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Editor-in-Chief
Alex Carnevale
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Features Editor
Mia Nguyen
(e-mail)

Reviews Editor
Ethan Peterson

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This Recording

is dedicated to the enjoyment of audio and visual stimuli. Please visit our archives where we have uncovered the true importance of nearly everything. Should you want to reach us, e-mail alex dot carnevale at gmail dot com, but don't tell the spam robots. Consider contacting us if you wish to use This Recording in your classroom or club setting. We have given several talks at local Rotarys that we feel went really well.

Pretty used to being with Gwyneth

Regrets that her mother did not smoke

Frank in all directions

Jean Cocteau and Jean Marais

Simply cannot go back to them

Roll your eyes at Samuel Beckett

John Gregory Dunne and Joan Didion

Metaphors with eyes

Life of Mary MacLane

Circle what it is you want

Not really talking about women, just Diane

Felicity's disguise

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Entries in mia nguyen (13)

Friday
Feb062015

In Which We Feel This Is Best For Max Emotionally

White Light

by MIA NGUYEN

Life Is Strange
developer Dontnod Entertainment, publisher Square Enix

x A moody afternoon is matched with an obnoxiously lit living room. In the background, the tea kettle is calling for my attention. With the sound of my robotic voice, I command the Xbox to power on.

x Berating electronics with our voice is part of our future.

x Prefaced with a warning I must choose my answers wisely.

x Caught in a torrential downpour, Max, is disoriented. Why is she lying in the mud without a tent? More importantly, why is she alone? She appears lifeless in form. In order for Max to feel safe, she needs to scurry up a set of stairs to the lighthouse for safety.

x There’s an ominous spiraling tornado heading towards the town. She expresses her awe with the phrase, “Holy shit…”

x Flashes of white light permeate the screen.

x Max wakes up in her art class at Blackwell Academy. Mr. Jefferson, a Dylan McDermott doppelganger, focuses his art lecture on Surrealism, the Beat Generation, and the self portrait. There’s a natural condescension in the sound of his voice when he says phrases such as, “selfie” and “your generation.”

x I open Max’s journal to gain insight on her personality. Her first entry expresses her excitement on accepting a scholarship to attend the “unique private school for seniors.” The journal also reveals her burning crush for Mr. Jefferson.

x Opening the journal also reveals a polaroid scrapbook, character biographies, a game map, and a text messaging app.  

x Mr. Jefferson is eloquent and sensual, wearing a white button-up under a form fitting black blazer. He leaves a quarter of his chest slightly exposed, ravaging teenage hormones on campus.

x In a failed attempt to crack teenage colloquialisms, the writers of the video game use “krazy” instead of “crazy” in one of Max’s journal entries. Swear words are integrated seamlessly.

x I become suspicious when Mr. Jefferson ends a statement regarding The Beat Generation with, “You dig?”

x “Geek cred."

x With a clunky polaroid camera in hand, Max snaps a selfie at an unflattering angle. It's the anti-selfie selfie.

x The fluidity of dialogue between Max and Mr. Jefferson is natural, but the timing is off. He doesn't hesitate to slam hand against the table to express his alpha male aggressions when Max fails to answer his question about the selfie in 2 seconds. Give the girl a chance to talk.

x I navigate through the halls of Blackwell Academy to the song “To All of You” by Syd Matters.

x I don’t rush. I’m nosy. I explore every crevice and object from top to bottom.

x There are numerous missing person posters regarding a girl named Rachel Amber. Top three most generic names. Hands down.

x For an upscale private academy, the bathrooms are pretty grimy and eerie. “Rachel Amber is a bitch” is scrawled with a Sharpie on one of the bathroom stalls. How quaint.

x A cerulean blue butterfly comes in through the window and piques Max’s eye.

x Nathan Prescott, one of the richest boys in the academy, walks into the bathroom alone. Shortly after, a girl with flaming blue hair walks in behind him. The scene aggressively evolves into a malicious verbal argument, which turns into someone getting killed. A camouflaged gun is fired.    

x Rewind. Rewind. Rewind.

x Max is now a human time machine making the game more compelling. The ability makes her paranoid.

x Does she have the power to twist fate?

x In addition to being the archetypal teenage punk, Chloe is Max’s childhood friend uses the word “hella” a lot. It’s trite characterization.

x Arcadia Bay has a lot of secrets.    

x I meet a weird girl on the quadrangular who enjoys flying her drone around campus.  

x I feel conflicted when it comes to making decisions in the game. The level of uncertainty rides on what I feel is best for Max emotionally. Do I hide in the closet or fess up to the joint left on her desk when her stepfather walks in? The 18-year-old me decides it's best to hide in closet and watch the argument play out.

x Three hours have passed. There are no wrong answers, just different outcomes.

x I'm emotionally invested, but I tell myself it's only a video game. Am I Max Caulfield?

 

 

Tuesday
Dec302014

In Which We Ascend To That Mall In The Sky

Skymall Surprise

by MIA NGUYEN

The infamous SkyMall magazine reaffirms the notion that we love on a world of excess. Here are a few gems to look out for in the spring catalog.

 

Jolly Rancher Landscape

Jolly Rancher Chandelier
Light Up Your Life
$1,800

- Made of gilded iron with cascading chains of Jolly Rancher candy

- 1,000 60-Watt bulbs

- Professional installation required

- This product is not available for international shipping

Disco Book Lamp Landscape copy

Disco Magic Clip-on Book Light
Brighter Pages, Better Comprehension
$25.00

- Transform your regular night reading experience into a fountain of fun

- 20 flashy colors

- Solar powered

- Sustainable aka "eco-chic"

Parrot Beak Shakers Landscape

Parrot Beak Salt & Pepper Shakers
Season Smarter
$29.99

- Minimal parrot beak design to match any kitchen decor

- Meticulously hand-crafted and painted

- Does not clog like most shakers

- No Animals Were Harmed

Etch A Sketch Landscape

Scarface Quotes Etch A Sketch
Shake It Until You Make It
$59.99

- Preset with 100 quotes from the 1983 film

- Easy to use

- Lifetime warranty

Malapropism Shower Landscape

 

Malapropism Shower Curtain
Treat Yourself Real Nice
$45.85

- Cute malapropism

- Conversation starter for guests using your bathroom

- Vibrant and cool as hell

- 100% polyester

- Liner not included

Ginger Ale Car Freshener

Ginger Ale Car Freshener
Keep Ridin'
$1.99

- Leave passengers sniffing like a dog

- Intense, long-lasting scent

- Semi-pleasant

- An acquired taste

- Lady-killer

Croissant Scented Socks

Croissant Scented Socks
The Parisian Experience
$7.50/each

- Vintage

- 80% cotton

- 20% encrusted croissant flakes

- Left and right pairs sold separately

- Machine wash cold; hang to dry

- Limited edition

Mia Nguyen is the features editor of This Recording. She is a writer living in Rhode Island. You can find her website here.

"Of The Sea" - Bride & Groom (mp3)

"Blackbird in a Cage" - Bride & Groom (mp3)

Monday
Nov102014

In Which Gregg Araki Maintains A Physical Trajectory

Better Off

by MIA NGUYEN

White Bird in a Blizzard
dir. Gregg Araki
91 minutes

Most of White Bird in a Blizzard has the style and pace of a lucid dream sequence. In this film, which was adapted from a novel by Laura Kasischke, director Gregg Araki revisits his niche focus: adolescence. Employing 1980s elements to paint the scene, he also incorporates romantic pastel color schemes to illuminate the mediocrity of suburbia. Araki develops strong connections with his characters and creates a mystery that is both alluring and magnetic. 

Kat (Shailene Woodley) comes home from school one day to discover that her mother has disappeared. Kat speculates that her mother grew tired of passing the butter and cooking dinner for her father. She doesn’t expect for her mother to return and thinks she may be better off.


Eve (Eva Green), Kat's mother, is a neurotic and psychotic housewife. In some scenes, she competes with her daughter's beauty. She makes a game out of it when Kat starts dating. Except for a flashback in which the two of them play cat-and-mouse under a white linen sheet, there isn't much of an emotional bond between the mother-daughter pair.


Kat's father, Brock (Christopher Meloni) doesn't offer much value to his wife's happiness or to his marriage. His presence makes his wife want to vomit. It's suspected that the last time the two had sex was when Kat was conceived. Their loveless and sexless marriage is drier than a bottle of gin.

Kat discovers sexual frustrations of her own. After shedding her awkward butterball appearance, Kat experiments with being a seductress. She discovers the power of sex after losing her virginity to the boy next door, Phil (Shiloh Fernandez). Afterwards, she yearns for it every second and tries to influence him to follow suit.

Soon after her mother’s disappearance, Phil halts all sexual advances altogether, but closely identifies himself as her boyfriend. Phil can be easily be compared to a Neanderthal version of James Dean. He's a chainsmoker who doesn't add much to the conversation.

Kat doesn’t hesitate for a second to find a way to fulfill her carnal desires. She shows up on Detective Scieziesciez’s (Thomas Jane) doorstep to seduce him in a skin-tight purple dress. His last name sounds like someone trying to say "sleazy" after having one too many. 

During her college breaks, she invites herself over for more coital exchanges with the detective. Years have gone by since her mother's disappearance, and her father appears to be the sole suspect, but there isn't enough evidence to prove him guilty.

Overall, this coming-of-age story captures the emotional and physical trajectory of sexual and gender identity, but leaves the audience more confused with their own spatial awareness. Araki's plot twist resembles the feeling of getting up too fast, feeling dizzy, and forgetting where you are.

Mia Nguyen is the features editor of This Recording. You can find her website here.

"Pills I Swallow" - The Twilight Sad (mp3)

"I Could Give You All That You Don't Want" - The Twilight Sad (mp3)