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 randompictures [ bluepessimism ] | Nov. 14th, 2009 02:58 pm Awesomesauce I saw this after I leveled my vampy.
 4 comments - Leave a comment | |

 randompictures [ leahfu ] | Nov. 14th, 2009 03:38 pm Took a day trip to New Orleans while I was out of town for work this past week
( some pics I took with my phone ) 15 comments - Leave a comment | |

 books [ giraffedays ] | Nov. 14th, 2009 02:09 pm The Pages The Pages by Murray Bail Vintage 2009 (2008) 199 pages Fiction

Murray Bail's 1998 book, Eucalyptus, is one of my most beloved books. It resonates so strongly with me that I'm always disappointed when other readers don't like it like I do - even though I can understand it, especially if they're not Australian and have never been there. It's a mix of Bail's distinctive writing style and the story itself: it either works for you or it doesn't.
The same is very much true of The Pages, a simple, short novel about two women, psychologists from Sydney, who travel seven hours to a sheep station in rural New South Wales to read a possible philosophic work written by a farmer's son, Wesley Antill, now dead. It was in his will that someone read and evaluate his work with the possibility of publishing it, and Erica is sent by the university to do just that. She takes her friend Sophie with her, who after yet another failed affair with a married man needs a break. Wesley's younger brother and sister, Roger and Lindsey, run the sheep station and are just as curious about Wesley's work. Interwoven with this present-day story is the story of Wesley, leaving home first to live in Sydney and then to travel around Europe.
( Read more ) Leave a comment | |




 free_palestine [ sadie_sabot ] | Nov. 14th, 2009 10:36 am powerful new post on the DAM blog cross posted; as always, please forward and repost widely!
(note: I know I'm posting lots; obviously once the delegation is over, I'll stop. They're over half way through their time there)
http://againstmilitarism.wordpress.com/2009/11/14/palestine-is-a-compass-pointing-towards-freedom/
When we crossed the Egyptian border at Taba, into the 1948 boundaries of the Israeli state, I ran over to the earthy cliff beside the road and touched Palestinian soil. Hours later, after dusk, we swam in the bathwater-warm Red Sea, and I felt this place soaking into my pores. I got involved in Palestine solidarity organizing when the second intifada began in 2000, and ached to come here for years. But the pain of being able to walk right in, holding my U.S. passport, into the homeland that millions of Palestinians in the diaspora are not allowed to return to, kept me focused on the work I believe is primary for U.S. citizens anyway: working within the U.S. to change our government’s policies, and to build popular support for Palestinians trying to live in peace.
The brutality of “Operation Cast Lead,” this winter’s attacks on the already besieged population of Gaza, jolted me over my block about coming here. When I became involved with the Dialogues Against Militarism delegation, it became clear to me that this was the way in which I needed to finally come to Palestine.
...
We didn’t reach Palestine, as currently defined, until a few days ago. When we left Jerusalem and entered the West Bank, I broke down in joy and rage. Leaning against the window looking at the apartheid wall, my fists clenched, gripping the seat, wanting to kick out hard and scream. Joy at finally being here and the rage at what my U.S. tax dollars are subsidizing here.
read the rest at their blog. it's powerful.Leave a comment | |

 madali | Nov. 14th, 2009 10:36 pm Review of "Cavalcade of Cartoon Comedy", "Mystic River", "Flirt" Cavalcade of Cartoon Comedy (MacFarlane, 2008)IMDB LinkI don’t know how to review this. Have you seen “Family Guy”? Remember those small scenes which occur after a character says something like, “This reminds me of…”? Those scenes are usually unrelated to the main plot and are small, random jokes sprinkled throughout each episode. Created by Seth MacFarlane, “Cavalcade of Cartoon” is basically an hour of similar style jokes. Each skit is around a minute or so and is prefaced by the title of the scene, such as “Name That Animal Penis!” It is very clear the kind of audience that this will appeal to. Like “Family Guy”? Then this is recommended. Don’t? Then fuck off. Simple as that. 4/5
Mystic River (Eastwood, 2003)IMDB Link"I'm tired of wishing things made sense. I'm tired of caring about some dead girl, and there's just gonna be another one after her. Sending killers to jail is just sending them where they've been heading all their dumb, pathetic lives. The dead are still dead. "I think it was with “Mystic River” that Clint Eastwood found his calling. Delivering feature films that are over two hours, makes the Oscar people cream their pants, have lots of emotional scenes, and attract the mainstream audience. And I don’t mean those in a negative way. Eastwood makes crowd-pleasing, mainstream films, but he makes them well. Any particular entry in a genre that is done well deserves respect, and Eastwood is very good at what he does. But to me, it is not as interesting, because it is the same film wearing different clothes. It always has characters going through emotional pain, helped by overacting, overdramatic script, and loud sentimental music. And big name actors and actresses struggling to have their name be mentioned positively by the critics and maybe have a few awards rolled their way. Wait, I’m doing it again, I’m sounding very negative towards the film, even though I enjoyed it. “Mystic River” starts off with three childhood friends, and one of them getting kidnapped by two pedophiles and being used for Happy Kiddie Ass Fun Time for four days, and now its decades later, the four friends have grown apart, and there is a murder. One’s a cop, one’s the father of the victim, and one is a red herring. 3/5
Flirt (Hartley, 1995)IMDB LinkHaley’s “Flirt” is a failed experiment. His film is about three stories, each one using almost the exact same script, with dialogue being almost verbatim, which slightly differences in wording, tone, and so forth. All three are about love, with each of them having its own set of characters, in a different country, and different genders. The first one is the best. Pure Hartley. A young man is talking to his girlfriend, who is moving away to Paris for six months, and wants to know if she has a future with him. “How can I answer that”, he says. “Yes or no”, she replies. Trying not to answer it, the young man says, “I can’t see the future.”The woman, irritated, answers back, “You don’t need to see the future if you know it’s there.”The man says that he will get a car and pick her up to drop her to the airport, and when he comes back, he will give her his answer. She agrees. He goes out and calls a woman he feels like he is in love with, but who is in a relationship. He has the exact same conversation about the future with her, but this time, he is the one who wants to know. All this is excellent. And he goes to the bar to meet her, and meets the woman’s husband, played by Martin Donovan, THE actor when it comes to Hartley’s films. If you watch a few of Hartley’s films, you will start appreciating Donovan. There is no one else in Haley’s films who is able to perfectly capture the essence of Haley’s writing style. Donovan doesn’t really act, he seems to PRETEND to act, but somehow it works perfectly. Soon, the story wraps up, and we get the second story. This time it is in Germany, and it starts with two gay men. Then the third story, with the main gender being a woman this time, and set in Japan. The second story was repetitive but tolerable for the sake of the experiment. But third time was not a charm. Not only was the repetition by now tiring, but there was none of Harley’s charm in the Japan story. By then, he had completely lost me, and I just wanted the film to finish. If it was just the first story, I would have loved it. But as three similar takes on the same idea, nope, didn’t work. “Relinquishing a hold on someone is an act of love. Giving up affection and determination to provide comfort are two practicable elements of love. Love requires no proof. Seen in this life, love is a sort of faith. Since a faith that requires proof wouldn’t be a faith at all. But I will make this distinction. Love is an act. Faith is an ability.”2/5 Leave a comment | |



 randompictures [ uncle_skizo ] | Nov. 14th, 2009 11:36 am Google kicks ass 
Current Music: "Wait Wait, Don't Tell Me!"
6 comments - Leave a comment | |


 coppervale | Nov. 14th, 2009 09:18 am Minor Tour Update Kalamazoo is full of book awesome and literary win.
Today: The Phoenix Faerie Festival (with pals Janette Rallison, Janni Lee Simner, and Aprilynne Pike), then the SECOND book launch event at Changing Hands Bookstore. It's practically a day off!
Tomorrow: SoCal, and the biggest week of the book tour. Leave a comment | |



 publius_aelius | Nov. 14th, 2009 01:22 pm 9/11--An "Inside Job" Has anyone—anyone at all—provided any evidence at all—that the collapse of the third and fourth buildings of the World Trade Centre on the 11th of September, 2001, was caused by explosions triggered by the airliners’ destruction of the first two buildings?
I have never seen any such evidence, and that means that the American sheep are being asked by their government and politicians and propagandizing “main stream media” to believe that a fundamental law of physics, the law of “conservation of momentum,” was magically suspended in New York City on that day: ( Read more... )
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/nov/13/nobler-trickier-path-september11-justice?showallcomments=true#comment-51
Answer to the above question: yes, someone has, and it looks like a put-up job to me:
http://www.implosionworld.com/Article-WTC%20STUDY%208-06%20w%20clarif%20as%20of%209-8-06%20.pdf
But this piece of puffery is reduced to be a credulous laughing-stock by this more in-depth analysis, which proves that the above conclusions depend upon MIRACLES:
http://911review.com/articles/griffin/nyc1.html
Some “conspiracy theories” are the only explanations that make sense. Current Mood: uncomfortable
Leave a comment | |


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