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    #vscocam Waverly, Al. (Taken with instagram)

     
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    Just dove into Dyke & the Blazers, which means I’m getting as groovy as I can with the Watts 103rd as well.

    The riff on “65 Bars and a Taste of Soul” is pretty much the definition of snakey, so Budos-y that it’s preternatural. That there’s plenty of tambo, rumble shuffle, “Shotgun” response guitar, and background ow!-that’s-funky shouting, those are all bonuses for you. Just for you. The snakiness is for me.

    The Wil Wheaton-looking dude in the blue Wesley Crusher sweater is for everybody.

     
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    bigredrobot:

    updownsmilefrown:

    James Brown, New York, 1968

    by Eve Arnold

    Godfather.

     
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    theatlantic:

    Is Facebook Making Us Lonely?

    Yvette Vickers, a former Playboy playmate and B-movie star, best known for her role in Attack of the 50 Foot Woman, would have been 83 last August, but nobody knows exactly how old she was when she died. According to the Los Angeles coroner’s report, she lay dead for the better part of a year before a neighbor and fellow actress, a woman named Susan Savage, noticed cobwebs and yellowing letters in her mailbox, reached through a broken window to unlock the door, and pushed her way through the piles of junk mail and mounds of clothing that barricaded the house. Upstairs, she found Vickers’s body, mummified, near a heater that was still running. Her computer was on too, its glow permeating the empty space.

    The Los Angeles Times posted a story headlined “Mummified Body of Former Playboy Playmate Yvette Vickers Found in Her Benedict Canyon Home,” which quickly went viral. Within two weeks, by Technorati’s count, Vickers’s lonesome death was already the subject of 16,057 Facebook posts and 881 tweets. She had long been a horror-movie icon, a symbol of Hollywood’s capacity to exploit our most basic fears in the silliest ways; now she was an icon of a new and different kind of horror: our growing fear of loneliness. Certainly she received much more attention in death than she did in the final years of her life. With no children, no religious group, and no immediate social circle of any kind, she had begun, as an elderly woman, to look elsewhere for companionship. Savage later told Los Angeles magazine that she had searched Vickers’s phone bills for clues about the life that led to such an end. In the months before her grotesque death, Vickers had made calls not to friends or family but to distant fans who had found her through fan conventions and Internet sites.

    Vickers’s web of connections had grown broader but shallower, as has happened for many of us. We are living in an isolation that would have been unimaginable to our ancestors, and yet we have never been more accessible. Over the past three decades, technology has delivered to us a world in which we need not be out of contact for a fraction of a moment. In 2010, at a cost of $300 million, 800 miles of fiber-optic cable was laid between the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and the New York Stock Exchange to shave three milliseconds off trading times. Yet within this world of instant and absolute communication, unbounded by limits of time or space, we suffer from unprecedented alienation. We have never been more detached from one another, or lonelier. In a world consumed by ever more novel modes of socializing, we have less and less actual society. We live in an accelerating contradiction: the more connected we become, the lonelier we are. We were promised a global village; instead we inhabit the drab cul-de-sacs and endless freeways of a vast suburb of information.

    Read more. [Image: Phillip Toledano]

     
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    [Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

    Lee Bains III & The Glory Fires - “The Red, Red Dirt of Home,” There is a Bomb in Gilead


    Y’all don’t stand a chance.

     
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    Camera Photo Booth

    26th birthday

     
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    First-ever YouTube cover. Might delete it and re-track in Pro Tools, the guitar sounds like garbage. Be gentle! 

     
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    Mystery Science Theater 3000 inhabits a special place in entertainment history: it was the culmination of a curatorial tradition developed by the TV hosts of Saturday afternoon creature-features, and the predecessor to the more universal, arguably less sophisticated snarkiness enabled by the Internet. As such it is a flagship, sailing forth from the Gilded Age of Snark, worthy of respect and admiration. Bow your heads when you speak its name.
    aberjona: Things I did not know in my 30s that I know now (not a continuing series)  (via l3fan-o-rama)
     
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    Geeks

    theremixbaby:

    occupythedisco:

    I think the reason I find geek culture so obnoxious at times to engage in is because the people are for the most part the same privileged dips that inhabit mainstream culture, but with the added detriment of a victim complex. They’re still largely white and center their race, they’re still largely straight and center their sexuality, they’re still largely cis men who center their gender. They challenge nothing about the status quo and what bodies get to be placed at the center of it, they offer nothing radically different to the typical narratives about which groups of people are and are not important and they can be just as hostile to groups who try to find a place in their space as the mainstream is, in some cases even worse. But for some reason they think the fact that they like Battlestar Galactica instead of Monday night football makes them radical alterna-gods who are too good for this sinful Earth.

    There’s that, too.

    Yo, not to interrupt the high-fiving but I am not really sure what this generalization is really serving: the all-white, all-male, all-straight ideal of geek culture is so obviously obsolete and outmoded that it’s not even worth doing the research to fight off the easy consensus. I mean, yeah, you can look at the 60-40 male/female split at Comic Con, the same ratio for gamers, the same ratio for people who saw Batman Begins, the proliferation of gay gamer groups, the “white” thing being so specious that you can simply just go to Best Buy or the comic book store or GameStop and just people watch for thirty minutes…. I mean, come on. Where do you want to go with this? How much time do you have? It’s almost like there are jerks of every type in almost any kind of field who can ruin a good thing for others. I worked at a comic book store for five years and regularly dealt with customers of all shapes, genders, colors, sexualities, ages, political affiliations, however you want to break it down. Mad anecdotal and I live in liberal gay ass Chicago, but really, it’s a spectrum. There are rude people everywhere! News at 11.

    (I get that the operative word in the original post is “largely” but unless we’re taking that to mean any kind of majority over 50%, it doesn’t seem to be very accurate.)

     
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    “Lovely” is a word I use too much but sometimes no other word will do.