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So these are the houses where they made the punk rock
09.18.2015
01:40 pm
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Necrophilism
Decatur, IL 62521
MAXIMUM ROCKNROLL, issue no. 35, April, 1986
“Is this misogyny or childish ghoulism?”

Before the internet, unsigned and unheralded punk and hardcore bands used analog processes like mimeographing, mass mailings, and silk screen to get the word out and build community. For bands with zero access to a word processing program, a desktop publishing program, or any kind of email, such processes were brutally time-consuming, and many of the bands that made an impact did so by dint of humongous gobs of back-breaking work. Michael Azerrad’s engrossing 2001 book Our Band Could Be Your Life is especially good on this point. Here’s a section from the chapter on Minor Threat:
 

Even though it was a fairly small operation, there were still plenty of things to do. Cutting, folding, and gluing the seven-inch covers, then inserting the photocopied lyric sheets, was a lot of work, so they’d have folding parties and invite their friends. “You’d just watch TV,” [Minor Threat drummer Jeff] Nelson recalls, “and get blisters and burn your nails from folding over the paper and gluing those down.” Some copies would get a special touch: “Folding all the lyric sheets and sealing them with a kiss or a fart,” says Nelson. “That’s what we’d do on some of them, we’d write ‘S.W.A.K.’ or ‘S.W.A.F.’ on a few of them.”

 
Throughout the 1980s, the influential zine Maximum Rock & Roll (or, if you prefer, Maximumrocknroll) became the de facto center of the American DIY music movement—largely by adopting an ethic of integrity every bit as committed as that of, say, Fugazi. In its heyday, Maximum Rock & Roll surely published thousands of reviews of independently generated punk and hardcore demos, EPs, albums, and 7-inches, and because of that analog world, there wasn’t any info@fuckyourecords.org at the end of the reviews so that the reader could find out more. No, what there were, very often, were mailing addresses.

Most confrontational hardcore bands had a significant interest in coming off as inscrutable, perverse, or intimidating, and in most cases a simple street address would simply and conveniently serve to fuel the imagination if a reader was so inclined. But where were these houses, anyway? Where were the places the birthed so much of American punk rock? Was it hovels in run-down urban districts, or was it posh suburban palaces? Marc Fischer of the Chicago-based art group Public Collectors decided to find out, and to do so, he had the brilliant idea of taking the addresses found at the end of MRR reviews and seeing what happens when you plop them into Google Street View. The results are pretty fascinating.
 

 
Fischer’s project, which exists as a Tumblr page, is called HARDCORE ARCHITECTURE. It’s no secret that punk gravitated more to cities, while hardcore was often an endeavor reflecting a specifically suburban anomie. But the juxtaposition of forbidding band names and sprawling prefab cubes of plenty can’t fail to elicit at least a smirk of humorous recognition. “Oh really? That uncompromising band Crippled By Society was based out of this expensive-looking McMansion?”

HARDCORE ARCHITECTURE looks exclusively at the 1982-1989 period, and it goes without saying that, well, 30 years have passed since then and now. Surely that McMansion wasn’t even there in 1985. But the beauty of Fischer’s project is that it eschews commentary, it merely presents the facts, as it were puts a face to the name.

Here is the statement that any reader of HARDCORE ARCHITECTURE encounters:
 

Hardcore Architecture explores the relationship between the architecture of living spaces and the history of underground American hardcore bands in the 1980s. Band addresses are discovered using contact listings found in demo tape and record reviews published from 1982-89 in the fanzine MAXIMUM ROCKNROLL (MRR). Google Street View is used to capture photos of the homes. Street names and numbers are removed to respect the privacy of people currently living at these addresses.

While care is taken to confirm that the home in the photo matches the street number listed in MAXIMUM ROCKNROLL, accuracy is not guaranteed. Some addresses have been confirmed using real estate websites. When multiple homes are built close together, the band-associated home is the house in the center of the composition. If you are a member of a band on this page and notice an error, please feel free to contact me. This research will later be supported by additional writing and exhibitions.

 
Every post presents the picture of a location, a band name, and then the name of the municipality, the relevant issue information of MRR and then the datestamp of the picture (obviously quite recent), and finally a sample quotation from the review and the identity of the reviewers. (Fischer uses an initial system—so “TY” stands for Tim Yohannan, “Jel” stands for Jello Biafra, and “TV” stands for Tesco Vee.) Specific street addresses are not published, although obviously anyone interested enough to find out could do so.

From Half Letter Press you can purchase a “booklet, flyer, and print pack” for just $20 (limited run of 100)—other items are cheaper and not part of a limited run.
 

Criminal Mischief
Reno, NV 89509
MAXIMUM ROCKNROLL, issue no. 35, April, 1986
“There’s some metal damage but not to a distracting degree. Power and production are tops; intense lyrics too.”
 

Sonic Youth
New York, NY 10002
MAXIMUM ROCKNROLL, issue no. 21, May/June, 1985.
“We’re bordering on ambient slow-burn here, but I’m still drawn…no, sucked into this band’s whole thing. They simply can do no wrong. I’m the biased jerk who really shouldn’t be reviewing this babe. Not for everybody, but then neither is good taste.”
 
More after the jump…

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Posted by Martin Schneider
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09.18.2015
01:40 pm
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You gotta have goals in life: Woman successfully flashes her ta-tas to Google Street View car
03.31.2015
04:20 pm
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Meet Australian woman Karen Davis. She was able to do the impossible, flash her boobs at a Google Street View car which then made it onto Google Street View without them being blurred out. As most know by now, Google Street View’s algorithm blurs-out license plate numbers and faces. I guess there’s no algorithm for areolas.

“I look at Google Maps a lot and I wanted to be on there and I thought this is the way to do it,” Davis told the Port Pirie Recorder, her local newspaper. “I got to tick something else off my bucket list.”

“I also did it for a friend in the United Kingdom. Now he can see me all the time,” said Davis.

Google has since gotten a hold of this titillating information in the past few hours and have now blurred Davis out completely. Aussies, amirite?

Below, is the naughty photo for posterity.


 
via Death and Taxes

Posted by Tara McGinley
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03.31.2015
04:20 pm
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Google Street View f*ck fingers
11.24.2014
12:20 pm
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Back in 2011 artist Michael Wolf started to collect images from Google Street View of folks flippin’ the bird at the Google Maps Camera Cars as they passed by them. Wolf has amassed quite a collection by this point as you can imagine. The exhibition is called “A Series of Unfortunate Events” which is dedicated to Google Street View mishaps and its subset of the series is simply titled “Fuck You.”

I’ve only known one person to be captured by the Google Maps Camera Car. Unfortunately, my friend was hipped to his appearance on Google Street View by someone who recognized him while looking for apartments on Craigslist. The person said to my friend, “Hey man, I saw you on Google Street View. You’re on a little girl’s pink bike.” My friend immediately looked up the coordinates and lo and behold, there he was, riding a Huffy pink bike—which he borrowed from his youngest sister ‘cause his bike had a flat tire—while holding a bag of take-out tacos.

I’m sure if he could do it all over again, he’d flip Google the bird, too.


 

 

 
More after the jump…
 

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Posted by Tara McGinley
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11.24.2014
12:20 pm
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‘Axe murder’ on Google Street View solved
06.03.2014
08:09 am
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An “axe murder” that was captured on Google Street View has been solved by police.

The images which were spotted on Street View appeared to show a young man with an axe in hand, standing over his lifeless victim on a cobblestone street in Edinburgh, Scotland. The killer then leaves the scene of the supposed crime.

Police were asked to investigate the photos after a complaint had been made by a Google user, leading to several reports about the “murder” online. The police soon discovered the murder had in fact been a hoax staged by two mechanics: garage boss and “murder victim” Dan Thompson, 56, who owns Thomson Motor Co in Giles Street, Edinburgh, and his colleague Gary Kerr, a 31-year-old mechanic, who stood over the prone Thompson with a pickaxe handle.

These two men had decided to pull the prank after spotting the Google Street View camera car approaching their place of work, as Thompson told the Edinburgh Evening News:

“By complete fluke I saw the Google car coming along the road but it had to loop the block so I had one minute to rush back inside the garage and set up the murder scene. There are pictures of men on Google flashing their bums but we thought we would be more classy.

“It seemed like the obvious thing to do so I threw myself on the ground and Gary grabbed a pick-axe handle from the garage.”

 
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The pair staged the “killing” in August 2012, and had forgotten about it until the images went live in late 2013. This was when a colleague mentioned he had seen the prank on Street View. However, their colleague wasn’t the only one who spotted the “killing,” as police eventually turned up at Thomson’s garage.

Two uniformed officers came down to the garage to interview us. They were treating it seriously at first - I was mortified because we didn’t want to waste police time.

“We explained to the police what we had done and they thought it was hilarious.”

Kerr also told the Edinburgh Evening News that they may have plans to repeat their hoax:

“I think Google do it every four years so we’ll have to think of something even better for next time.”

I suppose the only concern is how long it took the police to respond to a possible axe murder?
 
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Via Edinburgh Evening News

Posted by Paul Gallagher
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06.03.2014
08:09 am
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Grand Canyon added to Google Street View so users can explore America’s most endangered river
05.12.2014
04:29 pm
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Recently Google launched an absolutely amazing Street View tour of all 286 miles of the Grand Canyon, captured from the very waters of the Colorado River. My knee-jerk assumption was that this was simply another victory in Google’s ultimate goal of mapping every inch of the world (in order to more easily conquer it, obviously), but the Grand Canyon was actually chosen for its ecological significance. Working in conjunction with environmental non-profit American Rivers, Google released this statement:

For over 6 million years, the Colorado River has carved out its place on Earth. It spans over 1,450 miles, beginning in the Rocky Mountains in Colorado and ending the Gulf of California in Mexico. The Colorado River serves as a lifeline in the arid Western United States. It graces 7 states, 2 countries, and 9 national parks, nourishing the lives of 36 million people and endangered wildlife. Millions depend on the river for irrigation, water supply, and hydroelectric power. However, excessive water consumption and outdated management have endangered the Colorado River.

Over at Harper’s, writer and former Grand Canyon cartographer Jeremy Miller notes the extraordinary technology and scope of the project, and though he admits it can’t compare with a visit to the actual Grand Canyon, it’s baffling that such an impressive and advanced resource could be completed in just eight days. Silicon Valley has a notable habit of eschewing paying their taxes (or even more basic philanthropy) in favor of very conspicuous, tech-oriented social experiments—I’m unsure of how much Grand Canyon Street View will support conservation efforts, and I’m not convinced that a fat check wouldn’t do more to save the Colorado (it’s unclear if Google has donated). Regardless, the map is cool as hell, a worthy project in its own right, and I highly suggest you check it out.
 

 
Via Harper’s

Posted by Amber Frost
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05.12.2014
04:29 pm
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New Cat Species: Found on Google Street View?
05.07.2013
09:19 am
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elgoogtacteertstac
 
Cute and strange at the same time. A cat “cut-in-half” / shortened by Google Street View’s camera.
 
Previously on Dangerous MInds

Hand-job on Temperance Street (NSFW)


 
Via Google Street View
 

Posted by Paul Gallagher
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05.07.2013
09:19 am
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‘The New View You’: A short film about Google Street View
03.23.2013
08:54 pm
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image
 
The New View You—a short film about Google Street View, made by Dave at Sheep Films, and filmed by Ant Carpendale.
 

 
Bonus short ‘iEye’, after the jump…
 
H/T b3ta
 

READ ON
Posted by Paul Gallagher
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03.23.2013
08:54 pm
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Hand-job on Temperance Street (Kinda NSFW)

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An image of a couple performing a sex act on Temperance Street, Manchester, England, has been deleted from Google Street View, after the picture was spotted by users.

Temperance Street is well-known Red Light area in the city, and it is believed the image had been on Google Street view since April 2010.
 
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Close-up, after the jump…
 

READ ON
Posted by Paul Gallagher
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03.15.2013
07:41 am
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Google Street View driver does not like to be photographed herself…
10.13.2011
01:36 pm
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“I got yer privacy right here!”
 

 
Click here to view a larger image. Photo by Flickr user Dash.

(via reddit)

Posted by Tara McGinley
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10.13.2011
01:36 pm
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