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Remember That Project We Did That One Time?

By JK Evanczuk on Wednesday, October 19, 2011 - View Comments

Yeah, that one. There was one more left in the series. And it was, we humbly think, the best of the bunch, so we aptly saved it for last: book blogger extraordinaire Maud Newton summarizes the classic novel Crime and Punishment in 60 seconds.

The Entire Lord of the Rings Trilogy in 60 Seconds

By JK Evanczuk on Tuesday, June 21, 2011 - View Comments

Because we thought the challenge wasn’t hard enough, we asked filmmaker Adam to summarize the entire Lord of the Rings trilogy in one minute.

“A Lot of Stuff Happens.”

By JK Evanczuk on Monday, June 6, 2011 - View Comments

John Irving’s The World According to Garp summarized in 60 seconds. Watch it!

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The Catcher in the Rye, Retold in 60 Seconds

By JK Evanczuk on Tuesday, March 22, 2011 - View Comments

The latest in our “classic novels in 60 seconds” series. Enjoy!

The Story of Romeo and Juliet, Retold in 60 Seconds

By JK Evanczuk on Monday, February 14, 2011 - View Comments

Just in time for Valentine’s Day.

[Earlier: The Great Gatsby retold in 60 seconds]

Literary Readings for the Easily Distracted

By JK Evanczuk on Tuesday, October 19, 2010 - View Comments

I am a perpetual optimist, especially on the issue of literature in the digital age. I believe that the Internet presents a number of wonderful new ways to create and distribute literature, and I firmly deny, deny, deny when faced with the all-too-ubiquitous argument that the Internet is killing the book.

One point on which I will concede, however, is that the screen is changing the way we think. After spending eight hours at a computer and simultaneously listening to music, checking Twitter or Facebook (more often than I ought to, I should note), answering emails, editing video, or whatever it is that I’ll end up doing on a given day, suddenly I feel very distracted when faced with an open book. Reading a book can be jarringly simple after a day of multitasking and multimedia; when your brain is trained to process multiple streams of information at the same time, at lighting speed no less, sometimes it can be difficult to focus on just one thing.

So for those people, there’s Teleportal Readings, a monthly web video series made for “those who love reading but readings.” Or, I’d like to add, for those who love readings but think that video recordings of them are terribly dull. Watch what a little green screen hoodoo can do for literature:

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New Video Series: Classic Novels in 60 Seconds or Less

By JK Evanczuk on Tuesday, May 4, 2010 - View Comments

Remember this from a few months back?

For the last few months, we’ve been working hard with the good folks over at Anthology Media to put together a spiffy new web video series for you. The concept is pretty simple: we get writers, musicians, actors, and other creative types to summarize their favorite novels. In 60 seconds or less. With no time to prepare.

One of most the interesting aspects we found about this project was how it reflected the sorts of things people take away from fiction. We had each participant summarize a couple of stories, and everyone seemed to have a theme. Carolina, who you’ll see in a few weeks, managed to end each of her 60-second summaries with the concept of love. Morgan somehow related everything back to prostitutes and redemption. Other themes? Dinosaurs and aliens. This was all the more interesting when the stories in question contained neither dinosaurs nor aliens.

We’re kicking off the project with Matt Mazur, a NYC-based folk and comedy musician. He composed this little diddly about F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby off the top of his head. Enjoy and, if you like it, please share:

YouTube Goes Hollywood

By JK Evanczuk on Saturday, April 18, 2009 - View Comments

YouTube goes Hollywood!YouTube announced on Thursday that it would begin broadcasting major Hollywood movies and TV shows in addition to its user-created content, a move no doubt made to better compete with major online video provider Hulu. Which is great, but my only concern is, with all the hoopla over the Hollywood content, will the grassroots content remain as popular? Will users choose to spend their time watching big studio-made TV shows instead of kittens inspired by kittens? God, I hope not.

More: Briefs
Lit Drift Daily Prompt #71
10 minutes