Before I suffered brain damage and stopped reading anything that didn't have the word 'manual' in the title, I would have loved this:
Grey Lodge Occult Review. Issue
number 10 just went online, with pieces by Korzybski, Artaud, Burroughs, Dick, Baudrillard, Huxley, Battaille, etc....
The NY Post’s Sean Delonas has produced some powerful political cartoons, mostly on the basis of sheer grotesquery rather than wit, like his famous image of Cuomo and Giuliani literally “in bed” together. But I thought
this one was actually a good pun.
Nice.
Preview is the top link right now on
memepool.
Can you see your hits over there Joester? Does that drive much traffic?
Richard Box is an artist in residence in the Department of Physics at Bristol University. I've never heard of him before (no big surprise) but this looks pretty interesting to me:
FIELD represents a considerable development in Richard's work, whilst previous projects have included ambiguous glass objects much of the outcome has been photographic. FIELD is a major undertaking which will include the installation of several thousand ready- made glass fluorescent tubes. The bulbs will be 'planted' across the site at the foot of an electricity pylon, and will pick up the waste emission from the overhead power line. The piece is simple yet spectacular, making visible what would otherwise go unnoticed. The FIELD of tubes will flicker into life across the hillside as the early evening light fades. The performance each evening is hard to anticipate since it is heavily dependent on the weather. In all the best traditions of land art it is conditional on the variations of the great outdoors, and requires its audience to be patient. Here a parallel can be struck between FIELD and Walter DeMaria's, Lightning Field sited in the Nevada Desert - many visitors travel for days to see it, camp beside it and are lucky if they experience the sort of storm that will make the lightning dance across the 'field' of conductors.
Here's the
Bristol University press release. And here's the
slashdot story.
Anybody here seen the DeMaria in person? I'd really like to go there someday (although I think it's in New Mexico, not Nevada as the quote above says.)
as much as i loved chocolate and milk as a child, i was not a chocolate milk fanatic, in fact, i rarely had it. in the past few weeks, ive had a little chocolate milk flare-up. and today in a moment of weakness, i reached out in the aisle for the
hersheys syrup. got me wondering what other people drank while growing up. we usually had quik for hot chocolate, or occasionally swiss miss. my cousins had
bosco which was always the best part of those visits. any ovalteeners out there? what if they had called it
roundteen? would it have tasted as good?
the
slot: a spot for copy editors
in case you weren't keeping notes...last night's tasting menu at
wd...
Wow. 500+ hits from
August J. Pollack's link to "closed captioned war president".
based on the book950 book titles, short stories and plays that have been made into films (thx
maud)
architecture: from bad to
worse
if theyre going to call it
moynihan station, i might be just as happy if it doesnt happen.
In an otherwise dry investment research report, someone cracks wise. Emphasis added.
With HDTV – where an
upgrade to an HD signal would be required even if one were to remain with their existing service provider –
the significance of that trigger is only amplified. Once a consumer decides to make the substantial
investment in a new HD television set, they become acutely conscious of what they can display on it. (And
highly aware that if they tell their wife they spent thousands on an HDTV set without having HD
programming, they’ll be exposed as an idiot). It seems reasonable to expect that consumers will be
disproportionately willing to switch providers to get best High Definition service for their new High
Definition set.
impulse purchase - john schlesingers
Darling.