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Hare Krishnas psychedelicize Utah
04.02.2011
05:57 am
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I used to dance with the Hare Krishna people on Sproul Plaza in Berkeley back when I was a 17 year old longhaired hippie. The Krishnas always know how to party and they make delicious vegetarian food.

Every year the Hare Krishna Temple in Spanish Fork, Utah puts on the biggest Holi celebration in the Western Hemisphere. In 2011 the Spanish Fork Police department estimated that over 40,000 people attended in the first day alone of the two-day festival. Organizers carefully rationed their stash of approximately 120,000 bags of colored powder.

Attendees come from all over the country (and some from abroad), but the majority of attendees are students from Brigham Young, Utah Valley, and Utah universities.

Holi celebrates the triumph of good over evil and ushers in the spring season. The festival commemorates a Hindu myth about a witch who burned children in a fire. One child repeated the Hare Krishna mantra as he was carried into the flames and the witch was burned instead. At the Spanish Fork festival, rock and roll, R&B, and other modern interpretation of the mantra are played by musicians throughout the day and chanted in a call and response game between performers and attendees. The main event of each festival is the coordinated throwing of colored powder, when the sky above the crowd is filled with rainbow puffs of dye.

Who knew Mormon country could be so psychedelic? Beautiful.
 

 
Via publique

Posted by Marc Campbell
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04.02.2011
05:57 am
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The Ramones live at New York City’s Palladium in January of 1978
04.02.2011
03:23 am
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The Ramones live at New York City’s Palladium January 7, 1978. Suicide and The Runaways were the opening acts!

26 songs in 54 minutes.

Update April 4: All new video mix.
 

Posted by Marc Campbell
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04.02.2011
03:23 am
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Only fans of ‘The Wire’ will get this
04.01.2011
08:12 pm
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Kosmograd linked to this on BB Submitterator and wrote, “I found this in one of my mother’s magazines ...” I’m not entirely sure if this is a real ad or not, but I certainly had a good laugh.

Posted by Tara McGinley
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04.01.2011
08:12 pm
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Nat Tate: William Boyd’s literary hoax on the art world
04.01.2011
08:03 pm
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April Fool’s Day 1998, David Bowie hosted a party, at Jeff Koon’s studio in Manhattan, for the launch of William Boyd’s biography of the Abstract Expressionist painter, Nat Tate. As Boyd describes in Harper’s Bazaar, the book, Nat Tate: An American Artist: 1928—1960 was, :

...full of photographs and illustrations, and it was written by [William Boyd]. Nat Tate was a short-lived member of the famous New York School, which flourished in the late 1940s and 1950s and included such luminaries as Jackson Pollock, Franz Kline, and Willem de Kooning. Tate committed suicide in 1960 by jumping off the Staten Island Ferry (his body was never found) after having burned 99 percent of his life’s work during the last weekend of his life.

It was a coup for the author Boyd to have uncovered this forgotten and ignored artist. He gave interviews to the major dailies, the BBC and alike, and had extracts serialized in the Sunday Telegraph. All well and good, except, Nat Tate had never existed, and Boyd’s book was a hoax.

When I first heard about Nat Tate, from keen researchers suggesting a possible doc, it struck me as bogus. I thought this for two reasons: firstly, I’d just read a weighty tome on Jackson Pollock, which made no mention of this genius Tate. Secondly, and more importantly, it was the name Nat Tate, which sounded more like a Folk singer or a Blues percussionist than a painter. Nat Tate is overly familiarly, and moreover, if he had been an Abstract Expressionist, it would have been Nathaniel Tate, as de Kooning was William and not Bill. Smart ass, maybe, but you see, I’d been regularly writing hoax letters to newspapers under various names (Elsie Gutteridge (Mrs)., Edna Bakewell, Ian M. Knowles, The Reverend Desmond Prentice, Richard Friday and Bessie Graham) since I was a 12, and if these seemed hollow to the ear, then, for me, Nat Tate just didn’t ring true.

Okay, my quibbling dickheadery aside, Boyd had worked hard on making Tate “real”, as he told Jim Crace in the Guardian last year:

“I’d been toying with the idea of how things moved from fact to fiction,” says Boyd, “and I wanted to prove something fictive could prove factual. The plan had been to slowly reveal the fiction over a long period of time, but it didn’t really work like that.”

It took Boyd a couple of years to construct Tate’s persona. It wasn’t so much the framework – the reclusive genius who, conveniently, destroyed almost all of his own work and who killed himself at the age of 32 in 1960 – as the details that took the time. “Much of the illusion was created in the details, the footnotes and in getting the book published in Germany to make it look like an authentic art monograph,” he says.

“I went to a lot of trouble to get things right. I created the ‘surviving’ artworks that were featured in the illustrations and spent ages hunting through antique and junk shops for photos of unknown people, whom I could caption as being close friends and relatives.”

It was a good literary hoax, reminiscent of playwright and artist, John Byrne‘s faux naif painter, Patrick, who Byrne created after he failed to sell his own paintings to London galleries during the 1960s. Byrne claimed Patrick was his father, a self-taught artist, whose his fake paintings proved so successful with critics and cognescenti, they led to a major London show, and a memorable commission from The Beatles.
 
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Boyd went further with his creation, as he managed to get David Bowie, Gore Vidal and Picasso’s biographer, John Richardson, in on the act.

“None of them needed much persuasion,” Boyd laughs, “and they all went further that I would have dared ask them. Bowie gave a quote for the front jacket that Tate was one of his favourite artists and that he owned one of his few surviving works.

“Vidal allowed himself to be quoted in the book saying, ‘Tate was essentially dignified, though always drunk and with nothing to say,’ while Richardson told of how Tate had been having lunch with Picasso when he came to visit. It was these details that made it. People stopped wondering why they hadn’t heard of Tate when Vidal, Picasso and Richardson started appearing.”

The best was saved till last. At the launch party for the book at Jeff Koons’ studio in Manhattan, David Lister, the then arts editor of the Independent who was also in on the hoax, spent the evening asking guests what they remembered about Tate. A surprising number seemed to have attended one of his rare retrospectives in the late 60s and everyone lamented how sad they were he had died so young.

The hoax was so good, in fact, that Lister couldn’t stop himself from letting everyone know. “I was pissed off,” says Boyd, “because we had the London launch planned for the following week at a trendy restaurant called Mash, and we were going to repeat the experiment. I’d already done a large number of interviews with British radio, TV and print journalists – who shall remain nameless – and they’d all been taken in. But by the time their copy appeared they all swore blind they knew it was a hoax.

But Boyd’s point was made. And weirdly Tate continues to have a meta-life more real than the rest of us. Tate has now been the subject of three documentaries and has made a walk-on appearance in another fictional memoir, Boyd’s Any Human Heart. His art also lives on. “It’s strange,” says Boyd, “because whenever a friend gets married I always seem to find another Tate in the attic. I’m almost tempted to take one along to Christie’s and see what it sells for.” And most of us would love to buy one. Because some things are too good not to be true.

Boyd writes about the Nat Tate hoax in this month’s Harper’s Bazaar.
 

 

Posted by Paul Gallagher
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04.01.2011
08:03 pm
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Gentleman’s Willy Care Kit
04.01.2011
06:32 pm
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No, this is not an April Fool’s Day joke, it’s a real product you can actually purchase on Amazon, should you require it…

This reviewer, “Master Oliver C. Doubleday” AKA “Tico,” I think says it best:

“I used to be ashamed of my willy. People used to point and yell ‘What an unkept willy!’ I was bullied at school. But then I bought the Gentleman’s Willy Care Kit, and now, instead, people yell ‘What a fantastic willy!’ and all my friends think I’m really cool.”

Don’t forget to order a Gentleman’s Ball Scratcher, too.

Via Popbitch

Posted by Richard Metzger
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04.01.2011
06:32 pm
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Vertigo-go
04.01.2011
04:05 pm
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Vertige directed by Jean Beaudin in 1969 is a cinematic pop explosion that plays like a fashion shoot from Paris Vogue photographed by David Hemming’s character in Antonioni’s Blow-Up. A mix of LSD imagery, candy-colored sets, go go dancing, Vietnam war and horror movie stills and clips,Vertige rides the rhythm of a dynamic era of contrasting moods and styles, politics and attitudes.

Malron Blando has created a new soundtrack for Vertige in the experimental spirit of the film itself. Blasphemous? Perhaps. But so was the sixties.

Vertige with its original score by Serge Garant can viewed here.

“Final Days” (Peel Sessions) - Young Marble Giants
“River Of Blood” - The Black Angels
“Change Is Now” - The Byrds
“Voodoo Chile” (Live, Winterland 1968) - Jimi Hendrix
“Chinatown” - Destroyer
“The Desert Is A Circle” (El Topo) - Jodorowsky/Fierro
“Where The Rhythm Takes You” - Makin’ Time
“Signed D.C.” - December’s Children
“True Believers” - The Black Angels
“Trust Us” (Take 6) - Captain Beefheart
 

Posted by Marc Campbell
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04.01.2011
04:05 pm
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George Bush & Osama Bin Laden ‘super funny children’s toy’
04.01.2011
03:57 pm
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This is interesting, isn’t it? A child’s play set with George Bush as a tank commander chasing Osama Bin Laden around the desert on a train track?

Made in China, but seen for sale in Morocco. It appears like it was meant to read “Path Car,” but they spelled it wrong.

Says on the package that it’s a “super funny children’s toy.” Appropriate for “ages 3 and up.”

Thank you Adam Peters of Los Angeles, CA!

 

Posted by Richard Metzger
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04.01.2011
03:57 pm
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Friday in Hell: Dangerous Minds has avoided Rebecca Black’s ‘Friday’ until now
04.01.2011
03:41 pm
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I’ve absolutely refused to watch any of the Rebecca Black “Friday” parody videos circulating the Internet the past few weeks. However, this one deserves special attention on Dangerous Minds. It’s not what you think. Holy shit! Just watch.  

 
(via TDW)

Posted by Tara McGinley
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04.01.2011
03:41 pm
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‘Punk In London’ featuring X Ray Spex, The Adverts, The Clash and more
04.01.2011
02:57 pm
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Dangerous Minds recently featured Wolfgang Buld’s Punk In England. Well, our good friends at See Of Sound have have made available Buld’s first documentary on British punk, Punk In London. This is from a re-mastered DVD and looks and sounds far better than my old VHS copy.

This acclaimed feature length music documentary comes to special edition DVD featuring incredible live performances from: The Clash, X-Ray Spex, The Jam, Boomtown Rats, The Adverts, The Lurkers and many more! Digitally remastered to the highest standard from the original 1978 negatives by BBC Post Production, this access-all-areas documentary really captures the punk phenomenon in all its raw power and energy. Featuring early live performances from The Clash, X-Ray Spex, The Jam, The Adverts and interviews with those who strived for anarchy in the UK, Punk in London is a unique and powerful record of punk life as it really happened in the late 1970s. Filled with stunning live performance and insightful interviews, this remastered DVD-9 release features incredible picture and sound clarity along with previously unseen bonus footage of The Clash in Munich. Also included is a retrospective interview with director, Wolfgang Buld and trailers for other Odeon documentaries.”

You may want to own this one. You can buy it here.

“Why don’t you want to appear in our movie?”
Jean-Jacques Burnel: “Because I’m not a prostitute.”
 

Posted by Marc Campbell
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04.01.2011
02:57 pm
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Very informative tutorial on how to piss in public
04.01.2011
02:46 pm
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Unfortunately, none of these ninja piss tricks apply to women. Move along, ladies.

 
(via Nerdcore )

Posted by Tara McGinley
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04.01.2011
02:46 pm
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