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July 08, 2004

Who would write this?

"Stephen King murdered Stacey McGill in the Seattle Center. If you find this contact Gwen at 929-4961 urgent."

My mother found the above inscription written inside a cardboard box on her deck circa 1987. Nobody knows where it came from or what it really means. The phone prefix didn't match anything in the 206 area code at the time. We checked with the police: no unsolved murders at the Seattle Center (although there was that whole Green River thing going on), nobody reported missing named Stacey McGill, etc. She kept if for years then I took it to my place several years ago.

A prank? Almost certainly but here's the nagging thing about this box: what the devil kind of prank is that? Definitely written in a female hand (can't tell you how frequently I spell that "femail" then have to correct it -- but that's a different story). Why write that? Why leave it in an obscure place with a non-existent phone number? Where's the payoff for this prank? It made no sense then and time has not improved things where this mystery box is concerned.

Perhaps the prankster has lived a life of frustration wondering what became of her little joke. Maybe one day she will stumble upon this post and learn the truth: I've used the box as the basis of a short story that helped get me through a college writing class and most recently I built a screenplay around this little curiosity. While I may be curious about the box and it's origins, I'm not frustrated by it.

It would be interesting to learn the truth one day.

July 07, 2004

Just So You Know

Originally posted: 7/7/2004 10:26:24 PM

The paperwork for running a company is tedious beyond words. I'm rather glad there are people who enjoy doing all sorts of work that I just don't have the patience for or interest in. Accounting is one of those things. I fully appreciate it's importance but, good lord, it makes the eyes glaze over in less than thirty seconds.

Digital Moviemaking

Nearly finished reading "Digital Moviemaking" by Scott Billups. Bought the book after hearing the author speak at a hastily called gathering on the Microsoft campus. I can say that he is as enthusiastic and entertaining in person as he is in print. Or the other way around.

The book is geared for people (like myself) who have done some DV projects and want to take their work to the next (professional) level. It is a treasure-trove of details that are hard to come by otherwise. Especially important is the information on how to make your movie look professional (hint: shoot it like one).

Highly recommended. Can't wait to put some of these techniques to good use.