July 10, 2009

Futuristic Fashion from '68



(Thanks, Randy!) I'd like to have the breastplate, and someplace to wear it (I think).

July 9, 2009

MeatCards

Coming soon: "Business Cards Made From Meat and Lasers." Your info lasered onto delicious beef jerky (thanks, Ben!). More here.

Stranger Arrested for Striking Dead Man with Wand

"A Candler, N.C., woman danced in front of the [funeral] service, waved a wand around the casket, opened the lid, laid her hands on the deceased's head, and struck the body with the wand, according to an incident report from the Laurens County Sheriff's Office. . . . " (more here; thanks, Julie!)

The deceased's relatives were offended (though apparently no one stopped the woman, who escaped in a burgundy Toyota). Not clear whether the relatives were disappointed at the non-revival, or objected to the attempt.

Hope they don't lock her up. "When we are young / We read and believe / The most fantastic things. / When we are older / We learn with regret / That these things cannot be" – find that and other enjoyable quotes at Blithe Spirit, based on Noel Coward's play of the same name.

July 8, 2009

By Pepe, Author No. 34 on nastynets

Click on the image to enlarge. See Pepe on nastynets for more of his stuff; see nastynets for more also-great stuff by other artists.

60 Words Per Minute Art Critic

by Lori Waxman (click on the image to enlarge). Basically,

"For two to three days the critic is available, in a given location (usually an artist-run gallery or non-profit arts center), to any artist who wants a review. Artists bring in their work and, on a first-come, first-served basis, the critic spends twenty minutes writing them a review of one to two hundred words. She guarantees a thoughtful, critical but not necessarily positive review. The text is then “published” by the receptionist and posted on an adjacent wall for everyone—critic, artist, receptionist, audience—to read. Eventually all or some of the reviews are published in a magazine or newspaper."
More info here. I'd be v. interested in reports from participants (in any capacity).

UPDATE: Thanks to fluent~collaborative for granting my wish: the critic's performance is reviewed by 7 artists here.

July 6, 2009

Documentary on the U.S.'s Involvement with Weaponized Anthrax

Five of the world's top few scientific experts in biological warfare using anthrax have met untimely deaths that their family members or respected experts regard as suspicious. Anthrax War investigates these deaths and ultimately points toward the possibility that the 2001 anthrax attack in the U.S. was intended to bring about a massive expansion of the U.S. biological weapons "defense" programs indistinguishable from preparations for offensive biological warfare.

Produced for the Canadian Broadcasting Corp.; directed by Robert Coen. You can watch it on YouTube in segments; find the first one here.

Another Cheap Way to Thwart Big Bro: Make an Infrared Mask

"This how-to video shows how you can hack a standard baseball cap into a cool invisible IR mask to hide your face from cameras anywhere, and look perfectly normal to the human eye!"



(From WonderHowTo; thanks, Mark!)

July 5, 2009

WWFDD?

"When Frederick Douglass was old, a young man asked him what he should do to advance the cause of civil rights. 'Agitate, agitate, agitate!' was the answer Douglass gave.

* * * * *

"Apparently, our agitations and calls for single-payer insurance or at least a strong public option are seen as a nuisance by the Democratic establishment. Now Mr. Obama is telling us to knock it off and to support his watered-down measure, which will itself be further watered down by our jellyfish in the Senate. So we are faced with a choice. Do we trust the President and take his instructions, or do we follow Douglass' advice?

"In the 1960s, civil rights leaders were told to knock it off and wait for a better time. (Sound familiar, gay rights supporters?) Well, Kennedy and Johnson are gone now, but we still have the civil rights act and the voting rights act.

"There is always some excuse to do nothing. Someone once said that well behaved women rarely make history. That is true of any oppressed group."
(Thanks, madfloridian and Deep13!)