Tiki Central / General Tiki / Another Round of Savage Renewal!
Post #228395 by Humuhumu on Mon, Apr 24, 2006 3:49 PM
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Humuhumu
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Mon, Apr 24, 2006 3:49 PM
Due to popular demand (and with special thanks to urban archaeologist extraordinaire, Sabu the Coconut Boy, for the gentle kick in the pants to do it), we're happy to announce a fresh round of Savage Renewal! For those who don't remember the idea behind Savage Renewal, here's Hanford's original announcement about it from a while back: http://www.tikicentral.com/viewtopic.php?topic=16370&forum=1&0 We have kicked around some ideas for different takes on Savage Renewal projects, and we'll (hopefully) be a bit better about running them more frequently, but the time we're going to do a repeat of Savage Renewal: Archaeology, which was immensely popular. You can check out just some of the fantastic posts that people made by doing a search on "Savage Renewal". It'll work the same as last time: Instructions for Savage Renewal: Archaeology A-C - Wednesday, 4/26 First, pick something specific, and from midcentury Polynesian Pop. Look through your collection, and find an item that intrigues you. Maybe it's something you want to know a little more about, maybe it's just something you like a lot and want to share. Not a collector? Pick a tropical cocktail, album, an old restaurant. Pick something you saw in the Book of Tiki, or in Tiki Road Trip, or Tiki Quest. Now, take that item, and do a search on Tiki Central to see if it's been discussed before. If it has -- don't pick a different item! Find an old thread, and post on it. If you learned something new by looking at that old thread, it's probably something that other people would learn from, too -- so let's bring it back to the surface. Add whatever you know, or your thoughts on what others have discussed, or questions that haven't been addressed. If it hasn't been discussed on Tiki Central before, start a new thread. Tell us what you know, invite others to chime in with what they know. Try to pick something specific, and try to pick something that hearkens back to Tiki's midcentury roots. What if you really, honestly can't think of something you'd like to post? What if you're new? Your participation in Savage Renewal: Archaeology doesn't stop with kick-starting discussion about tiki. Ready... set... dig! |