I know it’s a tired meme, but OH MY GOD rainbows in space!
“This is what we see when we all die.”
(via Nerdcore)
I know it’s a tired meme, but OH MY GOD rainbows in space!
“This is what we see when we all die.”
(via Nerdcore)
R. Crumb’s Motor City Comics #1, “the only true workingman’s comic book,” featuring Lenore Goldberg and Her Girl Commandos. Another gem from “The Lizard Collection” over at Little Green Footballs. I like the back cover even more than the front. From Crumb’s Marxist phase? Nicely!
Thank you Charles Johnson!
Well, maybe 40 years ago…
Update: Jimmy Lee Wirt points out, “Obviously, she is experienced.”
(via Das Kraftfuttermischwerk)
Wow ! I had never seen this animated/live action film for the mini-song Sleeping In A Jar from the epic 1969 double LP Uncle Meat before. If this was, as I suspect, created as a TV ad for the LP then it’s no wonder it was never shown (except this one time on Swedish TV in 1971), given the none-too-subtle 7-UP bottle fellatio seen in the clip. As always, FZ brought the wholesome family entertainment.
Thanks Tony Coulter !
Rachel Bloom wrote and stars in Fuck Me, Ray Bradbury and embodies just about everything I love about women. As Dr. Tim said, “intelligence is the ultimate aphrodisiac.” A woman with a well-stacked bookshelf is my idea of bliss. And anyone who wants to fuck Ray Bradbury is a friend of mine.
Ray’s 90th birthday is on August 22nd. There’s a groovy article on the master at the L.A. Times website. Click here.
Don Letts made a documentary about the great Sun Ra? Yup, apparently so. I know what we’ll be watching tonight! How did this one slip past me???
Born in perhaps the most segregated place on Earth – early 20th-century Alabama – Herman Poole Blount rejected his name, his origins and the conventions of the time (or any other, for that matter), re-creating himself as Sun Ra, emissary from Saturn (“planet of discipline”) and musical genius. Blending Egyptology and Space Age imagery, he projected a philosophy of radical empowerment for the entire cosmos; keeping a big band on the road for decades through independence and communal living, he became a patriarch of jazz and an avatar of freewheeling space music. Turning from the punk and reggae with which he’s most closely associated to one of the key figures in 20th-century sound, famed DJ/filmmaker Letts presents the Sun Ra story in all its glory, combining powerful footage of Ra and his legendary Arkestra, interviews with band members shot at their famous group house in Philadelphia and testimonies from sax great Archie Shepp, Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore and other admirers.
-Keith Jones/musicfilmweb
Via Pathway To Unknown Worlds. Note that there is a download link.
Thanks William Meehan!
Nuff said. Get yours at The Nuns Are On The Sea Wall
Wait for the bass to kick in. God, I love this kid!
Previously on Dangerous Minds: Fred The Raver: Toddler Trippin’ Balls
Thanks, Nico!