out of nowhere
and no way
call it fortune
or fate
but it goes on and on
always
and in a complex world
simple people collide
so what are you gonna do today?
March 29, 2010
March 22, 2010
Toastmodern Garfield
Garfield Minus Garfield "is a site dedicated to removing Garfield from the Garfield comic strips in order to reveal the existential angst of a certain young Mr. Jon Arbuckle."
The results are a consistently hilarious, fine-standing example of what has become possible in our postmodern/nonsensical/pop-culture-familiar world.
But you know what? I cannot help but feel a lingering sense of melancholy as I watch Jon in his decontextualized world. The fruits of Garfield Minus Garfield are at once humorous and poignant - tendencies characteristic of life itself.
Poor Jon. That cat was your life.
March 21, 2010
When We Were Young
Nick Horby's review of Kid A, written for The New Yorker, October 20, 2000
I hope to make records for sixteen year olds. Sixteen was a great year for music.
I hope to make records for sixteen year olds. Sixteen was a great year for music.
March 19, 2010
fridays again
Friday! Eat it up, cigarette barbies.
This is for your toast-ironic sense of humor.
Father and Son
This is for you to say aloud.
The Chaos by Gerard Nolst Trenité
This is for Alex Chilton of Big Star, 1950-2010.
This is for me.
March 16, 2010
Everybody Everywhere
"This is the world of 'peer production,' the extraordinary Internet-enabled phenomenon of mass volunteerism and amateurism. We are at the dawn of an age where most producers in any domain are unpaid, and the main difference between them and their professional counterparts is simply the (shrinking) gap in the resources available to them to extend the ambition of their work. When the tools of production are available to everyone, everyone becomes a producer."
-Chris Anderson, from The Long Tail
-Chris Anderson, from The Long Tail
March 15, 2010
March 13, 2010
March 8, 2010
Do, or Do Not
"The Internet means you don't have to convince anyone else that something is a good idea before trying it."
-Scott Bradner (from Clay Shirky's Here Comes Everybody)
-Scott Bradner (from Clay Shirky's Here Comes Everybody)
March 7, 2010
#1
hey all.
my name is SHAWN and i am recording a record.
i found that when you can't write songs about being a girl or falling in love, you can just write love songs and narratives about being said girl, and get a bunch of real girls to sing those tunes. and so that's what i'm doing.
this project is about girls and boys and love and sex and ghosts and the beach and gender conventions/ideas/borders and tradition and being subversive and being honest or dishonest and drugs and getting older and my girlfriend and lo-fi music as an aesthetic and recording anywhere and listening to that and recording something as i graduate college because there's something genuine about that.
onward and outward,
Barbie
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