A year ago, a light bulb lit in our brains. As active bike riders, we wanted to see more clustered bike parking in our downtown. With the support of the Downtown Business Association and the generous governmental hurdling assistance of Dan Rivoire of the SLO County Bike Coalition, we finally scored an eight-slotted bike rack directly in the front of our store and Coalition Skate Shop. Easy parking and we have a bike pump at the front counter to keep you floating high on inflated tires. The rack is dedicated to Richard Fox, a well loved member of the SLO Bike Club who passed away in late 2009.
Al Jarnow gets his due
Celestial Navigations:
The Short Films of Al Jarnow
1968-1987, Al Jarnow, USA, 90 min.
Tens of millions of people have seen these films. Nobody knows who made them.
Curled up on our couches in the wee hours of the morning, in reruns, and nostalgic You Tube forwards, filmmaker Al Jarnow has touched our lives and changed the way we look at the world without us ever knowing. Beginning with his work for a certain public television show that featured a big yellow bird, Al Jarnow captured life’s scientific minutia and boiled it down for easy consumption between cookie eating monsters and counting vampires. Coupling time-lapse, stop motion, and cel animation with simple objects found in every day life, Jarnow deconstructed the world for an entire generation.
From the third floor of his Long Island gingerbread home, his mind wandered beyond the confines of educational programming. Delving into New York’s avant-garde film scene alongside Harry Smith, Jonas Mekas and Stan Brakhage, Jarnow created a body of awe-inspiring films that remain in the collections of MOMA and Pompideau Center.
Employing the archival skills honed during the excavation of over 40 full-length albums, Celestial Navigations marks The Numero Group’s first foray into the world of cinema. The 45 films collected have been transferred and color corrected from the original 16mm prints, along with fully remastered sound. Special features include a 30-minute documentary on Jarnow’s creative process, as well as film playlists designed for both children and adults alike. The deluxe package includes a 60-page book loaded to the gills with essays, ephemera, storyboards, photos, and a complete film index, all housed in the iconic Numero slipcase.
