birdmanre-blog
birdmanre-blog
Ryan Eagle The Birdman | Tumblr
87 posts
“The name is Birdman, ya’ heard man? I’m known mostly for my businesses, so this autobiography focuses more of the corporate side of my life rather than my personal side. Anyways, I’ve had a fascination with business for as long as I can remember. When I was a kid in first and second grade, I used to have a fantasy about owning a computer business one day. Who would have known it’d actually come true? I think some people's destiny is set from an early age and I fulfilled exactly that.”
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birdmanre-blog · 8 years ago
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Prairie Evening
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birdmanre-blog · 8 years ago
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illuminate
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birdmanre-blog · 8 years ago
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These abandoned train tunnels beneath Chicago, Illinois ran for almost 50 years, carrying coal and other materials for the buildings built over them. They stopped carrying coal in 1959, but the Chicago Tribune continued to use them until 1981 to carry paper from their warehouse to the Tribune. They were largely forgotten about until they flooded in 1992, causing almost $2 billion worth of damage. They’ve since been sealed almost completely. 
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birdmanre-blog · 8 years ago
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Housing near Maxwell Street flea market, Chicago, 1957
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birdmanre-blog · 8 years ago
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Maxwell Street, Chicago, Illinois, September 9, 1955
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birdmanre-blog · 8 years ago
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birdmanre-blog · 8 years ago
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birdmanre-blog · 8 years ago
Quote
Successful people do what unsuccessful people are not willing to do. Don’t wish it were easier; wish you were better.
Jim Rohn (via beinchargeofyourlife)
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birdmanre-blog · 8 years ago
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🍹
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birdmanre-blog · 8 years ago
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Late Sunset by Shane Bain
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birdmanre-blog · 8 years ago
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prints US | prints EU
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birdmanre-blog · 8 years ago
Conversation
chicago transit authority experience tiers
like average inconvenience tier: it's really crowded and someone is accidentally pressing on ur spine and forcing u to do a little bit of upright yoga/really enthusiastic driver who is either singing to or loudly berating the passengers
moderate inconvenience tier: a verbal fight breaks out; drunk people loudly shout at each other around u or loudly shout at u; someone is taking up a whole seat for their sandwich
inconvenient tier: a mild physical fight breaks out; more than 2 trains pass that are too crowded to board; a woman empties her purse on the seat next to her and yells at you while she sorts through it; the man in the seat behind u reaches under the seat and unties your shoes; someone accuses u of thinking you're better than them bc you're doin homework
high inconvenience tier: The Jacker sits across from you; you are trapped in a car full of drunk frat boys in a tunnel due to delays; you fall asleep and wake up in a suburb that doesn't exist; rahm emanuel is in your train car and smiles at you; you're running late and the first train that arrives is the santa train; the car fills with smoke and they make everyone get off; the train is delayed at 8:03am because a real person got hit and the cps student next to you whispers "hell yeah"
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birdmanre-blog · 8 years ago
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5 Books on Editing and Language A Shelfie from Ruth Evans Lane, Editor in Getty Publications. 
Hi, I’m Ruth Evans Lane, associate editor in Getty Publications. I really like books, and I would gladly discuss language with you any day of the week. These are five books that have pushed me to think about language in different ways.
1. The Subversive Copy Editor:  Advice from Chicago (or, How to Negotiate Good Relationships with Your Writers, Your Colleagues, and Yourself) by Carol Fisher Saller (University of Chicago Press, 2009).
A second edition of this book just came out this last year, which I haven’t yet read, but this is an essential companion to the editor’s bible, The Chicago Manual (see below). The demands on an editor can feel overwhelming, but Carol Fisher Saller, an editor of The Chicago Manual, breaks it down in a hilarious (I promise!) and helpful way.
 2. The Language Instinct: How the Mind Creates Language by Steven Pinker (William Morrow and Co., 1994)
Steven Pinker is a cognitive scientist and linguist at Harvard, and I read this book during a truly formative time in my life—right after I finished college. I was an English major, budding editor, and insufferable pedant. Pinker completely changed the way I thought about language—you won’t catch me telling anyone irregardless isn’t a word (though if you see it in one of the books I’ve edited, know that I’m lying dead somewhere).
 3. The Chicago Manual (University of Chicago Press, 2010)
In my world, there is no higher authority. The Chicago Manual (CMOS) is my alpha and omega. As art editors, we from time to time follow different conventions than those set forth in CMOS, and I’ve never met a rule I wouldn’t consider breaking, but I consult this book every single day (though, more often than not, their online edition), and when I was doing my copyediting certificate at UCSD Extension, I read it cover to cover.
4. The Riverside Chaucer (Houghton Mifflin, 1987)
If anyone ever tells you that there’s a right way spell a word, well, they should spend some time looking at medieval English. English didn’t really have standardized spelling until well into the 18th century, and even today, spellings are still changing, though less dramatically than they once did. One of the most interesting things to me about Chaucer is that he is, along with Dante, the most famous early vernacular writer (vernacular in this context means the language of the common people, so English for Chaucer and Italian for Dante). During the Middle Ages in England, most texts were still written in Latin, and French was spoken at court; Chaucer and Dante (and other, less-known writers before them) were not just brilliant writers but true revolutionaries.
5. The Adventures of Gillion de Trazegnies: Chivalry and Romance in the Medieval East by Elizabeth Morrison and Zrinka Stajuljak (Getty Publications, 2015)
This is a book I edited for the Getty and it’s special to me not just because the authors were tremendously fun (see this trailer for the book) but also because it’s about an exquisitely beautiful illuminated manuscript in the Getty’s collection that also happens to be written in vernacular French (which you can hear Zrinka reading here). Most of the medieval manuscripts in our collection are religious and written in Latin, so this Middle French tale of the love affairs and adventures of a medieval knight during the Crusades is extra special. This book, which gives the truly stunning illuminations along with a translation from Middle French, also provides a fascinating account of the manuscript’s cultural and political context and an in-depth art historical analysis.
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birdmanre-blog · 8 years ago
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Damen Station, Chicago
What do you think about my pic?
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birdmanre-blog · 8 years ago
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birdmanre-blog · 8 years ago
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Joel Sternfeld - McLean, Virginia, December 1978. from “American Prospects” series.
1978
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birdmanre-blog · 8 years ago
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Market Street - San Francisco - California - USA (by Peter Rood) 
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