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  1. Flaming Pablum, , more info

    Exhuming St. Marks Sounds
    Back in 2015, after having weepily documented the long, slow demise of storied record shop, Bleecker Bob’s at 118 West 3rd Street, I posted an entry about myself and my friend Steve having lunch at Miyabi, the Japanese restaurant that had assumed the long-contested address on West 3rd. Late last year, however, Miyabi quietly closed without a great deal of fanfare. I’m not suggesting there’s any sort of cause-&-effect correlation …
    By Alex in NYC, 678 words
  2. Jim Caroll - Blog, , more info

    Daily Inspiration: Innovation & Corporate Culture – “Committees are an infrastructure designed to race you to the bottom of opportunity!”
    “Committees are an infrastructure designed to race you to the bottom of opportunity!” – Futurist Jim Carroll Committees kill ideas. Committees kill all initiative. Committees kill the idea of innovation. Committees are the destroyer of all things. Did I mention I think committees are a bad idea? “Let me check with the committee.” “We’ve got a committee looking into that.” “There’s a committee involved with the decision.” “We’ll send that …
    By JimCarroll, 769 words
  3. Hermitary – hermit's thatch, , more info

    Solitude – a pre-history
    In searching for a prototype modern hermit, one is confronted by the reality that after the Middle Ages, hermits in modernity were destined by authorities to disappear. In order to survive, eremitism transformed into solitude, and hermits transformed into solitaries. Unlike historical hermits, however, who seem so similar regardless of geography, culture, or era, solitaries present more variable phenomena. Life styles of modern solitaries depend more on circumstance and personality. …
    707 words
  4. Tim Boucher, , more info

    Nevermades
    “Nevermades” are a conceptual evolution of Marcel Duchamp’s “readymades,” pushing the boundaries of authenticity and creation even further into the digital realm. While Duchamp recontextualized everyday objects as art by simply selecting them, nevermades are works that were never physically created at all. These virtual fabrications exist purely as digital constructs, challenging the traditional notions of art’s materiality and the value placed on physical objects. In the spirit of Duchamp’s …
    By Tim B., 184 words
  5. CST Online | Television Studies Blog, , more info

    “FINDING YOUR FIT” WITHIN THE CONFERENCE CONTINUUM by Christopher Pullen
    In this blog, I offer an autoethnographical account of what it means for TV scholars to take part in the conference continuum, which I argue is both familiar and strange in every iteration. Whether you are an ardent follower of certain large-scale conferences, or a serial “dipper in” to a plethora of small-scale events, you might not realise how to “find your fit” – when you turn up… Source
    By CSTonline, 79 words
  6. THE ANOMALIST, , more info

    New Paper on Chemical Classification of IM1 Spherules Published in Chemical Geology The Galileo Project/Harvard University
    The Galileo Project's Papua New Guinea expedition "has culminated in the publication of a major new paper by Professor Avi Loeb and his team in the prestigious Elsevier journal Chemical Geology. Thus Harvard's announcement, which also details some "key findings" from the 1.5M dollar effort. The announcement retains the claim the meteor was "interstellar," with admission that some spherules were "potentially of terrestrial origin," and, while stressing the "BeLaU" subset …
    241 words
  7. Flutterby™!, , more info

    Modern computing is just trying to keep
    Modern computing is just trying to keep up with all of the places where people have changed things for bullshit reasons, and fixing the resulting broken processes, until you die.
    37 words
  8. cultural snow, , more info

    About Warhol
    Tracey Emin, quoted in Dylan Jones’s newish oral history of the Velvet Underground:When I was at school, I used to imagine that I would go to New York by boat and when I walked down the gangplank Andy Warhol would be there waiting for me.The thing is, I still believe that...
    By Tim F, 53 words
  9. Lowering the Bar, , more info

    Cease-and-Desist Letter Fails to Prevent Competing “World Naked Bike Ride”
    I’ve already mentioned Tom Harrison’s “Headline of the Day” email list, which is always entertaining and often good source material for Lowering the Bar items. I highly recommend signing up (email: tomharrison711 at gmail.com). I have an email distribution list too, of course, but HOTD can offer you similar entertainment in far fewer words. The cost is the same. A recent link led to the headline, “A World Naked Bike …
    By Kevin, 913 words
  10. disassociated.com, , more info

    Grand final day: when some introverts must leave the house
    No posts about sport, hardly ever, then two in a week. But the NRL football (rugby league) grand final (Penrith Panthers versus Melbourne Storm) is on this long weekend, and since I wrote about the AFL the other day, this seems right. More a personality/psychology post though: a profile of Nathan Cleary, the Panthers halfback, and veritable introvert: Nathan Cleary could have the time of his life, “just the most …
    By disassociated.com, 197 words
  11. thebluemoment.com, , more info

    Other sounds 2: Vazesh
    The Persian tar is a cousin of the lute, the saz and the oud, a long-necked instrument with three double courses of strings — sort of like half a 12-string guitar, another relative — and an unusual double bowl made of mulberry wood with a membrane of stretched lambskin. Perhaps you already knew that, but I didn’t until I encountered the playing of the Iranian-born tar virtuoso Hamed Sadeghi in …
    By Richard Williams, 290 words
  12. 3:AM Magazine, , more info

    Inside the Spiral
    By Joseph Nechvatal. Suzaan Boettger, Inside the Spiral: The Passions of Robert Smithson (University of Minnesota Press, 2023) The 440 pages of the heavily illustrated book Inside the Spiral: The Passions of Robert Smithson are Suzaan Boettger’s deep dive into the incongruous religious and raunchy roots of American artist, art theorist and literary essayist Robert Smithson — famous as the creator of the minimalist abstract earthwork masterpiece, Spiral Jetty, that …
    By Andrew Gallix, 1,354 words
  13. StreetsblogMASS, , more info

    State Officials Say Work to Improve Safety at Lethal Memorial Drive Crash Site Will Begin On Monday
    Officials from the Department of Conservation and Recreation (DCR) have told local elected officials that the work will begin on Monday on several safety upgrades near the location where a driver struck and killed John Corcoran last week on a busy riverfront bike and jogging path in Cambridge. Rep. Mike Connolly, who represents Cambridge neighborhoods to the north and northeast of the crash site, told StreetsblogMASS that he and several …
    452 words
  14. BikePortland, , more info

    Podcast: In the Shed with Eva and Jonathan
    Hope you’ve had a great week. Eva just rolled away and we had a good ol’ time chatting it up for this week’s In The Shed episode. Check (mostly) all the fun stuff we mentioned in the links below. Cool solo art exhibition Eva saw at Director Park: Orquidia Violeta – Chalecos Protector Exhibition Our popular How’d She Get There?! segment: Eva’s route from North Portland to Director Park How …
    By Jonathan Maus (Publisher/Editor), 250 words
  15. Deeplinks Blog | Electronic Frontier Foundation, , more info

    EFF to Fifth Circuit: Age Verification Laws Will Hurt More Than They Help
    EFF, along with the ACLU and the ACLU of Mississippi, filed an amicus brief on Thursday asking a federal appellate court to continue to block Mississippi’s HB 1126—a bill that imposes age verification mandates on social media services across the internet. Our friend-of-the-court brief, filed in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, argues that HB 1126 is “an extraordinary censorship law that violates all internet users’ First …
    By Molly Buckley, 958 words