May 25
La Petite Mélancolie (NSFW)
Is mainly a French photo blog which has plenty of excellent timesink in it.
From
Hannah Hoch to
Romy Schneider and from
Edward Steichen to
Jorge Caceres
It is difficult to describe this site which sometimes verges on the
pornographic but also has many pages on surrealists such as
Paul Eluard and
Jacques Prevert,
as well as other avant garde people such as the Czechs
Karel Tiege and
Milan Kundra.
posted by adamvasco at 4:20 AM - 0 comments
Pictures from South Sudan by a UNHCR aid worker
(MeFi's Own™ tarvuz)
posted by elgilito at 3:04 AM - 1 comment
May 24
Whether you love him for his role as the
Sweet Transvestite in
The Rocky Horror Picture Show, the
Lord of Darkness in Ridley Scott's
Legend,
Pennywise the clown in the TV adaptation of Stephen King's
It, Wadsworth the butler in
Clue, Long John Silver in
Muppet Treasure Island, his voice work for scads of cartoons, his countless theater performances, his many unforgettable, wonderfully strange
guest spots on various
TV shows, his absolutely amazing
voice, or for (quite possibly) all of these things at once, the fact is, you love Tim Curry.
Spare a thought tonight for this acclaimed, ubiquitous character actor, singer, dancer, and odd-looking, sexy little man.
Tim Curry, 67, has had a major stroke at his home in Los Angeles. Early reports said that he was left unable to speak, but his agent now tells the Daily Mail that he's "doing great (...) He absolutely can speak and is recovering at this time and in great humor."
posted by Ursula Hitler at 11:05 PM - 33 comments
Welcome to Daily Star Wars
"2009 marks the 30th anniversary of the original Star Wars daily strip that was published in newspapers by the Los Angeles Times Syndicate. In honor of that I've decided to start
this blog where I'll be posting a new strip everyday to recreate the series original run. These strips were some of the only Star Wars stories going on at the time and generally had a more serious tone than their Marvel cousin. They're also officially recognized as part of the EU and fill in the gaps between films."
[more inside]
posted by hippybear at 7:01 PM - 10 comments
Eric Weinstein has a PhD in mathematical physics from Harvard, but has spent most of the last 10 years outside academia working as an economic consultant for a New York hedge fund. Now he apparently has a
new theory of everything that claims to be able to explain quantum gravity, dark matter and dark energy. Actual details have not yet been provided and
some physicists are dismissive. But his work has received
enthusiastic endorsement from Oxford's Simonyi Professor of Public Understanding Marcus du Sautoy, with whom he has been discussing the theory over the last two years.
[more inside]
posted by leibniz at 1:51 PM - 80 comments
Where did the formula that
a dog ages 7 years for every 1 human year come from? No one knows for sure, but the BBC, using data from the UK Kennel Club and US Veterinary Medical Database, have come up with a more accurate online
dog years calculator. The truth about how dogs age is more fascinating, and less straightforward, than we thought.
[more inside]
posted by 2bucksplus at 10:18 AM - 58 comments
“We did our first show in a bar...all of a sudden, the whole room was quiet.
And then we got everyone to sit on the floor cross-legged to watch our crankies.”
[more inside]
posted by Miko at 10:06 AM - 10 comments
Daft Train That Friday happy place where Daft Punk overlaps the Soul Train cakewalk. SLYT.
posted by perhapsolutely at 9:57 AM - 52 comments
Khaki Dance by The NSJ Crew. SLYT
posted by catch as catch can at 9:49 AM - 11 comments
Actual conversations with my 2 year old daughter, as re-enacted by me and another full grown man -
Episode 1.
posted by quin at 9:23 AM - 69 comments
Detroit Institute of Arts collection could face sell-off to satisfy Detroit's creditors Detroit emergency manager Kevyn Orr is considering whether the multibillion-dollar collection at the Detroit Institute of Arts should be considered city assets that potentially could be sold to cover about $15 billion in debt.
posted by R. Mutt at 9:13 AM - 81 comments
In 1997, Last Unicorn gave Zug the chance at recreating Frank Herbert's 'Dune' through a new trading card series. He was originally told to base his work off of David Lynch's film, but after complications with licensing, "they told me to avoid similarity to Lynch's visuals" says Mark Zug. Mark Zug's Dune
trading cards.
posted by Artw at 9:12 AM - 42 comments
Nowadays, fortified wines are the
butt of jokes. (
previously) However,
there was a
time when
they were
considered mainstream and
there were even a few commercials made.
Of course,
we can't leave out the best commercial for fortified wine ever made.
posted by josher71 at 9:06 AM - 64 comments
Eine murul / Breakfast on the Grass is a stop-motion animation answering one of Art's most enduring mysteries: why are those people sitting like that? (SLVimeo, 4:30)
posted by theodolite at 8:57 AM - 6 comments
In April, French cartoonist Boulet (
previous,
more previous) was invited to go on tour in the US,
courtesy of the French embassy in New York. As a good 'webcomic', he
kept a diary of his
impressions of New York,
the language barrier and
going to the MoCCaFest, and also had a book to sell, a reworked edition of his 2012 24-hours comic
Darkness (
previous).
posted by MartinWisse at 8:32 AM - 21 comments
A rare disease is defined as any condition affecting fewer than 200,000 patients in the United States. More than 7,000 such diseases exist, afflicting a total of 25 million to 30 million Americans..
One of them,
fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva (FOP), might be approaching a cure.
[more inside]
posted by dmd at 7:01 AM - 21 comments
You might have heard at one time or another a 60s band called Canned Heat, who made a wee bit of a splash way back when with a little number called
Going Up the Country. The song featured a simple but very catchy little flute riff between verses. If you ever wondered where that riff came from (not to mention the melodic contour of the tune itself) you need look no further than a 1928 recording by Henry Thomas, who played the flute melody on his quills, or, panpipes. The song was called
Bull Doze Blues.
[more inside]
posted by flapjax at midnite at 6:14 AM - 36 comments
Tech writers and their secret shame -
outdated gear.
posted by Chrysostom at 6:11 AM - 118 comments
Corporate Spirit uses stock photography to tell a deranged tale about living the corporate life.
posted by Foci for Analysis at 5:41 AM - 36 comments
Railroad bridge domino collapse in Lampasas County, Texas. (SLYT) No reported injuries, and the bridge dates from 1910, according to the
AP. The
Infrastructure Report Card, released this week (in which America received a D-), may need a small update to "8,680 of the 52,260 bridges in Texas (16.6%) are considered functionally obsolete."
posted by Erasmouse at 5:16 AM - 77 comments
Bernie "Whistling" Smith, a legendary, no-nonsense Vancouver cop was the subject of
this 1975. Oscar nominated documentary.
[more inside]
posted by KevinSkomsvold at 3:52 AM - 2 comments
May 23
FFF:
A long time ago, a child turned on a home gaming console for a little Saturday morning fun — unaware that inter-dimensional demons were using it as a portal into our world!
MISADVENTURE! [via
freeindiesgames]
posted by lemuring at 10:47 PM - 6 comments
Lindsey Stirling in Kenya..
posted by HuronBob at 10:37 PM - 15 comments
“We’ve seen the price of food become more expensive than ever three times in five years. Normally we’d see three price spikes in a century,” said Kaufman. “And part of the reason is this new kind of commodity speculation in food markets.”
In an article published Oct. 24 in Nature[subscription required], Kaufman describes what he calls “Wall Street’s thirst for water” — the push to turn water into a commodity like food, with the same instruments that produced the mortgage-backed security collapse and 2008 financial crisis.
Public or Private: The Fight Over the Future of Water [more inside]
posted by the man of twists and turns at 8:34 PM - 47 comments
Au revoir, Georges Moustaki. The French chansonnier, who got his start
writing for Edith Piaf, and later had a
lengthy career of his own, has passed away. His simple, languid, contemplative songs include "
Le Métèque", "
Ma Solitude", "
Votre Fille a Vingt Ans" and
many, many, many more. He was
79.
posted by Capt. Renault at 6:12 PM - 8 comments
Ask Strax! The famed warrior from the Sontaran Empire answers questions from miniature humans for
Monster Day Out.
"The last time a human called me a 'Potato Head' I simply turned and walked away calm and collected ... once I had crushed him to a pulp him with my monster fists!!"
posted by Podkayne of Pasadena at 4:06 PM - 45 comments
By a vote of 61%-38% the
National Council of the Boy Scouts of America has finalized a decision to lift sexual orientation from the criteria to discriminate for youth membership.
Previously and
previously.
[more inside]
posted by roomthreeseventeen at 3:17 PM - 99 comments
Next to a beautiful, elegant woman, between the silky spirals of her train, on the back of a chair, in a dark angle in the background, he accurately painted, although almost invisible, the animal that recalled the face of the protagonist. He thus had a series of ladies and gentlemen from the squirrel, from the lizard, from the sea horse, etc.
From
"The Real Face," by
Guido Gozzano, "first and finest representative of the
Crepuscolari, the poets of the Twilight."
[more inside]
posted by Iridic at 2:54 PM - 1 comment
Park Slope Family Circus: Old Family Circus panels combined with jokes poking fun at denizens of Park Slope, Brooklyn.
posted by mathowie at 2:50 PM - 61 comments
When news came through of Yahoo! buying Tumblr, everyone wanted to know what that meant for
all the porn on Tumblr. But it turns out that long before Yahoo! signed a check, Tumblr had been quietly doing something about it on its own:
stopping adult blogs from being indexed. [NSFW links]
[more inside]
posted by themadthinker at 1:13 PM - 147 comments
Chris Hadfield has captured the world's heart, judging by the 14m YouTube views of his free-fall rendition of David Bowie's "Space Oddity", recorded on the International Space Station (ISS). The Canadian astronaut's clear voice and capable guitar-playing were complemented by his facility in moving around in the microgravity of low-earth orbit. But when the man fell to Earth in a neat and safe descent a few days ago, after a five-month stay in orbit, should he have been greeted by copyright police?
posted by DiesIrae at 11:42 AM - 58 comments
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