thedailywhat:

René Magritte Fan Art of the Day: “Don’t Believe the Pipe” by Marcos C.
[flickr.]

thedailywhat:

René Magritte Fan Art of the Day:Don’t Believe the Pipe” by Marcos C.

[flickr.]

(Source: thedailywhat)

fuckkyeahchicago:

Awesome in 1959!
(submitted by fitbomb)

fuckkyeahchicago:

Awesome in 1959!

(submitted by fitbomb)

Holy FUCK
I hope they keep doing this
I intend to go some year soon
newvague:

Hopscotch Thoughts, Downtown Raleigh, NC Sept 9-11, 2010
Everything I tell you is true.
In good time, I assume you’re going to find here a collection of stories, photographs, accounts, interviews, and highly elaborate Press Stuff that I carefully sidestepped this past weekend. I wanted no involvement in the Machine; I’d had enough second-hand experience with this festival that my only desire was to rush from club to club, tripping over my own feet in clumsy, addled anticipation. I wanted to listen to bands without remembering names, focusing on the great wash of sound rather than jumping straight into adjectives and descriptors.  I wanted to get giddy with old pals without worrying about schedules and appointments. And so, I did.
The Hopscotch-literal as concept and praxis struck me immediately as The Worst Idea Ever. Why boast 120+ bands, when the simple physics of being prevents attendees from seeing any number even near this? For those unaware, the festival stood true to its name; that is, one could “jump” from club to club, with the lineups arranged in some form of jagged coherency based on mutual friendship or sound. I’ll admit to grumbling through my teeth when the lineup was released. Friday, for example, I could cap off the night with Woods, Pontiak, Tortoise, Megafaun, Washed Out, or Kylesa. And those weren’t even all the choices; rather, just the ones I’d be stoked to see. The unfortunate circumstance of Hopscotch is that while these names look great on a bill, it’s impossible to fully experience them all. The official festival response to this: consider that the bands are playing at the same time a few blocks away from each other, and leave mid-set. What?
But then, the redemption: full negative on the organizational side of things, it ended up being one of my favorite elements of the festival. I can’t tell you how enjoyable it was to rush from club to club, sometimes at a full run, with a pack of friends on the prowl. We all kept lineups tucked safely away in our back pockets, plucking them out more frequently than wallets and cellphones, pointing and mingling with people on the street about where we came from and where we were headed. We kept pens behind ears and drew rough circles around show times, making meetup plans for mutual listening. This, my friends, was the true Hopscotch spirit.
You see, I didn’t get to watch Woods, but friends sent me pictures. I got a live video of Kylesa, and a full-on vocal Tortoise report. Washed Out was written about, and I can watch the Pontiak show on YouTube. I spent the night in the warm arms of Megafaun, happily gabbing about every detail post-set. The fact that attendees were limited by the constraints of space & time (goddamn them all) opened doors for an intense and deeply-felt sense of sharing and community. It made everyone connect, by both mutual excitement and slight obligation. It almost seemed like the perfect flaw.
Because of this, Hopscotch felt more like a giant Raleigh hangout than an isolated event. Sharing experiences was the experience. Between day parties and after parties, the seventy-two hours bled into one another (and, of course, HS also claimed the day before with Howl and the day after with Dosh, among other things). The festival allowed for divisions and borders to be negated, as people flowed steadily through the streets, in and out of clubs, and through bars. It was one fluid, steady motion. We all lived three days in the warmest, sunniest, most golden night you could imagine, sleeping in our cars during the earlier parts of the day, and blinking, with bleary-eyed smiles, at one another across crowded rooms once we woke. We may have missed bands we like for those we love, but we were forced to connect in a way that we should, anyway: discussing, rapt and in awe, about how incredible our experiences were as they were happening. That constant reminder is what made Hopscotch truly great.
-tina haver    

Holy FUCK

I hope they keep doing this

I intend to go some year soon

newvague:

Hopscotch Thoughts, Downtown Raleigh, NC Sept 9-11, 2010

Everything I tell you is true.

In good time, I assume you’re going to find here a collection of stories, photographs, accounts, interviews, and highly elaborate Press Stuff that I carefully sidestepped this past weekend. I wanted no involvement in the Machine; I’d had enough second-hand experience with this festival that my only desire was to rush from club to club, tripping over my own feet in clumsy, addled anticipation. I wanted to listen to bands without remembering names, focusing on the great wash of sound rather than jumping straight into adjectives and descriptors.  I wanted to get giddy with old pals without worrying about schedules and appointments. And so, I did.

The Hopscotch-literal as concept and praxis struck me immediately as The Worst Idea Ever. Why boast 120+ bands, when the simple physics of being prevents attendees from seeing any number even near this? For those unaware, the festival stood true to its name; that is, one could “jump” from club to club, with the lineups arranged in some form of jagged coherency based on mutual friendship or sound. I’ll admit to grumbling through my teeth when the lineup was released. Friday, for example, I could cap off the night with Woods, Pontiak, Tortoise, Megafaun, Washed Out, or Kylesa. And those weren’t even all the choices; rather, just the ones I’d be stoked to see. The unfortunate circumstance of Hopscotch is that while these names look great on a bill, it’s impossible to fully experience them all. The official festival response to this: consider that the bands are playing at the same time a few blocks away from each other, and leave mid-set. What?

But then, the redemption: full negative on the organizational side of things, it ended up being one of my favorite elements of the festival. I can’t tell you how enjoyable it was to rush from club to club, sometimes at a full run, with a pack of friends on the prowl. We all kept lineups tucked safely away in our back pockets, plucking them out more frequently than wallets and cellphones, pointing and mingling with people on the street about where we came from and where we were headed. We kept pens behind ears and drew rough circles around show times, making meetup plans for mutual listening. This, my friends, was the true Hopscotch spirit.

You see, I didn’t get to watch Woods, but friends sent me pictures. I got a live video of Kylesa, and a full-on vocal Tortoise report. Washed Out was written about, and I can watch the Pontiak show on YouTube. I spent the night in the warm arms of Megafaun, happily gabbing about every detail post-set. The fact that attendees were limited by the constraints of space & time (goddamn them all) opened doors for an intense and deeply-felt sense of sharing and community. It made everyone connect, by both mutual excitement and slight obligation. It almost seemed like the perfect flaw.

Because of this, Hopscotch felt more like a giant Raleigh hangout than an isolated event. Sharing experiences was the experience. Between day parties and after parties, the seventy-two hours bled into one another (and, of course, HS also claimed the day before with Howl and the day after with Dosh, among other things). The festival allowed for divisions and borders to be negated, as people flowed steadily through the streets, in and out of clubs, and through bars. It was one fluid, steady motion. We all lived three days in the warmest, sunniest, most golden night you could imagine, sleeping in our cars during the earlier parts of the day, and blinking, with bleary-eyed smiles, at one another across crowded rooms once we woke. We may have missed bands we like for those we love, but we were forced to connect in a way that we should, anyway: discussing, rapt and in awe, about how incredible our experiences were as they were happening. That constant reminder is what made Hopscotch truly great.

-tina haver    

how are pictures so often metaphors for my life WHY IS THIS
memeblr:

spaceghetto

how are pictures so often metaphors for my life WHY IS THIS

memeblr:

spaceghetto

(via fuckyeahdogs)

Reuniting

Godspeed You! Black Emperor is coming to the Metro here in Chicago in March 2011.

Looks like I’m staying in Chicago at least that long.

Hmm, really NPR? Is that really the question you’re going to ask?
I will say that the color of Obama’s skin ought not make him unlikable for a big part of America - but ought to has nothing to do with it.

Hmm, really NPR? Is that really the question you’re going to ask?

I will say that the color of Obama’s skin ought not make him unlikable for a big part of America - but ought to has nothing to do with it.

damn. good snaps

damn. good snaps

(via zaas)

ahhh the hands
mymindcontrol:

can i marry this kid? kay thanks

ahhh the hands

mymindcontrol:

can i marry this kid? kay thanks

(Source: myminddcontrol)

the next few days: 70 degrees with a high chance of awesome shredding

the next few days: 70 degrees with a high chance of awesome shredding

this, every single fucking day
lotsofdogs:

:D

this, every single fucking day

lotsofdogs:

:D

and then

you

just

can’t

make

sense

I was talking to the Moon. Trying to get it to answer some basic questions. What’s your shape and why do you have such a size? Does the dust feel like I think it would? Does the sunshine ache at certain angles?

A clever man blunted by a foreign language. Makes it so this clever man can’t judge people quite so harshly. He doesn’t pick up on their hidden motives or their questionable judgment and just accepts, trusts, admires, hopes. These are the greatest people. Once back in his own land, it becomes about how the dance of deception has permeated everything around - like water slowly seeping through sand.

When you speak the language you speak the culture. When your culture is dark and murky and recessing to the swamp right before your eyes - despite its hallowed mythological privilege - it is a hard thing to pick up on, as the culture will do everything it can to reassure itself of its greatness. It will trumpet its symbols and successes and describe its utter uniqueness and exceptional quality. It will scorn fact for feeling, somehow resigning itself to the deeply troubling and very easy conclusion that hedonistic logic is the highest and most sound form of logic: if it feels right, feels good, seems good - it is good. So the language bends in strange ways and takes bizarre inflections and the citizens position themselves in opposing fortresses waiting for the last good day.

This guy has a nice toesy style and good kickflips thanks bloggytreats!

bloggytreats:

ben smith RIPPINGGGGG!

[ cloud overview | get your own cloud ]This is a Tumblr Cloud I generated from my blog posts between Mar 2010 and Sep 2010 containing my top 20 used words.Top 5 blogs I reblogged the most:tequilatequilaetralosintroducinganimalsbluntflickinaishamazing

[ cloud overview | get your own cloud ]


This is a Tumblr Cloud I generated from my blog posts between Mar 2010 and Sep 2010 containing my top 20 used words.

Top 5 blogs I reblogged the most:

Craigslist censorship
I won’t lie…
…more than a little disturbing.

Jim Buckmaster, Craigslist chief executive officer, told The Chronicle that demanding censorship on the site might score political points, but was ineffective in tackling the underlying problem.
“Is moving advertising around our best hope for addressing these  harms?” he said. “Then the ads fall under personals, and how long before  the demand is that we shut down personals? And where do those ads go  next? What other sections of our site would they like us to shut down?”

Craigslist censorship

I won’t lie…

…more than a little disturbing.

Jim Buckmaster, Craigslist chief executive officer, told The Chronicle that demanding censorship on the site might score political points, but was ineffective in tackling the underlying problem.

“Is moving advertising around our best hope for addressing these harms?” he said. “Then the ads fall under personals, and how long before the demand is that we shut down personals? And where do those ads go next? What other sections of our site would they like us to shut down?”