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Charlotte Census 2010

March 9th, 2010 in City, Demographics, Fundraising, Government, Politics by Desiree Kane

2000 CLT Census results

Did you know Charlotte in the 2000 Census only had 63-68% participation rates? It’s true. Think about all of the federal money we missed out on because people didn’t return their census!!!!

Lately the 2010 Census Bureau has been hitting the airwaves, billboards and tv ads pretty hard to encourage people to complete the paperwork the Bureau sends. I know I personally got mail yesterday reminding me that the form is on it’s way so you might have also seen that.

They’ve been stressing how important it is that our community get the best shot it can at the $400 billion dollars in federal funding that is on the line. What they aren’t doing is advertising some things as strongly that I feel are just as important. So, here’s my list of the top 5 most important things to know about the 2010 census:

  1. It’s important that you report everyone in the household, including infants. The census is only taken once a decade. By the time the next census comes around those babies will be kids and they deserve the benefit of a community with adequate funding while they grow up! Don’t forget to include them!
  2. In terms of your privacy, here’s what it’s illegal for the U.S. Census Bureau to publish or disclose:
    • Names
    • Addresses includingĀ GPS coordinates
    • Social Security numbers
    • Telephone numbers
    • Title 13 of the U.S. Code protects the confidentiality of all your information and violating this law is a crime with severe penalties. In addition, other federal laws, including the Confidential Statistical Efficiency Act and the Privacy Act reinforce these protections. * Private information is never published

  3. It’s really selfish to refuse to complete the 2010 Census information as a political protest. Why? Because the Census isn’t micromanaged by the Whitehouse. It reports to the Secretary of Commerce. Yes the information reaches the President in a report but those with political qualms with the Nation’s Leadership are hurting their neighbors by denying them the chance at federal money for betterĀ  hospitals, improved schools and senior centers, more job training centers, etc. If you don’t like your lot in the community now, it’s definitely not going to improve if you refuse to fill out the census form, regardless of who is in office or what party currently holds the most influence.
  4. Since the very first census in 1790, the U.S. Census Bureau has always counted all people, regardless of citizenship status. Which brings us to:
  5. The US Census is prohibited by law to give the information you report about your household to Immigration (or any other government agency for that matter).

    All Census Bureau employees take the oath of nondisclosure and are sworn for life to protect the confidentiality of the data. The penalty for unlawful disclosure is a fine of up to $250,000 or imprisonment of up to five years, or both.

So, Charlotte, I know you know it’s important to fill out the forms the U.S. Census Bureau sends but the above are not only reasons why but also hopefully shed some light on this national endeavor launched this month. I hope it was helpful!

Additional reading: http://www.census.gov/

Do you know something important I didn’t mention or have an interestingĀ  story about this census? Ā We’d would love to hear your thoughts in the comments!

FEATURED POST RESPONSE:

Matt Comer, editor @ Q Notes, North and South Carolina’s prominent LGBT media source, left a really informative response to this post! This is definitely another very important thing to know about the 2010 U.S. Census! Thanks Matt!Ā  – Desiree

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Vicente Fox speaks at Charlotte Museum of History

January 28th, 2010 in Events, Feature, History, Politics, World by Desiree Kane

Former President of Mexico Vicente Fox

photo: James Willamor; view this photo on Flickr

Tuesday evening CLTBlog-tographer James Willamor and I had the most amazing opportunity to cover a speech given byĀ the Former President of Mexico. He was in town with the Former First Lady, Marta, speaking at the Charlotte Museum of History for their Distinguished Speaker Series. Even better, I got to ask him a question!

Read more to seeĀ what he had to say:

Desiree Kane: Ā What way do you feel that the people of the United States most misunderstand the people of Mexico?

President Fox: Ā ā€œYou know people-to-people we understand each other very well. Ā I don’t say we all eat hamburgers or hotdogs, tacos a and tostadas. But People to people, it’s true. We have the most extended and warm relationship. When it moves to the political arena, when it moves to nation-to-nation, then we move to show the differences.

When you have the Lou Dobbs’ with ½ an hour of prime time television being so aggressive to Mexican people, so disgusting the way he speaks, then you create this aggressiveness but besides that I would say again people-to-people we have a great relationship. Ā 

And this 22-24 million Mexicans that are here, half documented, half not documented, but all of them working and working hard for you, for your family; Building your homes, building the roads, collecting apples in Washington State, collecting the vegetables in California, doing the services in New York. That’s why Mr. Bloomberg mentioned, the mayor of New York, said the city would collapse if it were not for the immigrants working there.

So, we understand each other, we work well. We have to find a way to combat reform, immigration reform. It’s not talking borders. It’s not to let anybody come in or go out, no. It’s to regulate what is unregulated, it’s to bring order to where there is more or less disorder of the man, to bring legality and recognition to the work that is being done by these people. Ā 

We just have a great dinner with President Bush, 1 week ago and all of the other people sitting in that room were Mexicans, very, very lovely Mexicans. The same thing happens in many homes here in the United States. Let’s build up that partnership up with order, with legality and with prosperity.ā€

Ā 

photos: James Willamor; view this slideshow on Flickr


My Charlotte Foursquare Christmas List, 2009

December 23rd, 2009 in Infrastructure, Media, Opinion, Retail, Review, Technology, Transportation, UNC Charlotte by Desiree Kane

A little over a month ago Foursquare, the location-based social media scavenger hunt/game, chose inclusion for Charlotte in it’s then very elite list of cities supported by the app/website. In no time at all we’ve seen local/independent business are getting in on the Foursquare e-gold rush.Ā  We’ve already covered UNC Charlotte, so here are the first three to emerge that aren’t at the University.

+ Villa Francesca


@Villa Francesca: Show that you’ve checked in on Foursquare and get a Free Half Dozen Garlic Knots!

+ Big Daddy’s Burger Bar

@ Big Daddy’s Burger Bar: Come by Big Daddy’s to redeem your Mayor reward! Rewards are subject to change.

+ Blynk Organic


@ Blynk Organic: If it’s after 2pm, show that you’ve checked in on Foursquare & get a free pastry with any coffee or hot tea purchase!

What’s interesting about these businesses, and ultimately what I think is interesting about Foursquare (or any other location based social network for that matter), is the clever design in which they are collecting consumer data.Ā  It’s smart on the behalf of Foursquare to offer this data as incentives for Charlotte businesses to participate with their start-up and it’s smart of businesses to use this same data to really target their core audience. By offering almost predominantly smart phone available service they’re already targeting a cross section of society with disposable income. Business and Foursquare makes sense but it feels like,Ā  and perhaps it’s because it’s still so new, like Foursquare has forgotten about the same audience they and the businesses are after: the end user, the proverbial “urban explorers”.

That said, all I want for Charlotte Foursquare Christmas 2009 is:

  1. I need more of something when I check in some place. I want to be able to click on the name of a location and pull up their webpage, or even cooler, some sort of multi-media. Click on a location that is a business and you get not a commercial but a showcase ofĀ  crowd-sourced video content. Charlotte has a lot of unique places that I discover randomly and infrequently but really cherish. If I had a mini-tour guide in my hand, with data populated by people I follow,Ā  I’d be much more apt to step outside of my regular haunts. That’s the whole purpose of Foursquare, isn’t it? It’d really help people explore places within the Queen City. Also – If I can’t get streaming video, can I at least get TwitPic supported and some way to attach pictures to locations?
  2. Closer communication with the company when, say, they change the nuances of how you play the actual game part of Foursquare. For example: A couple of weeks ago I got a point when I checked in anywhere, now I only get points if I check in someplace that I’m not mayor. I’m not mad, I just felt like I would have liked to know this info since they’re pitching it as a game (thus the “Leaderboard”).Ā  All of the info I needed isn’t readily available.Ā  Googling “Foursquare rules” is a complete mess when you’re looking for information that isn’t about the sport and when I search the only search field they offer for “rules” the only thing I get is a listing for a hair salon. Not.intuitive.at.all. Can a girl get a Foursquare.com/blog post?
  3. Directory Services – If they’re going to be trying to garner the attention of businesses, HELLO you should tell people WHAT businesses they can choose from. What good are coupons if no one knows where they can be used in their area?!
  4. Google Street View support – I think this goal is too lofty for Foursquare if I assume it’s on the same hardware options they have now. Street View would be such a battery suck that either everyone would hate it or no one would use it. I think phones will have to evolve more before this can be realized. It’s still stimulating to think about!
  5. Friends Integration – I want to be able to communicate easier with my friends. I can “shout” to everyone I play with but I can’t DM anyone if they don’t have Twitter.
  6. Put LOCATION in location-based! I want to see who is in a radius of the area I’m in so I can meet up with people! I want to be able to control in my privacy settings who’s radius I show up within most importantly.
  7. Badges – So, you get badges because you check in places that have been tagged via the web with a certain keyword a certain amount of times, with a certain number of the opposite sex, etc. When I create a new location, which earns me points, I have no options to tag the venue. This pretty much makes the badges, which could be a fun feature, pretty much the most anticlimactic feature of this “game”. The real value in the iPhone app is seeing where my friends are and finding new, trendy venues or quality cultural cuisine. Badges make me go “Oh, neat.” when I get them but I’m pretty sure I’m supposed to be motivated to get them and I’m not. I am highly motivated by a Foursquare exclusive deal though, I will say that. Maybe I just need a badge to strive for called “Exclusive” for earning the most mayoral deals or something.
  8. Pinging - I’d like to be able to set a ping to trigger when a friend checks in at a certain location without having to turn on pings for that person and get every.single.notification.for.every.place.they.go. I like my friends but somewhere you have to draw the line. LOL For example: I know that if I see a group of people I know check in at Jackelope Jacks on a weeknight that I can stop by and see my friends sing and hang out during karaoke. I don’t need to know when one person is all up on Lantana or checked in @ Pinch Mobile every time they’re driving peanut to his chess lessons.
  9. Foursquare for B2B- For businesses to business operations Foursquare has potential. For example: A small parcel delivery company could have their own webportal where they follow only a certain number of delivery drivers who check in at every place they stop instead of calling in to dispatch. Geo location would keep employees honest about where they are when they check in if they are checking in as they’re supposed to.Ā  Foursquare already has the data and is recording the metrics of their users. Heck, it presents some of the data & metrics they collect to the user, imagine the extent of data quality you can get if you’re a business and willing to pay for it! Again, good for businesses, ingenious for Foursquare.Ā  These folks would substantially help build the infrastructure of Charlotte’s Foursquare maps &locations as well. This segways into:
  10. Lists – I hate to say it because dividing people you know into groups is kind of cliche but I’d love to privately be able to see only where a certain list of people is at any time. If you follow any significant number of people it becomes difficult to figure out who is where. Foursquare’s time contingent approach to updates doesn’t help me figure out who is at a party or location. If they check in over a couple of hours, it gets confusing. In the business sector lists could be fantastic for managing any number of remote employees, logging time spent on-site at client offices by measuring time in between check-ins, etc. The value for the logistics field is pronounced and Charlotte is an inter-modal transportation hot bed. Think of how activists could even manage themselves with Foursquare if they had the hardware. Flash mobs? :)

#TheBotFather

December 9th, 2009 in City, Internet, Interview by Desiree Kane

voice: Jeff Elder, production: Justin Ruckman, music: RJD2; watch in HD on Vimeo

There’s an impostor on your Twitter and it’s not who you think.

Want to know what former Observer social networking columnist Jeff Elder is responding to?

Catch the second installation of our three-part series on #TheBotFather tomorrow morning.


#TheBotFather: Brains

December 15th, 2009 in City, Entertainment, Humor, Performance, Technology by Desiree Kane

Check out what the creator of Favrd, a widely popular service that showcased who “favorited” tweets and tallied them, said via the Favrd homepage the day he pulled the plug on it a little over a week ago:

There are still lots of clever and funny things to read every day, but finding these is no longer a challenge – you already follow your sources. Sites like this one now serve mainly as fuel for emotional up-fuckedness in the guise of a game.

Seems innocuous enough, he’s entitled to his thoughts. But then there was this shortly after via Twitter:

Screen shot 2009-12-11 at 6.27.52 PMMy, my @favrd! What’d Charlotte ever do to you!?! The answer lies below.

Marvin: Like a puppet master, we dictate memes.

@BenMarvin, possibly the most vocal of #TheBotFather troupe, says his goal with his bots (notably @SeriousBizznass and @Kinda_Gay, that he boasts is blocked by internet-popular @ICHCheezburger) is:

“to tell 9 jokes that only 12 people understand over and over again.ā€

Ben’s bots are the meme-style bots discussed in #TheBotFather: Basics. Some of them are offensive and some are not; but all of them have the same distinct air of satirical comedy designed to make you stop for a moment and chuckle, whether it be out of blatantly uncomfortable shock, or lighthearted LOLs. While he is not the sole generator of the content these bots tweet, he is the creator of bots many in Charlotte’s social media scene use as a medium through which they can anonymously voice their thoughts, jokes and opinions.

When asked what bot he’s most proud of, he says @SeriousBizznass and his 6 clones:

Marvin: … because the internet is serious business and he/I can say whatever I want.

Ben Marvin in person is exceptionally quiet though keen with the one-liners he comes up with while participating in conversation.

Marvin: I’m a self centered asshole on Twitter.

Ben Marvin is Charlotte’s twitterverse’s Kim Kardashian. Famous for being edgy; simply famous for being famous. He’s a shameless self promoter that could teach even the most seasoned social media gurus how to build brand ambassadors. He understands that his brand is a reflection of what the market values, and what our local area values is a platform from which to anonymously voice ourselves.

Ben even got himself nominated for a Shorty award in February of this year:

Screen shot 2009-12-11 at 6.33.41 PM

It’s actually quite ingenious. The antithesis of all that social media stands for, internet hooliganry, being used as a social media tactic in the name of transparency and entertainment value. What makes it even more intriguing is that even the creator(s) of most of these bots don’t know 100% of the time who is generating their bots’ content.

Marvin’s not the only one. During last Thursday’s livecast/chat/hashtagged interview/social media extravaganza, I had a convo with who I should now refer to as #TheBotFamily. They’re a group of mostly locals who’s are ā€œmaking the internet fun againā€ says Marvin. Sitting down and conversing with roughly 12 people via Twitter in and of itself is a challenge. Add the element of Twitter software mastery, multiply it by 12 people plus a hashtag and/or @ reply; it takes little imagination to understand what the giant cluster it developed into. It took me 4 days to digest it. I even had the help of TweetGrid’s @JazzyChad, with all of his Twitter knowledge.

Thursday’s interview highlighted the use of all three types of bots I talked about in the Basics piece. Ā In just under an hour talking to #TheBotFamily,Ā I had 825+ tweets from botsĀ that all chimed in at once. Ben Marvin’s bots were at the forefront of this. I got tacostacked, twice.

Some of the parody bots chimed in as well. Recognize these guys?:

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Screen shot 2009-12-14 at 8.29.36 PM

We also got to see the type of bot that is the least common: The character bots:

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DK: Why don’t you just say what you want instead of using bots?

Marvin: I can’t make a joke about being gay so I have a gay bot (…) like creating a character in a movie, I can’t play every character.

DK: What does having all these bots do for your ego?

Marvin: I feel pretty powerful, I can do what I want. I can ruin someone’s personal brand just like that.

DK: What makes you different from a troll?

Marvin: I’m worse than a troll. I’ll fuck with you longer, I’ll take it to real life, if you talk [publically] about a tweet up I’ll show up, all cokes up on PBR, overturning tables, yelling SUCK HIS DICK like a moshpit @ the Tremont.

DK: This is why Favrd hates Charlotte.

Marvin: Its Web 9.0, bitch.


#TheBotFather: Basics

December 10th, 2009 in City, Entertainment, Feature, Humor, Internet, Performance by Desiree Kane

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Part of what makes Twitter so enchanting is that it’s still considered “safe” (for the time being) in the minds of those who use it. The average person isn’t bombarded with some of the net elements they encounter nearly everywhere else: there are not tons of unwanted ads, or spam, or what I can only loosely describe as the archetype of a creepy ‘net weirdo. One element people may not know about though, is bots.

Bots are, at the simplest of levels, a small PHP or ruby script that you interact with on Twitter. They can be downright handy. But sometimes, the internet gives way to a new element of social interaction.

For example, Charlotte’s own: #TheBotFather.

“It’s not crowd-sourced. It’s a cartel if anything.” says local social media expert Lyell Petersen (@93Octane);

#TheBotFather is Charlotte’s very own comedy cartel with a style of performance artistry that stands alone. What makes them different than other local improv groups is their anonymity, and how they poke fun at people they know or just those generally in the CLT community. It’s one way Charlotte’s notoriously egomaniacal social media community polices itself and keeps it’s attitude in check.

“I don’t even think “bots” is the right term for these things.” Says Ben Ullman (@budesigns) of TegaCayTalk.com; “A bot automates tasks, follows people back, pushes RSS feeds, does all those generally inane tasks that users don’t want to be bothered with, repeatedly. Bots tend to be ignored. Sure, they are derided, and criticized as all that is wrong with Twitter – people, brands, companies who are not engaging, but rather automating, aggregating, and generally shoveling crap out into the twitterverse. But, then finally ignored. These bots are not that.” he says;

“They engage. They know you, and they attack you. They have personality, and they have an agenda. They are out to get you.”

Many Charlotteans unknowingly may follow and even interact with #TheBotFather’s incarnations. Some of local social media’s biggest names are caught in the fray on a multitude of levels, ranging from creating content to being hapless victims of what Jeff Elder called “mean graffiti”.

One individual, so concerned with online reputation management (ORM) they could not give their name, explains it better:

There’s the meme bots like

… the ones where the name is almost like a reverse #hashtag. As hashtags are used as the punchline to a joke. The meme bot dedicates its existence to one punchline and makes variations of the same joke, over and over.

There’s characters, like

… hmmm, not many characters left. RIP.

… maybe these really are just members of the third category:

The parodies. These seem to make up the vast majority:

… you get the idea everybody who is anybody in CLT — and some beyond — gets a parody bot.

At any moment one of #TheBotFather’s characters might accost you with something highly offensive, or pop off with something hilariously satirical that leaves you giggling if you’re living in or around Charlotte. It’s this interaction on a personal level that really brings these comedians to the cutting edge of social media and improv comedy itself.

“It’s helped me take myself less seriously both personally and professionally.” says Peterson. “I like them, hope they stay … Twitter wouldn’t be Twitter without them.”

Tomorrow CLT Blog will run the final post of this three part series: #TheBotFather: Brains.

Want to see #TheBotFather in action? This evening at 6:30 tune in to the CLT Blog exclusive interview with some of Charlotte’s most notorious bots!


BarCamp kick-off

October 17th, 2009 in City, Events, Media, Technology by Desiree Kane

bclogo

The second BarCamp Charlotte kicks off this morning at Area Fifteen in Charlotte. If you have never heard of BarCamp, here’s the skinny from the website:

BarCamp is an international network of user generated conferences – open, participatory workshop-events, whose content is provided by participants. The first BarCamps focused on early-stage web applications, and related open source technologies, social protocols, and open data formats.

In layman’s terms the format is this: At the beginning of BarCamp those who wish to speak at the conference give their pitch about the topic they wish to speak on. Once the pitches are done, everyone votes and the attendees set the conference. Wikipedia says of it’s origins:

The name “BarCamp” is a playful allusion to the event’s origins, with reference to the hacker slang term, foobar: BarCamp arose as a spin-off of Foo Camp, an annual invitation-only participant driven conference hosted by open source publishing luminary Tim O’Reilly.

CLT Blog will be broadcasting BarCamp live online today over at cltblog.com/live.

You can also connect @BarCampCLT and #BarCampCLT all day.


Fantasia Barrino & Macy's pair up with Feeding America

October 16th, 2009 in Charity, Events, Food, Fundraising by Desiree Kane

video: Desiree Kane; watch this in HD on Vimeo

Last night I had the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to visit Charlotte resident Fantasia Barrino’s home as she hosted a high-profile dinner party, teaming up with Macy’s and Feeding America for their ā€œCome Togetherā€ campaign. The goal is to raise 10 million meals for those who struggle with hunger on a regular basis, and to remind us that hunger is more than just something the homeless face every day.

Fantasia, who has been vocal about her story and rise to fame has vowed to commit her life and use her voice to helpĀ  those in need since she was once in their shoes. Her efforts will benefit the Second Harvest Food Bank of Metrolina. What’s more, Macy’s has committed to match monetary donations until the goal of 10 million meals is met.

Interview with CLT Blog is forthcoming!


Uptown Charlotte men's hairstyles hit all-time low

October 6th, 2009 in Entertainment, Fashion, Opinion by Desiree Kane

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photo credit: James Willamor, of course!

Uptown Charlotte is known for a few things: banking, nightlife and pretty people. Charlotte women are chic, fashionable and contemporary. It’s not uncommon to see a flirty, couture style party dress on a fabulous woman after hours Uptown, then shortly after that notice her rather bleakly dressed male cohort. Her shoes, nails, accessories and hair will all be on point. His on the other hand, will all be manicured down to just the basics. What’s the deal men of Uptown? More specifically, what’s up with your hair?

There are basically three haircuts seen on Uptown Charlotte men.

The below images have been altered to protect the… guilty.

1. “The Bro”

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This haircut is worn by bros who are recently out of college, would rather still be in college if they had the option to, or want to fight The Man by wearing a long hairstyle in a conservative banking workplace like their bros from their frat do. This style varies in length from the long example seen above to ending just above the ears. All lengths are shaggy and soft. This look can be seen after-hours at places like The Attic or chugging Bud Light alongside “The Brotha Fred” at Bar Charlotte.

2. “The Politician”

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This is by far the most popular men’s Uptown hairstyle. This hairstyle varies from a super-gelled side part to a Julius Caesar-esque style soft cut with loose curls that form a neat hair helmet on the afflicted. This style has been known to grow into “The Bro” if unmaintained long enough. Its natural habitat is at home in front of the Xbox or, if coaxed out after dark, at places like the lounge upstairs at Chima or playing pool holding a scotch on the rocks at Madison’s.

3. “The Brotha Fred”

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This is a very popular style with the Epicenter set. It can be seen on early 20’s boy toys cruising for cougars at the bar at Villa Antonio’s to 30-something men wearing a bedazzled shirt with a giant cross on it who are desperately still trying to keep up with the boy toys at Suite. This style can sometimes be good looking on the right guy, but it looks generally douche-y on the bulk of the population when it’s seen in daylight on a guy sporting the unofficial Uptown Charlotte men’s uniform: khakis and a blue striped shirt.


It’s difficult to ascertain who is at fault for the mass proliferation of the above three hairstyles amongst Charlotte men in the last few years. It’s a causality dilemma much like the chicken v. the egg. Are Charlotte men repeatedly asking for these styles and forcing their hair stylists into submission, or are Charlotte hairdressers guilty of suggesting these styles over and over again because they’re so skilled in these three cuts that it’s easier to do another one and continue on with their day? We may never know.


Mario moves to NoDa

September 17th, 2009 in Art, Feature, NoDa by Desiree Kane

Super Mario art in NoDa

photo: James Willamor; view this photo on Flickr

In 2007 Super Mario Brothers images started popping up around the UNC Charlotte campus and quickly became an Internet phenomenon, including a fan page on Facebook. Inspired by this original art, a new Mario artist has emerged in NoDa. He is a well-rounded conversationalist and artist who is interested in being provocative in the same way. I tracked down this elusive character and got the skinny on NoDa’s most talked about street artist du jour. Have a look!

When I first noticed the Super Mario art it was on Anderson Street in the industrial area near North Davidson Street. It was a series of three stars, one of which was unfinished. What struck me about them was their symmetry even though the series was incomplete. I then noticed the star on North Davidson Street near 36th, and finally, the well hidden whistle (which has since been removed). When I stumbled upon these my first instinct was to contact CLTBlog photographer and contributing writer extraordinaire James Willamor to see if he had photographed this artist’s work. Not to my surprise, he had shot some of them.

There’s something about locating someone who does anonymous street art. The elusive, mysterious qualities of locating a street artist were further exemplified when I found the artist. He turned out to be just as mysterious and captivating as his art. From the green star on the 3rd floor of the new Fat City Lofts building, to the hilarious pink frowning star over in the courtyard of Revolution Pizza, the diverse, lighthearted nature of the NoDa Super Mario street artist is apparent.

I sat down for a little less than an hour with the artist and found much more than a person who just likes to spray paint his surroundings. The symmetry I noticed in the series of stars was a result of holding an architecture degree, beautify his surroundings and the wish to inspire people to reflect on their childhood.

ā€œEven you coming in here, that’s the point of me doing [the street art],ā€ he said of my visit to the local venue where we spoke. ā€œI was really inspired by the UNCC artists and was really upset when they pressure-washed [the art] away.ā€

Contributor James Willamor was able to contact the original UNC Charlotte Mario artist, Henry Davis, for comment. Davis says of the original artwork, “the whole sort of essence was simplicity.” The recreations of the video game sprites were “verbatim, pixel for pixel.” Davis also says the original artwork was “cute and harmless” because it was done in chalk.

James also contacted Brandon Hicks for comment. Hicks assisted in the creation of six of the UNC Charlotte pieces. “Once the Mario art made it to the school news paper and was implied that it was vandalism, my girlfriend at the time and I created the ‘Free Mario!’ Facebook group and invited as many people as we could in hopes we would finally get in touch with the original artist. Once we did, Henry [Davis] and I started planning a large scale piece that was going to be four times the size of anything he had done before. When we finally did it in the Fall of 2007 I think, it got some hype because it was large and a cop showed up, and there was talk of it especially on the Facebook group.”

Hicks says he spotted some of the art while passing through NoDa recently. “I was very excited to see that it had spread to a wider audience.”

The debate between street art, graffiti, and vandalism will no doubt continue. The new Mario artist, when asked if there were any plans for more art, declined to say, though he did say there were things that were being thought about for specific, strategic locations around the city.

A slideshow of some of the recent NoDa Mario art:

photos: James Willamor; view this slideshow on Flickr