Monthly Archives: July 2010

Need a Flyer for Your Lost Cat? Don’t Ask This Guy.

Written by Karen Nichols

missingmissy

OK. So you’ll need to be in the right frame of mind to enjoy this one (it’s a joke, folks!) from David Thorne. But if you are, it’s pretty darned funny. This is a supposed email exchange between co-workers, one of whom (David) is a designer. Shannon is a distraught cat owner who makes the mistake of asking David’s pro bono assistance in creating a Lost Cat flyer.

From: Shannon Walkley

Date: Monday 21 June 2010 9.15am

To: David Thorne

Subject: Poster

Hi

I opened the screen door yesterday and my cat got out and has been missing since then so I was wondering if you are not to busy you could make a poster for me. It has to be A4 and I will photocopy it and put it around my suburb this afternoon.

This is the only photo of her I have she answers to the name Missy and is black and white and about 8 months old. missing on Harper street and my phone number.

Thanks Shan.

From: David Thorne

Date: Monday 21 June 2010 9.26am

To: Shannon Walkley

Subject: Re: Poster

Dear Shannon,

That is shocking news. Luckily I was sitting down when I read your email and not half way up a ladder or tree. How are you holding up? I am surprised you managed to attend work at all what with thinking about Missy out there cold, frightened and alone… possibly lying on the side of the road, her back legs squashed by a vehicle, calling out “Shannon, where are you?”

Although I have two clients expecting completed work this afternoon, I will, of course, drop everything and do whatever it takes to facilitate the speedy return of Missy.

Regards, David.

From: Shannon Walkley

Date: Monday 21 June 2010 9.37am

To: David Thorne

Subject: Re: Re: Poster

yeah ok thanks. I know you dont like cats but I am really worried about mine. I have to leave at 1pm today.

From: David Thorne

Date: Monday 21 June 2010 10.17am

To: Shannon Walkley

Subject: Re: Re: Re: Poster

Dear Shannon,

I never said I don’t like cats. Once, having been invited to a party, I went clothes shopping beforehand and bought a pair of expensive G-Star boots. They were two sizes too small but I wanted them so badly I figured I could just wear them without socks and cut my toenails very short. As the party was only a few blocks from my place, I decided to walk. After the first block, I lost all feeling in my feet. Arriving at the party, I stumbled into a guy named Steven, spilling Malibu & coke onto his white Wham ‘Choose Life’ t-shirt, and he punched me. An hour or so after the incident, Steven sat down in a chair already occupied by a cat. The surprised cat clawed and snarled causing Steven to leap out of the chair, slip on a rug and strike his forehead onto the corner of a speaker; resulting in a two inch open gash. In its shock, the cat also defecated, leaving Steven with a foul stain down the back of his beige cargo pants. I liked that cat.

Attached poster as requested.

Regards, David.

missingmissy

From: Shannon Walkley

Date: Monday 21 June 2010 10.24am

To: David Thorne

Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Poster

yeah thats not what I was looking for at all. it looks like a movie and how come the photo of Missy is so small?

From: David Thorne

Date: Monday 21 June 2010 10.28am

To: Shannon Walkley

Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Poster

Dear Shannon,

It’s a design thing. The cat is lost in the negative space.

Regards, David.

From: Shannon Walkley

Date: Monday 21 June 2010 10.33am

To: David Thorne

Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Poster

Thats just stupid. Can you do it properly please? I am extremely emotional over this and was up all night in tears. you seem to think it is funny. Can you make the photo bigger please and fix the text and do it in colour please. Thanks.

From: David Thorne

Date: Monday 21 June 2010 10.46am

To: Shannon Walkley

Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Poster

Dear Shannon,

Having worked with designers for a few years now, I would have assumed you understood, despite our vague suggestions otherwise, we do not welcome constructive criticism. I don’t come downstairs and tell you how to send text messages, log onto Facebook and look out of the window. I am willing to overlook this faux pas due to you no doubt being preoccupied with thoughts of Missy attempting to make her way home across busy intersections or being trapped in a drain as it slowly fills with water. I spent three days down a well once but that was just for fun.

I have amended and attached the poster as per your instructions.

missingmissy

Regards, David.

From: Shannon Walkley

Date: Monday 21 June 2010 10.59am

To: David Thorne

Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Poster

This is worse than the other one. can you make it so it shows the whole photo of Missy and delete the stupid text that says missing missy off it? I just want it to say Lost.

From: David Thorne

Date: Monday 21 June 2010 11.14am

To: Shannon Walkley

Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Poster

missing_missy_lost

From: Shannon Walkley

Date: Monday 21 June 2010 11.21am

To: David Thorne

Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Poster

yeah can you do the poster or not? I just want a photo and the word lost and the telephone number and when and where she was lost and her name. Not like a movie poster or anything stupid. I have to leave early today. If it was your cat I would help you. Thanks.

From: David Thorne

Date: Monday 21 June 2010 11.32am

To: Shannon Walkley

Subject: Awww

Dear Shannon,

I don’t have a cat. I once agreed to look after a friend’s cat for a week but after he dropped it off at my apartment and explained the concept of kitty litter, I kept the cat in a closed cardboard box in the shed and forgot about it. If I wanted to feed something and clean faeces, I wouldn’t have put my mother in that home after her stroke. A week later, when my friend came to collect his cat, I pretended that I was not home and mailed the box to him. Apparently I failed to put enough stamps on the package and he had to collect it from the post office and pay eighteen dollars. He still goes on about that sometimes, people need to learn to let go.

I have attached the amended version of your poster as per your detailed instructions.

Regards, David.

missing_missy6

From: Shannon Walkley

Date: Monday 21 June 2010 11.47am

To: David Thorne

Subject: Re: Awww

Thats not my cat. where did you get that picture from? That cat is orange. I gave you a photo of my cat.

From: David Thorne

Date: Monday 21 June 2010 11.58am

To: Shannon Walkley

Subject: Re: Re: Awww

I know, but that one is cute. As Missy has quite possibly met any one of several violent ends, it is possible you might get a better cat out of this. If anybody calls and says “I haven’t seen your orange cat but I did find a black and white one with its hind legs run over by a car, do you want it?” you can politely decline and save yourself a costly veterinarian bill.

I knew someone who had a basset hound that had its hind legs removed after an accident and it had to walk around with one of those little buggies with wheels. If it had been my dog I would have asked for all its legs to be removed and replaced with wheels and had a remote control installed. I could charge neighbourhood kids for rides and enter it in races. If I did the same with a horse I could drive it to work. I would call it Steven.

Regards, David.

From: Shannon Walkley

Date: Monday 21 June 2010 12.07pm

To: David Thorne

Subject: Re: Re: Re: Awww

Please just use the photo I gave you.

From: David Thorne

Date: Monday 21 June 2010 12.22pm

To: Shannon Walkley

Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Awww

missing_missy4

From: Shannon Walkley

Date: Monday 21 June 2010 12.34pm

To: David Thorne

Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Awww

I didnt say there was a reward. I dont have $2000 dollars. What did you even put that there for? Apart from that it is perfect can you please remove the reward bit. Thanks Shan.

From: David Thorne

Date: Monday 21 June 2010 12.42pm

To: Shannon Walkley

Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Awww

missing_missy5

From: Shannon Walkley

Date: Monday 21 June 2010 12.51pm

To: David Thorne

Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Awww

Can you just please take the reward bit off altogether? I have to leave in ten minutes and I still have to make photocopies of it.

From: David Thorne

Date: Monday 21 June 2010 12.56pm

To: Shannon Walkley

Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Awww

missing_missy7

From: Shannon Walkley

Date: Monday 21 June 2010 1.03pm

To: David Thorne

Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Awww

Fine. That will have to do.

Bonus:World’s Greatest Homeless Sign Ever!

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Happy 31st Birthday Walkman!

Written by Dorina Graham

31 years ago in July, Sony released its iconic portable audio cassette player. The Walkman changed music culture, allowing people to record, listen and transport music like never before.

Happy Birthday Walkman

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When Sony modified a cassette player and added headphones, the Walkman was born. By 1983, everyone who was anyone had a Walkman. This was a status symbol of cool. Happy Birthday Walkman!

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This huge Sports Walkman sits outside an 80s building in Disney World Florida. Believe it or not, it was hip to clip the smaller, portable version to your 80s outfit and be seen in public with a Walkman. Have you seen those workout outfits from the 80s? Now that’s scary.

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The blue-and-silver Walkman TPS-L2 was the first commercially available Walkman. It went on sale in Japan on July 1, 1979. Sony considered releasing the Walkman in the U.S. under the name Sound-About. For marketing reasons, they kept the name Walkman. It had a $200 price tag which was a great deal of money in 1979.

Sony Walkman Groups

Pictured above are Sony Walkman models: TPS-L2, SRF-30W, SRF-80W with a ‘Portable Stereo Speaker System,’ and WM-3EX. Throughout the years, various improvements were made to these rectangular personal music stereos. Some included a radio. Parents of 80s kids had probably never ripped through so much money for batteries before the Walkman.

These black and silver Sony Walkmans are the WM-R2, WM-7, WM-5, and WM-F2. Sony had celebrities endorsing and using Walkmans. Being “wired” was all-important. At that time, being wired was a status symbol. People took their Walkmans with them just as people now carry their cell phones or MP3 players.

As other companies marketed their version of the Walkman wannabes, Sony began producing their Walkman models as smaller units. Pictured above are the Sony Walkman WM-10, WM-20, WM-F20, WM-F10, and WM-F5. This was considered small, since it was about the size of a cassette tape.

These Walkmans include Sony’s WM-R15, SRF-33W, WM-10II still boxed, WM-10II, and the WM-10RV. The generation gap widened as more and more people latched onto the MTV culture, “Video Killed the Radio Star,” and the Walkman, recording their own mixed tapes and sharing them with friends. At one point, it was considered supremely cool to wear your headphones while banging your head to Autograph’s “Turn Up The Radio.”

Sony WM-F15, WM-DDI, WM-W800, and WM-F70 with box were produced during the height of cassettes. When the cassette tape would pull out, people used pencils or their fingers to quickly twirl the tape back into the safety of the shell. Carrying around extra music and cassettes was like toting small luggage.

Yet more Walkman models such as Sony SRF-A1, WM-16, and the WM-F8. They may seem big and bulky now, but the Walkman revolutionized the way people could listen to music. It made personalized music choices possible and portable.

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Did you have any idea the Walkman was this wildly popular? It also produced these models: Sony SRF-19W, DD-100 (“Boodo Khan”), WM-D3, WM-F100, and WM-F100III. This obsolete device was once a cultural icon.

Vintage Sony Walkman Ad

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Can you imagine this was considered super small? Not only small, but the “World’s Smallest.” The 80s hairstyle and clothes were rocking for that time too.

Dual Listening

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The Walkman UK version had a twin headphone jack for dual listening. There was also a ‘Hotline’ button which would partially override the sound from the cassette to make it easier to hear each other. Sadly, these features were not continued for the next Walkman version.

Sony’s Forward Thinking

Source,Source

The Walkman Double, on the left, featured twin tape decks supporting both playback and recording. It was the only model that featured twin tape decks and the ability to copy a cassette without the use of external equipment. Sony showed off their forward thinking with a Solar Walkman in 1987. The Solar version is rare and costly if you find one posted on an online auction.

These vintage Sony Walkman ads were for a few of Sony’s offerings. From 1979 until 1999, Sony would celebrate the Walkman’s July 1st birthday by releasing an anniversary model. Each anniversary model carried a different theme yet retained some characteristics of the previous anniversary models. In 2004, Sony released a hard disk based NW-HD1 to signify the death of the compact cassette tape.

RIAA’s Grandfather

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Ah, the grandfather of the RIAA perhaps? This ad proclaimed that home taping was killing music. As you might imagine, the British Phonographic Industry’s (BPI) 1980s slogan for its anti-copyright campaign quickly became a parody. The Walkman, home taping, and cassette culture ruled the 1980s.

Bonus:iPhone Testing