February 14
A few months ago, I signed up for an OkCupid.com account. 5 minutes after signing up, before having even written my profile, I started to recieve messages. Since then, I've recieved between 1 and 10 messages from random strangers every day. I'm not going to tell you my name, or username, or the usernames of anyone featured on this site. All I will say is that I am a young woman, and I will post up some of the most interesting messages I get sent day to day.
posted by Blasdelb at 5:36 PM - 13 comments
She is gone. A Valentines story of love and loss.
posted by ColdChef at 1:34 PM - 21 comments
Legendary comic book artist John Severin
has died. He was ninety years old.
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posted by MartinWisse at 1:13 PM - 37 comments
Today's
Google doodle is quite cute.
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posted by CrazyLemonade at 12:19 PM - 44 comments
170 years ago, a gala ball was held
in his honor on Valentine's Day. Flattered by New York City's elites, the author considered the occasion the finest moment of his life, particularly since he felt the United States was an ideal example of how Britain's class-bound society should live. But in the following weeks, when besieged by fawning groupies and actually meeting directly with the less than well-heeled folk of the New World, that his disposition turned sour.
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posted by Smart Dalek at 11:42 AM - 16 comments
Today, across Canada, thousands of women March. The February 14th Annual Women’s Memorial March is held on Valentine’s Day each year to honour the memory of women from Vancouver's Downtown Eastside who have died due to the violence of physical, mental, emotional and spiritual abuse.
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posted by what's her name at 11:23 AM - 46 comments
"
Lots of people write storytelling songs about trains and set it to acoustic music and do pretty harmonies, but First Aid Kit transcends that cliché. Their songs sound like they’ve gone away and seen too much and come back tired but still alive. Their music kind of has its own way of breathing: filled with tension for a little while until it goes over the edge and exhales while the instrumental parts just seem to grow. This part of every few songs of theirs is most thrilling in concert, when Klara plays guitar so intensely you’d think it’s her only way of communicating, while Johanna stands perfectly still and lets her voice carry out so that it seems kind of infinite, or like it’s been waiting to come out for forever, and I kind of can’t help imagining that it comes from under the ground up through her mouth, or that a little part of the sky exists in her diaphragm or something. They can sound like freaking angels, or like women demanding life’s answers and who can make Patti Smith cry."
Tavi interviews First Aid Kit on Rookie [more inside]
posted by filthy light thief at 11:01 AM - 12 comments
Aereo is a new venture that is about to start streaming live, over-the-air TV signals in NYC to your computer, tablet or smart phone for $12 per month. How, you might ask, can they do this legally??? They have developed a ultra small TV antenna and they'll be deploying many thousands of them around NYC.
Each subscriber then get's their own personal antenna, and they are therefore -- at least in theory -- protected by the 2008 ruling allowing Cablevision to offer DVR services from their head end.
It's good they have Barry Diller behind them to cover their legal bills!
Here's another article about this in today's NYT.
posted by Dean358 at 10:39 AM - 33 comments
Yosimar Reyes, a champion slam
poet has collaborated with artist
Julio Salgado, who is "
out and proud" as gay and undocumented, on a new set of works called "Five Tips for Queer Boys"
(#1,
#2,
#3,
#4,
#5, and
extra).
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posted by anya32 at 10:22 AM - 0 comments
To expose a bookshelf is to compose a self. The Paris Review towards a history of bookshelves.
posted by shakespeherian at 9:24 AM - 17 comments
Hit men, click whores, and paid apologists: Welcome to the Silicon Cesspool, by Dan Lyons (aka
Fake Steve Jobs) digs into the lying, collusion, and rotten dealings that surround tech journalism in the Valley.
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posted by smitt at 9:16 AM - 54 comments
Winifred Gallagher argues that neophilia has always been the quintessential human survival skill, whether adapting to climate change on the ancestral African savanna or coping with the latest digital toy from Silicon Valley. “Nothing reveals your personality more succinctly than your characteristic emotional reaction to novelty and change over time and across many situations; [i]t’s also the most important behavioral difference among individuals.”
[NYT] [more inside]
posted by obscurator at 8:36 AM - 35 comments
Rhodri Marsden, journalist and erstwhile member of Scritti Politti, decided to ask Twitter about their worst Valentine's Days.
This was the result.
posted by mippy at 8:27 AM - 25 comments
Joseph Gordon-Levitt, the Gregory Brothers and the ACLU have teamed up to bring attention to the issue photographer’s rights in public spaces, with
an animated musical piece featuring the ghost of Benjamin Franklin.
[via]
posted by quin at 7:36 AM - 15 comments
A
two part look back on Jim Jinkins' cartoon
Doug.
posted by griphus at 6:54 AM - 29 comments
Originality is a relative concept in literature. As writers from T. S. Eliot to Harold Bloom have pointed out, ideas are doomed to be rehashed. This wasn’t always regarded as a problem
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posted by Ruthless Bunny at 6:35 AM - 36 comments
NEW DELUXE TRANSIENT ROOMS WITH FREE ADULT MOVIES ... that's what the three-story-tall painted sign promised. It's
faded and peeling now, but the sign's still there, though the
Viceroy Hotel has been closed for nearly a decade.
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posted by orthicon halo at 2:46 AM - 33 comments
February 13
So many (free, online) ways to celebrate (or not) Valentine's Day:
a declaration of romantic intent -
14 ways an economist says "I love you" -
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posted by flex at 11:38 PM - 26 comments
Nevermore? The
crows in Rochester, NY are
being evicted. The City is attempting to scare off the local roost of over 20,000 birds using pyrotechnics, amplified distress calls, and laser shows. Other cities in the region are
taking even more drastic measures.
posted by Jesse Hughson at 10:12 PM - 78 comments
He leaves his cellphone and laptop at home and instead brings "loaner" devices, which he erases before he leaves the US and wipes clean the minute he returns . In China, he disables Bluetooth and Wi-Fi , never lets his phone out of his sight and, in meetings, not only turns off his phone but also removes the battery , for fear his microphone could be turned on remotely. He connects to the Internet only through an encrypted, password-protected channel, and copies and pastes his password from a USB thumb drive. He never types in a password directly, because, he said, "Chinese are very good at installing key-logging software on your laptop." -
Travel precautions in the age of digital espionage.
posted by Artw at 9:06 PM - 105 comments
In Praise of Older Women was condemned by some as some as pornography. In spite or perhaps because of that, it was a phenomenal seller. There is nothing pornographic about it. It is a beautiful and tender book, the semi-autobiographical tale of the amorous adventures of a young man who learns much, not only in matters of sex, from older women. It is a primer for men on the threshold of adulthood and a paean of elegant praise for older women. Unlike many male writers who write about women, there is no fear or hatred. In Praise of Older Women is warm and wise.*
posted by Trurl at 7:25 PM - 34 comments
Человек с киноаппаратом ("Man with a Movie Camera") is a classic experimental documentary film that was released in 1929. Directed by pioneer Soviet filmmaker
Dziga Vertov, this classic, silent documentary film has no story and no actors, and is actually three documentaries in one. Ostensibly it documents 24 hours of life in a single city in the Soviet Union. But it is also a documentary of the filming of that documentary and a depiction of an audience watching that documentary and their responses. "We see the cameraman and the editing of the film, but what we don't see is any of the film itself."
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posted by zarq at 7:18 PM - 26 comments
Since the Spring of 1997, Joe and the Lil' Giants Construction Company have been
excavating his basement, one truck load at a time. Joe uses
Wedico,
Tamiya and Stahl RC trucks, bulldozers, excavators and a
dirt lump crusher to build, remove, repair and sculpt his basement. You can follow Joe and his progress
here and on his
youtube channel.
posted by lilkeith07 at 7:03 PM - 36 comments
So a Persian writer, an Arab artist and a Jewish editor walk into a room…
Zahra's Paradise is a
webcomic inspired by the work of the late
Zahra Kazemi (
previously) and based on reports by Iranian bloggers. The author and publisher describe their experiences
here.
posted by Joe in Australia at 6:22 PM - 6 comments
Poet and Educational Consultant
Mark Grist -
Girls who read.
posted by lazaruslong at 6:10 PM - 19 comments
Every workday morning Johnny Barnes has greeted Bermudians just to let them know how much he loved them. And after many years they love him right back. It's a simple story about the power one man has to make other people happy. Meet
Mr. Happy Man. (Vimeo Link.)
posted by elwoodwiles at 2:51 PM - 19 comments
A whale of a tale. On Sunday, a jet-ski activist of Paul Watson's Sea Shepard gang (
Eco-Pirate: The Story of Paul Watson Documentary) was
water-cannoned into the Antartic by a Japanese scouter boat during filming of
Whale Wars. The
ICR presents a different side to Paul Watson as evidenced by their
regular press releases.
Greenpeace believes Paul Watson is an extremist.
posted by Funmonkey1 at 2:37 PM - 180 comments
Looking for Don Cherry's playlist, you say? No problem, eh. The Mother Corporation's
brand new digital audio service has been launched by the CBC today, and is available
here.
posted by PareidoliaticBoy at 2:07 PM - 36 comments
Tea Partiers and Occupiers meet over beer. There's been much discussion about what the
Tea Party and
Occupy Wall Street many, or may not, have in common. At
CPAC (the Conservative Political Action Conference) a CPAC attendee interrupts an argument between another CPAC attendee and an Occupier to tell the CPACer how much they have in common. He then invites some Occupiers to join him at a local pub, where they have been talking for hours. This video shows some of that meeting.
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posted by Philosopher Dirtbike at 1:40 PM - 44 comments
The makers of
Downton Abbey take great care to recreate the look and feel of the period in which it is set. But occasionally
anachronisms in the
dialogue slip
through.
posted by Horace Rumpole at 11:31 AM - 122 comments
The "visible web" is what you can find using general web search engines. It's also what you see in almost all subject directories. The
"invisible web" is what you cannot find using these types of tools. It's the internet that
Google doesn't show us; some of it dull, some of it private, some of it deliberately hidden.
More beneath the surface.
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posted by Stagger Lee at 11:07 AM - 60 comments
On Flickr,
vieilles_annonces posts scans from her "rather large magazine collection of
Ebony,
Jet and
similar magazines from the
1910s on."
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posted by EvaDestruction at 11:04 AM - 3 comments
Grossinger's Hotel used to be one of the most popular resorts in the Catskill region of New York State. The resort served as a playing ground for the famous stars of the time like Elizabeth Taylor and Jackie Robinson.
But, like most things, its popularity faded and by 1986 it closed its doors forever. It has remained abandoned ever since. (Buzzfeed, Now and Then photos)
posted by The Whelk at 10:16 AM - 30 comments
Does Football have a Future?: Football players are anywhere from five to nineteen times more likely than a member of the general population to suffer from a dementia-like illness. This is likely a result of
Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (
picture), neurodegeneration caused by receiving multiple concussions or even subconcussions that are not detectable around time of impact. CTE has been linked to
other mood and behavior changes, including suicidal depression (a great review of the medical literature generally), and has been found in football players as young as
21. And, of course, there is the sometimes debilitating physical disability (either acutely or later in life) from playing a hard-contact sport. The NFL has a long history of adjusting safety standards in bits and pieces (e.g.,
legalization of the forward pass) to meet public concern over potential injury and disability from playing the sport, though still to some degree publicly
denies a connection between football and brain damage. New Yorker writer
Ben McGrath talks to football players (past and present), their families (often left behind by untimely death or dementia-twilight), franchise heads, and doctors to explore this history, the crushing legacy of sports injuries, and the question of whether it is possible to reform the rules to minimize the risk of concussion and thus the risk of CTE (if any such risk is acceptable). Would it still be football if such changes were to tone down the violence? (
Yes, No [from iconoclast Buzz Bissinger]) And, uncomfortably: is the sport of football unethical for its players, even if entered into on their own volition? (
previously in the New Yorker; previously on MetaFilter
1, 2, 3)
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posted by Keter at 9:52 AM - 117 comments
RETRONTARIO: Yours To Rediscover. "RETRONTARIO was created to celebrate the neglected corners of Ontario’s rich televisual history; to put back into circulation material which rightly or wrongly had fallen into a black hole and was for all intents and purposes, lost."
posted by chunking express at 8:31 AM - 23 comments
LearnLiberty: a libertarian Khan Academy.
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posted by edguardo at 7:46 AM - 182 comments
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