Williamsburg apartment studio based on a May 1st story that just popped up in my feed from Yahoo.

    When I followed some of the links to find out more, I discovered that the video below was from 8 years ago and that the last video in their YouTube channel was from 5 years ago (victim of the pandemic?).

    Curious why Yahoo would revive a story written so long ago and timestamp it from today. I suspect an old RSS feed was reconnected and sprung back to life w/o the proper meta-date to filter it out as old. Yet another case of why good data hygiene is important.

    Nice story anyway – wonder what they’re up to today?


    Once a month, roommates Evan and Luke transform their tiny Brooklyn apartment into a full music studio. Sometimes they manage to cram an entire orchestra complete with brass, strings, and percussion into every nook and cranny and, in the process, spark something rare these days, a uniquely human in the experience.