Learning About MacGuffins

Every day that I learn something new I consider a success. Sometimes these new-found pieces of knowledge are nothing more than old thoughts and ideas repackaged. Or sometimes they’re displayed from a different perspective. Or sometimes they are truly new to my knowledge-base. Whatever the case I take such immense joy from learning.

Last Friday I was at a shoot for the movie Charlie Christ: The Gospel According to Fools, a feature-length film that I’m helping my friends complete. I’ve talked about my involvement with the film before but in case you didn’t see that post here’s a mini-recap: When I was first brought on to help I was only doing web-work. During that time I overhauled their website and redid it to its current state. You can see how it has looked for the past few months at NientePeaches.com.

As time progressed I’ve been stepping up my involvement. Currently I’m fulfilling the role of Line Producer – a job that consists primarily of logistic and systemic work so as to keep the structure of the movie’s production consistent and stable. We’re making great use of many of Google’s free cloud-based software offerings – namely Google Docs and Google Wave. Google Wave has come a long way since it was first introduced to the public. It used to be barely usable due to limited features, slow performance, and frequent crashes. However it is now extremely stable and feature-packed. Right now we’re using Google Wave as our virtual whiteboard in the sky, a task it performs gracefully.

But really the main point of this post was about learning new things. On Friday, at the shoot, I was introduced to the term MacGuffin. When I first heard my friend say that word I was convinced he was making it up. It sounded fanciful and full of farce. It wasn’t until he pointed me to its Wikipedia page with a definition that I was convinced.

According to its Wikipedia page a MacGuffin is:

A MacGuffin (sometimes McGuffin or maguffin) is “a plot element that catches the viewers’ attention or drives the plot of a work of fiction”. The defining aspect of a MacGuffin is that the major players in the story are (at least initially) willing to do and sacrifice almost anything to obtain it, regardless of what the MacGuffin actually is. In fact, the specific nature of the MacGuffin may be ambiguous, undefined, generic, left open to interpretation or otherwise completely unimportant to the plot.

One example sited on the Wikipedia page is the “briefcase with glowing contents in Pulp Fiction” or the island in Lost. It’s the element of the story that pulls together all of its tangents creating a way for the plot to move forward. Neat huh? Can you think of any other examples of MacGuffins?

We Live in Public

This is the first movie review I’ve written for my site. The format and structure of these reviews are bound to change like me – and hopefully for the better.

This past week I watched the documentary We Live in Public. Described (as of this writing) on Wikipedia as, “a 2009 documentary by Ondi Timoner about the loss of privacy in the Internet age, which focuses on Internet pioneer Josh Harris.”

This description is incredibly understated.

Josh Harris was one of the early dot-com pioneers, profiteers, and failures. His company Pseudo.com was one of the first video podcasts on the Internet. It hosted a variety of internet shows with lively hosts and information, streamed for the enjoyment of anyone who logged on.

Did I mention this took place in 1994?

Harris’ grand vision of everyone filming and wanting to film themselves has proven to be far ahead of its time. Today we have YouTube and a variety of other sites dedicated and thriving off of user-created content. To be so prescient with this business plan was both Harris’ blessing and curse.

This film took me on a roller-coaster ride around and through emotions that I had never experienced sequentially. The debate surrounding privacy is thoroughly investigated and the details of Harris’ exploits are boggling.

Clocking in at 90-minutes the film is direct and to the point. There is no excess and Timoner lets the archived video speak for itself.

I’m extremely amazed and surprised that I did not know anything that was presented in this film, but I’m extremely grateful to have seen it.

Watch the trailer embedded below.

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