Rob Teszka
@robteszka.bsky.social
220 followers 590 following 98 posts
I'm a former academic, semi-professional magician, and partially-trained clown who used to work on the railway and now gives historical walking tours. But I have interesting hobbies! ... Get tickets for my various shows at https://robteszka.ctcin.bio/
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robteszka.bsky.social
WHO IS THIS NERD

Hello! I am basically a wizard.

You may know me from the magic and storytelling I perform on the Fringe Festival circuit, the historic walking tours I lead with Forbidden Vancouver, or producing and hosting Vancouver's monthly Parlour Magic Show!
robteszka.bsky.social
Excellent! May more hyper-niche essays hit your Venn bullseye.
robteszka.bsky.social
I think it would be pretty fun if, whenever someone would write

"THIS"

underneath a post they vociferously agreed with

They instead wrote

"Quite."
robteszka.bsky.social
"Some mornings it just doesn't seem worth it to gnaw through the leather straps."

- Emo Phillips

Just been thinking about this line more and more, recently...
robteszka.bsky.social
This article for @thetyee.ca is fantastic and wonderfully timed as I have just been thinking about how Vancouver seems to be afraid of standing out, fashion-wise--and yet whenever I'm out and about in period dress after a tour, so many people enjoy the hat & bow tie.
Wear what makes you smile!
Look Out, Vancouver! I’m Dressing for Joy | The Tyee
Regional blandness was getting me down. Here’s how I turned things around.
thetyee.ca
robteszka.bsky.social
I am genuinely offended that Spotify's discovery playlist keeps recommending me electroswing no matter how much I don't listen to it
Reposted by Rob Teszka
marygillis.bsky.social
I genuinely think the reason execs were so certain AI could replace other workers is that they know it could replace them and they just assume everyone else does as little real work as they do.
robteszka.bsky.social
We all agree that we like arts spaces & they make communities feel good & neighbourhoods nice to live in. Right?

And yet: look at what happened to The Giggle Dam in PoCo. And what happened to the Opening Nite Theatre in Mission.

Landlords and city halls shouldn't be able to kill venues so easily.
robteszka.bsky.social
Would that even be possible? Would the landlord just be able to say "no. Dollarama will make me more money."? Would Pitt Meadows City Hall just say "that sounds like it'd be too much paperwork. denied."?

And if so: how the fuck are community-owned arts & culture spaces supposed to exist?
robteszka.bsky.social
Ive been wondering: what if the community got together and raised funds to buy the Hollywood 3 and run it as a co-op performance venue? Keep one of the screens, convert the others into a stage for local theatre and/or a cabaret for comedy, improv & music. Apply for a grant, try and make it work...
robteszka.bsky.social
The landlord is demanding an unreasonable amount, forcing them to close. And what for? To put in another fucking Dollarama!

I don't need to tell you this, but *we, as a society, need to decide we want to protect independent businesses, especially arts & culture spaces*
robteszka.bsky.social
Oh hey, a petition to save one of vanishingly few independent cinemas in the Vancouver metro area: chng.it/HmbZ8pzrYV

The Hollywood 3--previously Harris Road Cinemas--fuckin *rules*. A local, independent, second-run house with cheap popcorn!

Guess what?
Sign the Petition
Save Hollywood 3 Theatre in Pitt Meadows
chng.it
robteszka.bsky.social
I love this quote from the article:

"But the best ideas often come from wandering, from play, from slowness. Real understanding takes time. Sometimes, it takes failing. Sometimes, it takes boredom."

You cannot replace the process!
robteszka.bsky.social
It is yet another way we are willingly giving up control to some other corporate-owned interest. They tell us its empowering: "anyone can make anything now!" Meanwhile, it's terribly, insidiously the opposite: nobody knows how to do it themselves.
robteszka.bsky.social
...a capitulation. It's giving in to the corporate, industrial, product-oriented mindset. The only thing that matters is how much *stuff* gets done. But in so doing, we abandon understanding of the process, curiosity for other approaches, care for the people involved, and the benefits of learning.
robteszka.bsky.social
This isn't a "but we have calculators so we dont need to do math"situation. Calculators don't replace problem solving. You still have to think about and understand the problem in order to deploy the calculator.

The enthusiastic uptake of LLMs by students and academic institutions is...
robteszka.bsky.social
Having curiosity and working through a problem or trying to create something yourself are *vital* in not just learning things, but also--and I genuinely believe this--in having a full and complete human experience.
robteszka.bsky.social
Like, there might be a way we could make it more energy-efficient, teach people to expect inaccuracy, make sure only people who consent have their data used, etc etc

But ultimately, it's still cutting out such a crucial element of learning
robteszka.bsky.social
(AKA fancy autocorrect)
which is that it's designed and encouraged to be used as a replacement for *process*.

All of the other ills are potentially fixable (barring the will of corporate interests preventing anything that harms their bottom line):
Reposted by Rob Teszka
robteszka.bsky.social
I think, from now on, every time someone mentions "AI" I'm gonna go "oh, fancy autocomplete?"
robteszka.bsky.social
This thought brought to you by some magic I saw performed recently