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“Oh, I still don’t think you’re the god of thunder. But you ought to be!” || Issue #100

Today is a landmark photo – post number 100. When I started this feed last year in November, I honestly did not think it would get this far. At first it seemed silly, especially having to “play” this character myself, but the concept was definitely there. And as far as @Instagram goes, I have searched high and low to find a similar account. And so far, at least as far as public accounts go, one seems to be the loneliest number here. So at very least I win points in originality; all there was left was miles and miles of execution.

I’ve had a blast so far, and it’s a vision and project I have believed in since its inception. Do I have another 100 photos in me with the hammer? Maybe, maybe not. I still have a lot of ideas on the queue, and at this point I’m just going to shoot first and ask questions later.

Speaking of questions, I asked several folks to round up a series of questions that would tell my story a little bit. The camera behind the camera type of thing. So, without further ado –

1. What the hell is Mjolnir and how do you pronounce it?
– Mjolnir (mee-yole-near) is the name of the hammer. Not my choice, this is based out of the Norse Mythology that Marvel Comics also follow. If it was my choice to name the hammer, it would be Sex Panther.

2. Where does McFly come from?
– I am a big Back to the Future fan, and it is a simple nod to the McFly family. My previous Instagram account was mikey_mcfly, so I just dumped Mikey for Mjolnir for this IG reboot.

3. Your history with cameras?
– Started with handheld camcorders filming for projects in high school. More film projects came out of college when I was a film major before I switched to product design and industry. Several months after graduating college, I picked up the camera again in March of 2008 and filmed a weekend road trip I went on alone. That ended up birthing two things – an early idea for a company called Spiral Notebook Films and a 45-minute film titled “Understanding Michael.” Other short films came out of it such as “The Orientation Segment” and a large filming gig for Hula, Polynesian, and Tahitian dancing for the Hula Halau ‘O Makalapua school in San Bruno, California.

Several months prior, one of my closest friends Mark Penacerrada (IG @mark_onetimeinc) and I started ‘Mike and Mark – The Photo Guys!’ We had one gig for a graduation shoot at a community college before we started One Time with other friends and crime-fighting partners (IG @mattmaniego and @instafred_) From there, as an integrated marketing company, we’ve worked and partnered up with many clients and companies and put together an impactful portfolio.

4. What do you shoot with?
– Canons, all but one project where we used a Nikon. 7D, 60D, 5D Mark II, several Rebels and the Ti series. My Instagram photos are all shot with an iPhone camera.

5. Do you do this full time?
– I live in San Francisco, land of bat-shit high rent. So I do have a job in Palo Alto as an Administrator and Reports Analyst. Basically PC by day, and Mac the rest of the way.

6. You seem to be all over the place in what you do and can do. What do you consider yourself as?
– The God of Thunder you dumb motherf — no I’m kidding. If I ever push forth a title over anything else, it would be a writer. Second would be coffee junkie. The very last would be ice skater. Zero emphasis on skater.

7. Is Thor your favorite comic character?
– One of, but not my favorite. Daredevil is actually my favorite Marvel character, second only to Batman who tops the overall list.

8. How much does the hammer really weigh?
– For those of you who have ran into me during my shoots and were able to lift Mjolnir, well hot damn – you must be worthy!

9. Creative inspirations?
– Marty Linder, a brilliant designer and my college mentor. In film – Chris Nolan, Quentin Tarantino, Orson Welles, Robert Zemeckis, Jackie Chan, Charlie Chaplin, Mike Nichols, Chan-wook Park, Kevin Smith and Joss Whedon. I always wanted to be “Michael J. Fox” cool because I think no one tops him in that department. Writers like Jonathan Nolan, Brian Bendis, Ed Brubaker, and Stan Lee. I hope one day, Stan Lee gets full recognition as one of the greatest American writers in history, regardless of his genre. This man is responsible for some of the most amazing stories.

10. What takes up your spare time?
– I have a love/hate relationship with working out and training. I love it when I do it, I hate it when I don’t. During baseball season I’m following my Giants, and if your at the ballpark for a day game and you see someone running the upper reserve stairs from beginning to end, that would be me. Catch me after that pre-game workout, say hello, and let’s go have some beers and baseball.

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Pedestal

I’ve been in the creative field for a very long time. Over half of my life if my calculations are correct. I’ve studied and worked the hell out of digital filmmaking, film history, product design and development, prototyping, graphic design and user interface, and photography. I’ve learned it all, yet at the same time I know nothing. I know what I’m good at, and where I am less effective. I know my style. I know what I like, and what I don’t.

I know the rules, and I know how to break them.

I have gathered many observations throughout the years in all these fields – all very different from each other – yet one common denominator rings true for each.

This generation of creatives simply cannot and do not know how to take criticism. Any kind, whether it be constructive or not, or a simple “this sucks” just burns a hole in them. It’s actually terrible to see and realize, as it is very easy to with the openness of social media. So, where did we go “wrong?” I’m not exactly sure, but I have an idea.

I’m going to share a story. Fall semester of the year two thousand and three, when mobile phones were still stupid and dinosaurs still roamed the earth (see what I did there? Hashtag self-deprecation), I’m in Design 300. It’s a completely revamped Design and Industry program by a man who shortly after became my mentor, Professor Marty Linder. Final project was to design and prototype a full-scale sitting stool completely out of cardboard that anyone, and I mean anyone, can sit on and be completely supported. Now at the time, I weighed close to 300 pounds. That’d be okay if I also told you I was 6’6”.

I’m 5’7”. 5’7 ½” on a good day. So if I could design this thing to support me, then it can support anyone and anything.

Now, my three projects before this were… good. I earned A’s on them but quite frankly that wasn’t good enough for me. I wanted, more than anything, to make it to the glass case. And what’s the glass case? The area where everyone in the department and building would see your work – work hand picked by Prof. Linder himself. It would stay there for weeks, and it was a nice achievement and moment of validation for every design student at the time. So this stool was my final shot at making it into the case. And I’ll tell you, I had a sold-out-concert-melt-your-face kind of design that could not fail structurally and aesthetically. I worked on this thing for weeks, pushing 14+ hours a day. I was a man of determination. I was a man of passion. I was a man of precise calculation.

I couldn’t be wrong about this.

Finals day. Everyone brings in their projects, and I am feeling the hell out of my stool. Everyone is coming up to me and congratulating me, painting me up and down with words and idolizing eyes how wonderful my stool is. I love compliments as much as the next person, and if compliments warm the soul then mine burned like the sun that day. But I wasn’t completely satisfied. I was not fully validated. If anyone’s opinion mattered most to me in that room, it was Marty’s.

It was my moment to present. I was confident with a plan and a skit, and I nailed it. To this day, it ranks high as one of my most cherished moments in my college career. Everyone completely loved it. Everyone, except for Marty. But I should say, that he loved 97% of it. No really, 97%. His words exactly. I’ll never forget it.

And that 3% I did not “nail,” he let me know and he let me know in front everyone. He rained on me like a perfect storm, coming with it from the left, right, and southwest. And he’s critiqued me before and gave me a ton of constructive feedback. But not like this. He was Iron Mike that day and he knocked me the $%&# out. I think what was worse was that my face probably showed it, and I was front and center. But he didn’t let up.

He never lets up.

After being severely grilled like a well done burger, he took me down to a medium/medium-well and wrapped up with that 97% he did like about it. After complete devastation I did feel better about it all. I remember the journey – the thought process, thousand sketches on paper and napkins, the countless hunts for quality cardboard (yes, there is such a thing), being able to maintain precise X-Acto knife cuts – hundreds of them – each day for nine days. It was a grueling process and I adored every second. I knew what I made and I was proud of it.

And in the end, so was Marty. He pulled me aside when the final was over. He asked for my permission to display my stool in the glass case over the winter break through the beginning of the following spring semester. Confused at first, but I gladly gave him my blessing. He shook my hand, leaned in close to my right side and told me something I will never forget –

“I hope you know what I did there. And if not now, I trust that you’ll one day understand.” And neither he or myself never brought that moment back up in the many conversations and meetings I had with him afterwards.

Fast forward, over ten years later. No, it didn’t take me this long to understand what he did. It took several months or so to understand that he did what he did that day because he cared enough to knock me off the pedestal that everyone else put me on. And if I didn’t know myself any better I’d say that moment has hit me harder now than ever before. I got more than validation from Marty that day. I got from him – an important life lesson? A way of life? A keener understanding of design and the creative process?

All of the above. To this day I cherish any ”bad” comment or opinion against my work over the greatest compliment I will ever receive. Marty made me understand that day that while creativity never has a right answer, you can always be wrong about it because you need to be. For every photo or film or design I have ever worked on since, there is always something wrong about each one and I accept it that way. The trick is to minimize the wrongs – not to find the right answer – but to achieve higher effectiveness. Did the video make you laugh and cry? Did the photo remind of you a better time and place? Did the design improve your quality of life? That kind of effectiveness.

If I have any advice for all you creatives it’s this – get off the pedestal that either you or everyone around you put you on. You’re better off accepting that you do not belong there. And if you at one point feel like you were knocked off because someone thought of your work as inferior, regardless of how high or low you find their opinion to matter – use it, thank them, and buy them the next round. That person did you the greatest favor in reminding you how much more you can ALWAYS grow.

True success of a person is not told by numbers, at least, numbers in box office dollars or followers or views or ratings. It’s told by people, by someone, who took a moment to share a story of that one time that person made someone else feel 3% wrong.

Knowing that I am always wrong makes me a better person, and that, Marty, makes you one helluva success story in my book.

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