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4 books I read recently & loved: Paul Cunningham Goal/Tender Meat/Tender, Amy Gerstler Scattered at Sea, Urs Allemann The Old Man and the Bench, Leopoldine Core Veronica Bench

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I am 32 years old, but I am still changing. People told me I would never change. Those people are sort of right. The problem is that people only want me to change for them. Like it’s easy. Like I can just put on a new shirt and be not afraid of myself anymore. I mean I’m not entirely afraid of myself. Actually I’m pretty comfortable but it’s other people that find stuff out about me and they try to make me feel bad.

I live in New York. I have a career. I am a financial advisor, but I prefer the term, “wealth management advisor.” I think people are afraid to talk about wealth. I think too many people think wealth is a bad thing. I think my job description should remind people that wealth exists. That the wealthy exist. I am wealthy. I help people. I am here to help people become more wealthy.

I am a Roman column.

I have a secretary named Fluffy Bunny. Fluffy Bunny does whatever I ask her to. If I tell her to lick my smile, she licks my smile. If I tell her to fall in love with me, she falls in love with me. Sometimes I lock her office door and put a Paul McCartney CD in the wall stereo. Whenever Paul’s “Temporary Secretary” plays, I roll up my sleeves and I hit Fluffy Bunny. She has to smile as I hit her. If she stops smiling, we have to start the song over. If she makes it through the song smiling, I give her a hug and I unlock her door.

People don’t know about Fluffy Bunny. If they did, they would be mad. They don’t understand that Fluffy Bunny isn’t mad because I tell Fluffy Bunny not to be mad. Fluffy Bunny thought she was smarter than me when she started working for me. She would tell me that I was a bad person—that she feared that I would never become aware of my privileged state of being within the realm of white Christian male heteronormativity.

That’s when I started locking her in her office.

People don’t know about Fluffy Bunny. But God does. God is my bearded ghost. And I know as long as I acknowledge the bad things I do to Fluffy Bunny, God will forgive me. All I have to do is ask. And then I hear him in my head say, you are forgiven. And that means I won’t go to hell. People don’t know about Fluffy Bunny. People only ever want to talk about my other problem that I don’t think is a problem or anybody’s business. People are concerned about the way I act when I am alone in my house.

When I wake up in the morning, I like to lie in my crib for at least twenty minutes before climbing out of it. It’s a really big crib. I like to make funny noises and rest my hand against my chest and feel my own heartbeat. If I don’t make any sounds and listen really closely, I hear my heart make a do-do-do sound. Like a dial tone. I like to rock gently from side to side and pull my knees into my stomach tightly. I like to play with my colorful firefly nightlight that hangs from the side of my crib. All I have to do is knock my fingers against it and the fireflies light up and “Twinkle Twinkle Little Star” plays.

But what I like most of all is my Fluffy Bunny stuffed animal. I like its long ears. I like its pink nose.

Sometimes my diaper has to be changed. I cannot change it by myself. That is why I hired a nanny to take care of me at home. I pay her thousands of dollars a week to change my diaper. She is very strong and I like the way she cradles me in her arms. She rocks me. She feeds me my bottle. She sings me lullabies. And when I have an accident, she changes me. She wipes me.

I like the feeling of Fluffy Bunny’s nose against mine. I kiss Fluffy Bunny over and over and over again while I rock gently in my crib. I like thinking about her body.

I like to make Fluffy Bunny open the blinds in my office so I can look down into the streets. Me and my co-workers like to refer to the streets as “the valley of the dead.” We like to watch the protestors yell and shake their fists. Most of them don’t even know what they’re yelling about. They were in such a hurry to grow up. They just wanted people to think they were important. Too bad they don’t know about me. They don’t know my secret: you don’t have to grow up.

You don’t have to live in “the valley of the dead.”

I stretch my arms and legs out as far as my crib will let me. I like when I’m in the crib because things don’t have to make sense. There is no “like” or “dislike.” It’s all feelings and smiles. Colors. I don’t have to think at all.

Fluffy Bunny sometimes cries in my arms. It makes it hard to sleep. So I squeeze Fluffy Bunny really hard and whisper, I hug you Fluffy Bunny because you are the best bunny.

Then I feel good. Then I know I am not afraid of myself and that I am a good person. -- Paul Cunningham










Paul Cunningham Goal/Tender Meat/Tender
Horse Less Press

'Paul Cunningham holds editorial positions at Fanzine and Action Books. He founded Radioactive Moat Press in 2009 and he currently edits Deluge. His writing can be found in Spork, LIT, Bat City Review, BOAAT, Tarpaulin Sky, DIAGRAM, and others. His translation of Sara Tuss Efrik’s The Night’s Belly (Nattens Mage) was selected as a finalist in the 2015 Goodmorning Menagerie Chapbook-in-Translation contest. His poem-films have been screened in the MAKE Magazine Lit & Luz Festival, Seattle’s INCA: The Institute for New Connotative Action, AWP, and at the Museo Universitario del Chopo in Mexico City. He received his MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Notre Dame.'-- Horse Less Press


Excerpts

FRANK ZAMBONI

Eureka! Hear the fattest fifes and drums! An ice that hums! The bladewalk of the evening skatewalk has sullied the Ice Land Ice Arena yet again. But no matter! My rig and I are out of the barn and onto the post-knuckle buster rink to do some ol’ fashioned cleanup. On the by, I’m getting a bit of intense bleeding. [Radio chatter] Wholly goalie oxen bleed! You hear that?! Iris does it again! Going, gong, agog! A goal by a goaltender after my own tender heart! Record shatteringly! That’s how she does it! All those spectators said she’d never make it this far, but I know that type of joke’s-on-you jaw jacking all too well. Crazy Frank Zamboni, they used to say. And look at me now! Shoveling coal so fast I might end up feeding the bears!

(If you know what I mean.)

When he’s not busy erasing the Ice Land Ice Arena interior, he’s regaling tourists with tales of world-renown goaltender, Iris. She’s a guy’s guy’s prize for sore!

Every single light in the Ice Land Ice Arena turns on. Enter Iris, world-renown goaltender complete with a mean butterfly slide and goalholes one through five. She can cover them all, but it’s pre-season. Mating season. Glove side, high; glove side, low; stick side, high; stick side low. Fifth and final, between her armor-padded legs. That’s where she wields her slanguage blade, protecting her team from low shots and hot shots. You bet your ass there’s an I in her team. She deflects with zero regrets. When a save is made, blood is certainly shed. And she watches her own execution-style acrobatics on replay over and over and over. Another useless body another toothless bloodymug suction cupping up against the glass. Again and again. Always, always licking her frosty chops. Fava beans. A nice chianti. Slurpslurpslurpslurp.



IRIS

Call me Iris. Call me Mantis religiosa. Call me any, anytime. When the puck is advanced, the fuck is advanced, but not so advanced are these muzzled men cumming my way. I got all the talk-the-talk skateflock gamboys playing my tune. An ice that hums, viol-de-gamboys tuning me onto the stage of red and blue. Is this a stage? Or a dining hall for two? Maybe even a chapel. A confessional booth. Sounds like a honeymoon. And all these icy parabolic arches up in this auditoria! God, I’m praying for a preymate! I’ve devoured aphids, lizards, and frogs!—but lately I’ve been an injury risk to those predictable puck-controlling stickhandlers.

Game Day in the Ice Land Ice Arena marks the seasonal entrance of The Zanies. A cocky and cacti-muscled team of teamsters. Mean and green, the visored, penised bodies take to the ice wearing the appropriate padding. Each man, each body, one body with two long, curved stickblades for arms. The taller the longer. Prickly coxa bending into steamlined femur. Chunky green hookarms for puckhandling and slap-passes. Chunky green hookarms offering up a chopping block. A caulking block. Bodycheckers always bodychecking. Look at my striking cheek bones, they whisper. Look at my full-bodied hair. Sometimes someone even answers in the dark of the locker room, Nice abs.



IRIS

The Zanies are real stickhandlers. Always handling their sticks. Receiving my pucks on the blade of their sticks. Set them up with a fake pass. Send them a quick flick of my own hookwrist. Hahaha, I’ll pass! Instead I bodycheck them. Better check yourselves next time, boys. Meanwhile, I’m all box-baited by the idea of penalty!

Meanwhile, game-faced, I am hungry for meat!



FRANK ZAMBONI

She’ll blow your doors off. There’s no mercy when it comes to Iris! Any spectator who spectates from the gluteal-popliteal space of their cinema seat knows exactly what I’m talkin’ about. Trust me, no seat is comfortable when you’re eyeballin’ in the same stadia with that up-and-coming hotshot! Yes, yes. The rest of ‘em are bucket mouths compared to that big 10-4! None of their hookarm parts cause quite as much harm as the razor sharp tubercles she’s got hiding in the green of her mantis grasp! Her pseudopupil gaze is sure to engage. And distract! In no time at all, one of those jaw jackers will find ‘emselves on their back. I always suggest they bang a U-ee and call it macaroni, but what do I know?! I’m just crazy ol’ Frank Zamboni!

(I’ll prey for you.)



IRIS

Like a sturgeon. Scutched for the very first time. Like a sturr-urr-urr-ur-gin!


Forever a virgin. I never let those gamey beluga boys finish.


(If you know what I mean.)


A little caviar goes a long, long way.



Teaser 1: GOAL | TENDER MEAT | TENDER


Teaser 2: GOAL | TENDER MEAT | TENDER


Paul Cunningham Reading 12/11/14



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ABRIANA JETTÉ: What are the differences for you between writing poetry and writing nonfiction? Are there certain topics you believe best expressed as an essay rather than as a poem? Or, is your process much more organic?

AMY GERSTLER: I like your choice of the word "organic." It's a nicer way of describing the often chaotic, half blind way I go about trying to write my way into or towards something. I accept and also sometimes lament that Donald Barthelme's famous philosophy about the importance of "not knowing" seems to be a necessary component of writing for me, especially in the initial stages, most of the time. I'm not very good at mapping things out ahead of their actual writing. When I try, usually everything changes during the writing / revision process, anyway. Sometimes I set out to write something that I think will be an essay because it seems that it might need to contain a lot of research, that it might require a version of my own voice as opposed to a character's and /or that the piece leans towards the discursive/factual rather than lyric/imaginative. But even as I write that sentence, I find it hard to think of any of those modes as really separate. Some pieces I work on start out as essays and turn into poems, and vice versa. It gets even messier because I love reading and thinking about "hybrid literature" in which gestures and characteristics of several genres are combined in the same text.

ABRIANA JETTÉ: Is it easier for you to use humor in poetry than in prose?

AMY GERSTLER: It may be a little bit easier sometimes because I'm slightly more accustomed to writing poems than literary prose at this point. Also, in nonfiction prose, the voice/speaker is allegedly a constructed version of me, and I might find it a little easier right now to attempt to be funny when peeking out from behind a "character" or made up situation in a poem, might find that the situation or character provide or suggest their own opportunities for humor.

ABRIANA JETTÉ: Your interest in speech pathology seems evident in your work. I'm often struck by the sonic command and enchantment each poem possesses. Because of this, your poetry is a wonderful treat to read aloud. How would you describe the difference between listening to a poem and reading a poem? Is there something different that you are communicating to the audience depending on the presentation?

AMY GERSTLER: Being read to is a primary pleasure that many of us are lucky enough to have in childhood. Then we don't get to experience much as adults. It's a shame, because it can be beautiful to hear literature read aloud or recited. Like listening to music, it can be enveloping, and if someone is good reader, very transporting. Even if you're alone with a book on your lap, reading to yourself, you "hear" the sounds of the words in your head to a certain extent as you read. Otherwise, a lot of poetry wouldn't work very well on the page, and a lot of musically inclined prose wouldn't either. If someone reads to you, you can savor their voice, their interpretation and pronunciation, the ways they animate the text. Good actors are sublime at this. If you're reading to yourself, one big advantage is that you have the text right there, and can re-read parts, stop and look words up, and go at your own ideal pace, which might not be the delivery pace of someone reading to you. Literature is a different sort of time based medium when you're reading to yourself as opposed to listening to it being read or declaimed by someone else.

ABRIANA JETTÉ: What was it like to adopt the voice of a father and of a clairvoyant? Are they original voices or do you consider them to be characters in a narrative?

AMY GERSTLER: One of the things about reading literature that is such a miracle is that it allows you to briefly inhabit other minds, and/or commune with them, learn from them, take them on, know them intimately. I had wanted to be an actress for a while when I was younger, partly because I was entranced by the idea of "playing" someone else, that kind of transformation, trying to become a character different from yourself, to really work at that over time. My interest in writing dramatic monologues or persona pieces like the ones you mentioned stems partly from that early interest in trying to get inside another character/being to see what that would be like. If I understand the second part of your question: I don't consider the various character poems I write as being related to each other, or as part of some larger narrative (although that's a cool idea and maybe something that it would be interesting to try in the future!) They're usually just attempts to create and explore a character and their world, and/or a dilemma or situation the character is involved in, just within the confines of that particular poem.










Amy Gerstler Scattered at Sea
Penguin Books

'Amy Gerstler has won acclaim for sly, sophisticated, and subversive poems that find meaning in unexpected places. The title of her new collection, Scattered at Sea, evokes notions of dispersion, diaspora, sowing one’s wild oats, having one’s mind expanded or blown, losing one’s wits, and mortality. Making use of dramatic monologue, elegy, humor, and collage, these poems explore hedonism, gender, ancestry, reincarnation, bereavement, and the nature of prayer. Groping for an inclusive, imaginative, postmodern spirituality, they draw from an array of sources, including the philosophy of the ancient Stoics, diagnostic tests for Alzheimer’s disease, 1950s recipes, the Babylonian Talmud, and Walter Benjamin’s writing on his drug experiences.'-- Penguin



Excerpts

A Sane Life

Leaf skeletons everywhere,
denuded wings. Faces one itches
to kiss bob by every few seconds,
but one must restrain oneself or risk
imprisonment. They're all yakking
on cell phones, anyway, humming
"You'll Never Walk Alone" under their
precious, measured breaths.
Insured to the hilt, have you any
desire to be thought of in your
grave? To see your visage gracing,
say, the ten-dollar bill? To chuck
all devices and live on crackers,
molasses, and the occasional tastily
prepared bug? To slosh your toxicity
outside the alembic of self, just to see
how acidic it is? To disentangle
each task's tentacles from around
your scrawny neck? Relax responsibly
a beer ad urges. And that means
while blitzed on our hoppy product
do no harm? We swallow sunlight
in pills, outlive our wits, and ultimately
get shunted off to rest homes tended
by underpaid strangers. Clean food
costs more than the poisoned kind.
Soft, tasteful clothes in natural-dyed
hues (paprika, cinnabar, and almond)
cost more than the bright, starch-stiff
ones also made by slaves.
SALE ON PREFAB YURTS!
My opponent's attitude toward
planet Earth seems to be simply
Good riddance! Come to think of it,
dispensing random, impulse-driven
kisses might be just the ticket, a great
campaign strategy, worth a day
or two in the clink. A friend
with inside dope says every cell
downtown's got color TV. He claims
our local jailers make great pizza.


Sea Foam Palace

(Bubbling and spuming
as if trying to talk under
water, I address you thus:)
Must I pretend not to love
you (in your present bloom,
your present perfection — soul
encased in fleshly relevance)
so you won’t believe me
just another seabed denizen
vying for your blessed attention?
Some of us (but not you)
are so loosely moored
to our bodies we can
barely walk a straight line,
remaining (most days) only
marginally conscious.
We stagger and shudder
as buckets of   blood or sperm
or chocolate mousse or spittle
or lymph or sludge sluice
continually through us...

I love the way you wear your
face, how you ride this life.
I delight in the sight of you,
your nervous, inquisitive eyes,
though I try to act otherwise.
Being stoned out of thy mind
only amps up thy fearsome
brain wattage. Pardon my
frontal offensive, dear chum.
Forgive my word-churn, my
drift, the ways this text message
has gotten all frothy. How was it
you became holy to me? Should
I resist, furiously? Is this your
true visage, shaken free, flashing
glimpses of what underlies
the world we can see? Do not forget me
murmurs something nibbled
by fish under the sea.

After dark you’re quick-silvery,
wet /slick /glistening. Don’t
make me chase you, dragging
my heavy caresses, a pair of
awkward, serrated claws,
hither and yon. Give me a swig
of   whatever you’re drinking,
to put me in tune with the cosmos’s
relentless melt, with the rhythms
of dish-washing, corn-shucking,
hard-fucking, bed-wetting, and
the folding of   bones of other loves
into well-dug graves...    may we
never become lost to the world.



Amy Gerstler is the featured poet on poetryvlog.com


"Dearest Creature"


Amy Gerstler: The Best American Poetry 2010




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'When Urs Allemann’s Babyfucker took second prize in the Ingeborg Bachmann competition in 1991, it didn’t take long for scandal to overshadow the novella itself. No doubt this partly had been Allemann’s plan; his incendiary title and opening line (“I fuck babies.”) seemed almost too readymade for any puritan or politician trolling for the latest example of cultural decline or artistic bad taste. To censorship’s shrillest proponents, Babyfucker set itself up as the easiest kind of target, and it worked.

'While it made for great press, the hubbub of the Allemann Affair (as der Spiegel called it) ultimately clouded the view of a remarkable piece of writing, an insular, halting, repulsive, and often beautiful meditation on language and time. Babyfucker’s narrator, a man condemned to be surrounded by creels of crying infants who he sodomizes, rapes, and then tosses back, spends the novella self-consciously babbling through a deconstruction of his own grotesque punishment. In the process, his “sentence” transforms into both a punitive declaration from a nameless judge and the narrator’s only tool for self-articulation. As he puts it: “I fuck babies. That’s my sentence. I don’t have any other . . . My sentence. It’s what I have. It’s what I am. I have to be dragged out of it. By me.” He’s a man completely locked in by his own language, and over the course of Babyfucker, Allemann locks us in with him.

'The sentence, as both temporal horizon and unit of speech, again plays a central role in Allemann’s latest short novel, The Old Man and the Bench. Here Allemann’s protagonist has been “offered a contract,” given to him and seemingly enforced by no one, to sit on a non-descript bench and remember the past. There’s a definite timeline in sight: “From now on he’ll come here every day. It’s his place of work. He’ll reminisce about his childhood. For five months.” ...

'Like Freud’s fort-da game, in which the repetitions of his nephew’s playing are read as an attempt to master painful experiences through replication, the old man’s stories recount past traumas, making them real again. But these narratives also act as trauma’s container and stabilizing frame. Allemann deftly mines this vacillation, charging the man’s dead end snippets with strange, inventive energy. Though we know his contract is elapsing, very little gets done. The old man’s language and actions remain suspended in a perpetual state of becoming, a “twaddle” (or ein fünfmonatsgequassel as Allemann calls it in the book’s German subtitle). Unsinkable desire inches along, but just barely; instead, we’re propelled forward through syntactical repetition, a weaving of sound that turns the man’s language against itself, at points rendering his twaddle into a spiraling music.'-- Michael Jauchen









Urs Allemann The Old Man and the Bench
Dalkey Archive

'The title character in The Old Man and the Bench has a contract that requires him to write, and he feels he should focus on his past. Yet instead of childhood reminiscences, the old man dwells on a series of mini-narratives about, for example, a love triangle among concrete towers, a chaste visit by two call girls, and the joint-by-joint can­nibalization of his fingers. In the middle of these absurd tales, something like childhood memories appear, only to disappear into the stream of the old man’s ramblings. Urs Allemann’s virtuosic, lyrical monologue is at once playful and disturbing, recalling Dada, Kafka, and Beckett in its representa­tion of what language can do when it turns against itself and its speaker.'-- Dalkey Archive


Excerpt

The old man has to eat something. Everyone eats something. Him too. To say nothing of drinking well then why doesn’t he just say nothing. Whoever sits on a bench for nine hours has to deal with hunger and thirst. It’s not enough to indicate that every morning at the kitchen table he eats two pieces of crispbread. Without butter. He’s never abhorred anything his whole life as much as he abhors butter. Just soft smeary butter only soft smeary butter he’s never abhorred solid butter. To be spread all over his two pieces of crispbread the butter would have to be soft and smeary. He’d never be able to spread solid butter back and forth on the two pieces of crispbread. The two crispbread pieces would fall apart on him under the knife. Crumbled up broken to pieces he would have a fit and smash the plate with the useless crispbread dust on the kitchen floor. Good thing it’s never occurred to the butter to do anything other than stay solid in which case he’s not disgusted and sticks it back in the icebox or get soft and smeary in which case he’s disgusted and throws it in the dustbin. Icebox dustbin since when has this geezer gone for local color antiquated lingo. Since when is this old man a geezer. Since when it’s not enough to allude to the fact that every night he gets drunk in his kitchen. He never leaves the bottles he’s finished on the kitchen table. Even when he’s dead drunk he still knows that in the morning some kitchen-table space will be required for the crispbread plate. Before bed he always carries the empty bottles over into the dining room that despite what he would have thought he sets foot in once a day for this purpose. He sets the bottles down on the dining room table. Once the table is covered he’s never calculated how long it takes to cover the table with bottles it’s once again for the umpteenth time time for Winkelried the breaststroke swimmer. Short performance no audience. He stands up in front of the long side of the table bends down and stage 1 with his head tucked down between his shoulders with his hands held together to form a handpointer he advances with his arms into the sea of bottles. Space for hand arm head chest stomach must first be conquered. A few bottles fall over that’s not worth mentioning. With his forehead pressed against the table surface he retools his useless hand pointer converts it into a double hand shovel by stage 2 turning his hands outwards away from one another towards each other so that now his hand backs are touching instead of his hand bellies. Then he takes a breath then he raises up his head then stage 3 his left arm with the left hand shovel and his right arm with the right hand shovel simultaneously sweep clean the left half of the table the right half of the table the whole table surface. All the bottles are lying on the floor most of them shattered some of them unshattered. Along with tonight’s bottles for whose sake the table surface has been swept clean. Exit Winkelried the breaststroke swimmer. No applause. But what does the old man eat what does he drink on his bench. No secret there. On the way from his house to the bench he makes a stop at the baker. Ten to eight sharp he buys three pretzels. The paper bag with the pretzels goes in his left coat pocket. The soda bottle he bought yesterday is sticking out of his right pocket. On the way home from the bench he makes a stop at the grocery store. At ten past five sharp he returns the soda bottle he finished that day and in exchange takes along the bottle he’ll finish the next day. Since the grocery store opens at eight in the morning and he has to be at his place of work at eight he always has to buy his soda the evening before. He doesn’t return the paper bag to the baker. When he gets home in the evening before he gets drunk in the kitchen he throws the paper bag into the living room that despite what he would have thought he sets foot in once a day for this purpose. He sits on the bench chews the last piece of the pretzel gulps down the last of the soda screws the twist top onto the bottle screws the bottle cap onto the twist top screws the bottle cap that is perhaps called a twist top onto the bottle’s bottle neck’s bottle neck end’s glass screw thread that might be called the twist top screws curses screws curses smoothes out the paper bag folds it sticks the paper bag in his left coat pocket the bottle in his right coat pocket stands up brushes the crumbs if there are crumbs off his coat goes home. Later on he’ll get drunk in the kitchen. On beer oh the beer he can’t get it in the grocery store from the baker sothenwheredoeshe.

The old man is offered a contract. Everything he says is treated as if it were on paper. Everything on paper is treated as if he said it. Excellent working conditions. Without thinking about what the contract might mean he accepts what he’s offered by the old man.

Twaddles eyes closed twaddles eyes open twaddles.

His life. There’s nothing to say about it. Knowing he had his childhood before him he quickly had it behind him. Five months is a long time. He no longer knows how long he’s been living alone in the house.

It’s hard to answer the question of whether the old man stinks. It’s likely that he stinks but not enough to make himself nauseous. A restrained foul-smelling odor that complements the gray of his hat and coat. Anxiety alms ass abscess old ocular offal evening excretions. The old man is not of the opinion that of all the letters A O and E have the most disgusting smell. A homeowner is not going to get alms anyway. He is not at all of the opinion that sounds that letters are fragrant or stink. Whoever believes such a thing he yells should be he pauses pauses too briefly punched in the face. His tongue ripped out if he’s talking his writing hand chopped off if he’s writing. But why is he talking like that. He tries to shake his fists but doesn’t succeed. Instead an involuntary wave of rage sends ripples down his back. Pathetic body tremolo. Man and bench as gray green yolk within the fragrance egg grayly sourly housing the yolk. As a yolk in a yolk. Suddenly the wave ebbs away. The old man is busy creating order. Him the cock’s treadle the bench the yolk foul smell egg white and shell. If someone were to get too close to him greet him lean over him still clueless sit down next to him his nose would break the shell and would become aware of the vaporous clouds of putrefaction rising up from the old man and hanging in the air around him. Creating order means recognizing that the first and innermost layer often called the kernel or empty coat is made up of gray flesh and the second and middle layer often called the skin or even wrapping paper is made up of the herringbone coat and in contrast the third and outermost layer often called the imperial husk or the celestial cloche is made up of the odor coating. Unfortunately the old man ascertains that what reaches his nostrils doesn’t always remain the same. What smelled moderately foul yesterday smells immoderately foul today. Skepticism would be out of place here. The old man stinks. But creating order also means identifying the source of the stink. It’s not the coat it’s not the scarf it’s not the old man’s gloves shoes socks that stink. It’s not the hat that stinks the stink emerges from under the hat. The old man’s flesh stinks. His words stink. That’s not the same thing. New questions emerge that are difficult to answer. Does the flesh stench recur in the words’ stench. Does the word stench generate the flesh’s stench. Would his flesh if the old man were mute stink less. Would the old man’s words if he were fleshless stink even more. He eats his pretzel takes a gulp of soda. Wonders if he should think something up to fill up the empty coat. Ties his shoelaces tighter. Looks forward to his beer.

To the left of the bench there’s a trashcan. To the right of the bench and behind the bench there are bushes. Unfortunately the old man has not been granted a tree. Alder he laments oak maple October. The rustling of the names of the tree of the names of the month. Cloudssunfograinwind. Dew and no dew. The first frosts. Hoar-frost. He’s not sure. Crows jackdaws. If he has to pee he steps behind the bench and does it in the bushes. But who wants to know that. In front of the bench there’s the path the bench is on. Beyond the path a field. Beyond the bushes begins the forest. The woods. He knows they wouldn’t be woods if there weren’t trees there. No consolation. No reason to turn around. The woods behind him don’t make up for the linden tree the beech the walnut tree the chestnut.

All he has is language. That’s why he hates it. Because he hates it he’ll bite his tongue off. Some day. He says so.



Urs Allemann


'A FURTHER READING OF URS ALLEMANN'


Urs Allemann bei Sprachsalz 2011




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'Do you know those days where you stay home and you’re in your bed and you only get up to open a wine bottle but you open the wine bottle the wrong way and half of the cork falls into the bottle and so you drink it anyways but you’re pissed so you drink the whole bottle and then you’re drunk so its time to watch reruns of The Office until Dwight starts to look like Jesus Christ and then when you’re done with that you get in the bathtub because you need to play Come Thru twelve times and blow bubbles with your mouth and try to figure out what your bathroom looks like it if were underwater?

'That is what it is like to read Leopoldine Core’s first book of poetry, Veronica Bench. Depressing, but necessary and oddly fulfilling.

'Here's the thing: I read almost everything on the train. I like the quiet buzz of people around me in the morning to mingle with the words (I also just like to have a book in my hand when a dude is manspreading next to me so I can turn pages obnoxiously). I get to be alone, but still be surrounded by people and no one gets to know what i’m thinking. But when I finished this book and looked up from my seat, I wanted to talk to everyone around me about it. I wanted them to be as excited as I was, and also just as sad. Then we could all collectively cry together and fulfill my dream of not being the only one constantly sobbing on the L.

'Her poetry ranges from short little fuck poems that make me laugh, to musings with god, to poems that seem like a drunk dream I had once on Zoloft, but much more elegantly crafted.'-- Probably Crying Review










Leopoldine Core Veronica Bench
Coconut Books

'It's important, you know," Core writes, "for geniuses/ to be sloppy/ It makes other people brave." Well, I rolled around in her slop and found an ecstatic, fleshy tenderness. I wanted to lose whole days touching myself and reverting to my egg beginnings. Of course, these poems made me love her, made me think I was the only person in the world to ever fall in love this way. In Veronica Bench Core exposes us, out-greeds us, jokes freely with us, and speaks better than us. You should be bathing with these poems, you should rub up against them, you should examine your own monstrosity more, you should dote on your pain, you should be ashamed you ever were ashamed of being meat, you should let others record your girlhood, your infancy, your fullness, you should stop trying to be a better person before you die, you should read this book until it’s memorized and then we can all be blissed out in its captivity.'-- Jenny Zhang


Excerpts
from Brooklyn Rail

Friday




Egg




Morning Cocktail




Video Tape





Leopoldine Core - EVERYONE LIKE HER


2012 Emerging Writer Fellows Reading: Leopoldine Core


Type exercise for the poem, Hush Robot by Leopoldine Core




*

p.s. Hey. ** Jonathan, Hey there, J-ster, my sadly missing Paris neighbor. Although count yourself lucky to be where you are at the moment given this heat wave. My back is inching steadily towards unobtrusiveness, thank you. I understand the Ghost thing totally, of course. The Darger show is terrific. Visit in time, if you can. And you can ride Elaine Sturtevant's 'House of Horrors' ride in the same venue. The Chra, yeah, agreed, obviously. I need to try the Jenny Hval again. I didn't take to it immediately. Yay, about our fave bookseller's re-ensconcement. I'll head over here, and I'll wish her your hello, if she remembers me. Cake! It's so hot here that one would need to eat that cake, if I know which cake you mean, and I think I do, within moments of purchase or risk a mouth full of spoilage, but no problem. That Pure Ground video made me want to revisit Industrial. For a second I misread your sentence and thought there was a Can/Bill Withers collab album. Whoa. Come visit pronto, man! x, me. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. Really? I was just reading somewhere yesterday that 'Love and Mercy' has been a surprise success in the States. No?  The French reviews of 'Carol' circa Cannes were pretty high on it, for sure. I'm not sure when it opens here. ** Sypha Hi. You remember d.l. Billy! He's doing great, it seems. Yeah, I feel like whenever you mention music that you're into these recent years, it's nearly always big mainstream stuff, although you did get the Wire album. I remember 'Subhuman'. And what are the many reasons you're glad it died in the crib? ** Douglas Payne, Hi, Douglas! Lucky you to have seen Author & Punisher live. I just discovered them lately, and now my eyes are peeled re: the local listings. The Bingham story collection is very strong, I think. See what you think, though. I want the David Rattray book a lot! I keep forgetting about it. I knew him a little when I lived in New York. He was kind of great, very charismatic and stylish in a very unplanned for way. And an excellent translator in addition to his own writings.  Good to see you! ** Steevee, Interesting. Yeah, seems so, and, yeah, logical. Do you know/like that Ka/Dr. Yen Lo album? I can see it maybe being up your alley. I'm kind of addicted to it at the moment. Ah, shit, about your eyes needing more time and more help. I hope using the Wipes will speed things up. Hugs. ** Etc etc etc, Hi, Casey. I suspect that if someone from, oh, NYC or Chicago, say, were plopped down in this Paris heat, they would think we were a bunch of wusses, but Paris isn't made for high temperatures, and the combo of, at the moment, high 80s temps and the city makes it feel apocalyptic. I'm not a big Houellebecq fan, but I'm not a hater either. His writing is good, but I don't find it that exciting. His provocations don't interest me, but the way they ripple out is kind of interesting. He's kind of like the French literary equivalent of Lady Gaga or something to me. I haven't checked out the Knausgaard stuff yet, but it's high on my list. I hate Frappucinos 'cos I hate coffee mixed with dairy products, but I might score an iced coffee. Thank you! ** Bill, Hi. The Sauna Youth album is really good. It's been on repeat in my headphones. Wow, Sta Prest and Kicking Giant, yeah, cool. Oh, my God, 'Bone Abacus' is so great! Wow! I love it! I'm going to share it on Facebook. In fact, ... hold on ... I just did. Really, really great, Bill! Holy shit! What are you going to do with it? Everyone, d.l. Bill is artist Bill Hsu, as a bunch of you know, and he's made this really awesome new interactive piece that you must, must see. Go here to Vimeo. It's called 'Bone Abacus', and it's a total fucking treat! Major kudos, Bill. I really love it! Didn't end up at Palais de Tokyo yesterday, but maybe today or asap. I'll let you know. ** Chilly Jay Chill, Hi, Jeff. Things seem as okay with the actor as is possible under the circumstances, so that's very good. I am a fan of the LA Paisley Underground bands/scene still. Yeah, that Dream Syndicate album is good. Its over-resemblance to the Velvets has become more charming with time. My great favorite/hero of the PU scene is Michael Quercio, who coined the term. I'm a huge fan of his band The Three O'Clock, especially, album-wise, 'Arrive Without Traveling', which I think is their masterpiece, and also 'Sixteen Tambourines'. His earlier PU band Salvation Army is very good too. Michael and I were going to write a rock opera together with the artist Jim Isermann in the late 80s, but we never got around to it, unfortunately. Sometimes the band The Last is grouped into PU, and their album 'L.A. Explosion' is great. Game Theory is another excellent PU-related band. Rain Parade did some nice stuff too. So, yeah, I'm a fan of that genre. How did you end up wanting to investigate Paisley Underground? I'll remember to send you my address today. In fact, hold on ... I just sent it to you via FB. ** _Black_Acrylic, Billy Lloyd rocks! Or pulses at least! I think he's from Leeds, yeah, if I'm remembering. I'll check the Fischer review of the Terminator. And will see what he thought of the inescapable Kanye West perf.  Thanks!  ** Thomas Moronic, Your fine brain is so not deserving of that unfair clogging. Nope, I hadn't found that new Xiu Xiu page, but now I get to! Yay! You're going to see London & KP & presumably OB too. Fun. Shit, I didn't know about the John Waters and the Richard Hawkins shows, shit, or I would have made a bee line. We didn't see very much art due to time constraints. The Carsten Holler show at Hayward has fun in it, albeit a little thin. I loved the Agnes Martin show at the Tate, but you have to like what she does. We almost saw the Alexander McQueen retrospective and a Bruce Conner show somewhere. But I'm drawing a blank otherwise, Have a blast! ** Kier, Dengasm, ha ha, nice. It's very rare that I even think to try to mutate your name, so I'm glad that that one landed on the money. I apologize in advance, but, oh, I envy your rain and rain, sorry. If only I had snapchat. Dang. Someday. So chickens are actually really dumb? I mean, they seem dumb, but I always feel really bad and weird thinking that. You were busy in nature yesterday. Nice. But not nice about B's absence, although ... today perchance? My day wasn't a lot. The heat returned in the late morning, so bleah. Didn't go to Palais de Tokyo. Too bleah outside. Just worked on stuff. I have to be mysterious, but Zac and I got a yes on "LCTG' from one cool film festival, and two no's from other cool festivals, and now we're biting our nails waiting to hear from three others, one of which is our dream premiere place, although I think they'll probably say no even though we hear they're very impressed with the film. We made a difficult film, and that makes selecting it a complicated thing that ends up having to do less with our film's quality than with whether its difficulty will create a problem, and that has its ups and downs, we're realizing. Otherwise, gosh, not a lot. Kiddiepunk and I decided on September 10th as the pub. date for my new literary gif book 'Zac's Control Panel', so that's exciting. For me. And ... nothing else. I'll try for more today, but it's looking and feeling like a scorcher outside, so all bets are off. How was yours? ** Schlix, Hi, Uli! Thanks! Yeah, sucks about the premiere being canceled, and, more than that, about why. But the ventriloquist seems to be okay. And the Hamburg gig is now the world premiere by default. ** Kyler, I like 'scooched'. I'm really surprised that Google doesn't think it's a real word. Wow, well, her affair with Frankie Valli must be pretty juicy because, maybe I'm wrong, but, I mean, Frankie Valli? Are there that many book buyers over the age of 70? ** H, Glad you liked the gig and the Billy Lloyd. He used to be a distinguished local here a couple of years ago. Oh, I might have time for the Thoreau. I'll look for it. Given your stated interests, do you know the writings of Paul Metcalf? He's a great favorite fiction writer of mine, especially the later works like 'Patagonia', 'Apalache', and 'Waters of Potowmack'. Oh, sure, I would be very happy to share your list of books here and help out however I can. Enjoy your day! ** Okay. Up there are four recent books I loved, as the post's title already indicates, and I recommend that you give them your consideration as readers. Thank you. See you tomorrow.

Holly Woodlawn Day

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'I meet Woodlawn at her apartment in West Hollywood, Los Angeles' gay village or ghetto, on a sweltering hot day. In a few weeks she'll be in the UK to promote an exhibition of paintings of herself by the British artist Sadie Lee, showing her in a less glamorous guise than usual. "I said, 'Why don't you paint me as everyday me for a change, instead of all peaches and cream?'" she says.

'As we sit on her balcony talking, we're favoured with an ambient soundtrack that, appropriately, seems more redolent of Manhattan than of sleepy California: a fire nearby means that we're constantly interrupted by screaming sirens. "All right, already," howls Woodlawn. "Find the fucking fire and shut up. I swear, West Hollywood is breeding pyromaniacs today."

'The Holly Woodlawn of 2007 is a far cry from the sweet-voiced cross-dresser who made her first splash in the film Trash in 1970, fake-masturbating with a Miller beer bottle to considerable acclaim. Back then - during what we must inevitably call her 15 minutes of fame - she was one of the many drag queens and hustlers at the lower end of the Warhol social scene, congregating around his Factory studio and at hangouts like the bar Max's Kansas City. "The mole people," Factory manager Billy Name called them. "The amphetamine people." At the other end were the rich, famous and powerful: Jim Morrison, Yoko Ono, Janis Joplin, author George Plimpton.

'The 61-year-old man who answers the door today is out of drag, bent and frail, though indefatigably cheerful, using a Zimmer frame because of various slowly fusing discs in his spine that, he says, are unimaginably painful and incurable. "Oh no, this is IT, honey, downhill all the way from here on!"

'He rises at six; by 11 his painkillers have slurred his speech a little and fogged his memory. The outrageous spark is still there and the stories are as funny as ever, but delivered with a weariness and frustration he blames on the pills. I play nursemaid a little, fetching coffee and cigarettes from the nearby market, and getting the phone for him when it rings, treading carefully around his untidy, sparsely furnished apartment, with its bed and carpets covered in fag ash, and its one shrine-like photo of Andy, Candy, Holly and others in its most visible corner.

'I ask him about his alter ego, the boy born Haroldo Santiago Franceschi Rodriguez Danhakl. "I don't even know who he was," he says. "When I was younger, I was extremely shy and living in what's now Miami Beach. My father had a nice job. I guess we were middle income. I had good schools. I just was unhappy because I didn't know who I was. I didn't associate with the other kids in school, the suburban-minded ones. Plus I came out very young. I was raised in Puerto Rico for the first few years of my life, where the culture is more Caribbean. Everyone's naked, it's hotter, you come out earlier. I was having sex when I was seven and eight in the bushes with my uncles and cousins - of course, they were only 11 or 12 themselves. I was raised in a house full of women and my uncle was gay. We lived in a little tiny town, so those were my role models. Then Miami Beach. All the Cubans arrived after Castro took over, and that's where I really came out, on 21st Street in Miami Beach."

'The same month that Woodlawn hitchhiked north, July 1962, Warhol had his first major art show not 10 blocks from where we're talking, at Irving Blum's Ferus Gallery. Although the Campbell's Soup paintings didn't sell well at the time, Warhol had arrived. The night the show closed, Marilyn Monroe died three miles away in Brentwood, causing Warhol to work a poster image of her from the 1953 movie Niagara into his famous Marilyn screenprints - which in time turned him into, in the words of the American critic Wayne Koestenbaum, "our greatest philosopher of stardom".

'To some extent, Woodlawn was a product - or an exemplar - of his ideas. Although she didn't become a full-fledged Factory insider until 1969, she was very much on the same scene. She'd decided against the sex-change by this point, though: "Honey, once they cut it off, it's OFF!" And she didn't get to know Lou Reed until after A Walk on the Wild Side came out, but nonetheless saw many early shows by the Velvet Underground and Nico.

'"I was just one of the audience," he says. "I used to go to the Exploding Plastic Inevitable at the Dome, with all that colour and insanity, with Gerard Malanga [Warhol's assistant] brandishing a whip and Mary Woronov from Chelsea Girls dancing. So I was very happy when I gradually became a Warhol superstar. I felt like Elizabeth Taylor! Little did I realise that not only would there be no money, but that your star would flicker for two seconds and that was it. But it was worth it, the drugs, the parties, it was fabulous. You live in a hovel, walk up five flights, scraping the rent. And then at night you go to Max's Kansas City where Mick Jagger and Fellini and everyone's there in the back room. And when you walked in that room, you were a STAR!"

'Trash, a film improvised and shot in 1969 in the basement apartment of its director, Warhol's manager Paul Morrissey, was the nearest Woodlawn came to broader fame. A kindly, soothing presence on screen, Woodlawn certainly had acting ability: her horny, drug-happy character is the film's highlight. "That beer bottle scene is to my career what eating dogshit was for Divine in Pink Flamingos!" The gay director George Cukor is said to have tried to get Woodlawn nominated for an Academy award, but the issue floundered, perhaps predictably, on whether Woodlawn belonged in the Best Supporting Actor or Actress category.

'Since then, Woodlawn has published her autobiography - the toothsome and scandalous A Low Life in High Heels - and made a cult career in drag. Although based in New York until a couple of years after Warhol died in 1987, Woodlawn has lived on the west coast ever since. And she'll be in London shortly. "It's all blossomed into this week of Holly Woodlawn. I'll be busy every day, at parties and shows. Who knows? Hopefully I'll come home with a whole bra-full of money!"'-- The Guardian



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Stills




















































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Further

Bring Holly Woodlawn Home
Holly Woodlawn Website
Holly Woodlawn @ imdB
Holly Woodlawn @ warholstars.org
Holly Woodlawn @ Facebook
Book: 'A Low Life in High Heels: The Holly Woodlawn Story'
'warhol superstar holly woodlawn came from miami, fla...'
'TRASHING 'TRASH' WITH HOLLY WOODLAWN'
HW interviewed @ Powder Zine
Holly Woodlawn @ mubi
'Trash' re-reviewed @ Slant Magazine
Podcast: 'A Low Life in High Heels, part 1'



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Sings, etc.


Holly Woodlawn sings, "You Can't Be Friends with Me"


Holly Woodlawn - "Do Re Mi" from The Sound of Music - production number


Holly Woodlawn in Berlin


Holly Woodlawn sings, "La Salsa Gucci Frita"


Holly Woodlawn "Walk Right Up To Him"



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Talks, etc.


Holly Woodlawn Interview


Holly Woodlawn "Low Life in High Heels" Stephen Holt Show -Xmas '91


Holly Woodlawn Nervous Breakdown on the Set


Holly Woodlawn & Jackie Curtis Party 1970 (Holly passes out!)


Holly Woodlawn vs. Madonna



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Interview
from Bright Lights Film Journal




Holly Woodlawn: Gary, I’m smoking a cigarette and having a glass of wine and watching Sabrina. So the rest of the world will know I don’t have emphysema. My lungs — god only knows what color they are. And my liver? Forget it. I don’t think I even have one anymore. I’m 57. I’m a kreplach. That’s Jewish for, you know, you’re an old douche bag! My face is still flawless. You know why? Because I hang upside down, from my bed.

I have a wonderful apartment in West Hollywood with a little balcony so I can scream “Don’t Cry for Me Argentina!” I have my dog — a little tarantula. A Chihuahua-terrier mix. She looks like a tarantula. She’s black. Colored. But I digress. When I first heard about The Color Purple, I thought they meant “The Colored People” — my biggest faux pas. I will never live that one down. Oprah, forgive me!

I picked the name Holly from Audrey Hepburn in Breakfast at Tiffany’s. And then my friends were up on speed one night and I had met Andy Warhol at a party, and he said what’s your name, and I said Holly, and I didn’t have a last name. So we went home that night and we were watching Lucille Ball in I Love Lucy where she had this thing, this trophy, stuck on her head. And it said Woodlawn Cemetery. So my friends and I decided on Holly Woodlawn, and I would be the heiress to the Woodlawn Cemetery fortune!

I was at Max’s Kansas City, and Fred Hughes came up to me and said Paul Morrissey is doing a movie and he wants you to call him. I called him up and Paul said, I’m doing a movie with Joe Dallesandro, are you going to be available on Saturday? And I said sure! I’m going to be a movie star! Lana Turner. Elizabeth Taylor. Cleopatra! And I showed up and he said, You play this trash person, you pick up trash. And you’re supporting this junkie. I said gee, that’s a stretch. I don’t know if I can do it! So I showed up with my boyfriend, little Johnny, who I shot up in the movie. When I went to the set, which was Paul Morrissey’s basement, I was terrified. I had never been on screen. But I knew that I was the next Elizabeth Taylor.

When I saw Joe Dallesandro, so fucking gorgeous. I said, Johnny, get outta here. Go buy something! I was at the Cannes Film Festival with Joe. He’s still such a gentleman. He’s like Greta Garbo, he wants to be alone, but if you call him up, he’ll speak to you. He’s like me — shut her up! He’s a guy’s guy — he likes to hang out and watch ball games and drink beer and smoke cigarettes. He’s very bisexual. That’s why he’s such a gentleman. He’s got a very soft side, he loves giving, and hanging out.

That was not a Coke bottle, it was a beer bottle! I would have preferred Dr. Pepper.

George Cukor wanted to nominate me for an Academy Award. And all these people signed a petition — Paula Prentiss and her husband, Richard Benjamin, Robert De Niro. They didn’t know what category to put me in. They had no clue. Is this a man being a woman, or a woman being a man? I preferred Best Actor in a Supporting Role. Actor — because I didn’t have a pussy. So I’m an actor. I still don’t have a pussy. It [the operation] hurts too much!

As far as pioneer is concerned, I don’t know. I did what I had to do because I had to do it! If you can make sense of that. When I was a kid, I didn’t know what I wanted to be, but I knew what I had to be. When I was 16 years old, living in Brooklyn with this guy who wanted me to have a sex change, I thought that was what I wanted. We had the money, and I was at Johns Hopkins Hospital and they said I had to wait a year, so I said honey, I’ve been living as a woman for the past eight years — don’t tell me! So I took the money and I went shopping. My boyfriend was very disappointed. I blew $3,500 at Saks Fifth Avenue. Fabulous gowns but no pussy! Once you cut it off, it’s off. I like me having a hard-on. I love having sex. I like what I have.

I’m going to make a complete idiot of myself. Heklina said I could just stand up there and blow kisses. The hell with that. I plan to do an entire concert. I plan to do “Hello San Francisco.” Then I’m going to do songs that nobody ever fucking heard in their life. Like “Princess Poopooly Has Plenty Papayas.” Yes, I’m going to take you around the world. And I’m going to sing a little French song called “Once Upon a Summertime.” That’s the only ballad. It’s a pretty song. It’s going to be Marlena, Barbra, Bette, Beulah, Mona, Lola, and Falana! And Holly. All the girls.

My future? Gary, don’t laugh. I have a dream. My dream is to open up a bed and breakfast in of all places the Pacific Islands, Pago-Pago or somewhere, and have everybody just run around half naked, in grass skirts, run amok with no clothes. I’ll call it Holly’s Whorehouse. And I will feed them, and make sure they have a bed, or a straw mattress to sleep on and fuck on. I just wanna watch!



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14 of Holly Woodlawn's 23 films

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Paul Morrissey Trash (1970)
'The wonderfully tawdry ‘plot’ of Trash sees Holly Woodlawn playing long-suffering girlfriend to super-hunk Joe Dallesandro. They live in a grubby cellar on the Lower East Side: Holly sustains them by selling garbage she finds in and around the local streets. Alas, Joe can rarely satisfy her rampant lust due to impotence caused by his heroin addiction. In one particularly memorable scene, Holly gets ‘intimate’ with a beer bottle, after Joe yet again fails to get a stiffy. Despite having no formal drama training, she dazzles with an improvised performance throughout the film. So much so, in fact, that the prominent Hollywood director George Cukor petitioned the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for Holly to be nominated for an Academy Award. Unfortunately, there was no category into which a man playing a female role could be slotted. Furthermore, Holly was unable to attend the film’s glitzy premiere, as she was in prison at the time, banged-up for embezzling money from the bank account of the wife of the United Nations’ French Ambassador!' -- Ponystep



Excerpt


Excerpt



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Gene Ayres Bad Marien's Last Year (1971)
'Andy Warhol superstar Holly Woodlawn teams up with jazz superstar Asha Puthli for a weekend romp in the Hamptons, in which they play two angels rescuing a bored, wayward heiress from herself. Holly and Asha, two tacky fur angels crawl out of the sea in Southhampton in order to rescue a fallen angel, Gillian, who is boreda with life and has taken to taking up with strangers (Frederick). They hang out in her rich daddy's beach house, get even more bored together, until finally after a dinner party for their also bored friend Dominick, Holly and Asha take Gillian away to Neverland. It's all for the best.'-- collaged



Excerpt


Excerpt



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Paul Morrissey Women in Revolt (1971)
'The film went through various name changes. Documents found in Andy Warhol's Time Capsule No. 40 indicate almost 80 possible names including Pearls Before Swine, Make Date and Andy Warhol's Earthwomen. On June 25, 1971, a payment of $1,000 was made by Warhol's company for the rights to use a song titled Give Me the Man in a film titled Sisters, apparently another name for Women in Revolt. Paul Morrissey was filming Heat in Los Angeles when this payment was made, while Warhol stayed in New York. On July 22, 1971 Variety reported that the film was ready for release - now titled Sex, the same name that was used when it premiered at the first Los Angeles Filmex film festival in November 1971. However, when it later opened on December 17, 1971 at the Cinema Theater in Los Angeles, it was called Andy Warhol's Women. It was first shown in New York on February 16, 1972 at the Cine Malibu which Warhol had rented because no distributor was interested in taking the film. In 1978, author Patrick S. Smith separately interviewed Holly Woodlawn and Jackie Curtis for a book he was writing on Warhol's art and films. Jackie said that it took two and a half years to make Women in Revolt whereas Holly told Smith that it took approximately a year to film with "about three weeks of filming days," but "months in between."'-- warholstars.org



Excerpt


Deleted scene


Holly Woodlawn talks about WOMEN IN REVOLT



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Dallas Broken Goddess (1973)
'Broken Goddess is a revival of silent cinema - silent in that there are no spoken words; rather the story is told in title cards drawn from the lyrics of Laura Nyro's songs against a soundtrack of Debussy's music. The project was conceived around a then-fledgling starlet named Better Midler. And it would have worked. But one night while I was photographing Tally Brown's act at the Continental Baths, a strange thing happened. Tally introduced me to her then co-star in a film Scarecrow in a Garden of Cuncumbers (which willl be forever remembered if only for the fact that its title song was performed by Bette Midler and there was a fleeting cameo by Lily Tomlin as a telphone operator) - one Holly Woodlawn. La Woodlawn, you will remember, was riding high on the smashing success of Warhol's Trash [directed by Paul Morrissey] and an unprecendented write-in ballot to secure this new film personality an Oscar nomination. We had all seen that bizarre snaggled-toothed creature's poignant performance. And when the thundering applause that night subsided, the number one Warhol star of then and now rose in the presence of a shy, curly haired boy in farmer overalls. I, like everyone else present that night, was floored. The flash was instant. I would turn Holly Woodlawn into a silent film siren - the new Gloria Swanson/Theda Bara.'-- Dallas



Excerpt



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Jeffrey Arsenault & Matthew Patrick Night Owl (1993)
'This odd, independently produced horror film features performances by Warhol-era legend Holly Woodlawn and the versatile performer John Leguizamo. In the story, the handsome young man (James Raftery) who picks up women at a disreputable neighborhood bar is a real lady-killer; in fact, he's a vampire. When his sister doesn't come home one day, Angel (Leguizamo) tries to find out why. Meanwhile, the vampire is having a love relationship with a young woman he would rather not kill.'-- collaged



Excerpt



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Tommy O’Haver Billy’s Hollywood Screen Kiss (1998)
'Director O’Haver tries to flesh out his otherwise lightweight story with numerous subplots and familiar queer icons. Paul Bartel weighs in as a jolly, sinister underwear photographer, and the glorious Holly Woodlawn is wasted in a party scene where for some unknown reason we barely see her face. There’s a sexy but annoyingly stereotyped Latin hunk named Fernando, no doubt inspired, to use the filmmakers’ analogy, by Fernando Lamas or Ricardo Montalban in any number of 1950sMGM tropical melodramas. And while Sean P. Hayes and especially Brad Rowe are easy on the eyes, the film’s inability to breathe life into them beyond the snappy dialogue and campy narrative intrusions eventually capsizes the film. Using Sandra Dee and Doris Day comedies as blueprints for a 1998 comedy can be diverting but has one fatal drawback; you may end up with characters as foolish and forgettable as they were.'-- Bright Lights Film Journal



Trailer



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Michael Polish Twin Falls Idaho (1999)
'Although Michael Polish is credited as the sole director here, it's fairly obvious that he made this picture in tandem with his identical twin, Mark Polish. The two, in fact, play a pair of reclusive conjoined (or so-called "Siamese") twins, renting a room in a shabby hotel as they try to track down the birth mother who abandoned them years earlier. They soon befriend a young prostitute who starts falling for the healthier of the two brothers (played by Mark, who does most of the heavy actor lifting in the film), even as the sicklier brother (Michael) grows more and more ill. (The oddball cast, from cult icon Holly Woodlawn to once-famous leading lady Lesley Ann Warren to long-forgotten Saturday Night Live alumnus Garrett Morris, suggests that either the Polishes were having a laugh or simply desperate to increase their low-budget film's marketability with a handful of recognizable names.) A tender spin on sibling responsibility, Twin Falls Idaho is what all American indies should aspire to be: original, well-crafted, sophisticated, and heartfelt.'-- Cassava Films



Excerpt



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Allan Mindel Milwaukee, Minnesota (2003)
'Having lived his entire life under the watchful eye of his overbearing mother, Albert must fend for himself when an unidentified automobile suddenly kills her. Free for the first time, Albert quickly responds to the bait dangling in front of him, putting his aggressors against one another in a race for his trust. Using his skills that make him a gifted fisherman, Albert turns the tables on his seemingly doomed fate, capturing the heart of the woman most eager to deceive him, and fooling the man most intent on destroying him.'-- imdB



Trailer



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Robert Feinberg Heaven Wants Out (2009)
'Once a hot spot, the Bowery Follies Cabaret is now just another broken down New York City nightclub populated with the last vestiges of vaudeville entertainers, misfits and a headliner known as Heaven. She, like the club, has been there too long. In a drunken reverie, she wanders through the lives of the men who watch her sing night after night, looking for love ...trying to make sense of how she got there in the first place, hoping, for a ticket out. The film stars a bevy of Warhol Superstars including Holly Woodlawn, Mary Woronov, Ondine, and photographer Francesco Scavullo.'-- collaged



Documentary about the finishing of the film 'Heaven Wants Out'



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Joshua Leonard The Lie (2011)
'When they first met, Lonnie and Clover were young idealists, but an unplanned baby forced them to flip the script. Lonnie put his music on hold and got a shitty job. And now Clover is abandoning her activism for an “opportunity” in the corporate world. Drowning in disappointments, Lonnie decides he needs some time off work to reexamine his life. He calls in sick, but his abusive boss demands he sh…ow up or get fired. Lonnie panics and tells a shocking lie to justify his absence – and once the lie is out, there’s no going back. Now, it’s only a matter of time before the grenade he’s thrown on his life explodes and Lonnie is suddenly pushed to figure out who he is, what he wants, and just maybe, what it means to be a father.'-- collaged


Trailer



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Richard Carroll The Ghosts of Los Angeles (2011)
'A series of monologues written by Godfrey Hamilton. The overlooked and forgotten souls consider missed opportunities and what might have been. Holly Woodlawn plays herself.'-- Carroll Film


Excerpt


Trailer



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Gary LeGault East of the Tar Pits (2012)
'Two months ago, I ran a post about a movie I'd seen on DVD—Gary Legault's East of the Tarpits, starring drag icon Holly Woodlawn as a chanteuse who worships Streisand—and was outraged that in all its fruity glory, the film had been rejected by every single film festival in the world. I mean it's an "intoxicatingly funny Douglas Sirk-ian campathon" and there were no takers, not even at Cannes, which will show anything, even that Norah Jones flick! Well, someone from the illustrious New York Underground Film Festival read that item and instantly booked the kitchen-sink comedy for tonight at 1030pm at Anthology Film Archives (32 Second Avenue). They're promoting it so heavily they've even gotten someone very special to introduce it onstage—the same person who said it's an "intoxicatingly etc etc." You're reading him! See you there!'-- Michael Musto



Excerpt



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Zachary Drucker She Gone Rogue (2012)
'“Darling” (played by Zackary Drucker) attempts to visit her “Auntie Holly” but instead falls down a rabbit hole, encountering trans-feminine archetypes (legendary performers Holly Woodlawn, Vaginal Davis, and Flawless Sabrina) who are in turn confounding, nebulous, complicated and contradictory. Engaging a world of dream-like magical realism, SHE GONE ROGUE references Maya Deren’s Meshes of the Afternoon, utilizing a space where singular selves multiply and expand, offering windows into parallel dimensions, with time and space collapsing into a whirlpool of divergent possibilities. When Drucker finally finds the white rabbit, the process of identity construction completes a full circle, offering more questions than answers.'-- ZD



Titles


Excerpt



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Adam Dugas & Casey Spooner Dust (2012)
'“I have a spa fetish, and this scene is based on a honey treatment I did at Liquidrom, an amazing coed naked spa in Berlin,” gushes Casey Spooner of today’s clip of Dust, the feature-length that he wrote and directed with his creative and romantic partner of 13 years, Adam Dugas. Spooner, frontman for electro-pop duo Fischerspooner, and Dugas, co-founder of performance troupe The Citizens Band, envisioned their debut film as a Skype-age re-telling of Chekov’s Three Sisters, with cohabiting dysfunctional siblings colluding and colliding as they wrestle with their individual dramas. The cast includes Ssion’s Cody Critcheloe, artist and photographer Jaimie Warren, and fashion designer Peggy Noland, plus Warhol superstar Holly Woodlawn as the family matriarch. “In the tradition of early John Waters and the films Warhol made at the Factory with Paul Morrissey, Dust defines its own era by reveling in and rolling around in the 21st century’s sadness, audacity and flashpoint laugh-out-loud directness,” says R.E.M.’s Michael Stipe, who produced the tragi-comic collaborative effort.'-- Nowness



Trailer #1


Trailer #2




*

p.s. Hey. The unspeakably great Holly Woodlawn, subject of today's homage and fest, is very ill in hospital and in serious financial straits. Her friend and fellow performer Penny Arcade has set up a Go Fund Me campaign to raise money in order to bring her home, cover her nursing care, and, if it comes to that, to pay for her funeral expenses. If you're in a position to help, or if you're in a position to alert people to the fundraiser, please do. It's here. Thank you. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. Yeah, as Steevee said, everything I've read has said the film is doing surprisingly well at the box office, but I don't know. It just opened here, and I'm excited to see it. Excellent news about the Greenaway! I'll view it at the soonest opportunity. Thanks! ** H, I think you might find Metcalf really interesting, but see what you think. He's a singular writer, no one like him, and his work is very sorely underrated to my mind. The new Amy Gerstner book is fantastic! Yes, she's one of my oldest, dearest friends. We met in college where we were fellow aspiring young poets. And I published her first book, 'Yonder', with my Little Caesar Press a million years ago. ** Tosh Berman, Thank you, Tosh! ** Sypha, Hi, James. What's the status of that possible graphic novel project you were being solicited about? Well, that mainstream pop stuff plus the French equivalent is all the radio plays over here too, so that's no excuse, ha ha. That's very interesting about the circumstances, influences, and your reflections re: 'Subhuman'. Maybe in the future it will begin to strike you as a cool period piece, and maybe that period/mindset will be of inherent interest to readers too. Me, I'm already interested. Congrats on finishing the novella and on its acceptance! Man, you just finished a novella. Time to give yourself a short time to refuel and regroup, no? I know you enough to know you'll be headlong into a new project ere very long. ** Chilly Jay Chill, Hi, Jeff. Thanks. Yeah, the continual avalanche these days of theoretically must read books makes it very hard to keep up. I'm trying. What an absolutely incredible time for American lit. I'm so ongoing-ly amazed. I remember thinking Opal was only okay, but I haven't tried them in ages, and now I'm intrigued to find out. Best of the best! ** Steevee, Hi. I'm not finding the Dr. Yen Lo to be overly Wu-Tang-y, but it's a collaboration, so maybe that's it? Or else it is too WTC, and I'm just not minding? Curious to hear your thoughts. ** Thomas Moronic, Hi, T. Yeah, have a blast! No, still didn't hit PdT. Just looking for the right moment. Today was a possibility, but Zac and I have just been urged to make a trailer for our film asap, which we've been meaning to do for a while, so we'll be buckling down making that all day, I suspect. News on the PdT show as soon as it's in my memory bank. You do need that Gerstler book, I so agree. ** _Black_Acrylic, Yeah, isn't it? ** Kyler, Hi. Glad you liked the Gerstler poem. She's the best. Hm, potentially interesting, the Valli thing, I see. Anything can become anything, god knows. ** Bill, Hi. Such an excellent work! New Gary Lutz makes that Caketrain a must-get. Not to mention the others you mentioned. I read somewhere back a ways about a new, forthcoming Gary Lutz book that will be something like his writer lexicon or something? I can't remember exactly. It made me very excited. I wonder what's happened to it. Anyway, thanks, I'll get that. ** Cal Graves, Hi, Cal! You won't be disappointed with the Amy Gerstler book, I swear. I've been good. Good-ish. Hot temperatures and a temporary back problem, both solved for the moment. Otherwise, good stuff. Ah, just your normal mall clothing store employment then. I'm glad it's easy at least. Does the mall have a nice food court? There's a new Gabby Bess book coming out this month, I think, and I'm very excited about that. Summer causes nothing to go on. It's the culprit. Blame it. It sucks. Fuck it. (I'm a summer grouch.) Giddy-ish-ly, Dennis. ** Douglas Payne, Hi, Douglas. Yes, she does! She is one of the truly greatest, sweetest, best people in the world, Amy is. Oh, sorry if I spaced about 'The Weaklings' interview. I do space out, it's bad. Yeah, we can do it mostly anytime you like. How and when do you want to do it? I'm game. The LACMA 'Ventriloquists Convention' gig got postponed due to, they say, funding issues in the performance department of LACMA, so I guess it'll happen there next year sometime. Sucks. ** Right. I hope you will enjoy my humble grouping of things to do with the legendary and precious and amazing Holly Woodlawn. I'll see you tomorrow.

Mirrors

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Jeppe Hein 'Mirror Wall' (2009): A huge mirror is mounted onto a wall. When visitors enter the space the mirror starts moving subtly and wavelike. Visitors facing the mirror will be irritated by the vibrating reflection of themselves and their surrounding. This sensation causes not only a vague feeling of dizziness but also a latent distrust of one’s own eyes and spatial perception. As the mirror displays a different picture of the location, viewers question their position in the room.






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Reindeer breeders in Finland think they may have found a way to prevent their animals from being hit by cars — mirrored antlers. Anne Ollila, head of Finland's Reindeer Herders' Association, told Agence France-Presse they have begun testing reflective sprays on the animals to make them more visible to motorists at night. Around 4,000 Finnish reindeer are killed in traffic accidents every year.





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Nikko Jenkins, a man convicted of four murders, was left with a series of 9s engraved into his face after he attempted to carve "666" into his forehead while looking in the mirror.





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"Reflected" is the first single by the rock band Alice Cooper, released in 1969 from the album Pretties for You. The band also performed the song during a party scene in the film Diary of a Mad Housewife (1970). The song received no chart performance and had no success, but was re-written in 1972 as "Elected", which is the band's second most successful single (the first being "School's Out"). The lyrics and melody of "Reflected" and "Elected" are unmistakably similar.







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‘Penguins Mirror’ lets you be emperor of the penguins – just stand in front of all 450 motorized stuffed animals and they turn their white bellies towards you reflecting your silhouette. The ‘mirror’ is made from small motors, control electronics, a video camera, a microcontroller and special software. Each penguin is supported on a tin base allowing it to rotate in choreographed 360 degree circles.







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26 boys in 17 mirror mazes























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Archimedes, the renowned mathematician, was said to have used a burning glass (or more likely a large number of angled hexagonal mirrors) as a weapon in 212 BC, when Syracuse was besieged by Marcus Claudius Marcellus. The Roman fleet was supposedly incinerated, though eventually the city was taken and Archimedes was slain.






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Daniel Rozin's Peg Mirror comprises 650 circular wooden pieces that are cut on an angle. Casting shadows by twisting and rotating, wooden pegs forming concentric circles surround a small central camera. The mirrored image produced in this work is activated by software authored by Rozin that processes video signals and breaks up imagery geometrically, seemingly pixel by pixel. The silently moving wood components in this piece flicker like jewels or coins in the spotlight, challenging our notions about what constitutes a “digital object”.





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Thwaitesia argentiopunctata spiders, called mirror spiders, are all members of several different species of the thwaitesia genus, which features spiders with reflective silvery patches on their abdomen. The scales look like solid pieces of mirror glued to the spider’s back, but they can actually change size depending on how threatened the spider feels. The reflective scales are composed of reflective guanine, which these and other spiders use to give themselves color.






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Here's a trick that has the potential to creep anyone out. Learn how to write a hidden message on a mirror using anti-fog solution and a q-tip. Just write a secret message on a mirror to scare someone coming out of the shower. You'll have loads of fun with this practical joke.






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Designed by Brazil-born Andreia Chaves and introduced at Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week earlier this month, the Invisible Shoes are a feat of cutting-edge technology, their flashy good looks only possible as a result of rapid-prototyping. Chaves designed the shoes in 3D software, then manufactured the outer layers — the mirrored acrylic above and the black space frame below — using the 3D printing services of the Dutch product-design powerhouse Freedom of Creation.






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A four-year-old boy who was horrifically crushed when a 19-stone mirror plummeted onto him at a Hugo Boss shop died in "an accident waiting to happen", a coroner has stated. Youngster Austen Harrison had been playing with a heavy steel-framed fitting room mirror while his father tried on a suit before it toppled on to him causing "devastating head injuries", Oxford Coroner's Court heard.





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Created by London based artist Monica Bonvicini, the Don’t Miss a Sec art installation is a controversial public toilet that tests the boundaries of privacy. The mirrored glass is see-through from the perspective of the squatter, but completely frosted for onlookers.






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Abusers
















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Conceptualized by Alpay Kasal, this is a patent pending touch capable mirror. The interactive mirror features proximity sensors, gesturing, and both nearfield and farfield infrared.





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There is a Mirror World that exists in the skies of Dream Land. It is a world where any wish reflected in the mirror will come true. However, one day it only copies evil minds, and rapidly changes into a world of evil. Meta Knight notices this, and flies up to save the Mirror World. Meanwhile, Kirby is taking a walk when Dark Meta Knight appears. Before Kirby can react, Dark Meta Knight slices Kirby in four and Kirby becomes four different colored "Kirbys". They chase after the Dark Meta Knight and enter the Mirror World. The two Meta Knights fight each other and the real Meta Knight is defeated. He is knocked into the mirror, which is then cut into eight fragments by Dark Meta Knight (which are then scattered across the Mirror World), so Kirby must save Meta Knight and the Mirror World. After collecting all eight mirror fragments, Kirby enters the Mirror World and battles Dark Meta Knight. After defeating him, a vortex appears and sucks Kirby in, who is given Meta Knight's sword. Kirby fights 4 bosses before battling the Dark Mind. Upon defeat, the Mirror World is saved.









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Street performer dressed in a costume made from hundreds of mirrors was spotted near Griffith Observatory in downtown Los Angeles.







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When Google Cultural Institute’s Art Project launched in 2011 to take Google Earth-like tours inside the world’s elite museums, its goal was simple: Democratiz[e] who gets to look at art and how. Barcelona-based artist Mario Santamaria is documenting all of these moments in a new Tumblr project. In his latest blog, “The Camera in the Mirror,” Santamaria collects screenshots of Google’s tours when the institute’s camera catches itself in a museum mirror. The result is a series of robot selfies—the camera posing before a gilded museum room surrounded by art.











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2GB USB Flash Drive Then the hold type U dish LED disguise mirror. The product introduces: Give or get an electric shock Xin: The lithium polymer gives or gets an electric shock Xin. Heavy quantity: 45g. Color: he Yong permits purple. the abyss of time silver. gentle and soft powder.





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9 x 3.6 x 0.4m formed mirror polished stainless steel feature entrance wall of MONA (Museum of Old and New Art) in Hobart, Tasmania.






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Halloween mirror still malfunctioning





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Artist Alyson Shotz has created a run-of-the-mill picket fence covered entirely by perfectly mirrored surfaces. The visual effect of having a mirrored fence is as weird as it is diverse – in some landscapes, the fence seems to be camouflaged, while in others, it serves as a strange and surreal extension or distortion of the environment around it.









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Users


















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Carsten Holler 'Mirror Carousel'






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The designer/artist, Phillip K. Smith, has made alternating mirrored slats in the installation to reflect the surrounding desert of sand, bushes and hills. This is contrasted against the contorted and worn wood that makes the framework of the 70-year-old homesteader cabin. But it is at night where the LED technology comes into its own. Lucid Stead is illuminated after dark, its windows and door glowing with LED lights that change their hue over time. Smith explains why he uses a computer to vary the colours slowly in his project description. “The colour of the door and window openings are set at a pace of change where one might question whether they are actually changing colours.” Walk away from the shack and come back a few minutes later, and he says the “blue, red, and yellow” of before might now be “orange, purple, and green.” He uses the LED lights and the shack’s mirrors to induce a delicate transformation, saying “Lucid Stead is about tapping into the quiet and the pace of change of the desert.” If you watch for a long enough period of time, you will see the shifts in the Joshua Tree park as Lucid Stead reflects the light of morning, then midday, then dusk. Over time, the cabin gives off a glow, as it’s lit from within.







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This Mirror Secret Door is crazy! It looks like a regular wall-mounted mirror, but it slides open to reveal a whole other room!





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The Weave Mirror uses 768 individual strips which are woven together into a grid. As passersby walk in front of the work, motors adjust the woven strips to change the greyscale intensity of that particular X/Y coordinate on the grid. When you step back, it forms the illusion of a real-time mirror.





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Back in the early glory days of Disney animation, animators used their own reflection for reference when drawing the faces for some of their most iconic characters.









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Reflect Showered Mirror combines two needs in one and does so in a simple way. Ditch that cheap fogless mirror that always seems to fall in the middle of the night and scare the crap out of you and replace it, and your showerhead, with the Reflect Showerhead Mirror. By storing a cavity of water, the mirror remains condensation free no matter how steam-filled your shower gets.





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Unexplained faces captured by the crew can be seen top right of mirror.





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The Haunted Mansion at the Magic Kingdom recently received a new interactive queue. But that was just the tip of the iceberg. The ride itself has gotten an update in the form of new effects during the famous mirror sequence. Previously, as you passed the mirrors, you would see a ghost riding alongside you in your vehicle. Now, well, just check out the (very dark) ride video below:





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Yayoi Kusama 'I Who Have Arrived In Heaven'









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One way to reflect more sunlight back into space is to increase reflectivity of the world's marine clouds, which cover a quarter of the ocean's surface. John Latham and Stephen Salter of the University of Edinburgh have proposed wind-powered yachts (pictured) that would spray seawater droplets into the air to produce more clouds. Latham says that about a thousand of these vessels would be needed to make the plan effective, and that they should be deployed in the southern oceans, where most reflective marine stratocumulus clouds are.





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 photo shoemirror1.gif



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The architecture and design practice of Two Islands is responsible for this impressive work in the heart of the US American city of Flint, Michigan. The reflecting façade is characterized by the various textures it may display. On hot sunny days, the very solid and durable material expands, coating the entire object with creases like that of a cloth. On rainy days, however, the material contracts, enclosing the form of the building tightly and creating a smooth surface. Due to its hygroscopic qualities, the façade material changes, depending on the weather conditions.






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Merging two classic horror genres gets one unforgettable startle scare... the Zombie Asylum Mirror! Get maximum bang for your scare buck with this gothic, ornate, and seemingly innocent mirror that suddenly comes alive with a horrific vision sure to wet the drawers of even the toughest of your haunt visitors.





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The title of the third solo-exhibition by Los Angeles based artist Sam Durant at Praz-Delavallade refers to Amercian artist Robert Smithson’s work Yucatan Mirror Displacements (1969) which was itself a reference to writer John Lloyd Stephen’s book Incidents of Travel in Yucatan (1843). These references to «mirror travels» are then mapped onto particularly nihilistic examples of street graffiti. Each work consists of the reproduction of a graffiti slogan stenciled onto a mirror. Although the slogans are from multiple locations and different years they can be understood as responses to the effects of neoliberalism’s global hegemony. Through his work, Sam Durant addresses what he considers neoliberal economic policy’s main achievement: the restoration of class power to the world’s elites along with the largest upward transfer of wealth in modern history. What has happened to the other 99% percent of the population whose standard of living has been in corresponding decline has not been of much concern to those championing the free market fundamentalism. These mirror works are meant as “signs” from the other 99%.








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This simple mask hides your face behind a one-way mirrored chrome surface, allowing you to see out, but others only to see their own reflections. Makes a noteworthy costume for a Halloween party, especially with a hooded black robe, or just wear it in your everyday life to protect any traces of privacy you may have left in the 21st century.






*

p.s. RIP: James Tate, a sublimely great poet, one of my very favorite writers of all time, and a huge influence on my work. Terrible, terrible loss. Fuck death. ** Scunnard, Hi, man. I doubt she's happy or comfortable, but at least enough money has been raised to get her home. Glad Rome was great for you, hotness notwithstanding. Seriously crossed into infinity sign fingers that you'll return a full-fledged dr. Oh, Sylvere, how nice! I'll go check my email. I'm, as always, bad at missing things there. Thank you, and have a hugely successful trip to Switzerland if I don't talk with you again before. ** Bernard Welt, B-ster, my new neighbor! I certainly imagine so, no maybes about it. I will be calling you and hopefully seeing you very soon if not before you even see this. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi, David. Yeah, it looks bad for Holly, it's so very, very sad. And I'm so very sorry to hear about Kuro. My profound condolences to you and Bill. That's harsh. Take good care. Love, me. ** Sypha, Ah, dang, that's really too bad about the bowing-out. It was such a natural of an idea and match. Well, you can say why more exactly if you like. It's up to you. I think 50 pages constitute a novella, yes. It sounds wild, in the best way. Definitely sounds like you're not project-bereft. Good! ** Cal Graves, Dude, I'm so with you on wanting the cold back. We're in this extremely brief, coldish pause in our summer right now, ending by tomorrow, they say, and it feels positively holy outside even though it's just technically an average spring day. Oh, it's an outlet mall. Those are so weird to me. They kind of freak me out or something, I don't know why. But they also seem like movie sets for some reason, which I kind of like, although I don't know why they remind me of that. Gabby Bess seriously rocks, yes! PdT is Palais Tokyo, the big ultra-contemporary art museum in Paris. I don't know why it has Tokyo in its name. Maybe the building used to be a Tokyo-related place, but I don't think so. I think maybe the name was chosen just because it sounds cool. It's a super great space, huge -- the largest contemporary art museum in Europe -- and really raw and spooky with many, many floors, most of them underground, very labyrinthine. The shows there are really, really uneven, but it's a lot of fun just to be there and wander around. Ha ha, Paris is none of those things. Well, 'disillusioning' is subjective, so I guess it can be that. That's funny. I mean, Tokyo, which is one of the most amazing places in the world easily, is, or can be, massively confusing. That's so weird. I'll look into that. Peer-into-the-abyss-that-is-the-human-heart-ly, Dennis. ** Steevee, Hi. I don't know that director or film, so I look forward to your interview. Everyone, Steevee has interviewed David Thorpe, who is the director of a film called 'Do I Sound Gay'right here. I'm glad that the Dr. Yen Lo LP interests you too. Ah, his voice is reminiscent of Raekwon's, isn't it. That's right. This record is the first of Ka's that really grabbed me, although I've listened to his early stuff only in bits. Yikes, that restaurant story. ** Thomas Moronic, Hi, Thomas. Yes, very heartening news that the Gofundme campaign reached the goal. I never interacted personal with Holly. I saw her one time across a party some years ago. A friend of mine was her manager/keeper for a few years, so I heard a lot about her from him. But, no, sadly, I never had the chance to actually meet her. ** _Black_Acrylic, I hope it goes really well with Andrew today. Great things have their own tempos, you know? Sorry that this one's has been so protracted, but somehow I think that the time will have some kind of pay-off in the work itself. It works that way, or it can. ** Jonathan, Oh, man, my mouth literally filled with saliva awhile reading your first paragraph. Gross, sorry. Maybe I can get over there today. I'm going to try the Jenny Hval again tonight. I think it was probably just some blockage in my head when I first listened to it. I'm a bulletin board fan. Maybe that? 'Yonder' is really early work. I think, for Amy, it's like I am about 'Terror of Earrings', i.e. embarrassed, although her first book is infinitely better than mine. May the flipside not be tardy! ** Douglas Payne, Hi, Douglas. She was always incredible, really, no matter the flimsiness of the film. Oh, right, you're in California. Hm. Well, if you're a night person, we could do a phone/Skype in my morning, or vice versa. Otherwise, yeah, I guess email questions. I'm really slow with email stuff, but I would try to make myself answer them upon their arrival, which I can do. So, one way or another, ready when you are. Duvert is not really a Nouveau Roman writer, just someone who was working in roughly the same time period. There are books by him that are more experimental, like 'Strange Landscape', which are my favorite ones by him, of course, ha ha, but the books of his that Semiotext(e) have been publishing are more ... stylistically accessible, I guess? Yeah, he has a very developed, clear philosophical position on that. Even though he's a bit of a cult writer even in France, he's very respected, and he and his work never, to my knowledge, engendered a hysterical moralist reaction here. ** Okay. My new thematic post takes on the mirror. I hope you enjoy. See you tomorrow.

"Well, he seemed like - he just seemed like the world was at his finger tips and everything was always perfect all the time."

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Interview with Eve Babitz
Conducted by Paul Karlstrom
At her home in Hollywood, California
June 14, 2000


PAUL KARLSTROM: Why don't you -

EVE BABITZ: I thought of myself as, I was like an art groupie/art model and I wanted to-I never modeled for anything like that and never again did, and really most artists, you know, when they have models they really are drawing them basically, like in sculptures, not taking photographs, so I don't know who-and it wasn't Duchamp's idea so I figured I was the artist and the model in that one.

KARLSTROM: Why don't you tell me just, you know, what led up to it, how it came about?

BABITZ: Well, the photographer Julian Wasser came and there was the-they had the big party at the Green Hotel, even though Julian doesn't remember it; he has photographs that he took there at that time. And so I didn't get invited to it because Walter Hopps [curator of Duchamp retrospective at Pasadena Art Museum, 1963] was mad at me.

MR. KARLSTROM: Why was that?

MS. BABITZ: Because his wife was in town, basically.

MR. KARLSTROM: Is that Shirley? [Art historian later married to dealer Irving Blum.]

MS. BABITZ: Yes. I mean she came back, she suddenly did come back in a flash the minute that Duchamp thing happened and I was like not allowed in. So, but then I found out Jim Elliott wasn't invited either, so maybe nobody under 20, maybe 21, under 21 you weren't allowed in. So, so, he didn't invite me, so, and he wouldn't call me back, and he wouldn't call my mother back. And so I decided that if I could ever, like, you know, create any vengeance or havoc in his life I would, even though I was pretty powerless because I was only 20 and there was no way I could get to him. But, this Julian came up to me at the opening, the public opening, which I went to with my parents and-

MR. KARLSTROM: That was at the museum?

MS. BABITZ: Yeah. At the Pasadena Art Museum, and he said he had this great idea that I should play chess naked with Marcel Duchamp and it seem to be such a great idea that it was just like the best idea I'd ever heard in my life. It was like a great idea. I mean, it was, not only was it vengeance, it was art, and it was like a great idea. And even if it didn't get any vengeance, it would still turn out okay with me because, you know, it would be sort of immortalized. I would be this, you know, here's this Nude Descending the Staircase guy and now he's going to be The Nude in the Pasadena Art Museum. But, of course, I said, you know, I didn't think that the Pasadena Art Museum old ladies would go along with this. So-

MR. KARLSTROM: Was that part of what attracted you to the idea?

MS. BABITZ: Yes. Yeah, because it was like the Little Old Ladies from Pasadena, you know that Beach Boys' song.

MR. KARLSTROM: Right.



Eve Babitz


MS. BABITZ: So, I thought well, you know, this will be, you know, and it is kind of like, you know, it'll just kill them to find out that this happened there. So, but, I thought that he should tell Walter so Walter would know what we were doing, that we were going to do this. Because, it didn't seem like-I mean, it was okay to do it, but they ought to know basically. But, I know that Julian did not tell anybody because he probably forgot it the minute he agreed to do it. But he did call me the next day and say "Now, you're not going to chicken out are you?" Because we were supposed to do this two or three days later when they came back from Las Vegas, maybe the next day. They went to Las Vegas; they came back, Duchamp shows up at like, I don't know, it was a Thursday morning or something. It was like seven o'clock. Julian comes to get me at, like, seven in the morning. We drive out to Pasadena to create this, you know, rape.

KARLSTROM: And Duchamp didn't know what he had in mind either?

BABITZ: And he brought, and he said "Put that chess table there". You know, we're going to do the chess table. So, Duchamp, he had no idea. I mean that maybe he would of chosen someone else basically. He'd never met me before.

MR. KARLSTROM: Oh, I don't know, you look pretty good.

MS. BABITZ: He'd never met me before. I'd never met him before.

MR. KARLSTROM: Did you know who he was though?

MS. BABITZ: No, I didn't know who-I mean, I had an idea when I went to the art opening that he was probably great. He was one of those great people like-

MR. KARLSTROM: But you hadn't heard of him before?

MS. BABITZ: No. I mean I'd never heard of anybody except Ed Kienholz. That was as far as my-I knew who Ed Kienholz was and I thought he was great. So, I didn't even know who Joseph Cornell was at that time. So, and I knew that everybody was like in love with him because they had this huge party and they had two ballrooms and two bands. That I didn't get invited to.

KARLSTROM: Uh-uh.

BABITZ: So Julian sets up lights for a million years and I'm sitting there, like nothing to do, smoking cigarettes. Like, 8:30 or 8:15, Duchamp shows up with his beautiful suit and that hat from Las Vegas, that straw hat.

KARLSTROM: Did the museum engage in-

BABITZ: -the people who were in there were teamsters marching back and forth with big pieces of art. That's who was looking at this.

KARLSTROM: So you had an audience?

BABITZ: Yes.

KARLSTROM: It was like a performance piece?

BABITZ: That's right.

KARLSTROM: Did you feel that way about it?

BABITZ: Yes.



Marcel Duchamp and Walter Hopps at the Pasadena Art Museum


KARLSTROM: That's cool. You actually were in many respects the artist, but, on the other hand, the concept [that] was Julian [was watching you]?

BABITZ: Right, but he didn't think that anyone would go along with it, because he's always thinking up ways to get girls to take off their clothes.

KARLSTROM: So he had-this is interesting because you said you hadn't modeled, but, in fact, you had, you posed nude for Julian.

BABITZ: Not-

KARLSTROM: At least on, what was that? Several times?

BABITZ: Well, no, once.

KARLSTROM: Just once.

BABITZ: And it wasn't posing.

KARLSTROM: Then what were you doing?

BABITZ: It was getting naked pictures of yourself so you could show guys.

KARLSTROM: Oh, I see. So that's what you were doing?

BABITZ: That's right.

KARLSTROM: And you said, "Julian I need some naked-"

BABITZ: I don't want to go, like, work in some horrible magazine. This is what all girls did at that time.

KARLSTROM: And so you wanted to have naked pictures of yourself to show guys?

BABITZ: Gorgeous ones.

KARLSTROM: Yeah, gorgeous, right.

BABITZ: Yes. That's right. Gorgeous-

KARLSTROM: Because you were proud of your body.

BABITZ: Right.

KARLSTROM: Why did he choose you then for this, what turned into an extremely famous photo session? You playing chess.

BABITZ: Because he likes me.

KARLSTROM: You were friends?

BABITZ: Yeah.

KARLSTROM: He said you would be the best.

BABITZ: And he knew I wanted, you know, he wanted me to be part of this deal and I wouldn't go to the party with him when he wanted to take me because Walter didn't invite me.



Julian Wasser


KARLSTROM: So, what were you, Walter's girlfriend or something?

BABITZ: I thought I-I deserved respect.

KARLSTROM: I would say. This story is much more interesting than-

BABITZ: That's right. I was 20 years old and I wasn't invited to this party. So, I took these pictures. That was it. You know, I got to Duchamp. We started playing chess.

KARLSTROM: Was that the first thing you did? That's how this photo session started?

BABITZ: Yes.

KARLSTROM: Did he seem sort of taken aback when you took off your shirt?

BABITZ: No. He floated into it.

KARLSTROM: What did you do? Did you just go by the chair and take off your shirt?

BABITZ: No. He said, Julian said, "Okay, blah, blah, blah" You know, sit down [inaudible] you know, [inaudible]. "Okay, Eve, take that shirt off". There was the chess table. Duchamp goes to the two little chess pieces. Julian kicks that shirt like 30 feet away, so I have nothing on.

KARLSTROM: Was it fun?

MS. BABITZ: It was hot. I was sweating like a Lakers game.

KARLSTROM: You mean it was hot in there?

BABITZ: I was sweating. No one else was. Everybody else was delightfully cool.

KARLSTROM: But you enjoyed it?

BABITZ: Well, it was-I mean it was like work, I'll tell you and I don't like work. Work is not my thing.

KARLSTROM: And so Marcel just took it in stride.

BABITZ: Yeah. He beat me three times.

KARLSTROM: Are you a good chess player?

BABITZ: No. Horrible.

KARLSTROM: Oh.

BABITZ: Obviously.

KARLSTROM: Because he's supposed to be. I guess he was brilliant.

BABITZ: I know.

KARLSTROM: Did you-so most of the photos-I mean, we seen the proof sheet like reproduced during West Coast Duchamp, that book, you know.

BABITZ: I thought he only spoke French. I had no idea he spoke English so I tried to speak French to him. I asked him if he knew Mr. Stravinsky, the name of my godfather, and he said yes that he had been to that 1910 Firebird suite thing in Paris.

KARLSTROM: Did he seem sort of impressed that you had that connection?

BABITZ: Well, he seemed like-he just seemed like the world was at his finger tips and everything was always perfect all the time.

KARLSTROM: Sort of everything-

BABITZ: He wasn't losing chess, at chess.

KARLSTROM: Well you didn't care did you?

BABITZ: No, I didn't really care. I wanted to get it over with.

KARLSTROM: And you wanted to get your clothes back on.

BABITZ: Right.

KARLSTROM: So you basically-

BABITZ: I wanted my cigarettes. I wanted my glasses. I wanted my clothes on; I wanted Julian to take me to a Chinese restaurant.

KARLSTROM: So you-

BABITZ: I knew exactly the one he wanted to go too. Chow Yung Fat. It's down on Main Street.

KARLSTROM: So you really weren't all that comfortable?

BABITZ: No. No.

KARLSTROM: But it was worth it.

BABITZ: It was worth it because Walter came in and he dropped his gum.

KARLSTROM: So Walter actually came in to see how it was going.

BABITZ: Yeah.

KARLSTROM: And he didn't even know you were there.

BABITZ: No.

KARLSTROM: Wow. So you won.

BABITZ: Yeah.



Pasadena Art Museum 1973


KARLSTROM: You didn't win at chess.

BABITZ: No.

KARLSTROM: But you won in terms of taking control of the situation.

BABITZ: That's right.

KARLSTROM: I mean, did you think of it a little bit that way? Because I'm thinking of motivation.

BABITZ: I said, "Hello, Walter" and he dropped his gum.

KARLSTROM: Literally?

BABITZ: Yes. He always chewed Double Mint gum.

KARLSTROM: So what, did he hang out and watch?

BABITZ: No. He was even more ashen than he already was. He ran into his office-

KARLSTROM: Did it work?

BABITZ: Did it work? Yes.

KARLSTROM: Because you did get back, I mean-

BABITZ: Yes.

KARLSTROM: It sort of rekindled Walter's interest?

BABITZ: It made him return my phone calls, which was what I wanted out of life.

KARLSTROM: Isn't it interesting. This famous-this is actually one of the most famous photographs certainly in California art history.

BABITZ: I know, I know, and the reason is so bad. So bad.

KARLSTROM: What did you talk with Duchamp about? You said that the-

BABITZ: About the Firebird Suite.

KARLSTROM: That was the main thing?

BABITZ: Yeah. I mean, I just was basically sweating and wishing it was over and I couldn't believe he had beat me three times in [inaudible] spades which mean you move like two pieces and then the person check mates you.

KARLSTROM: And you never got anything out of it? Except fame.

BABITZ: Except, you know, my usual fame.

KARLSTROM: Fame and a little bit of power over Walter.

BABITZ: That's right.

KARLSTROM: And so you really had nothing to do particularly with Marcel Duchamp.

BABITZ: No. No. No.

KARLSTROM: There was no-you were both models is what it amounts to.

BABITZ: That's right. Right. Right.

KARLSTROM: And he had his clothes on.

BABITZ: It had to do with Walter.

KARLSTROM: How did you feel, maybe not so much in that situation, but perhaps, about your own sexuality? Were you sort of very much aware of that at that stage? You were 20 years old. Did you have that kind of self-awareness or self-consciousness as a sexual young woman?

BABITZ: Yes.

KARLSTROM: Yes.

BABITZ: I went to Hollywood High.



Outtake


KARLSTROM: So you thought it was a pretty weird thing-

BABITZ: Yes. I did.

KARLSTROM: So it wasn't-

BABITZ: I mean he was old, you know.

KARLSTROM: Okay, what about that?

BABITZ: It was like kind of depressing.

KARLSTROM: Really?

BABITZ: Yeah.

KARLSTROM: Tell me about that. Tell me how you felt about that. That's interesting. Because that suggests a kind of connection in a relationship, at least visual, between you and your self-conception, then brings in your partners shall we say. How did you feel about that? You said he was old.

BABITZ: Well, I mean, I just, I mean he was old and he was too old for me.

KARLSTROM: Okay. Well, but you know what that suggests is very interesting to me. Taking off your clothes and, in a sense, because you were paired with him that there was that, even a sexual connotation to him. Is that right?

BABITZ: Yes, there wasn't a sexual connotation.

KARLSTROM: There wasn't?

BABITZ: That's right.

KARLSTROM: But still you said that he was too old for you.

BABITZ: Right. That's right. He was, I mean, it was like, I mean, if he were like, you know, Nureyer, you know, and some sort of like insanely gorgeous looking, you know, stunning type of person like that it would have been much more fun.

KARLSTROM: Well, you see what that implies. That does suggest -

BABITZ: That I'm a shallow person?

KARLSTROM: No. No.

BABITZ: I am a shallow person.

KARLSTROM: No, Eve, that's not what I'm suggesting. But if you are, you are.

BABITZ: I would be much more eager to show it to my friends. But now I'm glad it wasn't. As I've grown older I've realized that it was like a smart move.

KARLSTROM: You would have preferred a James Dean.

BABITZ: Right.

KARLSTROM: Then, you would of really-

BABITZ: Then I would've shown my friends.

KARLSTROM: So it wasn't you being naked that you were unhappy with.

BABITZ: No.

KARLSTROM: It was about being paired with this old guy.

BABITZ: That's right.

KARLSTROM: I understand.

BABITZ: How would you like it? I mean, if it were like Louise Nevelson or something and you were 20 years old?




*

p.s. Hey. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. Ah, Lucas Samaras, how could I have forgotten that one? And Ira Cohen, come to think of it. Lit mags 4ever. Lacan! Everyone, if you're still in a mood for mirrors, if you ever were, Mr. Ehrenstein links you up to Mr. Jacques Lacan's thoughts on said subject. Said thoughts are titled 'The Mirror Stage as Formative of the Function of the I as Revealed in Psychoanalytic Experience', and, if that sounds like your cup of meat, it's right here. ** Sypha, Hi. Thank you for the explanation. Well, it doesn't have to be that way even though, of course, it mostly is. My 'HHU', for instance, with Keith Mayerson, was pretty balanced between text/image prominence, and it got a fair share response. In any case, your idea was very good, so I second your idea of doing something with it within your own work. ** Rewritedept, Hi. What a great Raspberries song. Big Bear, nice. My family used to trek up there for vacations a lot. You're right that I'm no real fan of SP or MM, but it does sound like fun, although seeing them when so far past their primes has an ick. My end? Things are good, I can say. Still working my semi-ass off on stuff, and fine with that. The launch post is, of course, awesome and a go. Mm, I'm in a no blurbing phase, which I go through every once in a while when I've done a bunch and need to lay off, but, when it's near finished, try me, and it could be possible that I'll be ready to be game by then, but also maybe not. Crap shoot. All of Lynne's books are great, honestly, but ... 'No Lease on Life' as a next one maybe? ** Etc etc etc, Hi. Tate's a big loss. So great. 'An egomaniacal Jane Austen' is a great description, ha ha, but it also doesn't make me want to jump into the new book, which is part of its greatness, ha ha. Honestly, I doubt I'm going to read Knausgaard. Like you, I had a test/peek at his stuff, and it didn't interest me whatsoever. I think I would only read him or start/try in order to try to understand what people du jour find exciting to want to read. But one never knows, obviously. All I know about OR books is that I like what they do and that they've published some writers I like a lot. I don't even know who runs it or anything about the process. I can ask some people who might in the know. ** Steevee, I just read something about 'Tangerine'. Huh, sounds vey interesting. Eyes peeled. Thank you! ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. I, of course, have fingers crossed re: that outside chance, but it sounds like it will be soon, no matter what. Hooray! Are there particular types of vehicles that you're restricted to drive? Or is it about automatic vs. stick shift and that sort of thing? Glad there's progress on that front. ** Jonathan, Hi, J. I forgot to answer your question yesterday, namely that, no, there is no new L'éclair de génie flavor flavor/design, or not when I popped in there for a classic the other day. Sadaharu Aoki has these new, strange consistency cookies that I liked, but Zac wasn't so sold on them. Nice packaging, in any case. Thank about the post. Oh, I remember that ice cube story, but I forgot that it was Jeppe Hein. 'Mr. Robot', don't know that. Good? Even with Christian Slater in it, ha ha? I'm hoping that the stuff to be done on your day off is stuff to be done for you and yours and for nobody and no place else. True? ** Douglas Payne, My mom was kind of a nutsy spiritualist, and she used to make my siblings and I do these ritualistic regressive voyages in our past lives that involved standing in a dark bathroom with a flickering candle below us while staring unblinking into the mirror where our past physical forms would appear and crossfade before us, so mirrors have a weirdness for me too. Skype sounds doable. I'll go find your username and trade you mine, and let's sort it out. Cool. ** Misanthrope, I was wondering where you were, big guy. Yeah, Tate's death sucks sucks sucks. My mojo's back, I guess, as is yours, according to the evidence at hand. Nice about the WWE thing. Cena's all right. I mean, he's a dude, he's cool enough. Sweet Lesnar subplot freak-out stuff. I love the side-trips. Yay re: back to the old place! Glad you're back, bud. ** Bill, Hi. Yeah, I know, very big ugh about James Tate. I've never been on a grants panel, but I was on the committee that chose the Lammy for 'best fiction' one year, and I can easily imagine how grant-giving consensus reaching would make any day a very long one. ** Okay. Mr. Ehrensein brought up Eve Babitz here the other day, and I thought I should make a post involving her, and the one up there is what I ended up deciding to make with her, for better or worse. See you tomorrow.

Mine for yours: My favorite fiction, poetry, nonfiction, music, film, art & internet of 2015 so far

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Books (fiction)
in no order

Mark Doten The Infernal(Gray Wolf Press)


xTx Today I Am A Book(Civil Coping Mechanisms)


Jeremy M. Davies Fancy(Ellipsis Press)


Edouard Leve Newspaper (Dalkey Archive Press)


Sean Kilpatrick Sucker June(Lazy Fascist)


Lucy K Shaw The Motion(421Atlanta)


Mark Gluth The Goners(Kiddiepunk Press)


Katie Jean Shinkle The Arson People(Civil Coping Mechanisms)


Sarah Jean Alexander Wildlives(Big Lucks)


Brandi Wells This Boring Apocalypse(Civil Coping Mechanisms)


Gregory Howard Hospice(FC2)


Tosh Berman June 1, 2014(Synaesthesia Press)


M Kitchell Spiritual Instrument(Civil Coping Mechanisms)


Molly Gaudry Desire: A Haunting(Ampersand Books)


Pierre Guyotat In the Deep(Semiotext(e))


Steven Millhauser Voices in the Night (Knopf)


Matthew Timmons Terrifying Photo(Wonder)


Anne Garréta Sphinx(Deep Vellum)


Sean H. Doyle This Must Be the Place(Civil Coping Mechanisms)


James Champagne Autopsy of an Eldritch City: Ten Tales of Strange & Unproductive Thinking(Rebel Satori Press)


Darby Larson Ohey!(Civil Coping Mechanisms)


Rachel Levy A Book So Red(Caketrain)


Johannes Goransson The Sugar Book(Tarpaulin Sky Books)


Urs Allemann The Old Man and the Bench(Dalkey Archive)


Oliver Mol Lion Attack!(Scribe)






Books (poetry)
in no order

Amy Gerstler Scattered at Sea(Penguin Books)


Ben Fama Fantasy(Ugly Duckling Presse)


Ron Padgett Alone and Not Alone(Coffee House Press)


Noah Cicero Bipolar Cowboy(Lazy Fascist)


John Ashbery Breezeway(Ecco)


Leopoldine Core Veronica Bench(Coconut Books)


Bernadette Mayer Eating The Colors Of A Lineup Of Words: The Early Books(Station Hill)


Corina Copp The Green Ray(Ugly Duckling Presse)


Nathaniel Mackey Blue Fasa(New Directions)


Paul Cunningham Goal/Tender Meat/Tender(Horse Less Press)


Lewis Warsh Alien Abduction(Ugly Duckling Presse)


Mike Krutel Fogland(Magic Helicopter)






Books (nonfiction)
in no order

Joyelle McSweeney The Necropastoral: Poetry, Media, Occults (University of Michigan Press), Jessica Hopper The First Collection of Criticism by a Living Female Rock Critic(Featherproof Books), Mira Gonzalez and Tao Lin Selected Tweets(Short Flight/Long Drive Books), Jarrett Earnest and Isabelle Sorrell, Editors For Bill, Anything(Pressed Wafer), Félix Guattari Psychoanalysis and Transversality: Texts and Interviews 1955–1971(Semiotext(e)), Dale Peck Visions and Revisions(Soho Press), Gabe Durham Bible Adventures(Boss Fight Books), ...





Music
in no order

Dalglish Oidhche


RSS BoYS HDDN


Death Grips The Powers That B


Blanck Mass Dumb Flesh


Locrian InfiniteDissolution


Wire Wire


John Wiese Deviate From Balance


Sauna Youth Distractions


Prurient Frozen Niagara Falls


Ricked Wicky King Heavy Metal


The Inward Circles BELATED MOVEMENTS FOR AN UNSANCTIONED EXHUMATION AUGUST 1ST 1984


Thomas Brinkmann What You Hear (Is What You Hear)


Secret Circuit Cosmic Vibrations


Holly Herndon Platform


William Basinski Cascade


Container LP


Thee Oh Sees Mutilator Defeated At Last


Loke Rahbek & Puce Mary The Female Form


Dr. Yen Lo Days With Dr. Yen Lo


Robert Pollard Faulty Superheroes


Katie Dey asdfasdf


Shit and Shine 54-Synth-Brass 38 Metal Guitar 65 Cathedral






Film
in no order

Aleksei German Hard To Be A God


James Benning natural history


Thom Andersen The Thoughts That Once We Had


Michael Salerno Elri Paints Himself as a Tornado


Brad Peyton San Andreas






Art
in no order

Henry Darger(Musée d'Art moderne de la Ville de Paris)


William Pope.L Trinket(MoCA)


Charles Gaines Gridwork 1974-1989(Hammer Museum)


Vincent Fecteau You Have Did the Right Thing When You Put That Skylight In(Kunsthalle Basel)


Bruce Nauman(Fondation Cartier)


Thomas Demand Pacific Sun(LACMA)


Agnes Martin(Tate Modern)


Chris Burden (Gagosian Gallery Le Bourget)


Inside(Palais de Tokyo)






Internet
in no order

Queen Mob's Teahouse
dark fucking wizard
Fanzine
Entropy
Enclave
espresso bongo
The Quietus
American Chordata
Broken Grey Wires
FUCKED BY NOISE
Solar Luxuriance
open culture
3:AM Magazine
largehearted boy
NEW WAVE VOMIT
THE NEATO MOSQUITO SHOW
Documentary Addict
Cutty Spot
Harriet: The Blog
{ feuilleton }
Isola di Rifiuti
pantaloons
Beach Sloth
Tiny Mix Tapes
UbuWeb
Other People with Brad Listi
Joe Brainard's Pajamas (The Sequel)
If we don't, remember me
Locus Solus: The New York School of Poets
giphy
The Wonderful World of TamTam Books
Illuminati Girl Gang
Shabby Doll House




*

p.s. Hey. I put this together while I was amidst pain and pain killers earlier this week, so I'm very sure I forgot important stuff. Anyway, if you feel like sharing some of the favorites things you've come across this year so far, I would be grateful and attentive. ** Bernard Welt, Hi, B. A shout across the brief kilometers between us. I remember only part of that story about your portrait and its bizarre editorial reception. Maybe even only the portrait part. Very odd. I've got a couple of Duvert books in English here, if you want to borrow them and stick to the English. I'm up for 'Que Viva Eisenstein'. Let's sort it. Not for 'Magic Mike', though. Zac is down for the Versailles/Kapoor trip, so let's sort that too. And see each other today. Talk or at least text first in a bit. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. Well, thank you for inspiring it. I was very happy to find that interview, as you can imagine. I love the way she talks. I think the earliest, best known of her books are still in print, or I think I noticed that in my searching. ** Tosh Berman, So cool. Growing up with the Pasadena Museum in reach was such a boon. They had an excellent reading series, mostly poetry but some fiction, at one point when I was, I don't know, 19, 20 years old where I heard and learned a whole lot. ** Kevin Killian, Hi, Kevin! I'm joyful to see you! Oh, that's interesting about the Julian Wasser show. When I was searching out Babitz stuff, I made a note to do a Wasser post at some point. Envy that you got to see that show. Are you good? Like ... really good? I'll bet? Tons and then tons more love to you from deprived me. ** Bill, Hi. Cool, a good panel can be totally interesting and fun and love-for-humanity inspiring even. I didn't know that project you linked me to. It looks quite fascinating. I'll delve into it in a short bit. I had totally spaced on the Legendary Pink Dots post, so I'm very glad you tweaked me. In fact, as I first read your comment while coffeeing into conscious earlier on, I started putting a LPD post together. I think it's going to need to be a subjective LPD sampler gig, and it'll pop up here next week sometime. Thanks! Have an excellent weekend! ** Styrofoamcastle, Whoa. Yo to you, man! I've been seeing C's snaps of you cooking and looking at your iPhone and stuff on FB, and I wondered what was going on. Oh, I can get you into 'TVC', don't sweat it. Not the slightest problem. So, you're saying you'd be here in late November then? 'Cos I think you mean during the Nanterre/Paris run. If that happens, I'll make completely sure to be here then. I haven't finished reading your book. I'm hopeless, but I'm quite a ways into it. Okay, I mean, I'm going to finish it anyway, but ... I don't know about that 'not fitting with your voice'. I haven't felt that way at all. Huh. Well, we'll talk about it. Awesomeness about the new novel-in-progress and about the show story/poem-y thing. Yeah, shoot it to me when it's ready. I know two of your recommended albums (Jamie XX and the Jaar), and, yeah, they're excellent. I know Jon Hopkins' stuff, but only in pieces. I'll get those records. I hope to get to talk to you soon too! I miss you a bunch! And maybe I'll get to see you in the big P! That would be sweet. Giant love, me. ** _Black_Acrylic, Right, gotcha, stick vs. automatic. I can't drive a stick shift to save my life. I'm too uncoordinated. Sure, yeah, I hear you about what the project's absence does to you. I go nuts and void-like when I'm not working on something. ** Steevee, Hi. My mom was really into Omar Shariff. It's strange because she was a semi-soft racist, but her big favorites were Shariff snd Harry Belafonte. It's definitely strange and depressing that there aren't big Arab movie stars in the US. Just as it's very strange and even more inexplicable to me that there are no big Black movie stars in France. ** Cal Graves, Hi, Cal. Glad you dug the post. Yes, banish that censored copy of 'Justine' to a brutal death. Or keep it around and glare at it fruitfully, I guess. What a pointless exercise that was. The stuff I'm listening to was mostly in that last gig post I made here. And in that list up there, to some degree. I haven't re-tried the new Hval yet. Probably today. I think I just missed its boat the first time around. 'Scott 3', yum, for sure. I'm making a gig post about Legendary Pink Dots, so I suspect that'll occasion my listening to them a lot for the foreseeable future. Ah, mystery of mirror-facilitated past life regression solved. That makes total sense. It's weird, or not, that whenever I run across someone who did that mirror/candle thing, they always saw the same things or rather archetypes, i.e. I was a pirate, I was an Egyptian higher-up, I was a soldier, blah blah. I will now face any mirror, even low-lit ones, with far more confidence in my notion of reality, thanks to you! Up? I just co-made two trailers for Zac's and my film. About to hopefully finish the script for our new film. Waiting impatiently to find out where/when our film will have its debut. Looks like quite possibly early September, so we'll see. A lot of film stuff mostly. And up-ness re: you? Just-ate-a-chocolate-eclair-ly, Dennis ** With that, I send you into the weekend with my 2015 picks to click. Like I said, I'd love to hear what you've been especially into, and, in any case, have the finest weekends, and I'll see you on Monday.

Satan Worshiping 18 Year-Old Male Escort Kills 'Sugar Daddy' with Lawn Lion

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Roommates of the Florida teen who allegedly bludgeoned a 36-year-old man to death last week say the suspect was a Satanic male escort after an $800 debt.





Dillon O’Donnell, 18, was charged with first-degree murder Saturday in the death of William “Billy” Davis III, whose body was found in a pool of blood outside his home in Ormond Beach, Fla.



Dillon O’Donnell playing an online game.


On Monday, O’Donnell’s housemates told The Daytona Beach News-Journal newspaper that the teen had recently started working as a male escort and that Davis, who worked at a nearby Publix, was his second client. The friends said O’Donnell told them Davis was his “sugar daddy” and owed him $800.





The roommates, both brothers, had been sharing a house with O’Donnell for seven months. They said the teen routinely participated in devil-worshipping rituals and sometimes wore red and white contact lenses. They said he spray-painted the number 666 on the walls and on the side of the house. They also said they saw him waving a knife around the night before the murder.



Mr Davis, pictured, was O'Donnell's second client who the teenager saw as a 'sugar daddy'.


“He told me and my brother what he was going to do (kill Davis), but we thought he was kidding,” Richard DeForest, 21, told the News-Journal. “He was satanic so we thought it had something to do with that.”





After exchanging several text messages, O’Donnell and Davis made plans to hang out Thursday night. Davis reportedly picked O’Donnell up and brought him back to his house. An arrest report released Monday shows that early Friday morning, O’Donnell beat Davis with a concrete lawn lion before stabbing him several times with a folding knife.



In the yard at the end of a bloody trail, the ornament, a lion, was found drenched in blood.


The report also shows that investigators found O’Donnell’s picture on a dating app Davis had on his cell phone. The roommates said they think O'Donnell and Davis met and communicated via gay websites.





In the days before the murder, Mr Davis and O'Donnell had been texting each other, police said. The texting was initiated by Mr Davis, who at 10am on Thursday, asked O'Donnell if he could see him that evening. At around 10pm that night Mr Davis picked O'Donnell up from his home and took him back to his house.



Dillon O'Donnell's escort profile photo.


Sometime early Friday, Davis' aunt Shirley Davis noticed a man was trying to hard in the side yard of the property and called the police.





According to police, O'Donnell returned home after the murder. DeForest and his brother said they saw O'Donnell in his bedroom, wiping blood off his naked body. “When we saw him we didn’t even ask why he had blood on his arms,” DeForest told the newspaper. “I thought it was that devil-worship stuff.”



The scene of the crime.


In court, O'Donnell testified that he and Davis were new friends. They met on a dating app called Grinder. O'Donnell said he never wanted to hurt Davis and that Davis attacked him first after an argument about unwanted sexual advances. He said he was leaving when Davis pushed him down the stairs.





That's when O'Donnell said he stabbed Davis with a knife. "He kept hitting me on my stomach, on the back of my head. I managed to cover up my face like I always do when I'm in any type of fight." he said. "I'm sure he stumbled back and hit his head, and I was trying to defend myself."



Dillon O'Donnell shown just after being sentence to life in prison.


Prosecutor Ed Davis said during his opening statement that a forensic exam of O’Donnell’s phone showed he had researched how to quickly stab someone to death. While Davis was stabbed, the prosecutor said it was the blow to the head from a 50-pound lion statue that killed him.





In 2014, the then 20 year old Dillon O’Donnell was sentenced to life imprisonment. A jury took an hour Thursday to find O'Donnell, 20, guilty of first-degree murder in the slaying of Davis, 38. Circuit Judge Margaret Hudson then sentenced O'Donnell to life in prison.








Comments

SIlkxxx -Apr. 19, 2012 at 5:36pm
Dillon Is bisexual, But he WAS NOT! a satanist! He was an extremely close friend of mine and my ex boyfriend. No one saw him doing this coming. Hes was quiet, yet very sweet and out going. You needed help he was there for you. He always had a gold cross on around his neck and spoke of getting a cross tattoo on his arm. He was very caring but his new roommate ended up somehow getting him of the wrong path. And someones sexuality shouldn’t have a matter in anything. I myself, I am bisexual and there should be nothing wrong with that. We gays are more caring and opened minded then any of you could dream you were. And someones religion shouldn’t have anything to do with a thing as well because in some way or form it all leads back to having faith there’s a god out there. Also i myself never heard anything about him being a male escort. If anything He did it on his own and didn’t go through a company! The media also twisted Richards (roommates) words. The house in witch Dillon lived in is just a whole bunch of young kids. They like to play pranks and have a lot of fake blood in the house so that’s why the roommate didn’t care when they saw blood on Dillon. And considering he’s a teenager he was in there teenage eyes thought oh maybe he’s taking some weird facebook picture. Never believe all of what you hear and half of what you see. Be more open-,minded. He was a great kid that in the last 2 months was turned down a dark road that ended quickly with him do this.

SLOWBIDEN -Apr. 18, 2012 at 9:12am
Totally offended that this newspaper put this in the faith section.

JT Brooklyn, Apr 16, 2012
The YOUNG ain't always Pretty on the inside! ;)

hogorina -Apr. 12, 2012 at 4:10pm
“MODERATION OF A GENUINE DEMOCRAT

I live in a redone school bus, as a share cropper with eight children. Education from TV commercials. Wife is ex-pole dancer. Her father was a former dirt farmer. Both of us are Democrats. L.B. Johnson is our alter ego. Our ancestors came to America with hats in hands. We are born again mental slaves and trying to avoid the ghetto life.
Hobbies are fish’n and drinking. Medicaid saved our way of life with extra money for booze and idle time to enjoy the fruits of others. America is the land of milk and honey. Thank goodness for those tax payers of whom give us the good life, We love the Constitution and the rights to march for more bread from Uncle Sam.Further, two sons want to be lawyers and two want to be police officers. One daughter wants to be a firemen.One son wants to be a building inspector where the political graft is a Heaven on earth. Our motto is let the government do for us what we are too shifty-minded to do for ourselves My advice to the suckers of whom pay the taxes and fight wars is to study ruling systems via Machiavella’s ( PRINCE ). Bleed them for all it is worth. I belong to the global Interfaith movement and along with my peers.Religion and democracy is the going thing today. Imcidentally, my wife was expecting triplets before she hit the road.”

Dismayed Veteran -Apr. 11, 2012 at 3:10pm
“…a man was trying to hard in the side yard …” Is this a misprint or what really happened in the side yard?

jjkrkwood, Apr 11, 2012
The kid was kind of cute and had he not been insane might have made it in the work/world of escorting.

BobtheMoronsp -Apr. 11, 2012 at 9:32am
When you are a genetic dead end, it is natural to hate yourself and everyone like you. The futility of living weighs heavily on the ‘people’. Some channel their energy in to positive things, others disintegrate into insanity in one form or another. Being a genetic dead end must really suck.

mikee1 -Apr. 11, 2012 at 9:02am
Both are big DUMMYCRAPS. You see, in order to be a dummycrap today, you have to be a NEO-SATANIST, COMMUNIST, who supports all things PERVERSE. OR you have to be so stupid that you listen to them and are duped by them in your FOOLERY. iF THE dummycraps are not taken out of power in this country, the UNITED STATES will soon FALL.

[Suspended User] -Apr. 11, 2012 at 3:27am
the only people dumber than atheists are devil worshipers. (And their roommates.)

duke37, Apr 10, 2012
Does he kiss? I sure hope the first client, the one who wasn't killed, writes a FULL review with all the details..

FreedomWitness -Apr. 10, 2012 at 10:22pm
Imagine in some states these two could have gotten married and adopted a child. Wouldn’t that have been great! Man are we diving to the bottom of the cesspool at an alarming rate.

lukerw -Apr. 11, 2012 at 4:03am
Water finds it’s own level… yawn!

progressiveslayer -Apr. 10, 2012 at 6:58pm
The elder rump rider of boys is dead and the younger rump rider will wish he’s dead after some hard prison time.

[Suspended User] -Apr. 10, 2012 at 6:02pm
People like getting naked in times like this both ways.

NancyBee -Apr. 10, 2012 at 8:35pm
The escort company did a terrible job checking ths guy out!!




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p.s. RIP: Satoru Iwata. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. Absolutely, about the Padgett and Ashbery. They're both exquisite. Thank you for your faves. I'll try to see the movies I haven't, and I want to read Bill's book! I still haven't seen Marjorie's doc. I really need to. I'm glad to hear that I come off okay. Thank you a lot for the report. ** Cobaltfram, Hi there, John. Oh, I'm fine. My fucked up back did its occasional number on me, but I'm A-okay now. Yeah, I have an apartment in the lower Marais. I like it a lot. I'm mostly writing a film script right now, text-wise, and next is a TV pilot, but I'm dying to get back into my novel, and I will very soon. Your talk about your novel-in-process is exciting, of course. I'm high-fiving your strategy. Uh, no, I haven't done anything with translating Death Grips' thing into writing, mostly because I've been much more interested of late in making fiction with gifs than with text, but the idea is still there. I hear their recent shows have been great, so that should be fun. I still need to see 'It Follows' and the 'Mad Max'. Nice to see you, and I'm glad to hear your writing is going so well. ** Chris Goode, Hi, maestro. Shoreditch, I've heard of that. The name is very memorable. Wow, how was the weekend? That's intense and humbling and exciting all at the very same time. Yeah, James Tate, so sad. When I was starting, he was, and he still is, so big for me. I miss Goat Island. Oh, ha ha, Coldplay as the worst ... you know, very happily, I haven't even thought about them in ages. Hm. Maybe it stands, but then, say, Muse and Red Hot Chili Peppers immediately spring to my mind as well. Nice that you also like the new Container! Oh, cool about the bringing me over there thing. I'm good with being part of a Q&A with you guys, sure, if you want. October 7th ... I think that's fine. Write to me, and I'll have that sorted out by then. This is so great of you, Chris! I'm really, really blown away! Love, me. ** Sypha, Thanks for your list. I would doubt the Tarantino will be out this year. I think he only just now started or finished shooting it. ** xTx, Yay! My total and major honor, pal, hero! I so wish I cold have been at your LA reading the other night. What an incredible line-up. It much have been really, really something. Love to you! ** Magick mike, Hi, Mike! Man, it's a total mind-boggling, lit-advancing wonderment, your book. Crazy great! I don't know quite a few of your faves, and I just scribbled them down to find asap. And, if SL's system lets me, and I remember there being some issue with international Paypal delivery or something, I'll order those books today or least get them sent to my LA pad. Everyone, Magick mike aka the extraordinary writer M Kitchell, whose book is one of the top faves of mine this year, is also the mastermind behind the extraordinary press Solar Luxuriance, as you may well know. Anyway, he has a recommendation/alert, which I recommend you pay close attention to, and here he is to tell you: 'Oh, also, meant to comment, Solar Luxuriance has released two books that I think would be of interest to both you yourself & the readers of this blog: "THE BOOK IS A GHOST: Thoughts & Paroxysms for Going beyond" by Roger Gilbert-Lecomte and "BATH HOUSE" by Hans Henny Jahnn, both of which are very near and dear to my heart. ** Steevee, Hi, Steve. Oh, nice, the Dr. Yen Lo ended up making your list. Shit, I forgot the Sleater Kinney. Yeah, that's a fantastic record. Gee, I sure hope the two documentaries will be the end of the JT Leroy thing, but, if there is a fictional version, ... playing me ... uh, wow, if he can be aged successfully a little, off the top of my head, I think I would choose Paul Dano. ** Tosh Berman, The honor is most severely and completely mine, sir. Wow, thank you so much for the very generous books list. I haven't read a one of them, and didn't know of their existence in a number of cases. They all intrigue a lot. I'm going to check out Alfred Hayes, for one, right away. ** Mark Gluth, Hi, Mark! I'm working on a bunch of stuff, and I'm good. Yes, Kiddiepunk and I were talking about your and his film lengthily yesterday. It sounds so incredible, and I'm really excited about it and desperate for it to become a real world thing. Next novel thinking sounds great.The thinking part is the most underrated part. '3 Women' is a huge favorite film of mine. Singular and amazing, right? Stay away from those forest fires, and vice versa as well. Lots of love from me! ** Schlix, Hi, Uli. I want to get back into reading Sebald, as I may have already old you. Fantastic books list. Do I know Aleksandar Tisma? Hm, maybe not. I'm going to get all over that and see what's what. I hope you're doing superbly. ** Observations of Deviance, Hi, welcome! Wow, your video place is a total treasure trove. Bookmarked and to-be-scoured straight away. I didn't know about that rare early live Pearls Before Swine stuff. Cool. Etc. Thank you a lot. I don't listen to as much avant/experimental jazz as I want to. I used to a lot some years ago, but I lost track. I'm a devoted addict of The Wire, so I'm constantly reading about it/them and making notes about what to discover and reinvestigate. I'll use exploring your place as an impetus to get off my ass about that. Again, thank you very much for entering. It would be a true pleasure any time you feeling like hanging out. Take care. ** H, Hi. Oh, I'm fine. I just had some lower back shit for a few days. Superb list, of course. I would love to read Niedecker again. It's been too long. I think I'll do that. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Thank you very much for your 2015 list. I've noted the things I don't know. Six months, wow. Bureaucracy? You're the soul of patience. ** Thomas Moronic, Hi, T. Kiddiepunk was just filling me in re: your guys' visit on the phone yesterday, Sounds fun, and I seriously envy you seeing John's show. God, it sounds so great! Michael has told me teeny-weeny details about your novel, and I'm fascinated. Us at Diggerland, ha ha. That was big fun, and, as I'm sure he told you, big hot. ** James, Hi. Well, thanks. Your input sounds plenty input-y. I'm way, way behind on films, as you could tell by my list. My favorite Paul Metcalfe are the later books. I would recommend either 'Apalache' or, my very favorite, 'Waters of Potowmack.' Or 'Patagoni' if you can't find the others. John Malkovitch?!?! Uh, no, ha ha. ** Bill, Hi, Bill. Your lists are a lesson in excellence. What is 'Turpsy' like? Is that his Bowie covers project? Thank you, thank you! ** Etc etc etc, Howdy, Casey. 'The Infernal' is definitely a massive 2015 book highpoint for me. Abso-fucking-lutely. Lucky you to see Death Grips, and twice! I still haven't had the live experience, but I reckon they'll hit France soon. Something tells me. ** Chip, Hi, Chip. I saw your emails this morning upon awakening, and I'll open them once I get this p.s. finished. Thank you very much! ** Jonathan, Hi, J. Hooray, a list straight from the brain of Mr. Mayhew. Oh, yeah, I spaced on the Mark Fell & Gábor Lázár (really good) and Shamir (ditto). Cool. That Phil Collins record sounds totally wild., Interesting concept, natch, and the contributors to it are quite an array. Thanks for the alert. Cookie: Superficially like a carefully ragged macaron, but not sandwich-like. Chewy in a weird way. Fruity plus chocolate plus something unknown and strange. ** Kier, Hi, Kier! Holy fuck, what happened to your eardrums? It sounds like it wasn't circumstantial like ... an ice pick attack or a very loud concert attack or ... ? What happened? Let them mend, for sure. Do you not get to listen to loud music or loud people or something? Yikes. Oh, my weekend? My old pal and d.l. Bernard Welt is in Paris for a few weeks, and I hung out with him on Saturday. We coffeed, walked, did Shakespeare & Co., coffeed, and wound up seeing 'Jurassic World', which I thought was stupid, lazy, and boring. I was shocked. I thought it would at least be a lot fun, but it was blah. Yesterday, I stayed home and worked, talked to/conferred with Zac, Gisele, etc. Oh, and I was/am very happy because my French publisher texted me to say that, at long, long last, after going through three translators, someone has translated 'The Marbled Swarm' successfully into French, and so my dream from the moment I started the novel of it being published in France is going to come true. Whew. I was scared. That was big. Not much else, though. How was Monday and/or your weekend? Hushed and tiptoeing love, Dennis. ** Misanthrope, Hi, G. I would think. I think so too. I never like the goody two-shoes wrestlers. Has there ever been a more boring pro wrestler than Kurt Angle? I did like Huckster though because even when he was supposed to be a saint, there was always something spooky and melancholy about him. Slacker, eh? You're a '90s boy. ** Postitbreakup, Hi, Josh. Thank you kindly. Well, just 'cos they're not real people to me doesn't mean I don't want people to love and relate to them, you know. The rest is just behind-the-scenes stuff. Thank you so much. I hope you're doing good. Love, me. ** Okay. Wow, I don't know ... the post today just happened to strike me as doable one day almost of its own accord. See you tomorrow.

For the birds

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p.s. Hey. Happy Bastille Day. ** Bernard Welt, Morning, B. My favorite thing in the post was the way the roommates talk. 'Beyond Black,' by Hilary Mantel is sounding very, very tempting. If we hit Berkeley Books, and we should at some soon point, I'll see if they have it. Ha ha, about the friend of Chris Pratt. What did you say about him? Oh, I'll ask you when I see you. ** David Ehrenstein, Seemingly, no? But they do seem to make very good masters and slaves. That's nice that Marjorie is excited about Zac's and my film. I hope she gets to see it. Nice, a piece by Tim Parks. I like his writing. Thank you for the link. ** David S. Estornell, Hi, David! Well, I think it's at least more normal than if the post today causes you do that, ha ha. ** James, Hi. Yes, we have exchanged post materials and coordinates by now, and it'll go up on Saturday as indicated via email. Excellent! Thank you very kindly, James! I'm not so sure that cops wonder what criminals were/are thinking, or not these days if they ever actually did. There are definitely some, at the very least, not unsexy Satanists amidst the master/slave set based on my looky-loo investigations. ** Gary gray, Goodness! It's you, Gary. How the heck are you? It's very nice to see you! Ha ha, funny. Things are going well, yes, thank you. And with you, pray tell? Love, me. ** Bill, Oh, yeah, it is/was real albeit a few years ago. I only just discovered it/him the other day, though. Strange it didn't go more viral at the time. It has all the viral elements. I ... don't think he was in an escort post. He seems to have done his brief escorting through grinder, and I confess that I've never even looked at grinder. Cool, about the Cameron Pierce, which reminds that it was one of the books I spaced on when making my 2015 faves list, shit. He's good, and he's cool too. He runs that very awesome press Lazy Fascist as well. Shellac, wow. I didn't like that recent record of theirs much at all, but live is a whole other can of worms. Thanks, gotcha, about that Momus album. I must say that I am now highly intrigued to hear him sing Howard Devoto. I adore Devoto, and, theoretically, I could see his stuff working via Momus's mind and mouth. ** Steevee, Ha ha. Have you ever watched 'Vegan Black Metal Chef'? Here, if not. It's interesting/ amusing, albeit in the rather short term. Very good news about your eyes' improvement, obviously. The new Bilal, cool, I'll check it out. I haven't tried the Miguel album yet either. Thank you very much, man. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Ah, yeah, I figured it was pure or at least nearly pure bureaucracy. As I think I mentioned, I'm a 100% automatic man myself, and I dig it. Oh, wow, cool that 'Don't Deliver Us From Evil' is quality. I wasn't sure about that either. And thank you a ton for the link directly to it. I'll try to watch that sometime today in celebration of Bastille. ** Schlix, Hi, Uli. I love Sebald. He's so great. Man, talk about a writer who got swiped from us painfully too abruptly and soon. I'm so happy that the blog was able to hook you guys up. The Kis background comparison vis-à-vis Tisma intrigues me. The 'more conventionally written' thing takes away a bit of the allure, of course, me being me. I'll try to find a book and check out the prose and see what happens. I'm very grateful for your intro. I'm so glad that things are better for you now, pal. Do tell me the story, if you feel like it. I'm definitely curious and interested. And, gee, thank you for giving my address to Puce Mary. Wow, that's great. I love her work really a lot. Best to you today, my friend. ** Kier, Hi, K! Iggy loved it? Wow, I thought it was so bland that I can't imagine enthusiasm for it, but I think it's the most successful movie in history or something, so apparently I missed out. That said, I really don't think you need to spend your valuable time on it. Yes, I'm thrilled that 'The Marbled Swarm' is being published here! It's a big dream come true, for sure. Okay, about how your ear thing happened. An infection bursting your eardrums sounds so intense. Just laze about for as long as you need to, obviously. 'Beyond the Black Rainbow' ... no, I haven't seen it. The same is familiar, but I can't remember what it is. I will investigate it post-haste. Thank you! My Monday was productive. Zac and I finally had our big meeting about our new film's script, and we went over it in great detail. He had amazing ideas, of course, about how it should be improved, all of which I totally agree with. From detail-y things to do a kind of slight reinvention of the main character that will make a huge difference in the best possible way. So I'll be spending a bunch of this week doing the revision, and, hopefully, we will then have a finished script whereupon we'll need to get it translated into French because, as I think I've said, Zac wants this film to be in French. Anyway, that was great, and I'm excited. Other than the meeting and hanging out with Zac, it was pretty quiet and work/ catching-up-related plus gathering supplies since everything in Paris will be closed today due to this, the country's biggest annual holiday. Not sure if or how I'll celebrate the occasion, but we'll see. You have the most fun-filled Bastille Day you can under the circumstances, and please tell me all about it. ** Misanthrope, Ha ha. Randy Orton's like that now? Huh. Wouldn't have imagined. Kurt Angle still exists out there in the pro-wrestling world? Wouldn't have imagined that either. Late 20th Century boy, but foxy as a motherfuck, I guess, right? ** Kyler, Hi. Ah, Fire Island. I went there twice back in the, what, 80s, yeah. You can no doubt imagine how much I didn't feel at home or dig it very much. Cherry Grove was okay-ish, though, I think. But The Pines, yuck. But the first time I was staying at the abode of a famous gay writer who was doing the whole cruising and fucking in the bushes and whipping his short off under the disco ball thing 24/7, so that didn't help. The second time ... I can hardly remember that time. Anyway, I hope you're having fun. It's not the 80s anymore, as much as people there probably wish it was. ** Right. Today's post, yeah, I don't know, I was into it. Still am, I think. One of those things. See you tomorrow.

'If you are looking for cute boys I am one of them': DC's select international male escorts for the month of July 2015

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clips, 19
Bournemouth

Had other profile name of clip but had problems loading/retaining pics so tried again with this one clips (added s). If this is ok I will delete the other one.

Slim, red/gingery, curly haired (ginger pubes), mostly smooth, 19. Brought up in a strict religious sect, been back a year, now studying Aquaculture.

Looking to rent myself. Got rented off the street yesterday by a guy on this site, who suggested the site to me, can give you his profile name if you want to talk to him about me.

I like guys who don't want to know more about me than what I look like. But if I am cruised by snoops, I will cruise back out of politeness.

Dicksize XL, Uncut
Position Versatile
Kissing Yes
Fucking Versatile
Oral Versatile
Dirty Yes
Fisting No
S&M No
Fetish Leather, Sportsgear, Skater, Underwear, Skins & Punks, Uniform, Formal dress, Sneakers & Socks, Jeans, Worker
Client age Users older than 46
Rate hour 130 Pounds
Rate night 650 Pounds



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Tosser, 24
Milan

I'm strange. Prepare yourselves. *cough* I am an imaginative, very cute bottom boy renting myself only for men wearing a suit. That's the minimum. During the sex, you may not remove your suit, not even so much as the jacket, shoes, gloves, etc. You may, if you insist, loosen your tie, but it will cost you. The more elegant you look in your suit, you more depraved you can act with me, and the less money I will charge you. Details count: socks, shoes, cufflinks, waistcoat, etc.

Dicksize M, Uncut
Position Bottom only
Kissing Consent
Fucking Bottom only
Oral Versatile
Dirty WS only
Fisting No entry
S&M Yes
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour ask
Rate night ask



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Snitch, 20
Oslo

I got into this lifestyle in my high school when I started bullying boys back then, because I tuned in the dark places of their minds, dont get scared, OK.

For our hour together you will be entitled to have my huge cock and enjoy my every inch too, above all your ass will belong to me, and will be stuffed with huge thrusting cock, only to be empty when I please.

I will fuck you and you will be very happy and indebted to me always.

Dicksize L, Uncut
Position More top
Kissing Consent
Fucking Top only
Oral Versatile
Dirty WS only
Fisting Active
S&M Soft SM only
Fetish Sportsgear, Skater, Formal dress, Sneakers & Socks, Jeans, Worker
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour 150 Euros
Rate night 800 Euros



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FREEHUGS, 20
Delhi

I am a Robot, and I come from another planet. a strange money-making creation that was sent to this planet in an unknown mission by me.

My unit's name is: E.M.I 2710

It's a wonder why I am here, that information is not in my system, maybe I am just here to explore, collect and when I stop escorting my information will be collected and archived like nothing happened, for future reference. It seems my technology is advanced and I can't fix myself anymore. this world doesn't have the resources and materials necessary to repair my damaged system. It's like I am a ghost, disappearing little by little, nothing can be done, just fade away with the darkness, the stars, the silence and a cold wind embracing this eternal solitude.

Guestbook of FREEHUGS

RE_MASSIMO - 01.May.2015
An arrow refined in the heart of the earth, the heart of the earth your heart,it's only love.The my kingdom in the universe PLANET EARTH

hardon1954 - 01.Mar.2015
Just said goodbye to this slut! What a butthole! I fucked him 2 times, very hard and deep and i loved it. I came inside with much cum, i like that a lot. Then I fisted him, with my hand, and with my foot. Then he ate my foot. I now am completely satisfied and exhauste.

Anonymous - 16.Nov.2014
Deee-licious! His asshole was my muse, and his anal passage was the fountain pen, and my face was a poem.

Dicksize No entry, Cut
Position No entry
Kissing No entry
Fucking No entry
Oral No entry
Dirty No entry
Fisting No entry
S&M No entry
Client age Users between 20 and 40
Rate hour ask
Rate night ask



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weed_smoke_2015, 19
Beijing

More than three words...that's too difficult for me.
If this sentence should describe you I'm not interested in a date.
I like long conversations about God and the World paired with dinner and raw sex!
I just arrived from Hungary. I wait in my home.

Guestbook of weed_smoke_2015

Anonymous - 28.Jun.2015
I was born to do what the fuck he said and when.

Dicksize XL, Uncut
Position More top
Kissing Consent
Fucking More top
Oral Versatile
Dirty WS only
Fisting Active
S&M No entry
Fetish Underwear, Uniform, Formal dress
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour 100 Euros
Rate night 300 Euros



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Moments-particuliers, 19
Paris

I propose my company for a moment ... a brunch, lunch, dinner, a show, a glass ... or even for a moment longer. To leave your solitude to live a moment for two, a journey into the world of fantasy with a handsome student. A nice boy in the world! Lovely opportunity to try things, gestures that we do not normally allow ... and to try them is much more exciting than sex with a stranger in exchange for a big ticket! Therefore no sex allowed, but all sour things are not prohibited (a hand that slips, and it ends astride one upon the other). It seems that I have a good ass! For you to never win!

Dicksize No entry, Cut
Position No entry
Kissing No entry
Fucking No entry
Oral No entry
Dirty No entry
Fisting No entry
S&M No entry
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour ask
Rate night ask



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WhiteAss, 21
Mönchengladbach

White small anarchist stoner punk from the Czech Republic and I plan to be around. Hate authority and wealth all class structure bullshit, but... Looking for some rich man to pay my diet. I hate rich men, HATE, but you turn me on. At this moment I travel around Europe to explore our continent so I'm here. I'm bottom, but I like when a rich man sucks my cock. Maybe you are horny? Maybe your enemy turns you on like you do for me? Should I put on my angry face? Come on and salivate all over my face and body and fuck my white ass. If you would like to shit directly in my mouth let me know. I guess that's all that you at first should known about me.

The world is gonna judge you.
No matter what you do.
So live the life the way you fucking want to.

Dicksize L, Uncut
Position More bottom
Kissing Yes
Fucking Bottom only
Oral Versatile
Dirty WS only
Fisting No
S&M Soft SM only
Fetish Sportsgear, Skater, Underwear, Skins & Punks, Boots, Formal dress, Sneakers & Socks, Jeans, Worker
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour 50 Euros
Rate night 100 Euros



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leoslater, 19
Bordeaux

I'm looking for short clients (no dwarves your body must be in proportion). Why? Don't ask me. Read Freud or someone.

Dicksize M, Uncut
Position Versatile
Kissing No
Fucking More top
Oral Versatile
Dirty No
Fisting No
S&M Soft SM only
Fetish Sportsgear, Formal dress, Techno & Raver, Jeans
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour 150 Euros
Rate night 600 Euros



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the_last_change, 22
Zurich

your last chance, what is happening today in Zurich, in the center.
young slender emoboy from Germany and am today for the last time.
a dear pretty young today your last chance to experience this.
use it, it won't be back ever, for the last time, only today.
time to suck your cock until you have no sperm left, don't worry.

Dicksize L, Cut
Position Bottom only
Kissing Consent
Fucking Bottom only
Oral Bottom
Dirty No
Fisting No
S&M No
Fetish Leather, Emo
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour 160 Euros
Rate night 400 Euros



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your-new-home, 18
Novaliches

Condo unit rent to own investment start at 8k. Full furnished with whore/maid included. Maid cleans 8am-5pm cooks 7am-9am& 7pm-9pm, &can be sexed 24hours. Projects offered Tomas morato near ABSCBN, Timog edsa near GMA. And malate. 5percent move in. High end living and sex life at the fort BGC. Contact me* on the said digits. *I am not the whore. The whore is in the pictures.

Dicksize M, Uncut
Position Versatile
Kissing Consent
Fucking Versatile
Oral Versatile
Dirty No
Fisting No
S&M Soft SM only
Fetish Sportsgear, Uniform, Formal dress, Jeans, Worker
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour ask
Rate night ask



_______________


HeureBleue, 24
Paris

I had gone for a tea. But this morning, rue Saint Severin, I go out with you dressed like yesterday. In normal city, mundane cars that do not know last night ...

Dicksize No entry, Uncut
Position Bottom only
Kissing Consent
Fucking Bottom only
Oral Versatile
Dirty No
Fisting No
S&M No
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour ask
Rate night ask



________________





Actor1, 18
Madrid

I count on chiropractic sessions to keep my body aligned. Getting fucked for hours in unnatural positions can impact my posture, and that can throw the rest of my body out of whack. Acupuncture helps me relax, loosen where needed and release stress so I can be a better bottom. I'm also very into massage before my appointments to help release tension in my back, neck, and shoulders caused by a natural fear of strangers. Hello, I'm Daviz Iraiz. I'm porn actor from Spain. If you are looking for cute boys I am one of them.

Dicksize M, Cut
Position Versatile
Kissing Yes
Fucking Versatile
Oral Versatile
Dirty No
Fisting No
S&M No
Fetish Sportsgear, Uniform, Jeans
Client age Users between 32 and 99
Rate hour ask
Rate night ask



_______________




CozyHotAss, 20
Rome

I am narcissistic Swede who like to have a rough bear italian boyfriend. I love sex, I'm always horny and even though I know I'm skinny, that it must be like them. Looking for a date with a sympathetic young boy with whom you once again have really good sex can? I have nice trimmed blond pubes. I am a handsame guy right, There is a palace. I've got schizophrenia and sometimes I talk funny because of it. You have never seened someone like me.

Guestbook of CozyHotAss

CozyHotAss (Owner) - 19.Jun.2015
No realman58 you're just a mad because I do not want one on your going to eat your excrement and you get to play with my feces and still so some things and you're on minors under 12 is already times not Moreover, I have already reported to you here but nothing happened so beautiful life yet REALMAN58

REALMAN58 - 16.June.2015
yes one month salary fucking swede so you can married your man ...fuck of support the gay dont make fun of him...
he lives in nightmare only hot sexy and big dick can save him...

Dicksize XL, Uncut
Position Versatile
Kissing Yes
Fucking Versatile
Oral Versatile
Dirty Yes
Fisting Passive
S&M Yes
Fetish Leather, Sportsgear, Skater, Rubber, Underwear, Skins & Punks, Boots, Uniform, Formal dress, Jeans, Worker
Client age Users older than 19
Rate hour 80 Euros
Rate night 250 Euros



_________________




Russian_strawberry, 25
Barcelona

my english so bad (
but i love spick
and sex
i am happy !)
and up to know good

Dicksize XL, Uncut
Position Versatile
Kissing Yes
Fucking Versatile
Oral Versatile
Dirty No entry
Fisting Active / passive
S&M Soft SM only
Fetish Sportsgear, Skater, Underwear, Skins & Punks, Uniform, Formal dress, Sneakers & Socks, Jeans, Drag
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour ask
Rate night ask



__________________




MY_Bloody_HALO_666, 23
Berlin

Hi, my name is Justin, just another faggot with out a life, and right now I'm giving it away for a small fee for the summer. I am a 1000% bottom boy and it will never change. I know I look about 12 which works since I'm really into the prospect of a daddy going nuts about me. Even though I graduated from one of the UK’s top universities and am now a postgraduate student in philosophy, I am also someone who's capable of looking very illegal and acting silly and naive and prepubescent to the point of self-victimization.

Not all angels are good - HAHAHAHAHAHA being.

Dicksize S, Cut
Position Bottom only
Kissing Consent
Fucking Bottom only
Oral Bottom
Dirty No
Fisting No
S&M No
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour 100 Euros
Rate night 400 Euros



_________________





for_old_men, 19
Inveruno

Looking to have some good offers for some lads to get serve heavy load of milk from my cock, i turn up, i sit in front of your tv, watch some porn and smoke a jay while you worship my meat. Make me a serious offer to churn my cream out. i want you to make me drip pre cum before I'm blasting your face with my boy juice. Ive been doing this for a little while now and still love it, i mean, who wouldn't?! Lol.

Dicksize XL, Uncut
Position Top only
Kissing No
Fucking No entry
Oral Top
Dirty No
Fisting No
S&M No entry
Fetish Sportsgear, Skater, Uniform, Sneakers & Socks, Worker
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour ask
Rate night ask



_________________




themoneyfinder, 20
Cluj-Napoca

wanna feel meh ..then buzz me................
i told you i will be ready in five minutes, stop calling me every half n hour.............

i have my dream ..to become the power Gay Porn Star to the World..........
i'm a sex lover ..and also sex-addicted.............

no condoms, don't want to waste time putting one on ..i let my client worry about everything..........
i appreciate your personality so i expect the same from you..............

Dicksize L, Uncut
Position Top only
Kissing Consent
Fucking Top only
Oral Versatile
Dirty WS only
Fisting Active / passive
S&M Soft SM only
Fetish Leather, Skins & Punks, Jeans, Drag
Client age Users between 18 and 90
Rate hour 50 Euros
Rate night 150 Euros



_________________



Scarlet_Thunderfuck_5000, 18
Berlin

m here to beat the all of guy ...hey guy don't gonna underestimate me bcoz trust me m gonna kill u all.... no hi hello just jump into end and finish job....

Guestbook of Scarlet_Thunderfuck_5000

Anonymous - 26.Jun.2015
18 since 2005

Dicksize M, Uncut
Position More bottom
Kissing Yes
Fucking No entry
Oral Versatile
Dirty Yes
Fisting Active / passive
S&M Yes
Fetish Boots, Formal dress, Jeans
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour 500 Dollars
Rate night 2500 Dollars



_________________






unsafebitch, 20
Köln

I'm a whore and maso since age 11 with no fixed Gentlemen, I'm a very conservative, homely boy who works as an prostitute.

I give ... because I'm just a whore, toys, pains, fuckable and nothing more.
I am grateful for the cock of my gentleman, enjoy the deep shocks, saliva hanging on his cock when he pulls out him and running down my chin. I love your breath withdrawal when its cock stuck in my throat, whip The strikes with the rod and the.
Tied up in this room and delivered to serve him with my 2 holes.

He taught me that friendship is very valuable:
Not mine but his friendships.

Dicksize L, Cut
Position Bottom only
Kissing Yes
Fucking Bottom only
Oral Top
Dirty WS only
Fisting No
S&M Yes
Fetish Leather, Sportsgear, Skater, Rubber, Underwear, Boots, Uniform, Formal dress, Drag, Worker
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour ask
Rate night ask



________________





BodyParty, 18
Louisville

Hi i'm andrey. i'm a polyamorous, demisexual, panromantic, gender non-conforming special snowflake and proud. you could remember me frum be4 as "andray" with "a'. i'm rying this out again with a new attitude. Now I whant just have fun. I want to please as many people as I can't. you need societies boyfriend, to feel her warmth? i am your quick fix? Then you are right with me. my shaved & flushed hole waiting for you. Size wise it all fits with a cry or two. It make You love me. I whant you to remember the date and want to have another one.

Dicksize M, Uncut
Position Versatile
Kissing Consent
Fucking Versatile
Oral Versatile
Dirty No
Fisting Active / passive
S&M Soft SM only
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour ask
Rate night ask



__________________



leshrac, 23
Pulau Sentosa

Tale of Leshrac – The Tormented Soul

Once upon a time in a bit city, a little boy was born into a hardworking family and raised with values of Buddhism.

He was straight, talented, intelligent and kind toward others beings. He had a dream, a future goal, one day he would become the monk to learn and represent the wisdom of life.

But world isn’t a fairy tale after all. Bad luck stroke him the first time through the news of his first girlfriend dead by brain cancer. Slow but sure, he was aware how other guys put their interests to this teen. As the sad memories faded away, he started growing love with a Japanese guy he found from here.

Things were going well for those lovers, until he was ready to became a Monk after graduated from his school with outstanding scores and applauses. Then with all the savings and investments worth a house, his Mom pursued him to continued his study abroad in the neighbor country. Motherly love always stronger and he can’t resist anymore. It was the first point in his life, he was tempted and failed.

So, he took the IELTS preparation class and started to getting know a German guy, named Markus who travelled to his city and showed his interest. Nevertheless, they both fell in love. He flew to Berlin after all his study applications granted. With his Mom money that supposed to fund him study, he shared an apartment together with 3 other international friends.

All he knew that Markus worked as an Insurance staff and lived with his ill Mom, sometimes he gave Markus’ Mom a present from his living cost saving. He loved Markus and so was him. Things were going smooth and well for another 8 months.

“There is a natural order to this world, and those who try to upend it do not fare well”. So things were revealed one by one. He realized that Markus was already married with a money boy and was in divorced process which took years. Markus status on that moment was still married.

Markus was so manic knowing that everything was revealed, he turned into a monster. He blamed everything on him. He used my money for gambling, he abused him physically and mentally after. He used his love feeling as the weapon to get more money for gambling and cheating around.

Until there came the point, He almost finished all my living cost from my Mom’s saving for Markus’ gambling and left around EUR 9,000. He quitted his study and took a decision to flew back and start working.

One of the good things is he addicts to sex.

So being an escort is one of the two options he would able to do to have an additional income, while the other one is to sell his organs on black market (either kidney or eyes).

The reason he still alive is He tries to believe in a hope that he is able to finished all his responsibilities no matter what as long it doesn’t counted as a crime (drug dealers and so on).

He is into anything from vanilla to BSDM, from safe sex to bareback. His limits would be scat and blood play.

The tale above is based on true story.

Kind regards,
Leshrac

Dicksize L, Uncut
Position Bottom only
Kissing Yes
Fucking Bottom only
Oral Bottom
Dirty WS only
Fisting Passive
S&M Yes
Fetish Leather, Sportsgear, Skater, Underwear, Uniform, Formal dress, Sneakers & Socks, Jeans, Worker
Client age Users older than 25
Rate hour 17 Dollars
Rate night 82 Dollars



______________



str8_men, 19
Bucharest

Unforgetable moments with straight identical twin men. Oh yes, we are so hot we can make you cum with just a look. We do it for our wallets. We love your money and do everything to drain you. We can be very talkative or really reserved, it depends. We are active and sociable but also have some faults. One of the worst faults is to be really pessimistic. We have always been like that. We are those kinds of persons that says: if anything can go wrong it will go wrong. We should change that way of thinking.

Dicksize L, Uncut
Position Top only
Kissing Yes
Fucking Top only
Oral Versatile
Dirty WS only
Fisting Active
S&M Soft SM only
Fetish Sportsgear, Underwear, Formal dress, Jeans
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour 250 Euros
Rate night 700 Euros



________________



aggro-whore, 21
HORNY, Finland

well into me aggro n gettin pure abused by a top filthy £££ lad or pop. Into me weapons n bein slapped and kicked around like a proper piece of scum

Don't share clear pics of me straight up coz am into pretty serious shit n defo need some trust built up n £££ first

Guestbook of aggro-whore

Anonymous - 26.Jun.2015
great depression, offers ignorance and imbecility

Dicksize M, Uncut
Position Bottom only
Kissing Yes
Fucking Bottom only
Oral Bottom
Dirty Yes
Fisting Yes
S&M Yes
Fetish No
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour 50 Euros
Rate night ask



_______________





ZooKidOnTheBlock, 18
Stockholm

Pics keep getting censored out for some reason. They're honestly not that evil haha.

18 yr old boy needs a new twisted, dark, taboo-loving pervert sugar daddy as have been discarded by mine. This would be a premanent/long term contract.

Write me if you like adventures. Buy me a car, a house and fuck me every day.

I'm just a person that has feeling and also I can give less of a fuck so I can be a great person to meet.

I'm not asking you for pics, so don't be surprised when I tell you "no". Because that's exactly what I'll say.

Yes, my name is a play on words. No, it's not just pointing out how new I am. Try to guess the second play on words

I know. 'Creative.'

Dicksize No entry, Cut
Position No entry
Kissing No entry
Fucking No entry
Oral No entry
Dirty No entry
Fisting No entry
S&M No entry
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour ask
Rate night ask



______________



suckmydick, 21
Torino

Only genuine and elite clients who are ready to pay well for a hot stuff like me!!!! I need your money to make more money for me. I can't revive you. Pay me good and get me. No need for nice words, I only care about money.

Dicksize L, Cut
Position Top only
Kissing No entry
Fucking Bottom only
Oral No entry
Dirty No entry
Fisting No entry
S&M No entry
Fetish Leather, Rubber, Boots
Client age No restrictions
Rate hour ask
Rate night ask




*

p.s. Hey. ** Kiddiepunk, Aw, thanks a lot, buddy. Let me know how where you have recently arrived is. Love, me. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. Jack Black is the coolest person alive because he sang a Doors song on Conan?!? ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. I'm not much of a Paglia fan, but her take on the Hitchcock birds is intriguing. I'll read it. Thank you. ** Thomas Moronic, Thank you kindly, T. Yeah, I was outside smoking, and my eyes wandered to the roofs of the buildings across the street with their array of no doubt dead TV antennas, once human lifelines and now just bird landings, and it made me feel complicatedly melancholy. Speaking of, ... today is a most sad occasion and a strangely sad one to boot. I sure hope your kids end up okay. Will you keep in touch with any of them, or is it best to let them decide if staying in touch is important to them, or ... ? Hugs, man.  ** Postitbreakup, Thanks. All the more reason for them to use those antenna corpses as hang outs. ** Kyler, Funny for me to imagine myself there too. My curiosity got the best of me plus that's what guys I knew who invited me along did back then. I always stayed with people who owned little houses there. I wonder if moneyed gay guys still buy little houses there. I mean the whole island is going to be under water in twenty years or whatever, so it doesn't seem like the wisest move. Happy day after Bastille Day. ** James, Thanks. ** Misanthrope, Me wicked in the realm of humor? Perhaps. It has to come out somewhere. Comical duck encounter there. A pigeon shit on my shoulder at approximately 3:47 pm yesterday, but, sadly, that's the whole story. I can't find a way to inject wickedness into it. ** Steevee, Hi. Hopefully the ears thing is just a power of suggestion manifestation. ** Bill, Hooray! Yes, look and look and look. Rachel Levy, hm, interesting, note written. Earlier the better on the Shellac albums, to my mind. So, 'At Action Park' (1994), 'Terraform' (1998). Personally, vis-à-vis recordings, I prefer the small amount of Rapeman stuff. But those early Shellacs pretty good. ** That was short. Yeah, middle of month, you know what you're getting, blabla, do what you do with them. See you tomorrow.

Back from the dead: The Seven Godlike Books of James McCourt (orig. 11/09/06)

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Readers of this blog know I don't tend to love American fiction the way I do the French variety. There have been and will continue to be exceptions to my literary Francophilia, but, generally speaking, I guess my preferences are on the table. The American writer James McCourt is one of the biggest of the aforementioned exceptions. His writing and mine don't have that much in common, on the surface at least, and yet there's no other living American novelist from the generations earlier than mine with whom I feel more kinship and whose work inspires in me a deeper affection. When he wrote a very positive review of 'God Jr.' in the Los Angeles Times Book Review last year, it was one of the greatest honors I've ever received. McCourt is that rarest of contemporary American authors -- a true iconoclast, a devoted high stylist, and a holder of the unfashionable opinion that prose is a natural extrovert and beauty that deserves the brightest polish, the best accessories, the most extravagant costumes. McCourt's work has been described as a marriage of Ronald Firbank's meticulous, delirious camp and Don DeLillo's maximalist historiography, which wouldn't be too wildly inaccurate if McCourt weren't a whole lot more mischevious and uninhibited than DeLillo. If McCourt's voice happens to strike one's fancy, there are few more potent language based drugs. Still, his reverential but modestly sized following shows that his books are not everyone's idea of an island in the sun. Far too many of his books are out of print. The internet is not exactly chock full of McCourt related goodies. He doesn't even have a Wikipedia entry, bewilderingly enough. Building a Day in tribute to his work was no picnic, and you won't find any youtube or McCourt fan site links below. For a writer as inebriating, fanciful, and entertaining as James McCourt, mine is an awfully straightforward tribute. But don't let that stop you from investigating his work if you haven't already.



_______________________
Mawrdew Czgowchwz (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1975; New York Review of Books Classics, 2002)

Official description: Diva Mawrdew Czgowchwz (pronounced "Mardu Gorgeous") bursts like the most brilliant of comets onto the international opera scene, only to confront the deadly malice and black magic of her rivals. Outrageous and uproarious, flamboyant and serious as only the most perfect frivolity can be, James McCourt's entrancing send-up of the world of opera has been a cult classic for more than a quarter-century. This comic tribute to the love of art is a triumph of art and love by a contemporary American master.


Blurbs:
'Bravo, James McCourt, a literary countertenor in the exacting tradition of Firbank and Nabokov, who makes his daringly self-assured debut with this intelligent and very funny book.'— Susan Sontag

'Mawrdew Czgowchwz is a Zuleika Dobson of the opera world. James McCourt is an ecstatic fabulist, robustly funny and inventive, and touchingly in love with his subject. His novel is both special and precious, in the most honorable senses of those words.'— Walter Clemons, Newsweek

'The reader must be prepared to follow the silver-tongued writer through an outlandish landscape, unquestioning. Reason would be out of place here. She would upset the ecological balance of a rich and delicate world.'— John Yohalem, The New York Times Books Review


from the Introduction by Wayne Koestenbaum:

To call Mawrdew Czgowchwz the great novel of the opera queen is less accurate than to call it the great novel of the gay virtuoso gabber—that creature of lists, parentheses, digressions, apostrophes, opinions, and contradictions. Oscar Wilde belongs to this tribe of loudmouths. So do Dorothy Dean, costar of Warhol’s Afternoon, and Charles Nelson Reilly, game-show stalwart. Although McCourt does not hesitate to connect connoisseurship to what a sociologist might call a “gay fan-base,” his novel skimps eroticism, despite its romantic ending, and despite the prose’s nonstop orgasm. Rapture is reserved for the voice of its heroine and its plural narrators (Rodney, Jameson O’Maurigan, Mother Maire Dymphna, and others contribute to the polyphony). Energy’s displacement from eroticism to music has nothing to do with the “closet” or with prudishness, for music is not a code for sexuality: rather, music is a sexuality. .... McCourt’s genius lies in his ability to weave the highest styles of twentieth-century literature and music with the gutsy vernacular of men/women (like Candy Darling and Myra Breckinridge) who modeled themselves after Jean Harlow and died in the process.

McCourt’s subsequent works go even farther into the lunatic fringe, the only place where I feel at home. To the reader who enjoys Mawrdew, I highly recommend McCourt’s other novels, Time Remaining and Delancey’s Way, and also his short-story collection, Kaye Wayfaring in “Avenged.” It is not pejorative to call a work of art “minor.” Deleuze and Guattari, in Kafka: Toward a Minor Literature, claimed that Kafka himself was a minor writer, and more important for being minor. Robert Walser, too, is subaltern: a writer’s writer, with the melancholy of music’s minor keys. Like other noble practitioners of that strain of modern literature (an elect galaxy including Firbank, Schuyler, Butts, Cavafy, Pessoa, and Rhys), James McCourt has the gift of not assuming that writing is a way of being polite, accommodating, or sociable. Although his novels give comic delight, they also are willing to perplex their readers, and to suggest, in their language’s bejeweled barbed wire, that pleasure is beyond our capacity to understand, and that we turn to literature not to see our desires made lucid, but to see a reflection of our transports at their most difficult.



_______________________
Kaye Wayfaring in Avenged (Viking, 1985)

Description: It is October, a peak fall day. Kaye Wayfaring sits on a rock high in the Ramble of Central Park, smoking raw Luckies, considering impetus.

Impetus is what she will need to plunge into Orphrey Whither's ''Avenged,''''based on a Diderot tale already once brought to the screen as 'Les Dames du Bois de Boulogne' (Robert Bresson, director, France, 1944),'' of which the harried unit press agent had written in the release for the first day's shooting, ''another dimension is revealed in the geometry of human lust,'' continuing, ''Never before has desire so bruised, so scalded so cruelly.''

Kaye Wayfaring, ''two-time Oscar nominee (for 'We Are Born, We Live, We Die' and for 'Way Station'),'' sits, broods, smokes, considers ''Avenged.'' H. Q. P., ''that seasoned, trusted metropolitan arbiter and public scold,'' had ventured to write of her: ''So on , so forth ; vivid and particular. No actress in these past two weary decades has displayed so deft a form. Wayfaring does deliver - in the Sullavan-Stanwyck-Lombard tradition, with offhand, odd resemblances to, among others, Irene Dunne, Frances Farmer and, eerily, Jeanne Eagels. Kaye Wayfaring is something of a navigator. Impetus is her concern.''



_______________________
Time Remaining (Knopf, 1993)

Official description: From the author of Mawrdew Czgowchwz ... and Kaye Wayfaring in "Avenged" ... - two wildly brilliant, moving, electric stories of gay life in New York during the last twenty-five years. The first story introduces Delancey, performance artist and, in his words, "one of the sole survivors" of a band known as the Eleven against Heaven. Delancey's recollections of four decades in the flamboyant New York wilds - spirited, defiant, festive, bright as paint (or acid) - are filled with the force of longing and the melodrama of remembering.

Delancey's prologue sets the stage for the title story, "Time Remaining," in which the formidable Odette O'Doyle - semi-retired transvestite ballerina, veteran of foreign wars, and polymath recorder of the stories of valiant lives - assumes the spotlight. On a midnight train to Long Island's South Fork, Odette reports on his just-completed mission: he has deposited the ashes of eight of the former "Eleven" in various rivers, canals, fjords, and harbors of Europe. Through the ceremonies of time, travel, ritual re-enactment, and eternal return, this renegade celebrant officiates at something very like an Irish Catholic wake. He recalls a glittering chain of outrageous adventures and a terrible history of decimating disease and death while conducting a private service of reconciliation and renewal.

Time Remaining is a moving, defiantly hilarious solemnization of life and love in the age of AIDS.

Review:'I Go Back to the Mais Oui," the first of two stories offered here, presents a summation of 40 years of gay life in New York by protagonist Danny Delancey, thereby providing a context for the much lengthier "Time Remaining," which follows. In that piece--a novel, really--Danny is joined by Odette O'Doyle, an ancient, wise, all-knowing drag queen who has lived through those 40 years. As they ride the midnight train across Long Island, Odette unbeads his pearls, dropping story after story from his personal epic. And what an epic! McCourt presents us with an encyclopedic view of gay New York, from high to low culture, from Frank O'Hara, Judy Garland, and the Everard Baths to ACT UP and the Clit Club, leaving no queer stone unturned. For some, Odette's discursive, anecdotal, manic soliloquy may be off-putting. But taken together, these brilliant stories add up to a life, one full of wit and anger, courage and love.'-- Library Journal


Etc:
* Podcast: James McCourt interviewed about 'Time Remaining' on NPR's Bookworm
* James McCourt reviewsThe Collected Stories of Noel Coward



_______________________
Delancey's Way(Knopf, 2000)

Review: Few literary writers take on Washington, D.C., probably for fear of stumbling into tired satire or overblown intrigue. James McCourt is undeterred by these risks, however, and successfully avoids them. Delancey’s Way presents a whirl of D.C. players and hangers-on in an elaborate, at times paranoiac, portrayal of the city that smacks of Marcel Proust and Don DeLillo. Delancey’s Way derives its energy from its carnivalesque language. The scenes, whether set in a cab from Union Station or a masked ball at the Library of Congress, entail characters discoursing to one another in lively harangues. As the novel progresses, one character after another goes gonzo, spewing references both classical and kitsch, and sprinkling every fourth sentence with foreign phrases. The reader—or listener—becomes an awed witness to these wild and virtuoso verbal performances. In response to a comment from Ornette, the jazz-playing redactor of race, Delancey thinks, “Where that came from I couldn’t have told you”—and then realizes he’s not writing this story, it’s writing him, and that’s just how things happen in D.C. -- Review of Contemporary Fiction

Review:"Sometimes this book is funny, and sometimes it's very funny. What it is, is an acidic romp through the political high and low roads of Washington, where the President is known as POTUS and Hillary (sometimes) as FLOTUS, with a wacky cast. The book is dense with allusion--political, literary, filmic, operatic, mythological, and more--uncommon in today's watery literary scene. The writing can veer from plain to stream-of-consciousness to labyrinthine. Thus, the same page can yield "Clinton is a masochistic hick out of Dogpatch turned high toned sadist," and "Clinton as Clint Eastwood--the quintessential Quantrill's Raiders personality."-- Library Journal


Etc:
* James McCourt profiled and interviewed about Delancey's Way by Patsy Southgate


Excerpt:

I never went to bed early in my life.

Until a minute ago . . .

You might have known it would all start out that way.

The first sentence I heard in my own head on the Metroliner to Washington. I'd put down Democracy (you know, the novel of Washington by "Anonymous" turned out to be written — depending on your politics, or your psychic — by either Henry or Clover Adams), gone to the back of the club car and from the window watched the tracks seeming to issue in two steel ribbons from underneath the train, then returned to my seat, a permeable signifier full of metaphoric dread, and succumbed to a little nap, tired of others' voices and of my own plans.

No systematic chronicle, I told myself as I drifted off, but more a rambling disquisition, with copious historical discussion and many anecdotes.

I never went to bed early in my life. Until a minute ago. Two lies, a sentence and a phrase, in the forced conjunction (or dual emphasis) of which there arises a tensile ambiguity — between the stronger and the weaker force — that sparks narrative. Always a forced conjunction, a duality, since what is a true sequence (this/that) if not an uninterrupted flow of conscious-radical-unconscious ideation-pulsation, lasting from the moment of birth until the moment of insanity and/or death? Nothing.

(Cont.)



_______________________
Wayfaring at Waverly in Silverlake (Knopf, 2002)

Description
: After skewering Clinton-era Washington in Delancey's Way (2000), McCourt, stylistically rambunctious and metaphysically inclined, descends on 1980s Hollywood and rejoins diva Mawrdew Czgowchwz (the subject of his first novel) and movie star Kaye Wayfaring, Mawrdew's daughter-in-law, mother of twins, and the focus of an earlier short story collection. In this set of interlocking tales, each a droll riff on one of the seven deadly sins, Kaye, who misses her dear, departed friend, Marilyn Monroe, has just flummoxed everyone by appearing in a wildly successful rock video and is now working on a movie about an Irish pirate queen. Such story elements are deeply embedded within a fizzing hubbub of witty conversations spiked with Hollywood trivia and mysticism that morphs into jousts, reminiscences, and philosophical disputations to form a scintillating montage not unlike those of novelist Paul West. As for McCourt, all his canniness and irony can't conceal his love for Hollywood and its obsessions.


Blurb
:'In Wayfaring at Waverly in Silver Lake, his hilarious deconstruction of the Hollywood signs, James McCourt is, as usual, erudite, recondite, and absolutely right.' -- Fran Lebowitz


Excerpt:

As out beyond long tinted windows Los Angeles lay gleaming in the bright air, while in the studio commissary the televised women’s Olympic marathon neared culmination on the multiscreen background wall, Leland de Longpré, Hyperion Pictures’ controversial new chief of concept evolution, was speaking words of caution and concern to the chief of publicity over lunch.

“Vanity of vanity, all—”

“But I didn’t say ‘vanity,’ ” the chief of publicity, purposedly attuned to words, objected. “I said ‘pride.’ And please don’t tell me they’re the same thing, because even if I don’t know exactly what vanity is, I do know what I think it isn’t.”

“True enough,” the strategist allowed (managing, his lunch partner thought, to sound both affirmative and not). “The Dodgers, it must be said, brought to Los Angeles a cohesive focus, enforcing a civic pride that had never been provided by the self-serving motion-picture industry. I’ve even heard it said the Dodgers in effect brought to bear on their adopted city the mysterious assimilative pride of Brooklyn—never to be confused with the exploitive vanity of Manhattan—thus creating, principally, but not entirely, through the Jewish factor, the atmosphere for the construction of a new civilization in what had been a desert.”

“As a matter of fact,” the publicist continued, boldly staking out his own territory, conceptually speaking, “whenever I’ve heard the word—‘vanity’—all I’ve thought of really is a piece of set decoration—one of those boudoir units with big round deco mirrors. Jean Harlow had one in Dinner at Eight.”

“It would seem clear,” Leland continued, relentlessly, “that vanity is not, all said and done, to be confused with devotional intensity. Devotional intensity is not vain; quite the opposite.”

(Cont.)



_______________________
Queer Street: Rise and Fall of an American Culture, 1947-1985(W.W. Norton, 2003)

Official description: Beginning with the influx of liberated veterans into downtown New York in the golden age before McCarthyism, Queer Street tells the explosive story of gay culture in the latter half of the twentieth century. Coming out himself in the "buttoned-up/button-down" 1950s, McCourt positions his own experience against the whirlwind history of the era, summoning a pageant of characters that includes Harry Hay, Judy Garland, Tennessee Williams, Gore Vidal, and Truman Capote. In a learned but lively voice, McCourt highlights the major events of the period: the landmark eruption at the Stonewall Inn, the AIDS crisis that brought an end to a century of bathhouse culture, the ascendancy of the Christian right, and finally the social acceptance of gays that paradoxically marked the demise of queer culture.

Review:'The book is less a memoir or a social history of the neighborhoods and meeting places of old gay New York than a thick scrapbook of the distinctive gay cultural styles, sensibilities and forms of literacy that reached their apogee in postwar New York and Los Angeles, where the plays, songs, films and stars that constituted so much of the gay métier took shape. Drawing on his preternatural command of that postwar gay cultural universe, Mr. McCourt brings a learned queer eye to the oeuvre of gay icons ranging from Bette Davis, Judy Garland and Holly Woodlawn to Luchino Visconti, Douglas Sirk and Ronald Firbank (a fey novelist of the 1910's and 20's whose style Mr. McCourt's may most closely resemble), as well as Susan Sontag's famous 1964 essay on camp, the riches of opera and the cultural poverty of the standing-room line at the new Met compared with the old.'(Read more)-- The New York Times Book Review


Brief excerpt:



"I hate to be a pill, to piss on smoldering embers, no matter how warming, but the facts are these: it was neither Larry Kramer's hysterics, the courageous reporting of the New York Native, Everett Koop's blinding-hot moral flash or anything else that turned the tide of AIDS recognition in America and of AIDS research funding by the American government. It was nothing less or other than Ronald Reagan's sentimental - goddamnit - feelings for a fellow guy he just happened to like a whole hell of a lot from their Hollywood days, a guy called Rock Hudson who came down with the goddamn thing. And if you don't think them's the facts, go look them up. As our story winds down to a close, darlings, in the year 1985, rather than cut AIDS funding by ten million, Ronald Reagan - or more probably Nancy, as Ronnie was already, courtesy of Alzheimer's, more and more lunching out, though not in public - was upped to one hundred million, and, get this right please, a 270 percent increase in AIDS funding. You see, darlings, all that heaven allows written on the wind by tarnished angels is an imitation of life."


Etc.:
* Podcast: James McCourt interviewed about Queer Street on NPR's 'Bookworm'
* A profile of James McCourt from Time Out New York



________________________
Now Voyagers (Turtle Point Press, 2007)

Description: Now Voyagers
is James McCourt’s long awaited sequel to Mawrdew Czgowchwz. Like his earlier novel, Now Voyagers delights in the whys and wherefors of celebrity and is a tribute to the triumph of art and music; love and humor. 'Tragic wisdom, we discover, can also be le gai savoir, and James McCourt has made a real specialty of transforming intricate wisdom into no more than discerning frivolity, no less than divine frenzy; as he puts it: a running-neon paradigm of the quintessence of diva-dienst! For the purposes (if that is not too grandiose a word) of such fiction, fun is fun, but folly a kind of fate. How I envy Mawrdew's new readers, though remaining helplessly content as a repeat defender.'— Richard Howard


Visit Turtle Point Press


Excerpt:

CHAPTER ONE

"There was a time," she then said, "time out of mind."

"So to begin," he replied, "at the beginning alike of the story and its solemn telling. Only what we're actually up to here in this stately room as the hour of the wolf approaches is more in the nature of the good old Invocation in Medias Résumé. And so far from our topos being of a time time out of mind, we've got it on both our minds big time and why not, so? Aristotle says. After this comes the construction of Plot, which some rank first one with a double story. That's us front and center, right down the line.

"But yes, for the listening world the standard model of the universe of fable always kicks in with Fado, fado, once-upon-a-time, Il y a, Es war, ci-fu-all requisite portal tropes of children's stories, of creation fables, of foundation protocols, and the sonorous sagas of the impossibly valiant. Nice to know we're in with the right crowd, anyway, so far as posterity goes-although enforst, parfit, whilom, and eftsoons we must forcibly abjure, lest we tip our hand too early and queer the pitch altogether. How does that sound? Yawpish enough, think you, for the general populace?"

"You've captured my attention-but the story is you always have."

The clock of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company Tower four blocks away on Madison Square had just struck eight familiar tones, signaling the half hour, in this instance half past eleven on the signal evening of June 16, 2004. In the front parlor of 47 Gramercy Park North, two old friends had sat down together at an old walnut oval Sheraton table to regroup their forces: S.D.J. (The) O'Maurigan and the woman once known (as she would have it, but in truth known still to the knowing world such as it was) as Mawrdew Czgowchwz, oltrano diva of the twentieth century, lately registered in the civic directory as Maev Cohalen, MAPA, psychoanalyst at New York's Center for Modern Psychoanalytic Studies and psychotherapist for the cadets and teaching staff at the Police Academy on East Twentieth Street.

The friends, elected affinities and denizens both of the night and the city, had just come in from an evening at Symphony Space on Upper Broadway, having participated in the boisterous Bloomsday centennial reading of James Joyce's Ulysses. (He had enacted Simon Dedalus from "The Wandering Rocks" and she Gertie MacDowell from "Nausicaa.") Now, in their one-room preceptory they had begun the work of the midnight hour, the examination of a collection of tapes dating back forty-seven years to the nineteen fifty-six-fifty-seven theatrical season, and a dusty manuscript entitled MNOPQR STUVWXYZ, unearthed earlier in the day from what they called the press, a large mahogany cupboard on the top floor of the town house. Each looked to the other uncertainly, wondering what had they done, what were they about to do?

"Here," he then said, "is a definite beginning, lest our plan be accused of lacking the most defining characteristics of a strategy-forethought, preparation, a definite objective in mind. A manuscript in the form of an extended telegram, entailing the allegorized matter of an epic fable, has been dislodged after many decades from its hiding place in an old cupboard, and the following story, correcting the fable and forging its corrected elements into a fragment of a history is, by many separate voices, told in full, or as nearly as can be. Ought to be enough for anybody is our feeling."

"You hurried down that same evening of the sailing and had the thing dispatched shore to ship."

"Yes, There was a time, time out of mind-the opening words of the offering we found uncanny, the offering called MNOPQR STUVXYZ, unpronounceable, but immediately recognizable and clocked for what it was, that sent us on a season's merry chase after means, motives, opportunities, and mischiefs.

"The whole of it, entirely in majuscule. The longest telegram on record, dispatched from the Western Union office across Broadway from the old house, up the block from Longchamps. Shore to ship-although come to think of it now, Leo Lerman always called Manhattan itself a great ocean liner, so possibly ship to ship. And even now, understanding much that youth and ignorance caused me at the time to remark without comprehending, I find it hard to disentangle the ... etcetera. Yes, there was a time, time out of mind ... so there was."

The woman who had been Mawrdew Czgowchwz, oltrano, took up the long telegram of the allegorical text (representing her as Mnopqr Stuvwxyz) she had first read another life ago (or so it seemed, without exaggeration) while crossing the Atlantic with her then companion Jacob Beltane, oltrano, on the Queen Mary in late September, nineteen fifty-six.

THERE WAS A TIME TIME OUT OF MIND IN THE SEMPITERNAL PROGRESS OF ITAL DIVADIENST AT THAT SUSPENSORY PAUSE JUST PRIOR TO THE ADVENT OF WHAT CAME TO BE KNOWN AS MNOPQRDOLATRY OR IN CERTAIN QUARTERS ITAL STUVWXYZCHINA WHEN THE CULT OF NIRVANA MORI FLOURISHED IN THE HOTHOUSE AMBIENCE OF THE CROSSROADS CAFE ON 42ND STREET ACROSS BROADWAY FROM THE VERY HOTEL WHERE IN THE GREAT DAYS CARUSO HAD IN SOMETHING LIKE THE SACRAMENTAL SENSE RECEIVED DESTINN WHOSE PALMY LOBBY ONCE ORMOLU MARBLE AND VELVET HAD BEEN TRANSFORMED INTO A VAST DRUGSTORE AND WHERE LATELY IN CARUSOS SUITE A PODIATRIST INSTALLED STOP THERE AT THE CROSSROADS CAFE IN THE SHADOW OF THE TIMES BUILDING NOVEMBER TO NOVEMBER FOR MORI WAS A DEAD CENTER SCORPIO THE GREAT WORLDS RAW CONCERNS WERE FLATLY IGNORED

The Crossroads Café: if Manhattan was a great ocean liner, the Crossroads Café was one of the places you could cross from first down to third-to social steerage. In that it resembled a chapel, didn't it, and even if you think of it a swimming pool-other places on board for crossing up or down.

"Crossing up, crossing down: dress stage. Passing ships-there's an idea, if not quite-"

"Original. It was a dark and stormy-"

"No, it was nothing like a dark and stormy night. There was a moon."

"That there was, waning from full, viewed from ship's deck in Manhattan as well-shining across the Great Meadow in the Park. This night, though dark enough here on the street where you live, isn't stormy, not yet. But then in New York lit up the way it is, on such languid summer nights how often come torrential rain and crashing thunder, too, like on the event-driven night of the first Bloomsday itself, when and while in the aftermath of old hurts new-enacted, two famously unlikely companions ... but they've likely not yet gotten to Eumaeus uptown, so let's bide our time in sultry air and set about our business, the drawing up of blueprints for a biosphere."

"You wrote a poem about that waning moon."

"It was that cool, clear late September evening on the day they sailed away, when we looked up and saw Pagliaccio in the moon-on the wane from full to gibbous. The wan expression on him-that moue, the oval mouth, sad eyes.Who was it said, 'Look at him-he's singing "Plaisir d'amour" and he's just come to "ne dure qu'un moment."'


"And on it went, detailing how the face in the moon, eyes, nose, mouth, is formed by the shadows cast upon the light-reflecting whole by the so-called maria, specifically the ... but of course I don't remember.

"And from there on to parallel imagined voyages across those seas whose names I don't recall, to the voyage out of the second line, employing every sort of word Arisotle designated-well, there are eight of those, and I do, or could recall them and what they had to do with the words of 'Plaisir d'amour' in relation to the poet's sorrow of the moment-but why now? More important surely to consider the ambiguity of Pound's news that stays news in view of the two immediately available meanings of stay-leaving out the one that had to do with whalebone corsets. Stay as in 'Linger awhile, thou art so fair!' and stay as in stop any further thing from happening and let us have an end to news."

"The poet is clairvoyant. 'Ne dure qu'un moment'-and our moment had only just gotten under way."

"Yes, well, it's easy to make predictions, is it not-especially concerning the future."

"Yogi Berra. We had a yogi on board."

"And yet one insists there must be more to it all-pictura loquens-than tick-rock, Tag aus, Tag ein, E pluribus unum and ashes, ashes, all fall down. The cultured young cry out, 'Do tell us about-we want to hear allabouteveryfuckinglastoneofem, Notes and queries, Q. and A., relating to the many consequential initiatives with which they became closely involved. The laughs the frowns, the upsandowns all first nature to them then and not in short, in long, the works. And unlike some in the city we do have all night.

"But unlike the authors of the long dispatch again to hand-who saw themselves, it seems, not as the bowler-and-stick vaudevillians they were, but as twin rhapsodes of mock-epic caliber, exuberantly flinging out their random paradoxical teasers as substitutes for Apollonian objects of contemplation, their fiery emotional effects as substitutes for Dionysian enchantment.

"For they were clever ones, as we soon discovered. Students of Comparative Literature no less, possessed, we saw at once, as we read through their unsettling text, of adroit, cool, and penetrating insight into theme, motivation, and character, keen in their primitive, exuberant ambition to get it.

"Fresh as paint their grasp of ideas introduced in Auerbach's Mimesis, and wielding an altogether more subtle knife than those blades thrust into the hands of the slashers recruited by the semiotic vogue. Determined to represent by annotating the fluctuations of their attitudes, as well as what they perpetrate and undergo, men's characters, and women's, too.

"Cruising our ranks in unobtrusive fashion during the intermissions, then later at the Crossroads Café dissecting us all down to the bone as an experiment in adaptation and exploitation. And if as it turned out what they were not so good at as they were at allegory and the grand design was smoking out a tail, and thus did finally fall into our clutches, their like never did come about again on the line."

"Don't you think they wanted to be caught out all along? I always did."

"That they made us making them? I suppose so, except that what they seemed to think they were up to the whole time was making us up. The crust!

"That said, we, all these years later making ourselves making them making us do not unroll our design in transparently allegorical fashion. Rather we allow them to unfold themselves as does life itself, which can be either tracked or lived, but never both simultaneously, according to both the uncertainty principle and the phenomenon of self-similarity. In this we are in our fashion true to our many darlings and also appropriately postcontemporary chaotic.

"We care little for plot or for the thudding sameness and strained expectation imbedded in it, seeking to reduce all experience to a carefully tabulated, weighed, and balanced succession of ratified incidents-one fucking thing after another, culminating in the uncovering and publication of the truth that will rock the world ... right to sleep.

"For us such schemes have been weighed in the balance and found wanting, as were police reports and journalism for Sherlock Holmes. For in general it may be said of postmodern writing of serious intent that in it, the function of the narrator is just that, no less, no more-to fucking narrate, all right? To describe the fluctuations of movement. He is permitted speculation in time-slip chronicles solely on approximations of distance and duration, and of necessity, that he may be seen as anything but omniscient, on his own infirmities of character and intellect, especially those concerned with the illusion of self-determination, as they are the very ones that tend to support the more preposterous asseverations benighted readers have been encouraged to believe they have been vouchsafed as gospel, beware of the dog.

"Nothing reported concerning the fluctuations of gesture, no speculation on the motivation, or lack of same, in any character-so many spinning in an ever-narrowing gyre-may be confidently taken as read, merely as read about-candidates must write on one side of the paper only; this margin to be left blank for the examiner.

"That also said, in mitigation directly concerning the exercise of free will, and mindful of the conditions that must necessarily obtain in order that our narrator may competently answer the decorum of a legend, any and all remarks acknowledging the constant presence-in-absence of the distant, the strange, the far-out, and further typifications of the scarcely known must be accommodated-imprimatur, nihil obstat-so long that is, as no notion of roman à clef is entertained. We're out for ummediated, unadorned truth here, and not for floods of spurious verisimilitude-dreaded analog to the symptom of flooding in a psychosis.

"And a good thing at that, given the tendency of tropes to mutate-indeed mutate into life itself, taking command of the text altogether, making its story their story-so that it may be said of certain texts not so much that they are lifelike as that the reading of them is like the experience of living. No book can live two lives, mar dhea.

"Because for the slab of a thing to be read as a true roman à clef, according to the latest postmodern formulation forensic multiples: a survey, they'd want to have more keys on their turnkeys' rings than are turned clockwise on any given day up the Hudson at Sing-Sing-and that's straight from the source, sparkling and bottled on the premises in clear glass.

"Moreover, we don't care what people do-in fact they can do it in the streets if they like-alarums and excursions galore, fife and drum, and the monkey wrapped his tale around a flagpole. More power and good luck to them now there are no more horses likely to be frightened by them-certainly not the noble steeds of the mounted police. Our attitude will remain that of still, calm, tranquil contemplation with open eyes, gaze unaverted, a state which beholds the images boldly presented to it and declares 'just so.'"

"Still and all," she observed, "whoever they turn out to be, they should be doing something worthy of note to attract the world's indulgent attention-something, indeed, besides vibrating."

"Agreed, and with the proviso that we shall remain less interested in what they are up to just then than in what they are thinking of getting up to or remembering what they've gotten up to before, we don't wish to stop them, or see them stopped.

"Not for long anyway. Only long enough to freeze-frame and cut into them, to examine in cross section their motives, means, and opportunities, to arrive at some sense of their origins beyond the bounds of sense-should anybody anywhere anytime wish to know just what's going on-the accurate depiction of primal conflicts being ever better served by allegory than romance. And then, somehow, to reinstigate fluency from what has been halted.

"And in their own words, not in the words of avid narrative adepts whose accounts inevitably climax with hair-raising escapes for some-all colors and lengths of hair at that-leaving hearts beating out of chests all around the town, and for unfortunate others, catapulted bodies splayed at unnatural angles on outcroppings of jagged rock. Absolutely not. Our inspiration is drawn from Maupertuis and his principle of least action, forerunner of quantum mechanics."

"In their own words."

"A debriefing."

"Had they a brief?"

"We know they did-to follow the lead of Mawrdew Czgowchwz."

"Where to?"

"Where to. Well, in the end I see us all together at the Grand Hotel, each in his own room, reading the emergency instructions on the back of the door, prior to dressing for the coming occasion, then going down in the elevator to the lobby to await her descent down the great staircase to get into the limousine, us following along in taxis-"

"Not you, you always rode in the car."

"Didn't I just. In any event, surely to the opera house."

"And what is she singing?"

"What else but Minnie, of course, her favorite role."

"It was-still is. You know, in murder mysteries, I've always liked best the ones with everybody gathered in one place and they each and all have a motive."

"Interesting projection."

"Oh?"

"What else, when it was yourself up there on the stage slaying them all."

"You've forgotten not for the first time either."

"How neglectful not-for the first time either."

"Like a serial killer."


Etc:
* Podcast: James McCourt, Edmund White, Camille Paglia, and Alan Hollinghurst discuss gay literature and queer theory on NPR's Bookworm
----





*

p.s. Hey. ** Bill, Thank you, and I know they would thank you too if they knew and could. I really didn't like 'Prometheus'. I thought it was heavy handed and gaseous and kind of leaden. As I've said before, I think the really underrated and fairly amazing Ridley Scott film is 'Legend'. I think that was the end of his short great period, i.e. 'Alien', 'Blade Runner', 'Legend', but there are some good stretches in 'Black Rain'. 'The Duelists' isn't bad. ** Sypha, The head! No, not the head! ** Steevee, Tosser is an interesting fellow. I suspect that with his pretty yet masculine looks and streamlined twink-meets-streamlined-hunk torso, he probably does all right. ** Thomas Moronic, Thanks, T. They are few and far between but, gosh darn it, I remain determined to ferret them out. Interesting comments are even rarer than interesting profile texts. I agree that they add this whole other great thing, but finding them really is like looking for goldfish in garbage bin. Your yesterday sounds to have been heavy, yeah, and rich and lots and lots of other things. Beautiful about her letter. That's amazing. That sounds very sensible about letting them decide what they need to hold onto. I hope you had a good, restorative sleep after that. ** David Ehrenstein, I like Jack Black's acting too, most of the time. I wish he didn't have that sub-SNL frat boy comedy rock band Tenacious D, which is one of the most annoying bands in the world, to my mind. But, yeah, he can be great. I will absolutely for sure skip 'Boulevard' now, not that I would ever have seen it in any case, but, ugh, that sounds horrendous. ** _Black_Acrylic, Yeah, I think going ahead makes a lot of sense. Automatic is nice. It's mod. It's acid. It's cool as a cucumber. ** Bernard Welt, I too was most happy when, having found that escort and thinking his profile had possibilities, I enlarged that particular thumbnail to find the final piece of his puzzle. Ha, I immediately thought of Malcolm McDowell too! Sorry about the mislead re: the 5, but that is good to know. Dang, well, call me old fashioned, but I did have a quiet hope that he truly was passionately and exclusively excited to talk with you about film. Not that he wasn't passionate. About film, about everything. ** Gary gray, Naturally the anarchist escort had a big place in my heart this month too. I'm very glad you're doing good. And you bursting into tears actually sounds like a sign of goodness to me, but I am weird. Oh, thank you for being into my latest novel again. And my imaginations likes from where and how you entered it. Dreaming of others is nice. Perhaps even the spice of life, as some say. That thing that has guys excited in the States ... you mean getting to see Justin Bieber's butt? No, I think you mean legalized marriage, right? Yes, I certainly heard about that. See, well, there's where the whole 'dreaming of others' thing comes in, you know? There are those, and many of those, in fact, who are very happy now, and seeing other people happy is a wonderful thing, or it can be. ** Misanthrope, Wickedness assuredly has its place, I think, and a fine place it is. That pigeon's poop was modest, a moist speck, hardly worth even mentioning. Geese! I've heard of them. They're like cooler ducks something, right? There's some hominem that was popular once upon a time that had the words goose and gander in it. I can't remember it. When I think of geese, I think of a lake. I think of geese, in a group, departing the surface of the lake on whose surface they had been resting, and taking to the skies, at first in a low then sweeping upwards angle while the sound of their feathers coursing through the air temporarily drowns out the sound of leaves barely shifting about in the trees astride the lake. ** Chilly Jay Chill, Right? That sentence was almost really, really good. I was very tempted to line-edit it into perfect shape, but that would have gone against the rules I've given myself about those posts. Big structural change, interesting, of course. I know how that goes. Oh, that ripple effect thing always happens to me because my novels are so intricately interconnected structurally and on the surface. Corralling the ripples? You mean so the rippling effect on the surroundings dies away at a particular, calculated point? It's hard to advise in a general way about that because, for me at least, every instance is pretty particular. I mean, asking yourself if the newly outer rippled prose is worth the revision is good. I often just follow them, yeah, but you can also get habitual about revising and lose sight of the overall. I guess just make sure you're giving each ripple effect attentive oversight, which is what it sounds like you're doing. Our film has been rejected by most of the big festivals, which isn't a huge surprise. It's a difficult film in an unusual way. We came within a hair's breadth, half-a-hair even, of being selected for the film festival that we most wanted the film to premiere at, but, even though the festival higher-ups really like the film, they feared dealing with the controversy it could create, so they played it safe. I think we know where the film will premiere, but we're waiting for confirmation. As soon as I finish the hopefully final draft of the script for Zac's and my next film, likely this week, then Zac and I will start working on the TV pilot. Gisele wants to direct a mini-series for French television, a puppet show -- much weirder but not totally unlike the kinds of puppet shows that used to be common decades ago on TV in the States (Shari Lewis, Howdy Doody, etc.) -- and Zac and I are writing the pilot for the series. The puppet and the puppeteer/host are already selected, and it's just a matter of writing an episode that makes French TV buy the series. ** Cal Graves, Way too much ... good plus bad, I'm reckoning? Hang in there. Pretend you are a magic sword and everything is liquid. Just don't throw away the started/ abandoned little projects whatever you do. Seriously, save them. I've gone back and finished half-started projects ten years afterwards sometimes. I'm good. No, Bastille Day was a bore. I had semi-firm plans with two friends, both of whom blew me off. Don't care, though. It was okay. In fact, I can answer your zoo question because I'm currently very excited to go the new, or, rather, recently reopened after a ten-plus year closure and revamp, Paris zoo, and the only reason I want to go is ... let me see if I can find a photo, hold on ... Click this, and you'll see the fake mountain range. That's the magnet for me. What's your favorite zoo part? I am reading the script for Zac's and my new film as I try to revise it to perfection. What are you reading? Your Walmart sounds nice. I'm not kidding, I mean it. Gosh, my enormous pleasure about 'MLT'. If-a-certain-someone-from-my-past-arrived-via-time-machine-in-my-apartment-right-now-I-would-feel-exactly-how-you-feel-ly, Dennis. ** Schlix, I know, that was a goodie, right? I got very lucky. Oh, shit, about your computer. It's boiling hot here already today, and my computer's internal fan is going all Merzbow. Holy, shit, Uli, about the ears and vertigo and numbness thing. Yeah, that's incredibly stressful even to hear about. The osteopath helped to some solid degree, you say? I'm pretty sold on osteopathy. Jesus, man. Your ears are still ringing? That is so strange but, obviously, I'm very happy to hear that you're through the worst of it. Hugs, and, there's nothing I guess I can do, but, if there is, don't hesitate. Hugs, my friend. Love, me. ** Okay. I decided to resurrect this long unavailable post. James McCourt has to be one of the most under-recognized great American novelists, and I encourage you to head in his work's direction. See you tomorrow.

Gig #80: Sampler: Legendary Pink Dots

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'Over 33 years and 40-plus albums, the Legendary Pink Dots have forged a unique, subterranean path through a cross-section of British, European and American musical subcultures. With roots in the same fertile soil of English 1980s post-punk, post-hippie, acid-informed occultism as Psychic TV, Coil, Current 93 and Nurse With Wound - equal parts Stonehenge Free Festival and Ballardian industrial estate dystopia - they've detoured through goth, industrial, ambient and dark folk along their journey, from lo-fi tape experiments to alternative dancefloor fillers, subversive pop to abrasive noise, often within the same song.

'If anything, though, the Dots can be seen as a singular development of the underground psychedelia that first inspired main man Edward Ka-Spel (born 1954) as a teenager: Syd Barrett's Pink Floyd, the alien visitations of early David Bowie, the art-rock of Henry Cow and the Residents, and of course the first wave of German kosmische music - Can, Faust, Neu! These early visions of artistic freedom have informed the band ever since, through changing incarnations built around Ka-Spel and founding keyboard player Phil Knight, aka The Silverman. Alongside a complex, somewhat tongue-in-cheek mythology constructed via their lyrics and presentation, this approach has seen the Dots filed away as the cult bands' cult band - beloved of a hardcore few, quietly influential yet perpetually existing well beneath the media radar.'-- The Quietus








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So Gallantly Screaming
'The Legendary Pink Dots’ discography is so expansive that it’s difficult to say something about their music with full authority. The Dots’ founding members—Edward Ka-Spel and Phil Knight—may not even know for themselves how many albums they have released by this point, although it’s safe to say the number of studio records exceeds 40. The band’s music is dark and filled with esoteric mystique, it’s loud, it’s psychedelic, it’s synthy, it’s gothy, and it’s still more thrilling today than many of the most hotly praised albums of the year.'-- Pop Matters






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I Love You in Your Tragic Beauty
'Ka-Spel's Legendary Pink Dots are one of the most adventurous (and ever evolving) psychedelic poppers. They began with psychedelic madrigals that were unique in the pastoral way they employed electronic sounds, for example on Brighter Now (1982). Asylum (1985) veered towards melancholy decadent futuristic pop a` la Roxy Music and Ultravox. As Ka-Spel's skills in orchestration improved, he sculpted the neo-classic pop of Any Day Now (1987), possibly his artistic peak, and then the eccentric synth-pop of The Maria Dimension (1991), and finally experimented with the avantgarde arrangements of Malachai (1993), probably his most ambitious work.'-- scaruffi.com






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Kalos Melas
'Unlike most acts of their vintage, The Legendary Pink Dots look forward. After more than 25 years, they continue to make compelling new music that is demanded by fans and maintains the high level of quality that set their careers in motion. Led by singer/songwriter Edward Ka-Spel and keyboardist/songwriter Phil “Silverman” Knight, the band continues to create their singular brand of modern psychedelia. Edward Ka-Spel's lyrics breathe with a sagacity and cleverness only found in rock's greatest writers.'-- ROIR






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True Love
'Eric Deshayes dit d'eux qu'ils constituent le meilleur groupe au monde. Rien de moins venant de la part de celui qui connaît l'histoire des musiques expérimentales et du Krautrock sur le bout des doigts. Les Legendary Pink Dots donnent le tournis, toujours à part, suivis par une troupe de fidèles amateurs partisans du bon goût universel. Le groupe a traversé le monde, le temps, les espaces intellectuels et les vecteurs artistiques. Quasiment 40 albums, 30 ans de carrière, pour explorer mieux que quiconque, sans jamais avoir vendu leur âme, les sentiments humains, les beautés étranges de la folie, les frontières de l'aliénation avec le contenu de nos vies, l'amour, la violence, la beauté, les dérives. Toutes les thématiques des sphères gothiques en somme, mais mieux que tous, avec plus de recul que tous, pas de clichés, uniquement un défrichage prescriptif et définitif dans des chants hors du monde, à l'ouverture d'esprit révélatrice d'une intelligence qu'on les visionnaires seulement.'-- L'Embobineuse






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Casting the Runes
'The thing is, it's not really known generally that the Legendary Pink Dots -- it's assumed that we started in London -- actually, we came from a very small hamlet in Moldavia, which of course didn't have any street-lamps so it was dark all the time. But, as the population in this small hamlet of Moldavia evolved, they developed their own personal lights to light the streets -- which were fluorescent pink lights. It was so remote, this hamlet in Moldavia, that very few people would ever find it. One day--you know, the story got around, of course, but nobody really believed it was true--some hitchhikers from the furthest reaches of Georgia sort of stumbled onto this hamlet in Moldavia and saw the locals walking around with these fluorescent pink spots all over their faces and finally someone said, "Those are the legendary pink dots!" And we were just rehearsing in a room nearby, and, that's how we got the name.'-- Edward Ka-Spel






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Adrenaline
'Their music touches on elements of neo-psychedelia, ambient music, electronic music, tape music, industrial, psychedelic folk, synthpop, post-punk, progressive, jazz, noise, pop, and goth rock, with a distinctly experimental/avant-garde bent; their sound has evolved over time and remains distinctive, making it difficult to place the group into a concise style or genre. The group's overall sound combined with Ka-Spel's distinct lyrics and singing have earned comparisons to Pink Floyd and Syd Barrett; the group also has links to the sounds of krautrock bands such as Can, Faust, Brainticket, Magma or Neu! (whose "Super" they covered on the 1999 tribute album "A Homage to NEU!").'-- Wikipedia






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Grey Scale
'The pulsing machine skank of 'Grey Scale' recognises the small compromises with the system we all make; gradual steps towards total surrender and a life lived in abject fear. "We know where you're hiding", mocks a sing-song voice towards the end. It traverses landscapes of strangely pastoral electronica, before giving way to the sound of a loudly creaking floorboard, or swinging door - suggesting that the way into a different space, another way of being, is right there in front of us, but hidden just out of sight.'-- The Quietus






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Love Puppets
'The music of the Legendary Pink Dots is a pretty disparate combination of elements. It's highly melodic, but there are some rapid-fire cut-ups and Biblical references to temper-an unusual combination. Extremely wide territory. Why are there Biblical references and collages in the midst of the beautiful tunes? It's meant to be painting that goes on inside of me, which is hardly the most balanced human being to use as a reference point in the first place. So any beauty that is inside me, any chaos that's inside me-they sort of fuse inside me. I paint them as they are going on all the time. The music I write is a representation of this. It's sort of like painting your own soul.'-- Edward Ka-Spel, 1987






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Just a Lifetime (live)
'Stravinsky said that music should not be listened to with the eyes closed. Would you agree? Yeah, I would. I like music to be almost hallucinating. It should take you places, even with the eyes wide open. To destroy the line between reality and dream. Have you ever had the experience, when you seem to remember something, and you realize what you're remembering cannot be placed. You've never been there before, and you couldn't possibly have been. Then you realize that you're actually remembering a dream.' -- Edward Ka-Spel, 1987






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Super
'Over the course of 25 years and seemingly twice that many albums, it's become well nigh impossible to state simply what the Legendary Pink Dots "sound like." The best one can hope to do is to describe what Edward Ka-Spel and company are up to at any given time. Currently, the band is in one of its most straightforward (relatively speaking) phases, and one of its best. The overall tone is one of English psychedelic whimsy mutated into darker, largely electronic forms: think of classic-era Gong and Syd Barrett's solo albums, as remixed by Aphex Twin. Ka-Spel's vocals have the high-pitched, childlike delivery of Barrett or the Television Personalities' Dan Treacy, which adds an extra layer of nervous dread to the uniformly dark, foreboding lyrics.'-- allmusic






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The Lovers (Part 2)
'How do you live your life when it feels like the world is constantly on the verge of apocalypse? Well, you’re going to find a way. It has ALWAYS felt like that — for generations in fact. Somehow the world keeps chugging along, but now and again we get little reminders — like the Haiti earthquake, the oil spill in the Gulf, or 9-11 and the wars that followed — that things are not well. And when you get down to it, you’re headed for your own personal apocalypse anyway. Nobody lives forever. The real question is, in the face of impending doom, how do you live well? I think I might have an answer, at least one that works for me, thanks to a strange and wonderful group called the Legendary Pink Dots.'-- The Music Missionary






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Hallway
'They’ve been around for 30 years and have produced a huge body of work. They’re so experimental that getting into it can be daunting. I would recommend starting with one of these albums: The Maria Dimension, Hallway of the Gods, Asylum, Crushed Velvet Apocalypse, Your Children Placate You from Unmarked Graves, or Plutonium Blonde. There’s a lot to them. Just give them a listen and have an open mind. Their styles and sounds are so wide-ranging that you are bound to hear things you don’t like, or that puzzle you, but if you persevere, you are also going to find music you will love, music that will speak to your soul.'-- FC






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Is It Something I Said?
'Edward Ka-Spel‘s brilliance with The Legendary Pink Dots is to introduce us to isolated characters and then immerse us in their world-view through expansive and mysterious soundscapes. He begins with the most restricted, infinitesimal point of consciousness and then slowly expands it outward towards a state of ‘cosmic consciousness’ (to use the phrase of 1960s psychonauts). Musically, he often follows this template of expansion, with simple melody lines repeating and layering in increased complexity of texture. Much of the LPD’s music is an undertaking to help the listener (and perhaps composer) escape his/her own head. Lyrical phrases, musical motifs, album titles and themes recur across decades, but tonal shifts between albums are slow and subtle. Hopefully, The Legendary Dots Project, like the Residents andSparks projects before, will provide the keen reader and listener with a giddy entry-point into the Legendary Pink Dots’ musical world. Fulfil the prophecy!'-- Kitty Sneezes






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Pennies for Heaven
'A single lit candle is brought onto stage. This pre-performance "mood-setter" would normally give a crowded concert hall an air of solemnity, ritual and intimacy. However, rather than placed conspicuously upstage, where it might be a silent call to attention, it is set off to the side, almost backstage. Obviously, the candle is not meant for the audience, but for the private ritual of the performer. Such is typical of Edward Ka-Spel, whose moving performances offer access to an original and deeply personal vision of the world. As founder of the Legendary Pink Dots, Edward and company have put out some of the most absorbing and richly diverse music around-ballads in epic proportions without concessions given to chorus, hummable melody, or neatly coategorized style. Instead, it is almost operatic, full of radical stylistic shifts, and bound with sophisticated and sometimes grating electronics.'-- Option Magazine






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Madame Guillotine
'The two and a half decade long musical journey of The Legendary Pink Dots has seen them traverse the psycho-goth-prog-rock landscape from one end to the other. Singer Edward Ka-Spel and songwriting partner/keyboardist Phil Knight have crossed just about every single boundary that divides the various pertinent sub-genres that are defined by terms like electronic, progressive, post-new wave, etc. Quite often there are straightforward pop tunes lurking underneath the dense layers of sound that seem to float in and out of their music, but their motif has always been to color the mise-en-scene with many hues of gray and highlights of muted blue.'-- Impose Magazine






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The Safe Way
'The Legendary Pink Dots may have meant the first word in their moniker to be ironic back when they named themselves during the post-punk anti-rock star era. But nearly three decades later, the irony now is that they've pretty much ended up living up to their own billing. The Amsterdam-by-way-of-London quartet has not only held to their defiantly experimental concept, but they've done it independently of the recording industry. "Somewhere inside me I always knew I was in for a bit of a long ride," explains founder and main artistic voice Edward Ka-Spel about the group's longevity. "I did have a lot of ideas that I wanted to see through back then, and I'm still seeing them through." Ka-Spel says he feels "no commercial consideration at all" when constructing the group's records, which have been known to mix and match everything from off-kilter drumbeats to spoken word sections to deceptively "childlike" ditties. "Better to miss a meal and have something you feel proud of than to slowly sell your soul," he explains. "The music we make is the most important thing."'-- Washington Post Express







*

p.s. Hey. This gig is for everyone, duh, but it's for Bill Hsu in particular because he suggested that devote some kind of post to Legendary Pink Dots. ** Chris Dankland, Hi, Chris! 'Mawrdew Czgowchwz' is an excellent place to start reading McCourt, yeah. It's by far the easiest one to get your hands on. 'Time Remaining' is my favorite, and if you come across a very affordable copy, definitely spring for it, but 'MC' is a very good beginning. Ha ha, it's nice that that escort's thing was so productive. I figured, about the new 'Terminator'. I'm saving it for a plane because those little screens have the magical effect of making mediocre blockbusters into perfectly acceptable time wasters. 'Terminator' can't be worse than 'Jurassic World', which I strongly suggest you skip, if it's not too late. I have a soft spot for Arnold in movies too. I dug him in the 'Expendable' movies. He has this surprisingly wry, playful self-conscious thing in his performances nowadays that's quite charming, I think. Best laid writing plans that wind up delivering alternate goods is more than acceptable, you know? Broken plans and rules are usually a really good sign. Getting stressed about the unmet goal is the only enemy in that situation. I'm really glad you can sense yourself progressing. I like your 'getting stuff out there' plan, and, yeah, I was very happy to see that I'll get to see your works on Mosquito. You have a good and much better than good day too, pal. ** Steevee, Ha ha, makes sense. The Jude Law thing. Urgh, so the ear problem wasn't just a phantom. That sucks, I'm very sorry to hear that. ** James, Thank you. I don't think James and Frank are related, but I don't know for sure. I think McCourt is a fairly common Irish name. Well, like I said to Chris, 'Mawrdew Czgowchwz' is a fine start as well as the easiest place to start, but he hasn't written a novel that isn't super excellent, for my money, so can't really go wrong. I'm very happy to have added a potential fan to 'LotB's' cult. ** Sypha, Hi. Yeah, it's cool, obviously, to me that you're using my favorite novels list as a template. I have, in fact, been thinking of updating the list again, sorry. I saw Tenacious D live one time when they opened for Weezer, and they were grisly unbearable. ** David Ehrenstein, He is indeed. ** Etc etc etc, Hi, Casey. Ha ha, if there's a polar opposite writer to Hemingway, it might well be McCourt. No, I haven't read it yet. Like I said before, I need to finish writing the film script, which is occupying my brain entirely right now, but I'm close to getting it done, I think. Again, I'm very sorry for my ridiculous slowness, but I fear I am like that, always have been and seemingly always will be. I don't like that about myself, but it's a force or lack of force that seems to be beyond my repairing. Are you submitting the novel to other places yet? Thanks, great, about the 'Infernal' piece, and very exciting about how quickly your 'MC' piece will appear. The new gif book isn't a novel, it's a collection of short works using/transmuting several different, mostly literary forms. Best to you! ** Bill Hi, Bill. I hope the gig is okay of you. Tackling their massive output is a daunting thing, and that tight selection up there is pretty subjective. Still, I hope it's of interest and serves their work. 'Queer Street' is very terrific. When watching 'Legend', you have to allow Tom Cruise to work on you in a neutral, puzzle piece-like, benevolent way. Tim Curry is insane in it. It's my favorite Tim Curry. But it's the film's style, mood, drifting trance-y quality in general that's the pleasure, I think. ** Douglas Payne, Hi. You have an 'in' with 'MC'. That's interesting. Opera is like High Latin to me, but I loved the novel anyway. Oh, okay, how do we sort out the Skyping time? I'm ready whenever mostly. By email, via Facebook? ** _Black_Acrylic, Yeah, listen to Andrew, I'm sure, and your mom about the approach to the lessons. Maybe there is detailing that needs to be considered? Well, hip-hip-hooray about Episode 2! Only a week away! Very exciting, Ben! I did in fact watch that speech. Someone propped it on Facebook, so I linked to it. Admirable, inspiring speech, for sure. She seems just great! ** Schlix, Hi, Uli. Avoiding panic is often the cure for all sorts of physical things. Our brains are so strange. Man, that Feldman concert sounds just dreamy. I don't know that work, but Feldman on Guston is a very fascinating idea, obviously. You're overheated there too? Yesterday was fucking horrible here. I can't tell about today yet. It feels ominous already at 9:40 am, though. Thanks for the link to the TI stream and the extra Moonfaced track! People seem really high on the new TI. I liked their first record, but then I watched a video of them live, and I thought it was boring and irritating. But it was a video of a concert, and how often do those work? ** Kier, Dennilingus! Whoa, ha ha. I bet that's my nickname in heaven and/or hell. I bet when I end up in heaven and/or hell, that's what they'll call me. We've been working on the script for a while, but it has come together pretty easily and quickly. It would be great to actually finish it by sometime next week, and that's plan/hope. I think the puppet show/TV series will be for smart, childlike adults and equally for smart, adult-y kids. It's not going to be transgressive or anything, but it will be dark and strange. Ideally. We'll see. It should be fun. The dummy and the ventriloquist who will star in it are really brilliant. They're in 'The Ventriloquists Convention'. Yeah, workhorse gets said in English a fair amount. I'm very glad your hearing is at least a little better. Man, three people on the blog are having ear issues right now, it's so strange. Nice day there, very nice. Oh, shit, no, I would never go bungee jumping. I like thrill rides and drop rides and stuff, but bungee ... no. My shoulders are tensed just thinking about it. But I totally get how intense and exciting it would be. Do it! Those new photos are beautiful, and, yeah, eerie. The eeriness is very interesting. I'm going to dwell on them and figure out how that works. Everyone, a new batch of photos by the genius Kier called 'lambing / farm horror' are now viewable with but a light tap on these words functioning as their entrance. Please depart. Awesome! Love, buddy! ** Gary gray, Hi, G. Cool. Yeah, being happy for happy couples seems to me to qualify as one form of joy. But you can get so seeing a stranger grin is joyful. It's weird. I get like that a lot. I don't even understand it. Wow, a poem where I'm in its mind? Thank you, man. That sentence/phrase is beautiful and super intriguing, so if it's just an outtake, that's pretty promising. Gee, thank you a lot, man, really. Hugs, love, etc., me. ** Misanthrope, That was a lustrous and lovely reverie there, George. I'd try to up the ante but yesterday was a fluke. I've heard people claim that geese are evil. It sounds like it. I don't actually like zoos that much. I just like fake landscapes, especially fake mountains and very especially with fake caves inside them. But I will happily seize the opportunity to visit that open-safari zoo-like place with you should I ever be so lucky as to have the chance. You are kind. ** MANCY, MANCY! MANCY, your du0 zines are so fucking good! So great! They've been sitting right next to my laptop for days now, and I pick them up all the time and pore through them knowing I will get a beauty and inspiration hit. Wonderful work, great sir! ** Right. Given the fact that Legendary Pink Dots have almost 50 albums out, perhaps my little selection of musical bits and songs from them will serve a purpose in letting you enter their stuff without the usual extremely intimidating vibe. Or maybe you already like them and wish to question my choices or add your own. Or maybe you won't give a shit, ha ha. Anything goes, is what I'm saying. See you tomorrow.

My name is Luka, by James Nulick

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I visited Luka Magnotta in prison. He was incarcerated at the Rivière-des-Prairies Detention Centre in Montreal. Are you a Canadian citizen? No. Are you a reporter? No. Are you American? Yes. What business do you have with Eric Newman? I’m a writer and a technologist, I advised the warden via email. I’m compiling material for a nonfiction work about Magnotta and Mark Twitchell. Ah, yes. Canada’s finest. You Americans really like to stir the pot, as they say? I’m not a reporter, sir. I’m writing a book about the events. I have no interest in portraying your country in a negative fashion. You know our procedures? Tremblay asked. I read them online, I replied via email. You have a passport and cleared bloodprints? I do. I will email you soon. I will wait, I said. Thank you, I said. I did not hear from the assistant warden for three months.




I researched documents online. I worked on material for other books. I was juggling the writing of three books simultaneously. It was unusual for me. I was energized after having received an unsolicited email from a publisher who’d read a piece I’d written on the abolition of capital punishment. The publisher wasn’t interested in my thoughts on abolition of the death penalty so much as he was interested in an academic paper I’d authored in the summer of 2010 called In Remembrance of the Victims’ Final Image and its continuous projection via the Eternal Punishment Screen. Earning money from my writing was rare. When it happened I felt vindicated for the late nights and the increasingly poor posture. I was two-thirds of the way through the rough draft of a book unrelated to crime and social media when I received an email from the assistant warden at Rivière-des-Prairies. You have permission to visit Mr. Newman. Please understand that your visit was granted based upon your contribution to prisoner rehabilitation through your work on the EPS. Your visitation is scheduled for 14 August, _____ at 1 p.m. Is this acceptable to you? Yes, I replied via email. Thank you, assistant warden Tremblay.




Magnotta spoke English. Assistant warden Tremblay spoke English. I was grateful. I’d muddled through French class in high school, but I was more interested in the unobtainable classmate to the left and two seats in front of me than in proper conjugation. On the night before August fourteenth, I felt ill. I had trouble sleeping. Twice I woke when the bile burned my esophagus. The diagnosis, made ten years prior, was GERD. Omeprazole and ranitidine no longer helped. You’re on your own, kid. Death waited for me behind grey walls at Rivière-des-Prairies Detention Centre. The collective pieces of Lin Jun haunted my mind. Sleep, I told myself. Sleep. I turned the illuminated clock face away, took a sip of Canadian water. I pulled the covers over me. Something pulled them away from me. I sensed a presence directly behind me, flat against the hotel wall. When it wasn’t directly behind me it was slightly to my right. When I moved it moved. It mimicked my exact body posture, location and position. I tried opening my mouth to scare it away, but my mouth wouldn’t open. My eyes turned against me. When I closed them fireworks exploded against black velvet. When I opened them tracers streaked across my peripheral vision. The presence watched me from a dark corner of the room. It grunted like a depraved child. It slowly compressed into a black ball and moved under the bed. It breathed as I did. I did not look under the bed. I knew I would die if I did. I wished I’d brought a nightlight, a child’s comfort device. I’m afraid of death, of blood, of pain. That’s all it is.




The death penalty was abolished in the United States in 2020, due largely in part to my theoretical work on the Eternal Punishment Screen, or EPS. In the summer of 2010 I’d published a paper in Coalesce: The Science of Culture, a glossy Canadian magazine on future trends. The paper was called In Remembrance of the Victims’ Final Image and its continuous projection via the Eternal Punishment Screen. In the article I put forth the idea that capital punishment, which had been abolished in every developed country except the United States, was barbaric and costly, and placed undue stress on the North American economy, such as it was. Killing people is expensive. After studying exhaustive research I saw that it was much cheaper to imprison murderers for life than it was to execute them. I argued this point in my article. I substantiated it with figures, tables, resources and footnotes. I postulated that a much more fitting punishment would be a constant reminder of the crimes the perpetrator committed. I contacted a friend, Lawrence Zabriskie, who I’d known since college. He was a well-known neuroengineer who had a taste for Asian women and fast cars. I called Larry and asked him for suggestions on the paper I was in the process of writing. Was it possible to punish prisoners humanely via a continuous feed of repetitive images? I asked. Explain, Larry said. I informed him of an idea I’d been toying with, a continuous feed of images projected onto a screen inside a prisoner’s cell. The screen would be thin and indestructible, a digital blend of mica and onionskin. It would permanently rest on the wall opposite the prisoner’s bunk. As most murderers on death row in North America prior to 2020 were segregated in restrictive housing with little human contact for 23 hours per day, the mounting of the screen in a closed cell would not be an issue. Larry and I worked on it for months. Larry built a working model in his garage. We used various materials, most of them readily available and relatively cheap. We determined that the Eternal Punishment Screen, or EPS, would be constructed of a thin LED-like material. The EPS would measure 55.88 cm by 106.68 cm. It would be permanently fixed to the cell wall. Images on the screen would bleed onto the wall. The images would be projected from the back, much like the flat screen televisions of the early Aughts. Due to prisoner rejection, the material would need to be indestructible. Theoretically, it would be impervious to utensils, plates, and serving trays. Personal care items such as combs and toothbrushes would be harmless, causing no scarring or distortion of image. If the prisoner attempted to remove the EPS from the wall, electric shock would occur. The current would be at low dose, serving more as a deterrent. The EPS would produce low emissions and would be very cost-effective to operate. Each prisoner segregated in restrictive housing would receive programming reflective of their crimes. Programming could be changed or updated immediately by remote IT personnel. The images would be encrypted to prevent hacktivists from politicizing the images. Guards and other personnel visiting a prisoner’s cell equipped with an Eternal Punishment Screen would be outfitted with special Radio-frequency identification, an RFID chip, most likely installed in identification badges. When the guard or visiting personnel approached the prisoner’s cell, the specially-programmed RFID chip would temporarily disable the EPS. The images on the screen would go black. Guards would be spared permanent retinal and psychic scarring.




I first learned of the crimes Luka Magnotta perpetrated upon Lin Jun as everyone else did. I saw the news reports. Lin Jun was a person Magnotta had professed to love. I typed the words Lin Jun into Google Images and hit search. I was horrified by what I saw. I could not erase the images from my mind. I clicked on a link. I watched an eleven minute video titled 1 Lunatic 1 Ice Pick. My eyes were scorched. I had seen something I could not unsee. I watched the World Trade Center fall to the ground in a cloud of paper and fire. I watched the unedited July 12, 2007 Baghdad airstrike on YouTube. I watched the trailers of the Gulf War on a continuous loop in 1991. From these many ancient video feeds I have ascertained that the America I once knew is now dead, the experiment is over. I trembled at the idea of being American. When I watched 1 Lunatic 1 Ice Pick on an Internet troll site I trembled at the idea of being human. Magnotta’s crimes were permanently burned into my synapses, a Polaroid image I couldn’t shake. What if those images, the last images of the victim’s body, could be played on a continuous loop in a prisoner’s cell, the prisoner only able to escape the images by closing or removing his eyes? It’s a lot cheaper than capital punishment, Larry said. I agreed. We worked on the EPS until a product began to appear that scared not only us, its parents, but scared nearly every person we tested it on (very few, in secret, comprised of mostly-compliant relatives and loved ones).




Shortly after I published the article In Remembrance of the Victims’ Final Image and its continuous projection via the Eternal Punishment Screen in Coalesce, I received an email from the ASX Digital Security Corporation. The name sounded innocuous. I figured they wanted to sell me a home security system, although my email host had not identified it as spam. I clicked on the message, expecting a barrage of bland images. Instead I received an email of a somewhat questionable nature. Its contents were troubling because The Corporation had mistaken my satire, an obvious nod to Kafka’s In the Penal Colony, for truth.


Dear Mr. _____,

We are writing today to advise you that we are very interested in the ideas you recently published in Coalesce: The Science of Culture. We find your ideas intriguing. The Eternal Punishment Screen, also known as the EPS, that you and Mr. Lawrence Zabriskie have devised and that you have described in great detail in your article In Remembrance of the Victims’ Final Image and its continuous projection via the Eternal Punishment Screen may very well end capital punishment in the United States once and for all. I truly have hope for you and your Nation. Your prototype EPS device is much cheaper than execution and far more humane. The victim’s family and loved ones may be somewhat emotionally compensated by knowing that the prisoner who perpetrated a crime against their loved one is constantly reminded of the horror and suffering they have irreparably caused. The prisoner’s mental illness with regards to subjection to a perpetual twenty-four hour loop of images they can neither escape nor shut off is of little or no consequence. Their life would be spared; there would be no death penalty. The victim of their crime would be with them constantly, a head on a digital stick, as it were. We would like to compensate you for your published ideas and for your contribution to the overall betterment of humanity. If you and Mr. Zabriskie agree to this, total and vested ownership of the Eternal Punishment Screen, global naming rights, intellectual property and copyright, and the right to manufacture, distribute and sell will rest solely at the discretion of the ASX Digital Security Corporation. We truly look forward to hearing from you!


Regards,



Thomas Silverstein
Chief Information Officer
ASX Digital Security Corporation




I replied via email. Talk to Larry Zabrieski, I wrote. I don’t want anything to do with it.





Magnotta was thin and sickly. His doll head hair was blonde and nearly translucent. Old plastic surgery scars ran along his hairline. There were plastic surgery scars behind his cheekbones. He had turned forty on July 24th. Eleven years had passed since his initial incarceration for the murder of Lin Jun. He sat behind a glass partition in a small cubed room. He was very small, a petite wisp of an idea rather than a man. An electronic device allowed us to talk to each other without use of a receiver. You are Mr. _____? Magnotta asked. Yes, I replied. I don’t receive many visitors, he said. I guess it’s to be expected, he said. He straightened a wrinkle on his jumpsuit. You created the EPS? Magnotta asked. I came up with the idea for it, yes, I said. It was more of a joke. It’s no joke, Magnotta replied. I live with it every day. I can’t shut it off. It just plays and plays. It’s driving me crazy. I have nightmares. I wish I could take it all back. But you can’t, I said. You took a life and now you are what you are. What am I? Magnotta asked. I don’t know, I said. That’s something you’ll have to discover on your own. You know I’m in restrictive housing twenty-three hours a day? Magnotta said. Yes, Tremblay advised me. What is it you wanted to ask me? We only have thirty minutes. A guard standing behind Magnotta and to the left of him shifted his weight slightly from his left foot to his right. Just some basic questions for a manuscript I’m working on about violence. Sorry, but do you feel social media contributed to your need to murder? I asked. Magnotta grunted. I don’t know. I guess I wanted the attention. Would you still have murdered Lin Jun if you didn’t have access to social media? I don’t know, Magnotta said. Maybe. I’m not sure. Why did you kill someone you professed to love? I asked. Magnotta twitched in his seat. I never said I loved him. Who said that? I don’t know. Because I was bored, he said.




I asked Magnotta a few more questions. His answers were I don’t know. I’m not sure. Maybe. I wasn’t getting anywhere with him. His hands were behind his back. I couldn’t determine if he was bound. I focused on the lapels of his jumpsuit. I couldn’t remember watching him walk in. Was he already seated when I sat down? I grew frustrated. I wanted to elicit an emotional response from him. Are you friendly with the guards? I asked. I rarely see the guards, he said. How do you deal with loneliness? You know, in the usual ways. You masturbate? I asked. Magnotta snorted. Do you miss physical contact? I asked. Magnotta leaned forward and spat on the glass that separated us. The guard yanked Magnotta from his chair and electronically incapacitated him. A moment later another guard came from behind a white door. The interview is over, he said. All three men disappeared behind the white door. The glass separating me from the interview room went black. The outline of Magnotta’s saliva slowly drifted down the glass and gathered in a pool on the sill. I stood and waited for the door to open. There was a buzz, followed by a mechanical rotation and a heavy click. A guard stood before me. Please follow me, Mr. _____. A taxi drove me from Rivière-des-Prairies Detention Centre to my hotel. I checked my email an hour after I arrived at the hotel. Assistant warden Tremblay asked me if my interview was satisfactory. Yes, I replied. I thought it best to be polite.





I felt restless. I took an elevator down to the hotel bar and ordered a drink. I watched anonymous couples whisper lies to each other. Hotel guests shoved black food into their mouths. Grey steaks flopped on china. Glasses clinked, silverware announced its presence. The contents of my stomach bubbled just below my ribcage.




I came away from the interview learning very little of Luka Magnotta. I did not ascertain his motives for murdering Lin Jun. I did not understand his need to record his crimes. He looked like a human being, he moved like one. I wasn’t sure I was convinced. I was disgusted when I watched his eleven minute hackfest, but my fingers typed the title into the search engine. Is Magnotta a morally repugnant purveyor of dark goods? Am I just as guilty for consuming them? Society only creates a theatre of the absurd when there is an audience present to bear witness.




Two weeks after the Magnotta visit I received a handwritten letter in the mail. The envelope was thick, heavy. How did he obtain my address? It unnerved me. Then I thought, well he is in prison. He has a lot of time for this kind of thing, to find others. I’m on the outside and I have so little time; the world continues to tell us faster faster, faster is better, more more more, more is better. But these are lies, of course. I want less these days, just to preserve my sanity, if nothing else. The world takes too much, and tells me I’m not giving enough. But then, that’s how it’s always been.




Hey –

I only wanted to be beautiful. That’s all I ever wanted. You can see that in my famous movies. Not like your movies, this thing that plays constantly in my room. You are sick. Why did you do this? You are worse than death! I only wanted to be beautiful, to give the world beauty. You can’t deny that. I created my face to match my inner beauty. My Soul is strong! I guess it’s gone now, I don’t know. I can’t see myself anymore. Maybe it’s a good thing. I’ve got this stupid electronic thing of yours always to keep me company. What were you thinking? And the noises, oh god the noises.


I petitioned the warden for a pet mouse. I want a mouse, maybe a small grey one or a brown one, just a beautiful thing I can hold in my hand. I need something to take care of. You know me, I love people. But I have a feeling he will say No because my whole life has been one big No, people always saying no! My dad said no to me from the time since I was born. My parents were big on no. Always no sayers! The only ones who said yes were my fans, the beautiful people who loved my famous movies. They were the ones who kept me alive when things were not so good.


I’m sorry our time was so short. It wasn’t nice. You maybe think I’m rude. I just didn’t feel beautiful that day. I felt like him, always lying. Dirty and stupid, with his stupid little eyes. I did not like his eyes. And he wasn’t a big thinker, he had such a little brain! I wanted to give people beauty and pleasure and he never could see that. He was just an experiment, a way to waste time. But what did he know? He studied computers! Computers aren’t people. But that’s such a waste of time, thinking about that. I think I did what was best. Most people aren’t beautiful, they only steal beauty from others, so maybe they should be erased? I felt it was best. There are enough computer people in the world! They turn on, they turn off, and nothing changes. We should all have those sleep modes! That way when you are boring me I can turn you off or put you to sleep.


Hey when you come visit me again, I will be much better behaved. Give me some more notice so that my face will be perfect for you. I got a mirror but it doesn’t work, these stupid lights are on all the time and the mirror doesn’t work. I’ve complained but they don’t care. They just care about schedules and making it seem like they know what they’re doing. Just like him. I wonder if you are like that too when you are alone? I don’t know, people are always found to be disappointing to me –


You see I can find you! When I want to be extra beautiful I can find things. I only wish I could find an off switch for you. As a note on side, I see you do not live in apt 208. That’s good! It would be a real cut up if you did! Ha ha! And I’m sure my love for people did come through, but maybe they took me away too fast and you didn’t get it. It’s all the same to me, I’m happy and comfortable and I have a small plant in my room that I water. It keeps me busy and my books, too. I only wish that you had never created this terrible mirror, it really gets to me and the visions I have at night are not pleasant. But then that’s what you wanted, wasn’t it? To remind me? That I’ve been bad? Well mister we are all bad, because we are born without god. But that’s ok, I still love you. I love everyone that our great god has made! Someday when I get out perhaps we can meet up and I can take you out to dinner. We’ll go somewhere good, where they have steaks and drinks. And knives. Jk!

L –




Luka Magnotta committed suicide on August 5, 2026. He was forty-four. He left a simple note. I can’t get these images out of my head. I am punished for love. He committed suicide by hanging. He used a prison bed sheet. His suicide was neither recorded nor televised. Control, Alt, Delete.





This article originally appeared in the October 2023 issue of American Prison.

Permission kindly granted to Dennis Cooper DC’s to reproduce.




*

p.s. Hey. James Nulick, commonly known around these parts as d.l. James, is the author of the very excellent novel 'Distemper', and, excitingly, the quite soon forthcoming novel 'Valencia' from Nine Banded Books, and this weekend he has gifted the world in and around DC's with a fantastic story that I anticipate and hope you will enjoy spending your weekend with. Please pass along your takes and thoughts to James in the comments arena between now and Monday. Thank you, and thank you, generous James. ** David Ehrenstein, Ah, not an Arnold fan then. Understandable. Not at all sure if I could articulate why I, very mildly, sometimes am myself. ** Etc etc etc, Hi. Cool, glad you're giving 'MC' your shot. You're not bothering me in the slightest. I'm just, yeah, given to painful slowness. Well, obviously very curious what you'll get from the new gif/lit collection. Thank you for the pleasant thoughts. I'm on it. The tunnel's light is becoming visible. Great weekend! ** Sypha, Oh, you're one of those, ha ha. I really need to write my long daydreamed of brainy, proselytizing screed about Weezer someday, I guess. I can't remember the first 'Expendables'. Heck, I can't even remember the second one. ** Steevee, Oh, that's most excellent, i.e. your review of the new Joshua Oppenheimer. I'm very, very excited to see that. Everyone, Steevee has weighed in critically re: the new film 'The Look of Silence' by Joshua Oppenheimer, who last directed the amazing film 'The Act of Killing', of which the new film is a companion piece. Very exciting! Enter Steevee's opinion and writing here. Ick, but glad the doctor has that sorted that diagnostically and put you on the mending path at least. Haven't listened to War since the old days, and I think I'm more familiar with their brief early period when Eric Burdon was fronting and collaborating with them. ** Thomas Moronic, Thanks, man, glad you found it potentially helpful. Congrats and hailing ticker tape about your summer officially beginning! Make that hot, unscheduled world your oyster. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Very sensible. Well, okay, hm, then redirect my compliment and insight towards your ability to project saintly patience when composing and executing a comment. Not just a light, but a burning bright one! ** Bill, Hi. I'm so very happy that you, of all people, enjoyed it, B. I wish you weren't too swamped too, obviously. I did also note and like that bit at the video's end, interesting. The Dutch animatronics guy ... oh, yeah, sure. I haven't seen his film stuff. I don't suppose some fan has made a reel of his input only. May your weekend surprise and delight you. ** Misanthrope, Hi. Yeah, at least half to two-thirds of them have lyrics, but, like Bill said, the singing/lyrics often don't kick in for a while. I know, or at least think, that, for instance, 'I Love You in your Tragic Beauty', 'Just a Lifetime', and 'The Lovers (Part 2)' have lyrics that run pretty much all the way through the songs. I disagree. I think our bits are tied for first place. You're starting to give me a geese phobia, just so you know. Not that that's a bad thing. Heck, it might save my life someday. I like natural landscapes too, don't get me wrong. Love them even at more times than not. But there's this little twist inside the effect of fake landscapes. It's like ... escorts versus boyfriends. It's like ... Britney versus Amy Winehouse or one of those other sincere emoter types. ** MANCY, Oh, I do, tons, man! What are you working on? How's stuff up there where you live, etc.? ** Well, then. I leave you in the capable 'hands' of Mr. James Nulick's talent for the foreseeable future or at least until, as you might have guessed, Monday.

Catherine Breillat Day

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'The central preoccupation of Catherine Breillat’s work is the sexuality of women. That is, in and of itself, no major accomplishment. How many male directors, by contrast, are not in some way preoccupied with women? Of course, the preoccupation with female sexuality in most forms of cinematic production is marked by exhibitionism rather than introspection; it reassures where it could tear apart. Even in a film like Brian De Palma’s Femme Fatale (2002), any effort to revise the image of the figure of the femme fatale along feminist lines is undercut by extensive displays of the female body. In this case, the femme fatale may no longer be the cause of the noir hero’s downfall, but she is still the source of visual pleasure. Although, Breillat’s films also tread a very fine line between exhibitionism and introspection—she admits that they are, after all, always about sex—they do so under the guidance of a fundamental difference in conception. In Breillat’s own words: “I take sexuality as a subject, not as an object.”

'But, of course, this formulation is only half right. Her films are, as I have said, uniquely concerned with a woman’s understanding of her own sexuality. The representation of this sexual reckoning encompasses a wide range of issues including the adolescent obsession with the loss of virginity, in films like Une vraie jeune fille (1975) and 36 Fillette (1988); a woman’s (possibly) masochistic relation to sex in Romance (1999); and the seemingly unbridgeable sexual and emotional gulf between an older woman and a younger man, in Parfait amour! (1996) and Brève traversée (2001). However, the films are also sexually explicit; contrary to Breillat’s assertion, sex is an object as well as a subject in her films. Moreover, the sexual acts on display in Breillat’s films are not only explicit, they are often unsimulated, a characteristic of her films that has contributed to her unflattering (in my view) international reputation as the auteur of porn. For Breillat, the visual display of sex is inseparable from the representation of the consciousness of her female characters. The representation of sex is also central to the development of her visual style—a level of innovation that has been grossly overlooked in contemporary film culture. And herein lies both the challenge and the controversy of her work.

'Catherine Breillat’s preoccupation with the representation of female sexuality began very early in her artistic career. Breillat began as a writer, publishing her first novel, L’homme facile, when she was just 17. Ironically, the book was banned for readers under the age of 18 in France for its explicit and transgressive sexual content, thus initiating Breillat into a lifetime of controversy. Breillat would quickly gain a reputation as the female De Sade, the new Bataille—a purveyor of transgressive sexuality. Breillat went on to publish seven novels and one play, many of which she would herself adapt to the screen.

'Breillat transitioned to filmmaking in 1975 with an adaptation of her fourth novel, Le Soupirail, retitled Une vraie jeune fille. Standing in between this transition from novelist to director was a brief, but no doubt highly influential, acting stint. In 1972, Breillat appeared in Bernardo Bertolucci’s Last Tango in Paris, playing a character named Mouchette. Bertolucci could not have chosen this name more wisely, drawn, as it is, from the eponymous protagonist of Robert Bresson’s Mouchette (1966). Bresson’s Mouchette, a very young, utterly disenfranchised girl who is both sexually precocious, sexually abused, and suicidal, was likely a template for many of Breillat’s own tortured adolescents. But Bertolucci’s film, which centers on the emotional anguish of an American man in Paris who begins an anonymous and transgressive affair in a empty, dilapidated Paris flat, was no doubt a major influence on Breillat’s representation of sexuality. Indeed, in 36 Fillette, Breillat cast Jean-Pierre Léaud, who also had a brief role in Last Tango in Paris. And, of course, the censorship problems that Bertolucci faced with Last Tango in Paris, for its representation of sodomy, amongst other things, were ones with which Breillat would become increasingly familiar.

'Breillat’s first film did not see the light of day until twenty-five years later, when it was released in France in 2000. Une vraie jeune fille was shelved by its backers for, once again, its transgressive look at the sexual awakening of an adolescent girl. And it is not so hard to see why. Une vraie jeune fille is an awkward film. It represents Breillat at her most Bataillesque, freely mingling abstract images of female genitalia, mud, and rodents into this otherwise realist account of a young girl’s sexual awakening. In her summary of Susan Sontag’s defense of a literary strain of pornography, Linda Williams offers what stands as an apt description of Breillat’s approach in Une vraie jeune fille, where an “elitist, avant-garde, intellectual, and philosophical pornography of imagination [is pitted against] the mundane, crass materialism of a dominant mass culture.” There is no way, in other words, to integrate this film into a commodity driven system of distribution. It does not offer visual pleasure, at least not one that comes without intellectual engagement, and, more importantly, rigorous self-examination—hence Breillat’s assertion that sex is the subject, not the object, of her work.

'The difficulty of Breillat’s work—that is, her steadfast refusal to make conventionally erotic images, or films, for that matter, which don’t deal with sex at all—has lead to a myriad of censorship problems. Her second film, Tapage Nocturne (1979), which also details the sexual longing of a young woman, and was adapted from her novel of the same name, also met with censorship. Although the film was released, access to it was forbidden to anyone under 18. But it was with the release of Romance in 1999 that Breillat would face censorship internationally, when the film was either banned altogether in some countries, or given an X rating. It was a situation Breillat spoke out about when she declared that, “censorship was a male preoccupation, and that the X certificate was linked to the X chromosome.” Breillat’s statement was echoed in the French poster for the film, which features a naked woman with her hand between her legs. A large red X is printed across the image, thus revealing the source of the trouble: a woman in touch with her own sense of sexual pleasure.

'Romance, and the world-wide discourse about pornography that erupted in the wake of its release, best typifies the challenge and the interest of her work. Romance is about a woman, Marie, whose boyfriend refuses to have sex with her. Her frustration leads her to a series of affairs in an effort to not only find pleasure, but seemingly to arrive at some better understanding of her own desire. The film is sexually explicit, and features, as do many of Breillat’s films, acts of unsimulated sex, hence the many accusations leveled against Breillat that she is a pornographer. Indeed, Breillat willfully courted such accusations by casting Rocco Siffredi, a famous Italian porn star, as one of Marie’s lovers. Moreover, Marie’s sexual encounters are marked by a sense of sadomasochism. Indeed, after having her baby she winds up with a man who is also the principal of the school where she teaches, having blown up her apartment and her boyfriend (who is also, presumably, the father of her child) on the way to the hospital.

'Romance was banned in Australia upon its release in January 2000. In his review of the Office of Film and Literature’s (OFLC) report on the film, Adrian Martin describes the reason for the ban. And in so doing, Martin arrives at precisely the thing that makes Breillat’s films so difficult, and so interesting. Martin surveys the censors’ objection to the scene where Marie is solicited by a man in the hallway of her building. In this scene, a man offers Marie twenty-dollars to perform cunnilingus on her, to which she assents without saying a word. Of course, more occurs, as Marie is turned over (or turns over) as her perpetrator then enters her from behind. As he continues, Marie seems to sob, and when he leaves, she shouts that she is not ashamed. Martin notes that in describing the scene, the writer of the OFLC report says that “he orders Marie to turn over,” and that she tries to “scuffle away.” Martin replies, “…I did not see Marie try to ‘scuffle away’ during the scene, or be forced to turn over.” Martin’s point is that this writer’s language reveals his own moral response to an image, as opposed to what is actually present in the image: “One of the most interesting things about Romance is the way in which it inscribes in its own material ambiguous designation of obscenity.” In other words, neither Breillat nor Caroline Ducey (Marie) give us any concrete signs of her own response to what is happening. We cannot walk away confident of Marie’s outrage, only our own, at best. Indeed, the whole scene begins with a voice-over where Marie proclaims that it is, in fact, her fantasy to be taken this way. Yet, the act itself is inscribed into the realist space of the plot, thus blurring the line between fantasy and reality that is signaled by Marie’s voice-over.

'As such, when we watch this act on screen, and many others like it, we are left only with what we think of what we see. Moreover, we project our own values back on to the screen, as Martin further notes when he cites a review of the film that describes the scene between Marie and Rocco Siffredi as a “humiliating affair.” Of course, there is, to my eyes, no signs of humiliation in that scene. If anything, it is a frank and very physical depiction of a sexual encounter. Siffredi asks Marie if he can have anal sex with her, an act that stands as the possible source of said humiliation. However, this possibility is complicated by the fact that she very calmly consents, on the condition that he first continue to make love to her. Moreover, the scene begins with Marie telling Siffredi, while holding a soiled condom, how men like to keep things hidden—how easily they are disgusted. The only sign of shame in the sequence comes when she admits to Siffredi, in the middle of sex, that she only sleeps with men that she doesn’t like. If there is shame here, it is the viewer’s.

'And that’s just the point. Breillat exposes us to sexual encounters, often very volatile ones, but does not tell us what to think about them. She does not, I believe, judge her characters, or their desires. But that does not mean, however, that Breillat’s images and characters are necessarily removed from moral consideration. Rather, the opacity of her characters, the material designations of obscenity, to borrow Martin’s phrase, only make the films more meaningful. For example, in À ma soeur! (2001), Breillat tells the story of the rivalry and sexual awakening of two teenage sisters. One sister, Elena, is fifteen, thin and attractive; the younger sister, Anaïs, is twelve, overweight, and subject to Elena’s hostility. À ma soeur! ends with a scene in which Elena, Anaïs, and their mother are driving on the highway. Out of nowhere a man jumps through the windshield, killing both Elena and her mother. It is a brutal and surprising conclusion to a film that has otherwise moved along very slowly, in a pace closer to De Sica’s Umberto D than the horror genre that it ends up resembling. After murdering Elena and her mother, the killer takes Anaïs into the woods and rapes her. The scene is horrifying, and is made more so (for this viewer at least) by the apparent lack of signs of resistance or even possibly distress on the part of Anaïs. Breillat and her brilliant young performer, Anaïs Reboux, resist the signs of terror that typically accompany such scenes. As Anaïs is escorted out of the woods by the police, we hear them say that Anaïs claims that no rape took place. And it is important, I believe, that we do not hear Anaïs say this. For one, by refusing coded signs of distress, Breillat, it seems to me at least, asks us to try to see this rape from Anaïs’ perspective. That is, Anaïs does not want to view it as rape, but as a sexual experience, especially as her age, body, and attractive older sister have previously stood in the way of her sexual desires. But this is not to excuse the rape. At all. Rather, by courting ambiguity, Breillat presents us with a complicated, if very controversial, portrait of the psychology of a young girl. We can judge this scene any way that we choose. We will likely be outraged and saddened. We can even condemn Breillat as the creator; however, our condemnation would, I believe, miss the point. For there is no question that what we see is rape; the question is why would this young girl want to see it otherwise. And our answer to that will not be found in easy, moralizing statements.

'This resistance to simple, and therefore limiting, character comprehension, is the key to Breillat’s films, all of which stands as efforts to represent the consciousness of her female characters in extremely complex terms. She does not afford us the easy access to the mind of women that one finds in mainstream film where a woman’s consciousness is always externalized.'-- Brian Price, Senses of Cinema



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Stills











































































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Further

Catherine Breillat @ IMDb
CB interviewed @ Film Comment
'Fairy Tales & Insomnia: On The Films of Catherine Breillat'
CB's films @ mubi
'On Set With Catherine Breillat: “I never really invent anything”'
Book: 'Pornocracy,' by Catherine Breillat
Catherine Breillat's books in French
Catherine Breillat @ Facebook
CB @ Pyramide Films
'Catherine Breillat attaquée en justice par Christophe Rocancourt'
'The joy of sex'
'Scénario catastrophe'
'Filming the Impossible'
'Catherine Breillat: "My sister's scared to see it"'
'Catherine Breillat: "All true artists are hated"'
'Catherine Breillat’s Transfigurative Female Gaze'
'Catherine Breillat’s politically incorrect films'
'Sex is a Hen Decapitated: Bluebeard and the Eroticism of Catherine Breillat'



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Extras


CATHERINE BREILLAT on INTIMACY


Rencontre Catherine Breillat


Interview with Catherine Breillat & Isabelle Huppert


Chantal Akerman + Catherine Breillat. Film Theory. 2001.


discovering CATHERINE BREILLAT and her movies



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Quotes

'I am the pariah of French cinema. That can make things complicated for me: it is never easy to drum up a budget or to find a distributor for my films in France. Some people refuse even to read my scripts. But it also makes me very happy because hatred is invigorating. All true artists are hated. Only conformists are ever adored.'-- Catherine Breillat

'In gonzo sex you see a camera man, and the camera man tells to the actors, 'move like that,' and a woman who is being screwed slides to the camera and asks 'am I ok like this' and they make fun... I think this is the high point of censorship. They are afraid of even a minimum of narrative. No wonder that the French cinema director Catherine Breillat, who tries to do precisely this both -- emotionally engaging serious drama, plus full sex -- cannot somehow really penetrate the big market.'-- Slavoj Zizek

'As a woman, I respect Breillat on many levels. I don't think most women have the balls to even murmur the subjects she portrays on film. What fascinates me the most is that she went from being a writer to a filmmaker, grabbing the bull by the horns, so to speak, and really nurtured her art. She didn't let anyone else misinterpret or do it for her. Only time will tell if American cinema will catch on and be comfortable with sexuality - as John Waters said it's the only thing American films haven't done ... it's the last thing left.'-- Sasha Grey

'(Breillat's) filming and selling actors, rather than words, produces an argument that splits her Dworkinite theory into less passionate responsibilities that is seemingly at odds with the narrative. And her writing feeds off that exposure. Breillat is one of the few filmmakers who looks hard at what her films throw back at her. Her work is extremely self-referential but not blind to the salesmanship, collegiate dialectics or feminist lore she seeks to expand beyond Unica Zurn and Shirley Mills.' -- Peter Sotos



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Interview




I want to ask you initially about how you began as an actor, and then you moved on to writing and directing.

No, I began writing a novel. In English it was called A Man for the Asking. In France it was called L’homme facile. I wrote it at sixteen years of age, but it was forbidden in France for anyone under eighteen. So it was illegal for me to read the book I had written.

An absurd situation, so you began writing and then you took up acting?

A little, very little acting, it was when I was very young, twelve, about that time. I wanted to become a moviemaker, director, a writer, singer, actress, but, in fact, my two real passions are literature and cinema. I wanted to be behind the camera, not in front of the camera. My sister became an actress, yes, because of me, and she was successful as an actress in France.

I have read quite a few interviews with actors who have worked with you. They have enormous admiration for you and loyalty. I am interested that you say you work behind the camera, and you prefer that, so how do you work with your actors; what is you role?

It’s like a …a translation of me…

A transference?

Yes, but I don’t know how I do it. Suddenly I feel this urgency and I have to make something. And, I have success but I don’t know how. I think I am very tactile so I create very precise choreography. I talk with the actors a lot, but when I directed this sort of big spoof, which is Sex is Comedy, I asked Anne Parillaud, who I worked with on this film and who is a big star (because I think that I was too demanding with her), so I asked her if I was, am, too méchante (nasty), aggressive.

Never, she said to me. You never tell me what I have to do, just what I have to be. Always I ask my actors to propose something and when they have finished I say to them, that is exactly what all the other actors would do in this text so it’s not interesting. They have to propose to me something else, something that surprises me. It is very boring for me if they do exactly what I have written. If they do that, I have just published a scenario, like a novel. So, if I shoot the scenario it will be because there is something else in the script and they have to convince me of what this something else is.

That they find within themselves?

That they find in their passions.

Do you rehearse your actors a lot or do you work more spontaneously on the set?

I never rehearse. If the first time is good, I always keep the first take, even if it is contrary to what I want. If it is not good, I cannot shoot it again, because what I want is grace. I don’t like work—it’s a joke of course, but work is ugly, work always appears, your have to have grace. For me a good “shoot” is what I call a magic shoot. Everything is perfect, completely. The way we shoot, the way the actress plays, how it is framed, the time, and the musical time—that is a magic shoot. For me, I always want to have this and it’s completely marvellous. There is some kind of magic. Magic happens.

You shoot very fast too?

Yes. And I think more and more quickly, especially the last two films I made, Barbe bleue and La belle endormie. La belle endormie was shot in costume and in nineteen days.

That is surprisingly fast for costume dramas.

Yes, like that, you are never bored. How can I say? You are always under pressure to do a scene because you are directly exposing others. It is best when you are in danger—a mise en danger—and you have to respond.

Going back to your upbringing, I’ve heard you mention that you had quite a strict, catholic upbringing, and I wonder about your artistic life as a kind of rejection of that orthodoxy. For example, critics often talk about Anatomie de l’enfer (Anatomy of Hell, 2004) as being a film that re-addresses issues around religious symbolism.

Anatomie de l’enfer for me is not against religion. For me it is a theorem to explain and prove what is “obscenity” because every time censorship prosecutes obscenity, they can never say what it is. So I make a théorème, like a philosophical théorème, or half philosophic, half mathematic, and, of course, I fall on the evidence that obscenity is… a dream ideal. And, of course, not a catholic one. In fact, at the time I was making this film my assistant, who is Jewish, said to me, you are very courageous to make a film that is against the Torah.

The interdiction on images?

Yes, but I said no. It’s my ‘scene’ as I had never read the Torah. So when I was editing Anatomie de l’enfer I would go to the metro and I would read the Torah in the metropolitan, the subway, and yes, it was the same world because this world is…even if you are not Jewish, not Catholic, not Protestant, it’s an orthodox society.

So I made Anatomie de l’enfer because in Romance (1999) I didn’t go to the extreme limit because courage failed me—to really see sex in a movie that is not a pornographic one. In fact, I failed, Oshima did it, but with Romance, j’ai échoue, I failed. With Anatomie de l’enfer, there was only one subject. You cannot escape.

I find Anatomie de l’enfer a very powerful and surprising film, but my students, particularly my female students, much prefer Romance. As twenty-year-olds, this is the film they want to talk about. For me, Anatomie de l’enfer goes places that Romance fails to, and I also feel some anxiety about the depiction of female masochism. Can you talk about why you think you failed with Romance?

My obsession, I think, is that it should not be forbidden to see the sex of a woman because it is not an obscenity. I very much like the Courbet picture, L’Origine du monde. It is an art picture. It is not pornographic photography and everyone understands the difference, but they cannot say why and censorship boards are also unable to say why.

With Romance when Marie [played by Caroline Ducey] has the mirror between her legs, in fact, in the script at the time I make her look at her sex and then she brings up the mirror and looks at herself. This sex cannot have this face. This face cannot have this sex and yet, I didn’t shoot the female sex. I just shot the triangle so I was very prudish. I did not go to the final demonstration, the expression of which, as an artist, I should have. When I saw Romance for the first time, I wanted to make another one immediately, a remake. But the business of the cinema is not artistic, so it is not possible, as you do not have the money to say I want to make that scene again, but not the same. This scene is one for heaven, now I want to make one in water, in the ground, in mud.

Because Romance is uneven and, in fact, although I wanted to make Anatomie de l’enfer of the ground [earth], it is also uneven and I don’t know why because I went exactly where I wanted to go with this movie. It is a very ecstatic movie for me.

I want to ask you about the two things that always come up in relation to your work, sex and violence. You’ve already talked about issues around sexuality, women’s sexuality, and so I want to ask you about not just what you are trying to do in your films in relation to sexuality, but also in relation to society. I ask this partly because last weekend I met two women who were documentary filmmakers. They were making a documentary about 40 years of feminism in France, the MLF (le mouvement de libération des femmes). They said they felt a need to make this documentary because of the lack of interest—and urgency—on young women’s behalf and their sort of denial and rejection of feminism. They said they needed to make this film because things have improved but they haven’t improved greatly.

The times go backwards. It is horrible. We go backwards. In France, we are currently speaking about the liberty to wear the hijab, the thing is that some women in Islamic countries have no rights. Why? It [The hijab] is a symbol of something horrible. When you look at Benazir Bhutto, she was one of the guides of the Islamic republic, but she didn’t wear it like that; she wore something more normal like a scarf, something coloured. But it is not about death, it’s about life. This sort of religion is now about death, the death of women.

The Algerian women are completely dressed in white, but it is not a light white cloth, it is like the material for a catafalque. And now they say in France, the country of liberty, that I can wear the hijab, but I cannot walk in the streets with the croix gammée (nazi cross). It’s symbolic, the same symbol. Now in Afghanistan the women have no right to study, no right to work and so they are treated like beasts without a doctor, without a veterinaire. They even face lapidation.

You cannot wear a symbol as it is forbidden. It is not a question of religion, no it’s forbidden to have croix gammée and the hijab should be forbidden. Yes, a scarf like Benazir Bhutto, but not covered. It is ostensibly a symbol of the enslavement of women.

What do young French women who are not religious think of their own situation?

They think that when their mothers, a mother like me, was a feminist, it was against men and that we were wrong because we were furious about men. They do not understand that all they have now is because of what we did and it was not “against” men.

Younger men now I think are nicer, less macho, not all of them, but many of them. Feminine and masculine are a part of all of us and they are now composed in a new man with all the characteristics—with the strength and the beauty of weakness.

In an article in Télérama that invited directors like yourself to discuss violence in the cinema, you talked about how, when you use violence, you want it to be like an axe, something very quick and sudden, like it can be in life. I think this is how the violence works at the end of A ma sœur (Fat Girl, 2001). There is also enormous animosity towards violence in the cinema, a fear that it might be contagious.

No, because when I was young and I could never go outside with friends. I only had permission to go to the bibliothèque. And I read many, many books. There I found a book, an Iranian anthology. It was called a book of pleasure and as a twelve year old, I made a very close study of each of its chapters. All the passages I liked the most at this age and up to twenty years old where all written by men and were so violent against women. But it was my culture, my artistique culture. I liked this in an artistic way and they were very great artists. It was marvellous in literature but it may not be marvellous in life.

Me? I was also a very great fan of Dostoevsky—all is dark, but when it’s like that you can project yourself into the darkness and you never have to act. Everybody has some attraction for violence. If you read about it, if you see it, it’s not violence. It can better help you understand yourself because you have a sort of shame, everybody knows that you/we have an attraction for violence, but it’s just a thought. It is not reality and I think that fiction is made to put in front of you what you are. But it is fiction; it’s not fact, so I think this creates great confusion for censorship.

In Romance I make a rape scene, even in A ma soeur. Many journalists said to me, a rape, a violent rape, is a crime. Therefore it is of course normal that the scenes would be censored, either cut from the film or the film forbidden. I say, no, it’s fiction; everybody says that women have a fantasme of rape. You can have the fantasy, you can want to be raped in your fantasies, but the reality is a crime. The crime is not a fiction, it’s a reality, not a thought—fiction and reality is not the same thing.



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11 of Catherine Breillat's 18 films

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Tapage Nocturne (1979)
'Solange is a film director and mother, living with her husband with whom she periodically makes loves. She's very attached to a bisexual actor, Jim, although this doesn't stop her for finding other lovers, often up to two or three times a night. Solange is looking for mad love. She soon meets and falls heavily for Bruno, a director like herself. They set up severe codes to determine their behavior and they endlessly re-enact " the first time ". It's like trying to relive the same dream, night after night.... Perhaps the film is more personal for Catherine Breillat. Is it a record of her working methods during this period? Her films have always dealt with sexuality and maybe the filmmaker was simply using the medium to express her own thoughts and experiences. I love that; a great deal of why I love the cinema is the auteur theory which states the director is the author of a film; that links in an artist’s work can be found from work to work. Breillat surely qualifies, and I can see how this film influenced her later work.'-- collaged



Trailer


Opening credits



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36 fillette (1988)
'Catherine Breillat’s 36 Fillette follows a few crucial days in the life of Lili, a 14-year-old French girl whose body is ripe and whose soul is troubled by an unhappy home life. One night during a miserable family vacation at a tacky resort, she talks her older brother into taking her to a disco and there she begins a series of risky flirtations with older men. We have caught her at a moment when her unhappiness has coincided with her sudden discovery of her sexuality and the power she can have over men. With a boldness born of anger and naivete, heedless of danger, she sets out to manipulate a man. Her psychological motivations are hinted at in a scene where her father is uncaring, but this is a film of observation, not analysis. The movie is controversial because of the difference in age between the two lovers, and because of the girl’s blatant, if naive, sexuality. But Breillat has made a film far more complex than it might seem. This film depicts the sort of situation one “should” deplore, but the film is so specifically about two particular people that it slips away from convention and just quietly goes its own way.'-- Roger Ebert



Excerpt


Excerpt



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Parfait Amour! (1996)
'Another frank depiction of sexual obsession from Breillat which, despite several instances of full frontal nudity, is not particularly graphic until a short orgy sequence in the film's latter stages. While the film is rather long and talky, it is also surprisingly compelling, aided considerably by its two excellent central performances, particularly Isabelle Renauld's; its semi-documentary/flashback framework, then, leads to a shocking, inevitable finale. Having a relationship with a beautiful, mature woman is every young man's dream and, for a while, Francis Renaud lives it but before long, his unwillingness to let go of his chauvinistic male friends (who are prone to graphically describe their sexual prowess in front of his female companion) and seriously commit to his relationship is too heavy a burden for them both; ironically, it is Renaud's attempt at taking on the role of father-figure (by taking an interest in Renauld's teenage girl) which triggers off the differences between them and which keep escalating as the film goes along.'-- Marco Gauci



Excerpt


Excerpt



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Romance (1999)
'It must have been a while since mainstream cinema audiences were invited to view a young woman submitting to be tied up by an older man (her employer, as it happens), the cord tied between her legs, through her vagina and pulled up good and tight: the unlovely impress of rope on genitalia represented in unforgiving close-up. Then the young woman interrupts the process in tears, not through rage at phallocentric oppression in life and art - nothing so dated - but rather anger at her own timid refusal of this adventure and naturally a vertiginous sense of the profound "enigma" in female sexuality. This is the burden and the song of Romance, Catherine Breillat's opaque essay in eroticism, a film controversial for its explicit portrayal of male arousal: a pink orchard of erect penises. The film is often discussed in the context of censorship, but in fact it has not been cut: the BBFC have earnestly decreed that this is because it is "very French". (Breillat herself caused a minor sensation at the Edinburgh Film Festival this summer, declaring that censorship was a male urge, and the X certificate was linked to the X chromosome.)'-- The Guardian



Trailer



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Fat Girl (2001)
'The original title of my film was always Fat Girl, but since I am French and not at all bilingual, it was for reasons more mysterious than an anglicism. Of course, the little girl was fat, but the title also expressed an autism, a wall between her and the world that the foreign language reinforced. And she was not designated by her name but by her representation, “fat” and “girl.” It was something completely different from the French of “grosse fille”; it was musical sounding, like a jazz tune. Of course, it is easy to name someone imaginary in this way, but as for the little girl who was going to play the role, Anaïs Reboux, it was hard to tell her that, according to the title itself, she had to be fat and that that was part of the reason she had been cast. So I shot the film under two working titles, Two Girls and Two Sisters, because the other sister, Roxane Mesquida, whose character I was not fond of while working on the screenplay, was gaining in importance. Clearly, it was also a story about sisters, a story about “a soul with two bodies.” But I always wanted to come back to the first title. In my head, it had never changed.'-- Catherine Breillat


Excerpt


the entire film



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Sex Is Comedy (2002)
'Perhaps no filmmaker has filmed sex more seriously and introspectively than Catherine Breillat, whose film Sex Is Comedy takes as its subject her own filming of sex scenes. When Breillat films sex, it’s as part of her movies in which the intimate aspects of the characters’ sex lives are integral to the story. This gives her work a substantial advance on that of most filmmakers. Censorship has fallen and sex dominates the media, yet most directors, even now, dutifully conceal their characters’ intimacy—and I don’t just mean the actors’ bodies—with a prudish aversion. This is both a failure of imagination and a failure of audacity. As Breillat makes clear in Sex Is Comedy, nothing puts actors, and filmmakers, on the line as sex does. For most contemporary filmmakers, sex is merely signified through the most banally pneumatic conventions. It’s as if directors and viewers were fulfilling a tacit agreement—don’t ask, don’t tell. Breillat’s films prove that without intimacy a story is a hollow shell, a diversion, a sham. Sex Is Comedy reveals the high price of that intimacy for the director, for the viewer, and, especially, for the actors. Which leads to another question: Is it all worth it?'-- The New Yorker



Trailer



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Anatomy of Hell (2004)
'With Breillat’s latest film, Anatomy of Hell, Breillat wishes to free the woman – her body, her psyche, her soul – from this repressive nature of a fearful, contempt-filled – and religious – society by initiating the man, by allowing him to understand the other, and thus understand himself. “The woman in this film represents a Christ,” says Breillat, using iconography for the means of the iconoclast, allowing her female protagonist to take the “fall” so that this man might understand more. And as such, Breillat’s protagonist in Anatomy of Hell must exist as a savior, a martyr of society’s inflicted masochism, and a woman who must face a sort of “mutilation” of fluids, of “falling apart” – a diegetic manner that Breillat compares to Pasolini. And like Salò, “This film will elicit a strong hateful response because it’s about the forbidden aspects of religion,” Breillat warns. “… looking at a woman’s body like this is really scary for people. And I think that the film will have a violent reception. I’m sure that hate and anger will come from the fundamentalist establishment. I hope that they won’t kill me.” Whether or not Anatomy of Hell’s salvation disgusts or enlightens will depend on the viewer’s own reaction to the characters own actions – to the film’s presentation of their sexuality, their orifices, and their own eventual transcendence, and the moral implications of such a “transgressive” ascendance. Like a feminine or egalitarian adaptation of Nietzsche’s concept Übermunsch (which literally means over-human) Breillat wishes to save her characters from their own religion-generated-nihilism – and thus destruction – by beautifying their natural, organic bodies and lives, and liberating their withered selves from a declining, malevolent society –a society in which the characters are enslaved and guilt-ridden with “chastity” and “virtue,” and thus inherent impurity. Breillat’s feminist salvation is to make what is deemed impure beautiful, and to make what is sin – what is filth – a work of art, of righteousness, a Nietzscheian transvaluation.'-- David Durnell



Trailer


Opening scene



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The Last Mistress (2007)
'In 2004, Breillat suffered a stroke and was confined to a hospital bed for five months, but remarkably a year to the day after the stroke, she began shooting her latest film, The Last Mistress. Based on a novel by Jules-Amédée Barbey d’Aurevilly, the film is a period piece and thus a significant departure for Breillat whose previous work has all been deeply grounded in modernity. The story is nevertheless as erotically charged as ever: aristocratic Ryno de Marigny (Fu’ad Aït Aattou) marries the rich, devoted Hermangarde (Roxanne Mesquida) but is lured into infidelity by La Vellini (Asia Argento), the earthy courtesan whose primal desires match his own. The Last Mistress has all the trappings of a period piece – lavish costumes, elaborate sets, etc. – but Breillat makes the material her own by transforming Barbey d’Aurevilly’s 19th century novel into a vital and highly sexual noir. Breillat gets brave performances from her two ill-fated lovers, Aattou and Argento, and the stylistic grandeur perfectly offsets the emotional intensity of the film, which is Breillat’s most exciting so far if not also her best.'-- Filmmaker Magazine



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Excerpt



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Bluebeard (2009)
'Reviews have called Breillat’s film a feminist retelling, but that seems to me to be a knee-jerk reaction to a woman making a film of a fairy tale in which women are threatened with death but come out victorious and rich. It’s a popular label, and thus is becoming a lazy one. Angela Carter’s retelling, the 1979 short story titled “The Bloody Chamber,” had more obviously feminist elements—the mother coming to her daughter’s aid rather than brothers, the intense examination of marriage and sex—but Breillat’s aiming for something slightly different. The film can be described as feminine, to be sure. Rather than questioning the man’s actions towards the woman, which is more akin to what I’d call feminist, the film is occupied with women’s actions towards and feelings for each other, and how they interpret their relationships with other women via the roles they cast for themselves. Both Marie-Catherine and the little reader, Catherine (haha, get it?) are jealous of their sisters, Anne and Marie-Anne (yeah, you get it), and their sisters are jealous of them. But there’s also kinship and dependence in their relationships, which are severely tried by the end of the movie. Marie-Catherine and Catherine cast themselves in roles: the wife, the heroine, in order to break out of the role of “sister,” and one-up both their own sisters and their previous notions of their own identities. This is why it’s important that Marie-Catherine seem much too young for marriage–not because of any perverse desires on Bluebeard’s part, but because she is a reflection of a younger girl’s tendency to imagine herself as the heroine of a stories, to overcome the restraints of childhood and imagine herself independent and important.'-- Something to Read for the Train



Trailer


Excerpt



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The Sleeping Beauty (2010)
'The Sleeping Beauty is hardly a shocking film when one considers the gamut of Breillat’s envelope-pushing filmography, but as Breillat exhibited in her adaptation of Bluebeard, Perrault’s fairytales hardly need much indulgent tinkering to be troubling. There already exists a wealth of material in fairy tales ready for exploring what they already imply about gender, sexuality, power, desire, justice, etc. The Sleeping Beauty is also far from a totalizing deconstruction of the fairy tale, and until its final few moments is perfectly satisfied with only its own colorful irreverence, but I’m not sure if that’s something these tales need anyway. What Breillat does instead is much more slight and interesting: she’s having fun with the genre and story as her template to toy with, then uses that foundation to engage with human sexuality as a subject, ultimately turning the otherwise tired “loss of innocence’ narrative on its head.'-- Film School Rejects



Trailer


Excerpt



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Abuse of Weakness (2013)
'French filmmaker Catherine Breillat makes her most personal film yet with Abuse of Weakness (Abus de faiblesse), a largely autobiographical account of the filmmaker’s stroke, which left her partially paralyzed, and how a notorious con man she had lined up for her first post-hospital film project swindled her out of a lot of money. Based on Breillat’s book of the same title, Abuse of Weakness (a French legal term) casts Isabelle Huppert as the film director Maud, Breillat’s alter ego, and French rapper Kool Shen as Vilko, a character based on Christophe Roconcourt, the man who managed to get thousands of dollars from Breillat for business ventures and the repeated promise he would eventually pay it all back. Like in all of the director’s work, psychologically reductive readings of the characters are absent, though intriguing performances give audiences a way into the material.'-- Hollywood Reporter



Trailer 1


Trailer 2






*

p.s. Hey. ** Scunnard, Hi, Jared! Dude, congrats on the degree. I caught the scoop on FB. Sweet! Now what? How are you going to work it? Or how do you intend to rest on your laurels? I'm good, thanks. Would like very much to see that LPD vid you made, if you find it. Yeah, you know me, I saw that abandoned Disney World thing. You know, call me a picky daydreamer in its regard, but I wish the Photoshopping or whatever had been a little less, I don't know, garish? But it was cool. It locked my imagination into override mode. Thank you, buddy. ** David Ehrenstein, That handwriting thing looks interesting, thank you. Everyone, this looks like an interesting essay type of thing about handwriting that comes courtesy of Mr. E. ** Damien Ark, Hi, Damien. Back when he was newly arrested or still on the loose, I can't remember, I looked at a few of the porns he was in. What struck me was how incredibly self-conscious and fake and how unsuccessfully and obviously manipulative of the viewer he was trying to be. I remember thinking that I had never seen someone be less successfully a porn star than he. That was very interesting. I wonder if I saw the one you've described. I can't remember. How are you? ** Gregoryedwin, Hey, maestro! Great to get to lay my eyes on your commentary-directed language! Did you have fun and/or success on your travels? Aw, dude, such a super book: yours. It was an honor to get the chance to have it represented here. Love, me. ** Thomas Moronic, Morning, T! ** H, Hi. You're moving to NYC! That's so cool and exciting! Wow! I'm sure however the book dispersal thing works best for you will be nothing but generous. ** Bill, My weekend was mostly but not entirely work-filled, and that went well, so I think it was a pretty okay weekend. I haven't seen the showreel, no, but I will go find it post-haste. The 'Lovers' album is very good. It's a quieter one in general, a bit more song oriented than the others. It's quite good, I think, yes. New piece, great! Excited for the demo! ** _Black_Acrylic , Hi, Ben. Really happy that you also like 'Motion Sickness'. I hope so too, re: her speech making productive waves. ** Steevee, Hi, man. I wish the Laibach that's playing North Korea was the much, much more focused and powerful Laibach of the 1980s, but I'm not sure that Laibach would have been so publicity seeking above all as to seek out the gig. ** James, Oh, gosh, it was nothing but a supreme boon for this place, and thank you ultra-much! I've barely read Patricia Highsmith. Just mostly excepts and pieces here and there, so I'm no help. It's strange, though, 'cos Paris-visiting d.l. Bernard Welt was talking to me about her when I ate pizza with him just last night, and I was thinking that I really need to give her a deserving college try. ** MANCY, Hi, Stephen. Thanks for giving those tips to James. And to me, inadvertently. Renovating your house ... am I crazy to think that sounds kind of like interesting if back-breaking fun? Either way, godspeed re: you getting back to your art. ** Statictick, Hi, N. No, I won't be in Chicago for the shows unless something weird happens. The new LA dates are not yet decided, I don't think, but I'll have to ask Gisele. Not until sometime next year, for sure. Awesome about the post! Thank you, man. I'm all bated coffee breath over here. My back is back to being its usual self. ** Douglas Payne, Hi. I saw your message, and I'll write to you today to set that up. Sorry, I got overwhelmed with work this weekend. You think, about the desensitizing? I go back and forth about that. But, for all my fascination and fantasy dwelling re: the horrific, I'm very thin-skinned about the real thing and visual documents of the real thing. There was this place in LA for a while called Museum of Death that had what you would expect -- mostly serial killer art, memorabilia, genocide photos, 'Faces of Death' videos, etc., and I got so nauseous being there amidst all of that lionized real horror that I had to leave. But I'm weird. ** Okay. I had done a mini-ish post about Catherine Breillat's work here about five years ago or something, but I decided to do a full-fledged thing. Enjoy, I hope. See you tomorrow.

Spotlight on ... Kathy Acker Great Expectations (1983)

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'Acker proposes that her text is the other text.

'The connection between reading and community is continually formed by writing that's disrupting real-time events.

'“Influence” is past-tense, hierarchical. But this is as space.

'My sense of Acker's view of present time1: being held to the absolute present (change) is pain — time as it is change is pain. Because “I'm scared.”

'Acker's project is always her autobiography as completely separated from its subject. All parts in her narratives, regardless of which character is speaking are in the same speaking voice: identical, seems to come from the same person. Thus ‘character' is random, nonintentional plot — yet irretrievably formed — by violence (“art is elaborating violence”). This ‘is' the author but only as if mechanistically recreating her autobiography continually, as if speaking to someone else while making up random events-the-future only as ‘spoken' off-the-cuff. The impression is that ‘written' (as if it were ‘speaking' only) doesn't exist there (in hers, though the narrative exists only as text). The text is thus secret as revelation of a life that is made-up (though the events are real/her life or real in the sense of being [in], rather than referring to these, events from other texts).

'That is, ‘character' and action for Acker is only imitation-of-oneself-as-if-she-is-speaking-unpracticed-monologue (an action), not in conversation (conversation is secret). The actions (events of the narrative) are connectives, go on as if spurts of whim which cause each other, cause new details thus not connected as crafted pre-formed (‘written') plot. There are only new connectives arising. The dots in the paragraph of which the above sentence is part indicate that an original exists from which she supposedly quotes, part of which is apparently omitted; proposes her writing is ‘only' appropriation (of other texts, of herself, of historical events), the text not distinguishable from ‘its' original.

'Referring to Cézanne and the Cubists, Acker makes her space in Great Expectations the same as theirs: “They found the means of making the forms of all objects similar. If everything was rendered in the same terms, it became possible to paint the interactions between them. These interactions became so much more interesting than that which was being portrayed that the concepts of portraiture and therefore of reality were undermined or transferred.” “A narrative is an emotional moving.” Something exists at all when it is part of a narrative.

'This is what I call (in my writing) minute movements within even tiny events which are the reality that's being undermined that's ‘baseless' because they're only interactions (not entities). Acker was a Buddhist.

'While in her oeuvre the most constant reference to action is to fucking or being fucked, fucking is evoked/takes place as social-political rather than physiological sensation (secret). Even that which is physiological is caused by the outside, done to one/ though one acts in the outside/ one does not ‘express' (be in or write) direct sensation: “After the jeeps and the lorries left, wounded on the forehead now by the rising sun, I placed my sackcloth jacket over my face.”

'Sensation is outside as a means of making the compressed space of psychological, physiological and landscape the same. A passage beginning “Now we're fucking”: is entirely speaking: what she wants, speaking of herself as an image of a blonde tiger all over him, speaking what's happening and isn't happening, as if radio sex. A disembodied voice is sensation. The reader, as writer also, is not able to see or feel because the text has substituted for feeling. The text/speaking is between it. Text has to be the conditions only.

'Acker's subject is subsumed in her (own) social construction in a benign, even beautiful universe. She constructs the site/sight/space (characters) of herself being enslaved because this is occurring outside in the social realm everywhere, is realistic. The surface of the writing-as-the-enslavement is not palatable (the enslavement-as-the-writing is intended not to be palatable), one can not bear to be in it (the writing destroys itself, can't be dwelled in, changes the reader).

'It is free by its nonintentional mode.

'Plagiarism is: not allusion. It is ‘the same.' The author as plagiarist: complete transformation as one's own appearance is invasion, destruction — that's continual realignment of oneself as same one. Autobiography as fiction: the same one is consuming (as being) itself.

'If the transformation of one is continual it is the destruction of that one in only its appearance again.

'In that sloth is non-transformative, it is a relation to terror still without being changed by it.'-- Leslie Scalapino



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Further

Kathy Acker Info Page
'Kathy Acker: Where does she get off?'
Kathy Acker answers survey questions
Kathy Acker interviews The Spice Girls
Guide to the Kathy Acker Papers
Kathy Acker @ Ubuweb
Kathy Acker sound records @ PennSound
'Looking back at Kathy Acker'
'Death (and Life) of the Author'
'DISCUSS RULES BEFOREHAND
'Poète Maudit', by Chris Kraus
'The gift of disease', by Kathy Acker
Video: Excerpt of Reading by Kathy Acker (1977)



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Extras


Trailer: WHO'S AFRAID OF KATHY ACKER?


Kathy Acker poetry reading SF 1991


Kathy Acker interviews William S. Burroughs - part 1/3


Kathy Acker on Bookworm


The MEKONS & Kathy Acker ~ Live


Kathy Acker Documentary by Alan Benson New York 1984



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Interview
from The Review of Contemporary Fiction




Ellen G. Friedman: You say Burroughs was an influence on you.

Kathy Acker: Oh, he was my first major influence.

EGF: Can you say what in Burroughs you admire or took?

KA: I came out of a poetry world. My education was Black Mountain school—Charles Olson, Jerry Rothenberg, and David Antin were my teachers. But I didn’t want to write poetry. I wanted to write prose and there weren’t many prose writers around who were using the ways of working of poets I was influenced by. Their concerns certainly weren’t narrative in any way. Any prose writer, even if he doesn’t use narrative the way narrative is traditionally used, is concerned with narrative. I mean the reader has to go from A to Z and it’s going to take a long time and that’s narrative. There’s no way to get around it; that’s the form.

EGF: So Burroughs seemed a natural?

KA: There were Burroughs and Kerouac really. I love to read Kerouac, but Burroughs is the more intellectual. He was considering how language is used and abused within a political context. That’s what interested me. The stuff about his relation to women and all that was really secondary for me to the main work, books like The Third Mind. I was also looking for a way to integrate both sides of my life. I was connected to the St. Mark’s poetry people at the time. On the one hand, there were the poetry people, who were basically upper-middle-class, and on the other, there was the 42nd Street crowd. I wanted to join the two parts of my life, though they seemed very un-joinable. As if I were split. Of course, the links were political.

EGF: There were political links between the two?

KA: A political context was the only way to talk about the link between them. Politics was the cause of the divergence. It was a question of class and also of sexism. The poetry world at that time denied any of this. Sexism wasn’t an issue, class, forget it. Money—we’re all starving hippies—ha, ha. That I worked in a sex show for money was not acceptable at all, despite the free love rhetoric. Warhol was interested in this convergence as well. I knew Warhol people who worked on 42nd Street, and his was the only group that did any crossover. He was interested in sex hype, transsexuals, strippers, and so forth.

EGF: What attracted you to 42nd Street? Was it the political aspect you’ve been talking about?

KA: Oh, no. I just needed money. I had gotten out of university and I had nowhere to go.

EGF: Where did you study?

KA: At Brandeis, at UCSD, and a little bit at CCNY and NYU.

EGF: We were talking about your early work.

KA: The first work I really showed anyone is The Childlike Life of the Black Tarantula by the Black Tarantula.

EGF: What about the schizophrenia?

KA: The thing about schizophrenia: I used a lot of autobiographical material in Black Tarantula. I put autobiographical material next to material that couldn’t be autobiographical. The major theme was identity, the theme I used from Tarantula through Toulouse The Adult Life of Toulouse Lautrec by Henri Toulouse Lautrec, the end of the trilogy. After that, I lost interest in the problem of identity. The problem had for me in a sense been solved by that trilogy. After that I became interested in plagiarism, working with other texts.

EGF: Here’s a quote from Don Quixote having to do with semiotics: “What it really did was give me a language with which I could speak about my work. Before that I had no way of discussing what I did, of course I did it, and my friends who were doing similar work—we had no way of talking to each other” (54). Was there an element of truth in that statement?

KA: I felt very isolated as part of the art world; I could never talk about my work until the punk movement came along and then I don’t know for what reason or what magic thing happened, but suddenly everyone started working together along the same lines. But we had no way of explaining what we were doing to each other. We were fascinated with Pasolini’s and Bataille’s work, but there was no way of saying why or how. So Sylvdre Lotringer came to New York. His main teachers were Felix Guattari and Gilles Deleuze and somewhat Foucault. That’s why I didn’t want to use the word “semiotics” because it’s slightly inaccurate. He was looking in New York for the equivalent of that scene, which wasn’t quite Derrida’s scene. What he picked on was the art world, especially our group, which was a kind of punk offshoot.

EGF: Who was in your group?

KA: Well, there were my friends Betsy Sussler who now does Bomb, Michael McClark, Robin Winters, Seth Tillett. People who started the Mud Club. Bands were forming, such as X, Mars, and the Erasers. Bands with ties to Richard Held, Lydia Lunch. Very much the Contortions. It was that amalgam of people he found. Sylvere started hanging out at our parties. I knew nothing about Foucault and Baudrillard. He’s the one that introduced me to them, introduced everyone to them. But it wasn’t from an academic point of view, and it certainly wasn’t from a Lacanian point of view or even from Derrida. It was much more political. When he did the Italian version of Semiotext(e), there were very close ties with the Autonomia, and it was very political. When I went over to France, friends of mine were working on the Change. There were connections with Bifo and Radio Alice. For the first time we had a way of talking about what we were doing. It was mainly, for me, about decentralization, and in Don Quixote I worked with theories of decentralization.

EGF: Why did you leave the United States’

KA: Not enough money.

EGF: You do better in London?

KA: It’s better for a writer over there, for me. There I’m an accepted writer. Here it was very difficult; I was sort of an adjunct to the art world. I really wanted to get out of New York. I’m forty now. I was thirty-seven when I got out of New York. I was feeling that my life was never going to change. To survive in New York is to be a little like those hamsters on a wheel, the wheel turns faster and faster. I felt that either I had to get very famous, just as a calling card for survival—I had to write movie scripts, I had to do whatever writers do here, write for popular magazines—or else become like a lot of poets I know who are very bitter about their poverty. And I don’t want either alternative. What I like is the middle ground. And I didn’t see it possible to maintain that middle ground.

EGF: And it is possible in London?

KA: Yes, very much. It’s a very literary society and you don’t want for money, so you can work.

EGF: Do you have a community of writers whose style of writing is closer to yours than here in America?

KA: No, I’m probably closer to people here. I have very good friends in London, but the people I’m closest to are people here.

EGF: Are there any contemporary writers whose work you’re following?

KA: Oh, I have friends who are wonderful writers, Lynne Tillman and Catherine Texier—very much I’m following their careers. I was just sent a novel by Sarah Schulman called After Dolores, which is just lovely. But what would be the feminist writers in England don’t interest me that much.

EGF: Too ideological?

KA: No, it’s not too ideological; I don’t mind that. It’s just social realists. It’s too much, “I used to be in a bad nuclear marriage and now I’m a happy lesbian.” It’s diary stuff and the diary doesn’t go anywhere, and there’s not enough work with language.

EGF: I understand.

KA: I’m more interested in the European novel now. Pierre Guyotat. Duras’s work interests me. Some of Violet Leduc, early Monique Wittig. Some of de Beauvoir’s writing, Nathalie Sarraute. There is Elsa Morante’s writing. Luisa Valenzuela, I like her work. Laure, an amazing woman, a French woman from the upper classes who lived with Georges Bataille. Wonderful writer.

EGF: Who’s your ideal reader? Do you like academic readers?

KA: I don’t imagine an ideal reader. I write for myself and maybe my friends. Although as I give readings more and more, I try and see whether the audience is bored. So in that way I’m aware of an audience. There has to be that element of entertainment, really, or there’s limited accessibility. So I do care about my readers in that way. Academics-I feel a confusion about academia.

EGF: You’ve come out of the academy?

KA: I absolutely hate it. I’ve seen too many English departments destroy people’s delight in reading. Once something becomes academic it’s taken on this level—take the case of semiotics and postmodernism. When I was first introduced to the work of Foucault and Deleuze, it was very political; it was about what was happening to the economy and about changing the political system. By the time it was taken up by the American academy, the politics had gone to hell. It became an exercise for some professors to make their careers. You know, it’s just more of the same: the culture is there to uphold the post capitalist society, and the idea that art has nothing to do with politics is a wonderful construction in order to mask the deep political significance that art has—to uphold the empire in terms of its representation as well as its actual structure.

EGF: What do you mean “in terms of its representation”?

KA: In England, for instance, they don’t have an empire anymore though they refuse to recognize that fact. What they have is Milton and Shakespeare. Their attitude toward Milton and Shakespeare is something absolutely incredible. A person’s speech denotes his class. Those who can speak Milton and Shakespeare are in the top class. It goes much deeper than this, obviously. The literary world should be a populist world, it should be the world in which any class can discuss itself. But in England, the literary world is so tightly bound to the Oxford-Cambridge system. Nobody but nobody gets into that world who hasn’t come from Oxbridge. It assures that its representation of itself always comes from its upper class. And those classes which are not Oxbridge have no representation of themselves except in fashion and rock and roll. So you really have two Englands: one represented by fashion and rock and roll, and one is the literary representation.

EGF: That’s very true for England, but not so much for the U.S.

KA: No, but I still think there’s an element of it here.

EGF: Fostered by the academy?

KA: Yes.



___
Book

Kathy Acker Great Expectations
Grove Press

Most conceptual writers were poets, but apart from the self-published volume Politics, Acker stuck to prose. She started to explore various techniques – combining porn with passages stolen from Dickens and Proust, having her characters change gender and identity, having real characters drift in an out of the action and interspersing the text with diary entries and drawings. Small presses started to pick up on her work and the burgeoning punk scene required literary expression. Acker developed a reputation, won a Pushcart Prize for one of her short stories and decided to see what would happen if she appropriated not just a few passages from other writers but a whole work of literature. Great Expectations was the result – Acker’s reimagining of the Dickens classic as something else entirely. Porn, whores, gender-shifting narrators: Charles would have spun in his grave, which was probably the point. While no one who read it claimed to understand it, Great Expectations perfectly captured the boundary-breaking spirit of the New York late 70s-early 80s New Wave scene.'-- Lit Reactor

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Excerpt

I Recall My Childhood

My father’s name being Pirrip, and my Christian name Philip, my infant tongue could make of both names nothing longer or more explicit that Pip. So I called myself Pip, and came to be called Pip.

I give Pirrip as my father’s family name on the authority of his tombstone and my sister—Mrs. Joe Gargery, who married the blacksmith.

On Christmas Eve 1978 my mother committed suicide and in September of 1979 my grandmother (on my mother’s side) died. Ten days ago, it is now almost Christmas 1979, Terence told my fortune with the Tarot cards. This was not so much a fortune—whatever that means—but a fairly, it seems to me, precise psychic map of the present, therefore: the future.

I asked the cards about future boyfriends. This question involved the following thoughts: Would the guy who fucked me so well in France be in love with me? Will I have a new boyfriend? As Terence told me, I cut the cards into four piles: earth water fire air. We found my significator, April 18th, in the water or emotion fantasy pile. The cards were pointing to my question. We opened up this pile. The first image was a fat purring humper cat surrounded by the Empress and the Queen of Pentacles. This cluster, travelling through a series of other clusters that, like mirrors, kept defining or explained the first cluster more clearly, for there is nowhere to go there is no lineality of time time is an almost recurring conical, led to the final reversed (not consciously known by me) image: during Christmas the whole world is rejecting a male and a female kid who are the genetic existing scum. To the right of this card is the Star. To the left is the card of craftsmanship which due to hard work succeeds.

Terence told me that despite my present good chance and my basic stability and contentedness with myself (the fat purring human cat), or alongside these images, I have the image or obsession of being cast out and scum. This powerful image depends on the image of the Empress or the image I have of my mother. When I was very young, even before I was born, my mother hated me because my father left her (because she got pregnant?) and because my mother wanted to remain her mother’s child rather than be my mother. My image of my mother is the source of my creativity—I prefer the word consciousness. My image of my hateful mother is blocking consciousness. To obtain a different picture of my mother, I have to forgive my mother for rejecting me and committing suicide (the picture of love, found in one of the clusters, is forgiveness transforming need (the savage red untamed lion) into desire (the two lovers hold the cup of fantasy with the caduceus of health).

Due to this hatred, the cards continued, I separate women myself into virgin meditation (The Hierophant) or the scantiest lust, rather than believing I can be fertile.

I have no idea how to begin to forgive someone much less my mother. I have no idea where to begin repression’s impossible because it’s stupid and I’m a materialist.

I just had the following dream: In a large New England-ish house l am standing in a very big room on the second floor in the front of the mansion. This room is totally fascinating, but as soon as I leave it, I can’t go back because it disappears. Every room in this house differs from every other room.

The day after my mother committed suicide I started to experience a frame. Within this frame time was totally circular because I was being returned to my childhood traumas totally terrifying because now these traumas are totally real: there is no buffer of memory.

Pure time is not time but a hole. Inside this hole everything that happens not comes back again because it never went away. There is no time; there is. Beyond the buffers of forgetting (memory is a tool of forgetting) which are our buffer to reality: there is. As the dream: there is and there is not. Call this TERROR call this TOTAL HUMAN RESPONSIBILITY. The PIG I see on the edge of the grave is the PIG me neither death nor social comment kills. This TERROR is divine because it is real and may I sink into IT like I sink into the arms of any man who shows me affection.

How can I start talking to you about my mother? I’m a mass of memories feelings anxieties. Fuck psychology. My mother was a drunk. Oh I’m so embarrassed to admit my mother was drunk. She didn’t drink four bottles of Schmirnoff’s a day. She’d down one glass of Scotch fall down on her hands and knees and crawl dog-style across the floor to the nearest available man place her head on his left thigh. Then she’d try to crawl up the man. Didn’t give a damn if her husband who drank four bottles of Jack Daniels a day when she wasn’t watching him saw her.

I grew up in this typical American family life.

My mother often told me, though not directly cause when she wasn’t drunk she pretended sex and booze are non-existent, the only cause in this world is money. You shouldn’t care if an action is right or wrong: you should totally care if you’re going to profit monetarily from it. Grow up, kid.

The helmeted bow-legged stiff-muscled soldiers trample on just-born babies swaddled in scarlet violet shawls, babies roll out of the arms of women crouched under POP’s iron machine guns, a cabby shoves his fist into a goat’s face, near the lake a section of the other army cross the tracks, other soldiers in this same army leap in front of the trucks, the POP retreat up the river, a white-walled tire in front of three thorn bushes props up a male’s head, the soldiers bare their chests in the shade of the mud barricades, the females lullabye kids in their tits, the sweat from the fires perfumes reinforces this stirring rocking makes their rags their skins their meat pregnant: salad oil clove henna butter indigo sulfur, at the base of this river under a shelf loaded down by burnt-out cedars barley wheat beehives graves refreshment stands garbage bags fig trees matches human-brain-splattered low-walls small-fires’-smoke-dilated orchards explode: flowers pollen grain-ears tree roots paper milk-stained cloths blood bark feathers, rising. The soldiers wake up stand up again tuck in their canvas shirttails suck in cheeks stained by tears dried by the steam from hot train rails rub their sex against the tires, the trucks go down into a dry ford mow down a few rose-bushes, the sap mixes with disemboweled teenagers’ blood on their knives’ metal, the soldiers’ nailed boots cut down uproot nursery plants, a section of RIMA (the other army) climb onto their trucks’ runningboards throw themselves on their females pull out violet rags bloody Tampaxes which afterwards the females stick back in their cunts: the soldier’s chest as he’s raping the female crushes the baby stuck in her tits

I want: every part changes (the meaning of) every other part so there’s no absolute/heroic/dictatorial/S&M meaning/part the soldier’s onyxdusted fingers touch her face orgasm makes him shoot saliva over the baby’s buttery skull his formerly-erect now-softening sex rests on the shawl becomes its violet scarlet color, the trucks swallow up the RIMA soldiers, rainy winds shove the tarpulins against their necks, they adjust their clothes, the shadows grow, their eyes gleam more and more their fingers brush their belt buckles, the wethaired-from-sweating-during-capture-at-the-edge-of-the-coals goats crouch like the rags sticking out of the cunts, a tongueless canvas-covered teenager pisses into the quart of blue enamel he’s holding in his half-mutilated hand, the truck driver returns kisses the blue cross tattooed on his forehead, the teenager brings down his palm wrist where alcohol-filled veins are sticking out. These caterpillars of trucks grind down the stones the winds hurled over the train tracks, the soldiers sleep their sex rolling over their hips drips they are cattle, their truck-driver spits black a wasp sting swells up the skin under his left eye black grapes load down his pocket, an old man’s white hair under-the-white-hair red burned face jumps up above the sheet metal, the driver’s black saliva dries on his chin the driver’s studded heel crushes as he pulls hair out the back of this head on to the sheet metal, some stones blow up.

My mother is the most beautiful woman in the world. She has black hair, green eyes which turn gray or brown according to her mood or the drugs she’s on at the moment, the pallor of this pink emphasizes the fullness of her lips, skin so soft the color of her cheeks is absolutely peach no abrasions no redness no white tightness. This in no way describes the delicacy of the face’s bone structure. Her body is equally exquisite, but on the plump or sagging sides because she doesn’t do any exercise and wears girdles. She’s five feet six inches tall. She usually weighs 100 pounds even though she’s always taking diet pills. Her breasts look larger and fuller than they are because they sag downwards. The nipples in them are large pale pink. In the skin around the nipples and in the tops of her legs you can easily see the varicose veins breaking through. The breast stomach and upper thigh skin is very pale white. There’s lots of curly hair around her cunt.

She has a small waist hands and ankles. The main weight, the thrust, the fullness of those breasts is deceptive, is the thighs: large pockmarked flesh indicates a heavy ass extra flesh at the sides of the thighs. The flesh directly above the cunt seems paler than it has to be. So pale, it’s fragile, at the edge of ugliness: the whole: the sagging but not too large breasts, the tiny waist, the huge ass are sexier MORE ABOUT PASSION than a more-tightly-muscled and fashionable body.

My mother is the person I love most. She’s my sister. She plays with me. There’s no one else in my world except for some kind of weird father who only partly exists part out of the shadow, and an unimportant torment I call my sister. I’m watching my mother put on her tight tawny-orange sweater. She always wears a partially lacey white bra that seems slightly dirty. As she’s struggling to get into a large white panty girdle she says she doesn’t like girdles. She’s standing in front of her mirror and mirrored dresser. Mirrors cover every inch of all the furniture in the room except for the two double beds, my father’s chair, and the TV, but they don’t look sensuous. Now my mother’s slipping into a tight brown wool straight skirt. She always wears tight sweaters and tight straight skirts. tier clothes are old and very glamorous. She hitches her skirt up a little and rolls on see-through stockings.

She tells me to put on my coat and white mittens because we’re going outside.

Today is Christmas.

Huge clean piles of snow cover the streets make the streets magical. Once we get to the park below the 8th Street Bridge I say to myself, “No foot has ever marked this snow before.” My foot steps on each unmarked bit of snow. The piles are so high I can barely walk through them. I fall down laughing. My mother falls down laughing with me. My clothes especially the pants around my boots are sopping wet. I stay in this magic snow with the beautiful yellow sun beating down on me as long as I can until a voice in my head (me) or my mother says, “Now you know what this experience is. You have to leave.”

My mother wants to get a strawberry soda. Today my mother’s being very nice to me and I love her simply and dearly when she’s being very nice to me. We’re both sitting on the round red vinyl turn-able seats around the edge of the white counter. My mother’s eating a strawberry soda with strawberry icecream. I see her smiling. A fat middle-aged man thinks we’re sisters. My mother is very young and beautiful.

At camp: males string tents up along a trench filled with muck: slush from meat refuse vomit sparkle under arching colorless weeds, the soldiers by beating them drive back the women who’re trying to stick their kids in the shelter of the tents, they strike at kick punch the soldiers’ kidneys while the soldiers bend over the unfolded tent canvas. Two males tie the animals to the rears of the tents, a shit-filled-assed teenager squatting over the salt-eroded weeds pants dust covers his face his head rolls vacantly around his shoulder his purple eye scrutinizes the montage of tents, a brown curlyhaired soldier whose cheeks cause they’re crammed full of black meat’re actually touching his pockmarked earlobes crouches down next to a little girl he touches her nape his hand crawls under the rags around her throat feels her tits her armpits: the little girl closes her eyes her fingers touch the soldier’s grapejuice-smeared wrist, from the shit heaps a wind-gust lifts up the bits of film and sex mag pages the soldiers tore up while they were shitting clenched the shit burns the muscles twisted by rape. Some soldiers leaving the fire wander around the tents untie the tent thongs they crawl on the sand, the linen tent flaps brush their scabies-riddled thighs, the males the females all phosphorescent nerves huddle around the candles, no longer wanting to hear anything the teenagers chew wheat they found in the bags, the kids pick threads out of their teeth put their rags on again stick the sackcloth back over their mothers’ tits lick the half-chewed flour left on their lips

My mother thinks my father is a nobody. She is despising him and lashing out at him right now she is saying while she is sitting on her white quiltcovered bed “Why don’t you ever go out at night, Bud? All you do is sleep.”

‘’Let me watch the football game, Claire.’’ It’s Sunday.

‘’Why don’t you ever take Mommy out, Daddy? She never has any fun." Actually I believe my mother’s a bitch.

“You can’t sleep all the time, Bud. It isn’t good for you.”

“This is my one day off, Claire. I want to watch the football game. Six days a week I work my ass off to buy you and the kids food, to keep a roof over your head. I give you everything you want.”

“Daddy, you’re stupid.” “Daddy, you don’t even know who Dostoyevsky is.” “What’s the matter with you, Daddy?”

My father makes my flesh slime.

Daddy’s drunk and he’s still whining, but now he’s whining nastily. He’s telling my mother that he does all the work he goes to work at six in the morning and comes back after six at night (which we all know is a joke cause his job’s only a sinecure: my mother’s father gave him his first break, a year ago when the business was sold, part of the deal was my father’d be kept on as ‘manager’ under the new owners at $50,000 a year. (We all know he goes to work cause there are drinks and he doesn’t hear my mother’s nagging.) He’s telling my mother he gave her her first fur coat. My father is never aggressive. My father never beats my mother up.

The father grabs a candle, the curly brownhaired soldier his red mouth rolling around the black meat bakes out his knife: his hand quickly juts the red rags over his sex his pincher his grabber the curly brownhaired soldier jerks the sleepy young girl’s thighs to him, she slides over the sand till she stops at the tent opening, one soldier’s mutilated forehead cause he was raping over an eagle’s eggs the eagle scalped him another soldier’s diseased skinpores these two soldiers gag the father, the father throws a burning candle into their hairs, the curly brownhaired soldier takes the young girl into his arms, she sleeps she purrs her open palm on her forehead to his shudder trot, the clouded moon turns his naked arm green, his panting a gurgling that indicates rape sweat dripping off his bare strong chest wakes the young girl up, I walked into my parents’ bedroom opened their bathroom door don’t know why I did it, my father was standing naked over the toilet, I’ve never seen him naked I’m shocked, he slams the door in my face, I’m curious I see my mother naked all the time, she closely watches inside his open cause gasping mouth the black meat still stuck to his teeth the black meat still in a ball, the curly brownhaired lifts her on to her feet lay her down on the dog-kennels’ metal grating hugs her kisses her lips the ear hollows where the bloodstained wax causes whispers his hand unbuttons his sackcloth pulls out his member, the young girl sucks out of the curly brownhaired’s red’s cheeks the black meat eyes closed hands spread over the metal grating, excited by this cheek-to-stomach muscle motion bare-headed straw-dust flying around his legs injects the devil over her scorches, the dogs waking up at the metal gratings leap out of the kennels their chains gleam treat me like a dog drag in the shit, the curly brownhaired nibbles the young girl’s gums his teeth pull at the meat fibers her tongue pushes into the cracks between her teeth, the dogs howl their chains jingle against the tar of the road their paws crush down the hardened shits, the curly brownhaired’s knees imprison the young girl’s thighs.

My father’s lying in the hospital cause he’s on his third heart attack. My mother’s mother at the door of my father’s room so I know my father is overhearing her is saying to my mother, “You have to say he’s been a good husband to you, Claire. He never left you and he gave you everything you wanted.”

“Yes.”

‘’You don’t love him.’’

“Yes.”

I know my grandmother hates my father.

I don’t side with my mother rather than my father like my sister does. I don’t perceive my father. My mother is adoration hatred play. My mother is the world. My mother is my baby. My mother is exactly who she wants to be.

The whole world and consciousness revolves around my mother.

I don’t have any idea what my mother’s like. So no matter how my mother acts, she’s a monster. Everything is a monster. I hate it. I want to run away. I want to escape the Jolly Green Giant. Any other country is beautiful as long as I don’t know about it. This is the dream I have: I’m running away from men who are trying to damage me permanently. I love mommy. I know she’s on Dex and when she’s not on Dex she’s on Librium to counteract the Dex jitters so she acts more extreme than usual. A second orgasm cools her shoulders, the young girl keeps her hands joined over the curly brownhaired’s ass, the wire grating gives way, the curly brownhaired slides the young girl under him his pants are still around his knees his fingernails claw the soil his breath sucks in the young girl’s cheek blows straw dust around, the mute young girl’s stomach muscles weld to the curly-headed’s abdominal muscles, the passing wind immediately modulates the least organic noise that’s why one text must subvert (the meaning of) another text until there’s only background music like reggae on that ground: the inextricability of relation-textures the organic (not meaning) recovered, stupid ugly horrible a mess pinhead abominable vomit eyes-pop-out-always-presenting-disgust-always-presenting-what-people-flee-always-wanting-to-be-lonely infect my mother my mother, blind fingernails spit the eyes wandering from the curly-headed, the curly-headed’s hidden balls pour open cool down on the young girl’s thigh. Under the palmtrees the RIMAS seize and drag a fainted woman under a tent, a flushing-forehead blond soldier burning coals glaze his eyes his piss stops up his sperm grasps this woman in his arms, their hands their lips touch lick the woman’s clenched face while the blond soldier’s greasy winestained arm supports her body, the young girl recovered.

New York City is very peaceful and quiet, and the pale gray mists are slowly rising, to show me the world, I who have been so passive and little here, and all beyond is so unknown and great that now I am crying. My fingers touch the concrete beneath my feet and I say “Goodbye, Oh my, dear, Dear friend.”

We don’t ever have to be ashamed of feelings of tears, for feelings are the rain upon the earth’s blinding dust: our own hard egotistic hearts. I feel better after I cry: more aware of who I am, more open. I need friends very much.

Thus ends the first segment of my life. I am a person of great expectations.




*

p.s. Hey. ** Thomas Moronic, And good morning once again to you, Thomas! Weekend was work-filled, and, luckily, good. Oh, cool, it's always so great when I get to hear that the blog's doings had a pay off, thank you. Yep, yep, yep. Will do, of course, on the Xiu Xiu tape, thanks! And thanks for the congrats re: the French 'Marbled Swarm'. I'm hugely happy about that and very relieved. How is your mid-summer operating? ** Scunnard, Well, you get laurels for sure, and then it's your call whether to rest upon them and also what 'rest' means. You control some of everything. Cool, re: the publishing plans and about the feedback! Please do make some video work. I, for one amongst your fan base, have felt deprived for way too long. I'm good, busy, sweating a bit too much of late, and more of that kind of thing right there. ** David Ehrenstein, Morning, sir. Ha ha, I saw her once across a semi-well-lit room. No closer than that. Wow, you're really on the ball about interesting stuff out there, thank you. Everyone, David E. directs us to a very interesting looking piece of writing entitled 'Stars in My Pocket Like Bits of Data'. Check it out. It looks very worthy of us. Here. ** Bill, Hi. You might like 'Anatomy of Hell' and/or 'Romance' particularly, if you want to delve further. There was no link to the Hoegen, but I'll find it. It's on my post-work agenda today. And I'll mute the sound when I get there. Thanks! ** Etc etc etc, Hey. You mean you're near-exhausted with films that tackle sexual and other transgressions entirely, or do you mean only/mostly via the particular aesthetic filters used by filmmakers working within the externally designated genre 'transgressive film' or ... ? I love Noe's work, but everyone seems to be down to some degree on the new one. I haven't seen it yet. I also haven't seen 'The Tribe', no. I'll try it. Sounds worth trying. See, I didn't know MoD was still in business even. I am flinging the polar opposite of deathly thoughts right back at you, maestro. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Thanks, man. 'Pornocracy' is very well worth a read. ** Steevee, Hi. Have to disagree with you. 'Anatomy of Hell' is my favorite Breillat film. Least favorite might be, hm, maybe 'Tapage Nocturne'? ** Jonathan, Hi, J-J. Cool. Yeah, Sauna Youth is a keeper and a stickler, aren't they? I was really surprised. So glad that the gig further filled your auditory coffers. Hm, I can see the 'AoH' =-ish 'ModD thing, huh. Interesting. I did not see the Melgaard show, nope. I feel like a dummy. Yeah, I saw on FB that you found that Rimbaud book I published. Up until then, that Rimbaud work had never been translated into English. When I found it, I jumped. That was Little Caesar's all-time best selling book, no surprise, I guess. I'll seek out that Franco Bifo Berardi book. It does sound to be of high interest, yes. Haven't yet gotten to Berkeley Books. Blame the heat, basically, but the heat is less heated, at least for the moment, so I'm going to use this window to escape to there. Have heard some of the Xiu Xiu/TP stuff, yeah, and it's wonderful, yeah. That was a wild Monday you had there. How often do wildness and Monday align, I ask you? ** Kier, Hey, Kierator! 'Romance' is a real good one, in my humble opinion. I always forget that chamomille is a flower, even though, duh. I can even clearly imagine what the flower looks like without googling it, I think. I think that being 'in the rye' has been used as a positive phrase by enough writers throughout history that being in the rye must actually be a very nice thing. I wonder why. New apartment! New, happy-making roommate! Congratulations, my pal! I hope the one you're seeing today is the dream home that is mysteriously inappropriate for any other wannabe renters besides yourself and your friend. That means my fingers are as crossed as fingers can be. Tell me what happened. Fun, yay! My days? Hm. I've mostly been home working because I have a lot to do, and because, until the heatwave broke a little yesterday, the outdoors was gross here. So I've been mostly hold up working on the revision of the script of Zac's and my next film. It's getting close. And I always do this kind of big project for Zac on his birthday, and it requires weeks of organizing and querying and stuff, and I'm in the latter stages of that. And I'm working on a new gif work. So my 'plate' has been 'full'. Otherwise, I've seen d.l. Bernard Welt who's in Paris right now. We tried to see Inside Out', but it was sold out. Uh, the door to the basement of my building is usually locked tight, but it was mysteriously open yesterday, so I went down there using my iPhone flashlight function as a torch and explored. It's sort of like an underground barn with stalls and stuff, but labyrinthine. It's kind of ancient feeling and nice. Not much else. Blog post making. I'm way behind on that, gulp. Today I have to finish the script, I hope, so I don't anticipate much else, but you never know. How was your Tuesday, the visit to your hopeful new pad included? ** Bernard Welt, Speaking of. Thanks a lot for chiming in about Highsmith. I was hoping you would. How are you on this semi-fine but perhaps soon to be slightly too hot day? Let's talk. ** Misanthrope, Cool, about the LPD-related pleasantness. Interesting about the necessity for lyrics. Nah, I was kidding about geese's evil. I don't believe in evil. I guess they're just alpha. Who can blame them? Thanks to LPS's Facebook activities, I read/saw about Undertaker whomping Lesnar the other day, and it did my heart good, don't you know. ** Douglas Payne, Hi. I finally wrote back to you today. Sorry. Yesterday was a swamped 24 hours. I avoid those real world pain videos and photos like the plague. Not my kind of porn. Peter is so smart. People have such a wrongheaded idea about Peter's work and him. ** Statictick, Hey. All sympathies to you about your dickish back. We bad back dudes need to stick together. I'm going to save my Odd Hours experiencing for your post. I was never one of those kids who snuck looks at their presents before Xmas morning. Sounds like Amy needs to high-tail it back to Detroit with her mother right now, yes. Weird. ** Okay. I'm spotlighting Kathy Acker's 'Great Expectations' today. It was the first book of hers that I ever read back when, and it still might be my favorite of her novels. Dig it, if possible. See you tomorrow.

Happy 60th birthday to Disneyland 5 days late

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Disneyland employs a patented 'Smellitzer' device designed to pump certain scents around. The Smellitzer uses a series of pumps and vents to launch the smells 200 feet at just the right second. And then an exhaust system sucks the odor out of the room before it interferes with your next sensory experience. Everything is pleasant in Disneyland, because the park has your very sensations under lock and key. Whether it's a waft of sea salt in Pirates of the Caribbean, or vanilla in Main Street, your senses are constantly being played for fools. In all, 14 rides, shops, and attractions in Disneyland employ the Smellitzer technology.







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When Disneyland first opened in 1955, the roving costumed Mickey Mouse mascot figure looked like this.





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Walt Disney's final words - written rather than spoken - were, rather cryptically 'Kurt Russell'. No one, including the actor himself, has any idea why.





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People occasionally dump their loved ones' ashes at Disneyland. Popular spots include the Haunted Mansion of course and Pirates of the Caribbean. Two stories in particular stand out, both involving a mother dumping the ashes of their dead sons on their favorite rides. Supposedly you can see the dead boys crying on a pirate boat and in the Haunted Mansion. Here's a pic someone took of one of the dead boys' ghost in the Haunted Mansion.






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The powers that be at Disneyland determined that it would be more costly to turn off the system that broadcasts the endless song "It's a Small World After all' in the ride of the same name and reboot it than it would to just let the speakers keep playing the infectious tune after hours. Only during an emergency or a massive power outage does the music stop, but during nightly and morning cleaning and maintenance, as well as throughout the deserted hours overnight, 'It's a Small World' plays eternally into the ether.





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Some dead rides

General Electric Carousel of Progress (1967–1973): A sit-down show in which the building rotated the audience around a series of stages. The stages had audioanimatronic humans and household appliances showing how appliances and electronics advanced about every 20 years from the turn of the century to the "modern" era of the early 1960s. The audience stopped in front of each stage while the characters joked with each other, described life at the time in history, and demonstrated their kitchen.








Flying Saucers (1961–1966): Guests rode in single-rider cars on a cushion of air that were steered by shifting body weight. The air cushion was supplied from below through holes in the floor that opened when the cars passed over. The ride's site later became the site of the Tomorrowland Stage, and is now the site of Magic Eye Theater.





Astro Jets (1956–1964): A rocket-spinner ride originally located between Submarine Voyage and Flight to the Moon.




Mine Train Through Nature's Wonderland (1960–1977): The Big Thunder Mountain Railroad attraction replaced this sedate train ride with a roller coaster version. The only attraction that remained from the scenic vistas was the mighty waterfall tumbling from Cascade Peak into the Rivers of America, visible only from various boat rides around the Rivers. The structure that formed Cascade Peak and its waterfalls was demolished in 1998 after it was found to be suffering structurally from the decades of water that flowed over it.




PeopleMover (1967–1995): A scenic, slow-moving ride high-above Tomorrowland that was intended to demonstrate how people could be shuttled around a central urban area without rushing to board individual trains or drive individual cars. It consisted of many dozens of small open-air cars seating up to eight riders, all running continuously on a track above and through the various attractions in Tomorrowland. After the ride was closed, the track sat vacant for two-and-a-half years until the opening of the ill-fated Rocket Rods.





Captain EO (1986–1997): 3D film starring Michael Jackson and directed by Francis Ford Coppola about a spaceship captain and his misfit crew battling against an evil queen. The show closed in 1997 due to a decline in popularity.




Skyway to Fantasyland (1956–1994): This ride, a typical aerial lift ride seen in many parks, traveled from a chalet on the west side of Fantasyland, through the Matterhorn, to a station in Tomorrowland. Cabins hung from cables and ran constantly back and forth between the two lands. The Fantasyland station still stands – closed to public access – adjacent to the Casey Jr. Circus Train, and is concealed by trees. Its support towers were removed and the holes in the Matterhorn through which the ride passed were filled in.





Skull Rock and Pirate's Cove (1961–1982): An entertainment and dining experience themed to Captain Hook's pirate ship. Dumbo the Flying Elephant was relocated to the former location of Skull Rock and Pirate's Cove and reopened there in 1983.




Monsanto House of the Future (1957–1967): A walk-through tour of a plastic house with plastic furnishings and interior and modern appliances such as dishwashers. The house was designed in roughly the shape of a plus sign with high-tech rounded exterior contours, all made from white plastic with large windows. It was outdated almost as soon as it was built. It was anchored to a solid concrete foundation that proved to be so indestructible that, when it was dismantled, the work crew gave up and left some of the support pilings in place and they can still be seen in King Triton's Grotto between the Tomorrowland entrance and Fantasyland.




Country Bear Jamboree (1972–2001): An audio-animatronic show featuring traditional American folk songs sung by a variety of bears and their friends, including Henry the host and Big Al, Shaker (aka Terrence), The Sun Bonnets (Bunny, Bubbles, and Beulah), Liver Lips McGrowl, Wendell, Ernest, Gomer, Trixie, Teddi Barra, The Five Bear Rugs (Zeke, Zeb, Ted, Fred and Tennessee), and Zeke's son Oscar.




Space Stage (1955–1960)




Adventure Thru Inner Space (1967–1985): A dark ride that pretended to shrink the rider gradually down to microscopic size within a snowflake, then further to view a water molecule in the flake, then finally to the point where one could see the throbbing nucleus of a single oxygen atom, with electrons zooming all around. The attraction was replaced by Star Tours in 1986 and is now the site of Star Tours: The Adventures Continue.





Swiss Family Treehouse (1962–1999): Treehouse based on the film Swiss Family Robinson. Rethemed as Tarzan's Treehouse in 1999.







Rocket to the Moon (1955–1966): Inside a building under a tall futuristic-looking rocket ship, the audience sat in seats around central viewing screens (top and bottom of the center of the room) so that they could see where they were going as they headed away from Earth and towards other worlds. As actual flight to the Moon became more likely, the ride was refurbished Flight to the Moon, a refurbished version of Rocket to the Moon with a mission control pre-show. The ride became obsolete as the United States sent actual manned flights to the Moon between 1969 and 1972, and it was refurbished as Mission to Mars, An updated version of Flight to the Moon, simulating a spaceflight to Mars instead of the Moon. The attraction building is now the site of Redd Rockett's Pizza Port, a space-themed restaurant.






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It's a well known fact that there are some creepy Disneyland urban legends. One of those legends is that the park is haunted by various ghosts, including the ghost of Walt Disney himself. A few years ago, security cameras at the park allegedly caught one of these ghosts walking around at night. The quality of the video is not great, but you can clearly see there is something there that should not be. Take a look for yourself below. It's chilling.





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Thanksgiving at Disneyland, 1961






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Disney created a color called Go Away Green. A very bland green shade you see a lot of in the park but don’t really think anything about – until now. It was created with the idea that the common eye would glaze right over it. Truth is, unless you’re looking for it, it is all too easy to just glance right past anything painted in this all-too-neutral color. No See-Um Green is actually in a lot of places. The fences, buildings, the wall around the park… And most famously, the door to the exclusive Club 33.





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Illuminati -- The Satanic Face of Disney !!






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Bats Day in the Fun Park, also known as Bats Day, Goth Day, Bats Day in the Park and Bats Day Out, started in August 1999 as a joint effort between the promoters of the goth/industrial and deathrock clubs Absynthe and Release the Bats. It has become an annual three-day event taking place at Disneyland in Anaheim, CA. Bats Day patrons dress in their Gothic attire for the annual visit to the park. There are other scheduled events and gatherings on this day, including a large group picture in front of Sleeping Beauty Castle, group pictures at the Haunted Mansion, and a photo scavenger hunt.














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A dishwasher at Disneyland was busted after an undercover police officer posing as a 14-year-old girl responded to his Craigslist ad, which offered theme park tickets in exchange for sex. 27-year-old Darreck Michael Enciso responded with interest when an undercover cop posing as a 14-year-old girl contacted him online to set up a meeting. That meeting happened July 9 and Enciso was arrested. He had theme park tickets and condoms on his person. Enciso was charged with a felony attempt of a lewd act on a child, contacting a child with the intent to commit a specified sex crime and meeting a minor with the intent to engage in lewd conduct. He was fired immediately.






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Walt Disney's attention to detail was legendary. He placed the garbage bins at Disneyland 25 steps away from the hot dog stall, as this was how long it took him to eat a hot dog.





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Some ride layouts


The Monorail


Indiana Jones Adventure


Mr. Toad's Wild Ride


Haunted Mansion


Snow White's Scary Adventures


Space Mountain


Splash Mountain



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The first employee death at Disneyland took place in 1974. Deborah Stone was a greeter on a ride called America Sings when she got caught between a stationary wall on the ride and a moving wall. She was crushed, but not discovered until the next day. The park was closed for three days to clean up and install safety signage.






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In October 2004, Disneyland held a charity auction. The prize? A once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to become a part of the Haunted Mansion attraction by being "interred" as the honorary "1000th Ghost" to occupy the Haunted Mansion. The winner was Cary "Jay" Sharp, a doctor and medical lawyer who placed the winning bid of $37,400. Sharp was given a special midnight "burial" at Disneyland Park on the porch of the Haunted Mansion, at which time his tombstone, which now rests inside the attraction's graveyard segment in front of the ghostly band, was unveiled.





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In 1999, my family visited Disneyland. We happily rode the Small World ride. I was 12 at the time and my sister was 6. We loved every moment and our parents smiled with nostalgia. At one time near the end, some lights suddenly shut off and rear lights illuminated the ceiling. The moving display parts shut off and crew members wearing red overalls walked along them to help passengers in the boats onto the stages to direct them out of the building via emergency exits. A voice came over the loudspeakers. “Disneyland thanks you for your visit. Please evacuate the attraction in an orderly fashion.” The staff wouldn’t tell us much as they quickly ushered us out of the building. Ambulances were outside and a police car was parked in the main walkway. At the time, my mother still had her camera out and snapped a few last-minute photos of whatever to use up the last of the roll of film. This was the last photo on the reel, aimed at the ceiling at the attraction.






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Turn away now if you believe in magic! Stunning photographs go behind the scenes at Disneyland.


The red eyes of the Abominable Snowman in the Matterhorn ride


The mechanics that keep the Jungle Cruise in motion.


Seen from behind: Animatronic pirates in Pirates of the Caribbean.


The poles holding up the 'ghosts' in the Haunted Mansion reveals them as nothing more than puppets.



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A mobile phone video allegedly shows Disneyland's White Rabbit getting a little too personal with a 14-year-old girl. The 30-second video was filmed by Manuel Carlos. It shows his daughter Alexis pulling on the tail of the White Rabbit. Mr Carlos laughs as his other daughter Jocelyn, 14, also takes a turn. The rabbit then follows Jocelyn pinning her up against a fence. Jocelyn told ABC 10 the rabbit held her by the arm and neck. "He told me, 'Don't you ever do that again or I will call security, and tell your stupid friend to stop doing it too'," Jocelyn told ABC 10. In the video someone can be heard yelling "Hey you get off her". The rabbit then says, "Don't even start your shit with me". In a statement, Disneyland said: "This seems to be a blatant attempt by a lawyer to generate publicity for a case that has no merit. If anything, all this video shows is a family of misbehaving guests deliberately provoking a character for their own malicious amusement." Disneyland's White Rabbit is already the subject of a lawsuit after claims the character refused to hug African American children.





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Disneyland's Tom Sawyer Island! An exciting land of adventure! See th- Wait, they removed that. OK then, ride- Oh, there are no rides. Well, you can dine in th- No restaurants. There are absolutely no reasons to visit Tom Sawyer Island. You can blame this one on the hippies--back when they invaded the island in the 70s. On the 6th of August, 1970, about 300 members of the Young International Party (Yippies) descended upon Disneyland. After taking over Castle Rock on Tom Sawyer's Island, the hippies hoisted the Viet Cong flag. Then these new communist citizens of the new country of Tom Sawyer's Island marched down Main Street USA and harassed the marching band while sarcastically singing the theme to the Mickey Mouse Club. In response, Disneyland called in the riot cops. Fights broke out between the Yippies and the police -- one eyewitness account describes a girl with her "head split open, blood dripping all over her face"-- as children everywhere were mentally scarred for life at the sight of Mickey Mouse passively watching an intense and violent beating. Up until that day, Disneyland had had plans to develop Tom Sawyer's Island into a new "Land" with thrill and dark rides, but this incident caused them to change their policy and leave the Island as uninteresting as possible in order to discourage visitors with ambitions.








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Theme songs


Sparks 'Mickey Mouse'


Eyes 'Disneyland'


Nero's Day at Disneyland 'Mascara Running Everywhere'


Fat White Family 'Bomb Disneyland'


Tiermodus 'It's a Small World' (Disneyland cover)


Boyd Rice and Friends 'Disneyland Can Wait'



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I am a Disneyland freak. I’m such an afficionado, I want to be burried there. I love cruising around the park and noticing all the little details. However, the greatest detail I’ve ever found is a dark one… an EVIL one. Take a look at this photo, taken from the parking structure down to the road below.





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*

p.s. Hey. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. Well, I recommend another look, of course. ** James, Hi. 'Great Expectations' isn't influenced by 'Eden Eden Eden'. 'EEE' wasn't translated into English until 1995, and Acker's French wasn't good enough to have gotten enough from it pre-translation. 'Militancy bores me': That's curious. What do you mean by 'militancy', and why is it boring? I do have pretty good energy, I guess, and I can be diligent when I'm into something. Good combo for working, I guess. Ha ha, you really hate Joshua Cohen, don't you? I'm not a fan of his stuff, but the RS piece doesn't surprise me. He's kind of the 'serious', 'avant-garde' Franzen or something, or he really wants to be. If it helps/matters, a little bird suggested to me that 'Gone' is probably going to be reprinted in the next six months or so. ** Douglas Payne, Hi. Huh. I'll resend the message when I finish this. That's strange. I must have fucked up the sending somehow. Me too, re: Acker love, of course. ** Rewritedept, Cool about Big Bear's fun. Did you, like, go on hikes, water-ski, uh, build campfires, uh, ... ? Tricks are okay. Pretty busy with stuff with some summer heat suffering heavily mixed in, i.e. the July-centric usual, I guess. Don't spend it all in one place. Or do. ** Sypha, Hi. No, 'GE' didn't sample 'Neuromancer''Neuromancer' wasn't published until 1984. Sorta no surprise, knowing your literary likes and dislikes, that her work is a mixed bag for you. ** H, Hi. Thank you. Two weeks? Wow, soon. I guess you have a place to live lined up then. Congrats again! Okay, however you want to do it re: the generous books offering thing, I'll do my part. ** Steevee, Hi. Have to disagree with you again. I don't think 'AoH' is homophobic, much less 'grossly', or clunky. I saw the 'Filth' reissue was happening via Gira's FB feed. Sounds most acquirable. I think 'CoG' might be my favorite Swans too. I pretty much love all of their records apart from 'The Burning World'. And I think the records they put out in the '90s when hardly anyone was paying attention them like 'White Light from the Mouth of Infinity' and 'Soundtracks for the Blind' are quite excellent and really underrated. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi. They showed 'Going Clear' on TV here, but I missed it. Rental. Yeah, obviously very intrigued by it. ** Chilly Jay Chill, Hi, Jeff. Glad you liked the posts, man. 'My Mother: A Demonology' is a fine novel. Something I realized when co-edited the Kathy Acker Reader book for Grove and read everything she wrote over a period of a few months is that most of her novels, meaning the mid- and later ones, start out really strong and then get kind of messy and meander-y after a while, including 'MM: AD', but they're great nonetheless. I think 'Great Expectations' and 'Blood and Guts ... ' are the two novels of hers that are really inspired and focused and sharp all the way through. I'm amidst the Guyotat. It's wonderful, of course. I just wish the tougher, denser novels would get translated into French because that realm of his work is what I really love, but, of course, they're extremely hard to translate. Happy birthday belatedly! Nice way to spend it. That sounds fun. Being on film sets is a great high even with all the stopping and starting and the weird, laggy tempo. I miss the 'LCTG' shooting. So awesome that you're tentatively happy with the film based on your story. That doesn't always happen, God knows. ** Bill, Hi, B. Ah, thanks for the link! I'll use it in about, oh, 15 minutes, I'm reckoning. ** Misanthrope, Yay! LPS adultifies! What's up with all the you-know-what insanity surrounding him, if you care to say? That story of you in your car in the traffic has really made me question my belief that the notion of evil is a falsehood. ** Thomas Moronic, Hi, T. Yep, re: Acker. There seems to be renaissance of interest in her work these days. I see her and her work referenced a lot. There was this big lull wherein her work was largely ignored after she died until just recently. That's very happy-making, obviously. For instance, the post yesterday got through-the-roof traffic, which I wasn't expecting. Nice about the writing fiddling. I love that phase when it's fueled by optimism and confidence. Eek, about your toe. Interesting that some people say 'touch wood' and others, including me, say 'knock on wood'. I always think it's the knocking that makes the luck work, but maybe it's just the contact with wood itself. Huh. ** Right. It took me five days, but I finally get to wish Disneyland happy birthday DC's-style. Have at it. See you tomorrow.

Gig #81: Of late 23: Duster, M.E.S.H., death’s dynamic shroud.wmv, Thighpaulsandra, Vince Staples, Tallesen, Rolo Tomassi, Slackk, RP Boo, Flying Saucer Attack, Seven Davis Jr., White Poppy, Xiu Xiu

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DusterTropical Solution
'There was no shortage of psychedelic listening options for the late-’90s space cadet; you simply had to navigate the substrata of drone-friendly bands such as Spiritualized, Flying Saucer Attack and Bardo Pond. San Jose, Calif.’s Duster flew closer to Earth, offering more structured guitar-rock compositions and the kind of muffled-yet-melodic vocals that hadn’t been heard since the (original) shoegaze era. For debut album Stratosphere, the songwriting duo of Clay Parton and Dove Amber recruited drummer Jason Albertini (an original member of Queens Of The Stone Age) and created a sound akin to Yo La Tengo playing beneath a heavy winter blanket. For an exploration of the pop side of the space-rock moon, Stratosphere is one place to start.'-- Magnet






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M.E.S.HThorium
'Piteous Gate, the debut full-length from Berlin-based artist M.E.S.H., uses the cinematic and all of its tropic tendencies to arrive at a statement of personal vision often hard to find within the social continuum of future-minded electronica or quasi-club music. That isn’t to say the record isn’t full of the social tropes common within the field; rather, the record uses those sounds — ephemera from sample packs, pirated VSTs, Ableton drum-racks loaded with Frankenstein YouTube samples, mecha, etc. — to contextualize the individual’s relationship to the largeness of spectacle. The album’s subtlety and abstract tendencies prevent it from becoming solely a work of stock collage or pastiche appropriation. Rather, in order to evoke the powerful, high-budget achievement of top-dollar soundtracks, M.E.S.H. incorporates trending audio into the prodigy of his own will to power, an act that reflexively places himself at the center of the discourse’s high-fidelity. After all, the individual artist’s own labor can become competitive with the machines that produce our most grandiose sci-fi. Finally, there can be indistinguishability between the sheer productive capability of capital and the loner armed with vision and software — one of the dreams of electronic music all along. This exchange between subject and massive infrastructure, between personal will and infinite resources, makes the space of Piteous Gate similar to a public space structured like a collection of multiple private domains. But, isn’t that just cinema, blown away/disappointed people sitting together alone in a public space?'-- SCVSCV






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death's dynamic shroud.wmv너 땜에 맘이 맘이 맘이 맘이 괴로워요
'For anyone who may have written off vaporwave years back, please let Death’s Dynamic Shroud.wmv’s messy, marvelous new album pull you back in. Vaporwave went through some ugly years after its time in the spotlight. There were a lot of factors: over-saturation from a flood of less-than-inspiring releases; a pushback from its conceptually weighty origins; a few brick-dumb articles that introduced it to wider audiences as a punchline. In their own ways each of those contributed to creating an environment that was intensely, defensively closed-off to the point of asphyxiating itself. Yet lately there are releases popping up that show vaporwave growing and evolving in ways that are really exciting. That’s part of what makes I’ll Try Living Like This such a blast. It doesn’t try to subvert any of the current trends in vaporwave, it doesn’t try to hearken back to the intensely conceptual qualities of the early days. I’ll Try Living Like This does one single thing: it fucking bangs — hard and consistently — for a dizzyingly complex and immensely pleasurable hour, and then says good bye (the last track is literally called ‘Good Bye’). It feels like a part of this genre’s strange lineage, yet never feels tied down by it.'-- Fact Magazine






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ThighpaulsandraParalysed
'If you have heard any of Thighpaulsandra's previous albums, you will know that you'd best approach this record with no fixed set of expectations, because once again he changes genres and defies easy classification, sometimes more than once within one song. Drawing on his long-time background as a key member in such diverse groups as Coil, Spiritualized and Julian Cope's band (in each case arguably at the height of their creative prowess) and his work as producer and sound engineer for an even larger variety of customers, you'll find classical passages next to hard rock riffing, krauty experimental work-outs turning into super catchy, almost radio-friendly songs and more. Many adjectives have been used to describe Thighpaulsandra’s work: epic, challenging, timeless, idiosyncratic, but certainly never predictable or boring.'-- Editions Mego






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Vince StaplesGet Paid
'Talking about the four, five, or nine “elements of hip-hop” is no longer fashionable, not because the art form has fundamentally changed, but because we have learned more about what it is. Why, then, is evaluating distinct criteria like “production” and “lyricism” still so much more common in rap criticism than in any other kind of music writing? Summertime ‘06 is privately nostalgic for songs like Sean Paul’s “Temperature” and Chamillionaire’s “Ridin’” and Beyoncé’s “Check on It” and Cassie’s “Me and U” and Yung Joc’s “It’s Going Down.” Rap songs from 2006 continue to affect us because they sound thrilled with themselves; there’s a sublime and overwhelming Gestalt to these tracks that transcends catchy hooks and smart lyrics, combining these with the affective realm of voice inflection and onomatopoeia to create an irreducible sum. I thought about this when Vince Staples told the Grantland NBA After Dark podcast that music in the era of digital piracy was about “creating moments.”'-- Will Neibergall






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TallesenEmmel
'Tallesen works full-time as a roof-top gardener in NYC. Since his day job consists of planting vegetation that he’ll (potentially) never see fully grown, gardening provides a good entry point into why his music sounds the way it does: as if it were a tree planted on a 20th-floor balcony whose growth can only be measured from a specific point in Central Park. Importantly, though, Tallesen wants to make his audience move. Because a lot of his music is audibly contorted and melted, stretched and stifled, etc. and etc., bodies tap or move (uncontrollably, even) to a potentially non-existent, perhaps constantly decaying rhythm. Yet, as Tallesen tries to shift both with and without this confinement of beat, there’s an insatiable twitch inside us that wants to move with one or all melodies, a fleshy desire for audible nihilism.'-- C Monster






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Rolo TomassiRaumdeuter
'Rolo Tomassi are the wild children borne of Converge and the Dillinger Escape Plan's technical ecstasy, borne thousands of miles away but in full possession of that visionary collision between the atavistic and the exultant - that is the essence of the group's totemic, visceral power. Those qualities are featured most daringly here on tracks such as 'Raumdeuter', and 'The Embers', their sheer assurance and sophistication a wonder to behold. Eva Spence's vocal command remains one of the most potent weapons in extreme metal, a blade honed amid the aural contortions that it is relentlessly ground upon, never losing its razor-sharp capabilities. Short circuit guitar pathways scorch and suspend themselves alongside riptides of bright melodic arcs, their brutality landing as harshly just as surely as their melodic immediacy. But these signature aggressions are given nuance by the surprising yet welcome pools of evocative piano-centred pieces.'-- Kevin Mccaighy






__________
RP BooYour Choice
'Sonically, RP Boo is a modern-day Zatoichi samurai, cutting his samples in unorthodox ways. His sound remains unique. Fingers, Bank Pads & Shoe Prints contains both tracks made after his acclaimed 2013 debut album “Legacy” (“An album of scorching, scene-defining hits” SPIN) and older tracks. Highlights include “Banging On King Dr.” which sees him cutting up street numbers; the monolithic noir feeling of “Sleepy”; the subtle funk of “Your Choice” which may in some way be inspired by his Dad’s role as bass player for Prince; “Lets Dance Again” whose delicate soulful sound echoes deep streams of Chicago dance music history; the dramatic string-infused “Daddy's Home” and the celebration of achieving dreams that is the closer “B'Ware.” Fingers, Bank Pads & Shoe Prints is the sound of an innovator reconfirming his place as leader with one of the most essential Footwork albums to date.'-- Planet Mu






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SlackkPosrednik
'Slackk’s Backwards Light EP harbors the unshakeable sino-grime sound of yesteryear and mobilizes it, bringing it successfully into the current by combining it with a raving orchestration that fits well with its R&S home. It’s a similar model to some of his previous work — the track “Three Kingdoms” from last year’s debut full-length Palm Tree Fire offered a comparable Eastern motif. But while that almost boarded on banality, Backwards Light is sharper and arguably more original. It’s difficult, by and large, to divorce Slackk’s music from a grime context. Indeed, Slackk — a.k.a. Paul Lynch — is regarded as invaluable to the genre, having previously ran the radio-rip resource grimetapes.com. Slackk’s re-imagining of grime, however, gives a dynamism that is lacking somewhat in the boxy square-waves and established rhythm patterns that are otherwise commonplace.'-- Stefan Wharton






_____________
Flying Saucer Attack Instrumental 7
'For over a decade, there have been few reported sightings of Flying Saucer Attack. A delicious run of albums in the 90s gave way to near-total silence at the turn of the new millennium, almost as if planned. Over time, the Bristolian experimentalists have been whittled down to a one-man band, consisting of core member David Pearce. You could call them space-, post-, avant-, or whichever prefix you might apply to 'rock' in order to emphasise the decentralisation of ego and retrospection in the context of otherwise traditional rock instrumentation. Whatever you call it, the urge to transcend is clear. Incorporating disparate folk and electronic influences, previous efforts saw Pearce revelling in the puerile joy of burying acoustic tracks in noise – sometimes white and mechanical, sometimes tailored to sound a little like the eponymous flying saucer. Today, Pearce's vocal presence and melodic talent take a backseat, giving way to pure ambience. In light of the freeform discord of Flying Saucer Attack's live recordings (see 1996's In Search Of Spaces and 2003's P.A. Blues), as well as a few reverential pieces named in tribute to Popol Vuh, the new album's material is not unprecedented, but it is daringly funereal and earnest. A few whispers of flying saucer remain, but they are mostly subdued in the mix – less campy space-exploitation, more of an atmospheric tool.'-- The Quietus






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Seven Davis Jr Sunday Morning
'George Clinton bestrides today’s music like an intergalactic Colossus. You can hear the Funkadelic and Parliament bandleader’s influence in numerous recent albums, from the most praised (D’Angelo, Kendrick Lamar) to more obscure efforts, such this debut from Californian DJ and producer Samuel “Seven” Davis Jr. Universes takes the tradition of Clinton’s psychedelic funk and feeds it through a modern beat-making sensibility, as with the combination of compulsively jumpy electronics and woozy Funkadelic vocals in “Welcome Back”. “It’s whatever you want it to be,” a voice intones at the start of the album, which is themed around the notion of space travel; focused production ensures the Afro-futurist trip doesn’t take a wrong turn into self-indulgence.'-- ft.com






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White PoppyConfusion
'How do you grapple with something that isn’t there? On her third full-length as White Poppy, Natural Phenomena, Crystal Dorval manages to erase almost all traces of herself. Her voice disappears into the ether with lyrics that are mostly indiscernible — when there are any at all. The attack of her guitar is blunted and nearly bleached out of existence in reverb and delay systems. And the minimal percussion employed tends to feel more like a kite bobbing along at the end of a tether than anything solid and grounding. To this end, Natural Phenomena reads like further notes on a musical history of disappearance and obfuscation. Roughly one third of the album is made up of lyrically-oriented songs, another third contains wordless vocalizing, and the remaining third is entirely instrumental. Because they aren’t divided up into sections as such, it gives a sort of watercolor impression of songs half submerged.'-- Tiny Mix Tapes






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Xiu XiuPlays the Music of Twin Peaks [extract]
'In a weird way (what other way could there be?), there is no more apt a group to perform Angelo Badalamenti and David Lynch's unmistakeable score for Lynch's seminal Twin Peaks TV-series than Jamie Stewart's Xiu Xiu. Like the show, their music is elusive, dream-lit with dark undertones. Commissioned by David Lynch himself, this is an immediately recognisable yet entirely new interpretation of the music of Twin Peaks; one emphasising its chaos, drama, fear, noise and sidelong leering glances. "The music of Twin Peaks is everything that we aspire to as musicians and is everything that we want to listen to as music fans. It is romantic, it is terrifying, it is beautiful, it is unnervingly sexual. Our attempt will be to play the parts of the songs as written, meaning, following the harmony melody but to arrange in the way that it has shaped us as players."'-- Jamie Stewart/Opera North







*

p.s. Hey. Before I/we begin the day's time-delayed interactions, d.l. H has a kind offer that applies to some of you out there reading this. Namely, H has some books that must be sacrificed due to an impending move to a new location, and H is offering them to someone here free of charge. These are the books in four groups/links: Books 1, Books 2, Books 3, Books 4. Now, I will let H explain the offer, and here H is: '[The] receiver [of these books] should be one real person. (Unfortunately, no organization/store/press...etc., because they resell these books which libraries here would do, which I don't like...when I ship these with my cost, etc.) That person must be younger than 30 year old, and almost unemployed and unschooling, while wanting to be desperately, (ie. not living on wealthy personal or educational (art grants included) sponsor's fund), book lovers, and aspiring writers, who are simply appreciative and humble about receiving the gift and will actually read these over some time for their studies and pleasure. Interested persons please email to Dennis Cooper, dcooperweb@gmail.com. He will choose an appropriate one if there are some candidates. If there's no right person till this weekend, I will donate these to a university library here and my advisor who will keep the books so well. Thank you. ** Thomas Moronic, Whoa, awesome! Disneyland, or my pickings from the big D., did an escorts/slaves-type number on your magnificent imagination-plus-fingers combo. Superb, pal, and I am entirely humbled. No, I didn't write any of those texts. They're all lifted from here and there. Credit my writerly eye and pickpocketing talents or something, I guess, for their disconnections. Thank you, man! ** H, Hi. Thank you again for doing that. I hope I passed the offer and info on in a clear and appropriate way. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. I know I went to Disneyland first when I was just this side of being a swaddled blob of an infant, but I don't know when that was. I was two years-old when it opened. So, pretty early. 'The Jetsons' has a lot to answer for. ** Tosh Berman, I can't believe you've only been to Disneyland once, but I've been ... it feels like hundreds of times. I've been to Disneyland Paris a few times, and, in Tokyo, we chose to go to the second Disney park -- Tokyo Disney Sea -- instead. I've come to really like Disneyland Paris. It took me a while. And Disney Sea was quite nice. A handful of good rides and a super beautiful mountain/ crater smack dab in the middle that's dreamy to look at and to ride rides within. But I'm really into Disney as a great artist, and I think the original Disneyland is his masterpiece, and it's the only park that he supervised and designed/signed off on down to the tiniest details. All the others are attempts to replicate it, usually at lower cost, and always using a larger area of land to enclose the park, which changes the experience, design, everything. The last time I went to Disneyland last October, I was really struck by how small and tight and almost claustrophobic it is compared to the others. Even with the post-Disney alterations, it really feels like a one person's artwork, and the others don't have that feeling at all. ** James, Hi. Oh, I didn't mean to "school you". I just happened to know the discrepancy. Sure, I got humiliated by a teacher or ten back when. Horrifying abuse of power there. Ha ha, see, if that had been Disneyland-obsessed me getting my head stuck it would have been a highlight of my life or something, I think. To become, even for an embarrassing moment, a design detail in Disneyland sounds dreamy. But I am, as I keep saying, weird. Well, yeah, JC's review was really obnoxious. It certainly didn't help my opinion of his stuff. He really does come off as being very in love with his not anywhere near as brilliant as he seem to think self. That doesn't help either. ** Steevee, Hi. When I was a young Los Angeleno, one of the big things my friends I did as often as we could was go to Disneyland on LSD. I did that a lot, and all he way up until the early '90s, although, by then, I would go on Ecstasy rather than on LSD. Never had a bad or scary experience, but more than a few of the similarly drugged friends who came with me did. I'll try the new Weeknd. They've never really grabbed me, but they've never put me off either. I've always felt on the verge of being seduced. ** Sypha, Hi. Among the later novels, I think 'Pussy King of the Pirates' is probably the most fun, if you want to delve into them. Yeah, I think you have to be in the mood to be exhausted with Swans, or I mean you have to get into their particular style of exhausting listeners, or something. ** Robert-nyc, Hi, Robert! Really, really nice to see you! I've never been to Disney World or to any of those Florida-based parks. It's a massive hole in my Disney theme park fascination. When I was in high school and early college, it was a fairly common thing for guys and gals at my schools to take summer jobs working at Disneyland. They did have wild stories, more prank- and drug-oriented than sexual, but I can't remember any this morning. I'm very good. We'll probably be looking for a venue to show 'LCTG' in NYC pretty soon, or rather our producers will. Yeah, hang out more often if you can and feel like it. That would be nice. I hope you're good, and you sound good. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi. Flamingo Land looks totally charming. I didn't know about it. I'll pen it in for a future theme park road trip. ** Postitbreakup, Hi, Josh. Thanks! There's a scene in the next film that Zac and I are going to make that's set in an amusement park. Maybe in Parc Asterix, but we'll see. I don't know those rides you mentioned, I don't think. I only know the So. Cal, Paris, and semi-know the Tokyo parks. There are some pretty decent books on Disney's art that have a good amount of stuff about Disneyland and its making, etc. in them. Good to see you! ** Misanthrope, Well, with the name LPS, he would have to be a funny guy, or, otherwise, he'd be raw meat for bullies. Thanks for the update about the mom thing. Sounds as complicated and stressful as ever, albeit closer to some kind of conclusion at least. That's all it takes to be evil? Huh. That just sounds like 'jerk'. I don't even know who two those lads you mentioned are. I assume they must be comely and all of that. ** Kyler, Hi, Mr. K. I think it was just called Skyway. No, wait, when you were going from Fantasyland to Tomorrowland, it was called Skyway to Tomorrowland, and vice versa. Not an imaginative title. How's it, bud? ** Okay. I'm presenting you with another gig of music I've been into lately for your auditory and, in some cases, visual perusal, and I hope your experiences in its regard are fruitful in some manner or other. Also, do get on H's kind offer if you fit the bill and want some awesome free books. See you tomorrow.

Back from the dead: The Allegedly Sexy and Apparently Evil Harlow Day (orig. 06/25/07)

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1.
Affidavit lays out details in porn producer's slaying
By MARC DAVIS, The Virginian-Pilot
© May 19, 2007

At first, Sean Lockhart, who is better known by his porn star moniker Brent Corrigan, didn't get it. Here he was, at the luxurious Le Cirque restaurant in Las Vegas, sitting with three fellow gay-porn stars, one of whom would eventually tell State Police about the meeting. They were on the verge of a deal - a big deal. If it worked, it might make them rich. Might even make them $1 million. Or so they imagined. But there was a catch: Lockhart was caught in a messy contract dispute with a porn producer in Pennsylvania named Bryan Kocis who ran the popular and notorious gay porn company Cobra.


Brent Corrigan

Across the table, the well known gay male escort and porn star Harlow Cuadra, 25, offered a solution. "What if Bryan left the country?" Cuadra said. "What if he went to Canada?" Lockhart was drunk and didn't get the hint. "Then he'd only come back," Lockhart replied. Cuadra's romantic partner and business partner, Joseph Kerekes, 33, who worked as an escort and porn performer under the name Trent, hinted again. "Harlow knows someone who would do anything for him," Kerekes said.

Suddenly, Lockhart got it: Cuadra was offering to kill Kocis. A few days later, Kocis was dead. His throat was slashed, his body stabbed 28 times and his house set afire to conceal the slaying. Details of the meeting at Le Cirque, including the dialogue between the participants as well as Lockhart's thoughts, are contained in a 21-page police affidavit released Tuesday - the same day police arrested Cuadra and Kerekes and charged them in Kocis' slaying.


Brian Kocis

Cuadra and Kerekes shared a new $571,000 house at 1028 Stratem Court, off Birdneck Road in Virginia Beach. Together, they ran a business called Norfolk Male Escorts, and they produced porn movies, which they sold on several Web sites. In his escorting and porn appearances, Kerekes portrayed a tough Marine. Cuadra, who billed himself as a 19 year-old, was the baby-faced, smooth, boyish "twink". Cuadra and Kerekes imagined themselves as major players in the twink market. Their most ambitious project was one that would pair two of the hottest twinks on the Internet: Cuadra and Lockhart aka Brent Corrigan, famous for his roles in several Cobra Videos products.

The police affidavit from Pennsylvania describes in detail virtually every e-mail, phone call and action of how the events unfolded, day by day, starting with the fateful dinner at Le Cirque and ending with Cuadra and Lockhart frolicking on a nude San Diego beach. At some point during their conversations that day, Cuadra admitted he was present when Kocis was slain. Police say Cuadra set up a meeting with Kocis using an alias and corresponding by e-mail, posing as a young man who wanted to model for Kocis and make movies. Police tracked the trail of e-mails and phone calls after the fact.


Harlow and Brent on the beach

In the San Diego beach conversation, according to the affidavit, Cuadra described himself inside Kocis house, sharing wine with Kocis. Kerekes said he thought Cuadra slipped something into Kocis' drink, after which Kocis was "kind of stumbling" around. And Cuadra talked about the killing itself. "It was quick," he said. "He never saw it coming." Cuadra talked about watching Kocis die. "Actually, it's sick, but it made me feel better inside," Cuadra said. "It almost felt like I got revenge."

The affidavit lays out a complex web of circumstantial evidence leading to police taping the beach conversation. Cuadra and Kocis had never met. But they did exchange e-mails and phone calls, setting up a face-to-face meeting at Kocis' house for the night he was killed. On Jan. 20 - four days before the slaying - the police affidavit says Cuadra used his Discover card to charge $39.95 to conduct an Internet background check of Kocis. On Jan. 22 - two days before the killing - the affidavit describes how Cuadra set up an alias e-mail account at Yahoo.com and used it exclusively to communicate with the victim. Later that same day, the affidavit shows, Cuadra used the e-mail account to set up the meeting with Kocis for Jan. 24. On Jan. 23 - the day before the slaying - the affidavit says Cuadra used his Discover card and his driver's license to rent a Nissan Xterra sport utility vehicle in Virginia Beach. The SUV was gray or silver with three brake lights - matching a witness' description of a vehicle seen leaving Kocis' house the night of the murder.


Trent

That same day, the affidavit says, Kerekes checked into the Fox Ridge Inn in Pennsylvania, not far from Kocis' house, using his driver's license, paying cash in advance for two days for two people. It appears from the affidavit that both Cuadra and Kerekes visited the victim's house the night of the killing. Both are quoted from the San Diego beach conversation, describing the inside of Kocis' house, including his expensive home entertainment system and an upstairs bedroom. On Jan. 25 - the day after - Cuadra returned the SUV, having driven it 1,052 miles. A round-trip from Virginia Beach to Dallas, Pa., is 770 miles. That same morning, according to the affidavit, Cuadra called Lockhart to break the news. He told Lockhart to check out a local TV news Web site. That's when Lockhart discovered that Kocis was dead. "I guess my guy went overboard," Cuadra said, according to the affidavit. Lockhart became upset and drove home immediately.

Cuadra and Kerekes were arrested Tuesday - two weeks after the San Diego beach meeting. They are being held in the Virginia Beach jail, with no bond, awaiting a June 14 extradition hearing.


Harlow and Trent: mug shots



2.

The little ad that could

ABOUT HARLOW

19 years old
5'9", 155 pounds
30 waist
Toned, medium athletic build
Cuban/German
Skater with an awesome personality

Hi guys! I am Harlow, I guess you can call me an all American boy next door bad boy. I am a guy that can be seen at church with you, then pounding you wildly all night long in any way you want! I am a great top that packs 9-plus inches, yet I will be completely submissive and bottom for any size you have and thats' deemed neccessary :-) I can bring home the goods at least three to four times in any one hour session and will take you places your wildest dreams never brought you!

I enjoy surfing and can be found at the beach four times a week also at the skate park, where I can do all the tricks you want this bad boy to perform! I am religously at the gym five times a week pumping iron to stay hard for you in all muscles!

I am non-arrogant, completely ready to serve you in any way you want! Top or Bottom, I will oblige and make you come back for more. Please see my many great reviews at www.daddysreviews.com under the name Harlow in Norfolk.

My talents shine for you alone in a one-on-one or in my favorite type of booking, a duo with that masculine marine, Trent! Please try us both together for truly A HOT TIME you won't ever forget!!

Leave a shout out to Harlow today!
Harlows Global Voice @ www.harlowcuadraonline.com



3.

Those who got their money's worth: Harlow's last 10 escort reviews



Review #16, 03/01/2007

Name: Harlow

Location: Norfolk, VA
Email: stareyes23519@yahoo.com

Phone: 757-717-0233

Website: http://www.norfolkmaleescorts.com/harlow.html



Ethnicity: Caucasian Age: 18+
Height: 5'9" (175 cm) Weight: 150-160 lbs (68-73 kg) Build: Defined
Hair: Average Dark Brown
Cock: Cut 8-9" (20-22 cm) Thick
Smoking: No Drinking: Tolerant 

Orientation: Gay Calls: In/Out
Roles: Escort
Kissing: French Masturbation: Both Anal: Versatile Oral: Both 
Rates for time only (US $): 1st=200 

Date: 01/2007 Type: Afternoon Where: Norfolk, VA Rate: 1200
Rating: Recommended Hire Again? Yes
Where Found? Daddys Reviews Which: 
Reviewed Before? Match Description? Yes Lived up? Yes



Experience: 
I arranged to meet Harlow for an afternoon appointment. Mark had him pick me up at my hotel in mark's BMW M5 and then we went back to BOISRUS house. Harlows pictures don't do him justice, he has a nice tight body, broad smooth chest, defined stomach, and of course a very nice butt. We talked and got to know each other.

We then spent some quality time in the jacuzzi. After he got me all hot and bothered we decided to hit the bed and I had one of best times I have every had. After several hours of fun we had a nice shower and went out to dinner. Harlow is a nice young man with a great personality. I would recommand any one wanting a great expericence try him out.



Handle: Wade
Submissions: First Review

You: Gay Male 36yo a little overweight I have experienced some escourts in the past.


Review #15, 01/29/2007

Name: Harlow

Ethnicity: Caucasian Age: 20's
Height: 5'8" (173 cm) Weight: 140-150 lbs (64-68 kg) Build: Muscled
Eyes: Blue/Brown Hair: Short Dark Brown
Cock: Cut 8-9" (20-22 cm) Average

Orientation: Gay Calls: In/Out
Roles: Escort
Kissing: French Masturbation: Both Anal: Versatile Oral: Gets 
Rates for time only (US $): 1st=200 2nd=200 

Date: 12/2006 Type: 1.5 Hours Where: Norfolk, VA Rate: 300
Rating: Recommended Hire Again? Yes
Where Found? Hooboys M4M Which: 
Reviewed Before? Yes Match Description? Yes Lived up? Yes



Experience: 
After trying to schedule an appointment with Harlow in October and being hung up on by the BOISRUS telephone guy, I was hesitant to try and schedule something with Harlow but his photos were so attractive and he was so close to my ideal type that I decided to give it another try and BOY am I ever glad that I did! This time Mark (the receptionist) was completely professional and so much so that I thought I was speaking to a new guy. I arranged to meet Harlow at the "boidello" that they have set up in Norfolk and was impressed not only by Harlow but by their setup as well.

It's very comfortable with an enormous multi-person shower, a king size bed, a jacuzzi and a massage area as well as a fully stocked bar and Bel Ami porn on the big screen. As to Harlow... I'll not say that he was even better looking than his pictures (I mean did you SEE those pictures?) But he's every bit as handsome and sweet as he appears in them. He's a great kisser and very attentive to making sure that I was having a good time. His face may be boyishly charming, but he got frisky on the massage table, in the jacuzzi, in the shower, in the bed, in me, er... anyway... We also talked a bit in the jacuzzi and he's genuinely a nice intelligent guy. I'd hire him again in a heartbeat... and I definately will next time I'm passing by Norfolk. 



Handle: Havan
Submissions: 5 or more Reviews

You: I'm a 50 year old somewhat sedentary massage addict who likes the company of svelte and friendly young men. I generally like the self indulgent atmosphere of an escort session where it can be "all about me" and still be friendly and fun. I generally DISAGREE with Veronica Mars' Logan when he says "If the cuddling is the best part he's doing it wrong"


Review #14, 01/29/2007

Name: Harlow




Ethnicity: Caucasian Age: 18+
Height: 5'9" (175 cm) Weight: 150-160 lbs (68-73 kg) Build: Muscled
Eyes: Brown Hair: Short Brown/Black
Cock: Cut 8-9" (20-22 cm) Thick
Smoking: No 

Calls: In/Out
Roles: Escort
Kissing: French Masturbation: Both Anal: Versatile Oral: Both 
Rates for time only (US $): 1st=250 

Date: 12/06 Type: 1 Hour Rate: 200
Rating: Recommended Hire Again? Yes
Where Found? Hooboys M4M Which: ID #134894
Reviewed Before? Yes Match Description? Yes Lived up? Yes



Experience: 
WOW! Harlow is a VVGL All American with a great but not overdeveloped wrestler's build. Even better in person than his already incredible Pix. Model looks, defined body, sweet little ass, and a meaty cock. I like escorts in my height range (5'8" to 5'10"), but it's not easy to find the hole package like this. I booked him for an hour at his studio.

He offered me a massage but I decided to go directly for more. Passionate kissing and rolling around, followed by oral, anal, the works. You can tell he wrestled because he really knows how to move around on the mattress. He is eager to please and be pleased and verbal about it. Harlow is a total dreamboy. He got a lot done in an hour -- and yes, he can be counted on for several orgasms if that's what you expect -- but I wish I'd booked him for the whole day. We showered each other and kissed some more before ending the session. Definitely best in class.



Handle: Fratlanta

Submissions: First Review


You: Average professional guy in mid 40's. Travel a lot so I've seen my share of escorts, including some of the best.


Review #13, 12/27/2006

Name: Harlow:

Ethnicity: Caucasian Age: 18+
Height: 5'10" (178 cm) Weight: 150-160 lbs (68-73 kg)
Build: Muscled
Hair: Brown
Cock: Cut 9-10" (22-25 cm) Thick
Smoking: No Drinking: Tolerant
Orientation: Mostly Gay Calls: In/Out
Roles: Escort,Massage
Kissing: Yes Masturbation: Both Anal: Versatile Oral: Both
Rates for time only (US $): 1st=225 2nd=200
Date: 11/2006 Type: 1 Hour Rate: 225
Rating: Recommended Hire Again? Yes
Where Found? His Website Which: boisrus.com
Reviewed Before? Yes Match Description? Yes Lived up? Yes

Experience:
I have been wanting to have an experience with a man, Harlow was my first. I was very nervous, and he put me at ease with a massage to start. His body is unbelievable, and his cock is the greatest. He came 3 times, and I think he could have gone on. He made me feel like a stud that I am not. I have returned for more since, and will return again.

Handle: mganderson60
Submissions: First Review

You: 60 MWM, finally realize I am gay, just learning


Review #12, 08/31/2006


Name: Harlow

Ethnicity: Caucasian Age: 20''s
Height: 5''8" (173 cm) Weight: 140-150 lbs (64-68 kg) Build: Swimmers
Eyes: Blue/Brown Hair: Average Sandy Brown
Body Hair: Smooth Facial Hair: Smooth
Cock: Cut 8-9" (20-22 cm) ThickOrientation: Mostly Gay Kissing: Yes Masturbation: Both Anal: Versatile Oral: Both Kink: Switch 
Roles: Companion Escort Massage 
Calls: In/Out
Smoking: No Drinking: Light Piercing: One
Rates for time only(US $): 1st=200 2nd=175 Date: 07/2006 Type: 2 Hours Rate: 375.
Rating: Recommended Hire Again? Yes
Where Found? His Website Which: www.boisrus.com
Reviewed Before? Yes Match Description? Yes Lived up? Yes

Experience: I preset my appointment with Harlow for 2 hrs.incalls two weeks in advance before my conference in VA, Virginia Beach. The arrangement was made through Mark, the agent who did a very good job in arranging the time and presence of the models requested.The incall place is located in a very private , first class neighborhood.The indoor facility is above par with all the amenities available and nice furnishing. The place also has it''s own Video equipment in hand for photography and movie production.
The service provided by Harlow was superb and excellent.He was very versatile and came thrice during the session. He looks much younger than his age and has the most perfect body and lean muscle not to mention the hung & thick tools that comes with it. I am very satisfied with his service and would definitely request for him again in my next visit to Virginia Beach, VA. Anybody visiting VA should definitely check-out Mark''s incall facility and his stable of very hot, young and goodlooking models specialy Harlow.
My only regret is not booking Harlow for an overnight or a whole weekend but there will be another next time.

Handle: INSATIABLE

Submissions: First Review

Previous Reviews: N/A
You: I am a 43 year old single, self-employed businessman, travels many times a year to different states and out of the country most of the time.I like to meet hot, smooth goodlooking young model (caucasian), escort (18-22) for entertainment and companionship.


Review #11, 06/13/2006


Name: Harlow

Ethnicity: Caucasian Age: 18+
Height: 5''9" (175 cm) Weight: 150-160 lbs (68-73 kg) Build: Defined
Eyes: Green/Hazel Hair: Average Brown/Black
Body Hair: Smooth Facial Hair: Stubble
Cock: Unknown 8-9" (20-22 cm) Thick Kissing: Yes Masturbation: Both Anal: Versatile Oral: Both 
Roles: Escort
Rates for time only(US $): 1st=200 Date: 05/2006 Type: 1 Hour Rate: 200
Rating: Recommended Hire Again? Yes
Where Found? Agency Which: boisrus.com Reviewed Before? Yes Match Description? Yes Lived up? Yes

Experience: DAMN! Harlow is exactly as advertised. Hot tight body, nicely toned and defined. Nice big, thick cock, big balls, perfect ass. Beautiful face.

I met him for an in-call at his agency house. He came out to my car to greet me and make me feel welcome right away. He took me inside, and after taking care of business (agency policy this is done up front), he offered a drink and a massage. I was interested in the massage, but wanted to undress him first. I started to remove his shirt. He could tell i wanted to make out, so we started kissing and he started rubbing his hot body up against mine. He made me so horny I comletely lost interest in the massage!

We continued to make out and i took off his shirt. His niples and chest and abs are beautiful! I felt his crotch with one hand and slid my other hand inside his pants in back and started caressing his ass, he was hard already (we both were!)

He is extremely confident sexually and it is obvious that he loves sex. He came 3 times in the hour!!!! I was amazed. I am sure he could have easily cum again as he stayed hard the whole time, but our workout was pretty intense and I was drained. He did everything I asked, and he made me feel like a real stud (even though I''m not).

Afterwards we showered together. I began to wish I had scheduled 2 hours with him because he got me hard and horned again while we showered. He is a natural charmer. Great personality, very respectful, easy to talk too. (Plus, he repaired my glasses which got broken during our passionate romp, lol!)

I will definately meet Harlow again! I live in DC so it is a 3.5 hour drive to his agancy house in Norfolk but I will gladly do this again and again! This was my first experience with an escort and he made it so enjoyable I''m honestly not interested an any others. (Unless they are from the same agency and join the two of us for a 3 or 4-way).

A quick note about his agency. I spoke several times with Mark over the phone and want to say that he was very professional and corteous. The house they use for in-calls is fantastic, complete with a huge master suite with jaccuzi, a massage table and a whole lot of other ammenities I didn''t even notice because I couldn''t take my eyes off of Harlow. I think next time I will check out the jaccuzi with Harlow.
Because of the long drive I misjudged the traffic and I arrived late for my appointment. Mark and Harlow were very understanding and Harlow gave me the full hour even though I think it would have been reasonable of them to reduce the time. I''m feeling bad right now because I should have given Harlow a nice tip for his patience, only I just now thought of it. Sorry Harlow, I''ll take care of it next time!
Overall rating: 2 thumbs (and a penis)way, way up for Harlow and the agency.

Handle: kwikdraw
Submissions: First Review
You: 49yo, professional, inexperienced with escorts.


Review #10, 05/10/2006


Name: Harlow

Ethnicity: Caucasian Age: 20''s
Height: 5''9" (175 cm) Weight: 150-160 lbs (68-73 kg) Build: Defined
Hair: Short Black
Body Hair: Shaved Facial Hair: Shaved
Cock: Cut 8-9" (20-22 cm) Thick Kissing: Yes Masturbation: Both Anal: Versatile Oral: Both 
Roles: Escort Worship 
Calls: In/Out
Rates for time only(US $): 1st=200 Date: 4/2006 Type: 1 Hour Rate: 200
Rating: Recommended Hire Again? Yes
Where Found? Agency Which: www.norfolkmaleescorts.com Reviewed Before? Yes Match Description? Yes Lived up? Yes

Experience: I saw Harlow on 4/21/2006. What can one say about him that has not already been said? 
Courteous, prompt, and respectful? Yep! 
Boyish charm? Unquestionably. 
A gorgeous stud who is better looking than his pics? No doubt. 
Incredible sex appeal and fun to be with? Oh yeah! 
Has the tools, skills, and know-how to make you feel great? You can say that again! Can’t get enough of him? You betcha! 
And so on and so on.

So I apologize for not sharing any original thought. I have a few, but I think I''ll tell Harlow first when I see him again. He’s just damn great!

BTW: I caught a glimpse of Justin entering the house as I was leaving. Hot stuff, my friends. Tried to arrange a duo with Harlow and Justin for later that night, but schedules could not mesh. Something to look forward to in the future!

Handle: Lawyer
Submissions: First Review
You: MWM, professional. I hire young male escorts a few times a year across the country.


Review #9, 04/11/2006


Name: Harlow

Ethnicity: Caucasian Age: 20''s
Height: 5''10" (178 cm) Weight: 150-160 lbs (68-73 kg) Build: Defined
Eyes: Brown Hair: Short Brown
Body Hair: Smooth Facial Hair: Smooth
Cock: Cut 7-8" (18-20 cm) Thick Kissing: Yes Masturbation: Both Anal: Versatile Oral: Both Kink: No 
Roles: Escort Massage 
Rates for time only(US $): Session=550 Date: 03/2006 Type: 2 Hours Rate: 550
Rating: Recommended Hire Again? Yes
Where Found? Agency Which: norfolkmaleescorts Reviewed Before? Yes Match Description? Yes Lived up? Yes

Experience: After a month or so away on business, I needed some extra excitement added to my life so contact Mark at Norfolk Male Escorts. I was pleased to have one of the main ''studs'' Harlow and another great new young Marine, Jason. After slipping into the giant jacuzzi and having a great double massage by the guys, we all became quickly hard and it was decided that I would be plowed by Jason and giving head to Harlow at the same time. Jason ''The Rabbit'', was more like the Energizer Bunny, until he finally came all over me. Harlow''s extra-large tool immediately took his place and I was pleasently rammed for it seemed over 1/2 an hour! Somehow, I remained hard throughout the entire 2hrs, my preference, then shot-off a giant load at the end of the session. We all 3 took a refreshing leisurely shower and cleaned up in the huge 6 person-sized shower. I even had time to sit down and have a drink (or 2) at the great fully stocked mini-bar that was provided. Mark/Norfo
lk Male Escorts is making the ''experience'' even better by EXPANDING the entertainment area and offering several other new optional and unique thrills-wrestling mat (I can''t wait!), workout area, and a few other things to make me cumming back for More and More. I always find it had to choose from the past great young men or trying out the new guys! Thank-you for a great and excellent service.

Handle: Lexusman

Submissions: Fourth Review

Previous Reviews: Harlow/Norfolk, Trent/Norfolk, Trey/Raleigh
You: SWM Executive in my 40''s who once in a while likes to spend time with young guys to ''soak up'' some of their youth!


Review #8, 02/02/2006

Name: Harlow

Ethnicity: Caucasian Age: 20's
Height: 5'10" (178 cm) Weight: 140-150 lbs (64-68 kg) Build: Swimmers
Eyes: Brown Hair: Short Brown
Body Hair: Smooth Facial Hair: Smooth
Cock: Cut 8-9" (20-22 cm) Thick Kissing: Yes Masturbation: Both Anal: Versatile Oral: Both 
Roles: Companion Escort Massage 
Calls: In/Out
Smoking: No Drinking: Tolerent 
Rates for time only(US $): 1st=200 Date: 01/2006 Type: 2 Hours Rate: $600
Rating: Satisfactory Hire Again? Yes
Where Found? Other website Which: BOISRUS
Reviewed Before? Yes Match Description? Yes Lived up? Yes

Experience: Having used BOISRUS about 10 times in the past few months and Harlow 6 times, it continues to amaze me how thrilling it is each time I see him. This time, a 2 hour appointment (1 hours is NOT enough time for everything-hot tub, massage, oral, anal!) I had Harlow with another young hung stud, Seth. I used BOISRUS/Mark's fantastic In-House, complete with giant hot tub and 60 inch porn TV. The hot guys are always prepared and on time, which is very important to me. Harlow (and Seth) are extremely hung young guys, enough to turn anyone on by just looking at them. Clearly, the both boys workout in the gym, which only encourages me to get in better shape (I want to keep...UP with them :)). Harlow always is patient and takes his time, which makes each meeting something always special. I look forward to my next and 7th meeting with Harlow and this great professional service.

Handle: Lexusman

Submissions: Second Review
Previous Reviews: Harlow/Norfolk
You: SWM in my 40's, executive, looking for some fun and excitement to hold old age at bay by seeing great young and exciting guys. It is working!


Review #7, 01/23/2006

Name: Harlow

Ethnicity: Caucasian Age: 20's
Height: 5'9" (175 cm) Weight: 140-150 lbs (64-68 kg) Build: Defined
Eyes: Brown Hair: Short Brown
Body Hair: Smooth Facial Hair: Shaved
Cock: Cut 7-8" (18-20 cm) Thick Kissing: Yes Masturbation: Both Anal: Versatile Oral: Both 
Roles: Companion Escort Massage 
Calls: In/Out
Smoking: No 
Rates for time only(US $): 1st=$200 2nd=$200 Date: 12/2005 Type: 2 Hours Rate: $400
Rating: Recommended Hire Again? Yes
Where Found? Agency Which: BOISRUS Norfolk Male Escorts Reviewed Before? Yes Match Description? Yes Lived up? Yes

Experience: Harlow was an incredible pleasure to experience! After contacting Mark at BOISRUS, the new in-house was a perfect place to meet, on time and ready. After a full body massage where we were BOTH turned on and hard, we used the large hot tub and watching porn on the giant flatscreen TV. His tool was almost as large as mine and accomidated me in both oral and anal. In fact, Harlow 'shot his load' 3 times, and was hard for a fouth over the 2 hour period. What a DAWG! This is the 5th time that I have booked Harlow though Mark's excellent service...am I addicted to him or what!?

Handle: LEXUSMAN

Submissions: First Review

Previous Reviews: Harlow, BOISRUS/Norfolk All Male Escorts/Norfolk Virginia
You: Single, 40's and in good shape, enjoying and trying to maintain my youth with youthful experiences!


Review #6, 06/14/2005


Name: Harlow and Trent

Build: Defined
Eyes: Brown Hair: Short Unknown
Body Hair: Smooth Facial Hair: Smooth
Cock: Cut 9-10" (22-25 cm) Thick

Kissing: Yes Masturbation: Both Anal: Versatile Oral: Both 
Roles: Companion Escort Massage Modeling 
Calls: In/Out

Rates for time only(US $): 1st=200 

Date: 05/2005 Type: 1 Hour Rate: 200
Rating: Recommended Hire Again? Yes
Where Found? His Website
Reviewed Before? Yes Match Description? Yes Lived up? Yes



Experience: 
I have reason to visit Norfolk on weekends to visit friends who are in town only on Saturday. This weekend I decided to make an escape out of it and rented a suite in a downtown hotel. Just a weekend to pamper myself and try out new things.

I had seen Norfolk Male Escorts' site and steeled up the nerve to give it a try. I called Mark and told him a little about myself and what kind of company I was looking for. He recommended Harlow. I had seen Harlow's pictures on the website and definitely was agreeable to the idea. Since my friends were leaving town at 6pm I asked Mark to send Harlow to my hotel at 8:30ish. Harlow was originally not going to be available, but Mark worked it out so that we all could be happy with the arrangement.

Harlow arrived right on time and I gotta be honest and say that he just about knocked my socks off. He is the most desirable young man I have seen. Just the right amount of boyish charm in a MAN's body. His pictures do not do him justice. We talked for awhile and he was able to calm my nerves by finding something we have in common and carrying on an intelligent, worthwhile conversation about it. He truly wants to make you comfortable and relaxed.

Since everyone's experience will be something different and since everyone is looking for something different, I won't get into the details of what went on. I'm just not comfortable kissing and telling. Suffice it to say that it was FANTASTIC and I spoke with Mark the next morning and set something up for that day as well.

I scheduled Harlow again and asked for Trent to join him. You'll find that review under Trent's name since he deserves his own review.

Thanks Mark and crew and I'll be looking forward to visiting Norfolk again.



Handle: Bill

Submissions: First Review


You: 
Gay male, mid-30's, 5'11'', overweight. I work from home in a family business so it is hard to socialize. Shy about my build and experience.


4.
Deeper! Deeper!


Harlow's blog


Norfolkmalescorts.com


Brent Corrigan Online



5.
Update 2015



Harlow Cuadra 2015


Harlow Cuadra Found Guilty of Porn Producer’s Murder
The Harlow Cuadra Story
The Harlow & Joe Blog
Cobra Killer @ Facebook
Twink Porn Bloodbath
Superior Court judges denies Cuadra’s appeal



Keep On Dancing, Harlow Cuadra


Cuadra sentenced to life for Kocis murder
----




*

p.s. Hey. ** Douglas Payne, Hi. Still not? Weird, but hardly unprecedented, at least re: my FB account and activities. Okay, I'll switch to email. I'll be out all day starting soon, but I'll write to you tonight and we can finally set this up. Sorry for my part of the tech issues. ** Chris Dankland, Hi, Chris. Cool, really glad you dug the gig, obviously. No, I haven't been over to find the goodies on AT's Soundcloud. Will do. Thanks a bunch for letting me know. Yeah, I can't say that I like everything on that new Vince Staples. It seems a little drawn out, but there are a bunch of tracks I really like a lot. I've only heard this and that of Young Thug. Not enough to get a grip. I'll get 'Barter 6' right away. Great! Oh, damn, about his troubles. Actually, yeah, on the trailer. We've made a short teaser trailer for 'LCTG' and also a longer, fleshed-out trailer whose duration is about four minutes. Our plan is that we're going to release the teaser as soon as the first showing is nailed down, and it looks like that will be nailed down in the next few days. So, that'll be public soon. We're going to save the longer and much more representative trailer until either the film starts being more widely available or if the festival that will seemingly host the first showing wants to use it to promote the film. So, there should at least be a little glimpse-type trailer out very soon. Thanks for asking. You take care too, man. ** James, Hi. I guess I am known for my bright eyes about stuff. People say so. Tokyo! Extremely great plan there. And that's a great time of year to go. Mm, well, vis-à-vis that Disney choice, it depends. Tokyo Disneyland is pretty close to the So. Cal. model, and Sea is completely different from any of the other parks. We chose the latter for that reason. Love back, Dennis. ** Sypha, Hi. I've been obsessed with that Ladytron song 'Destroy Everything You Touch' for a few years. It makes me swoon. Ha ha, I can only double down on whatever hell _B_A gave you about Keane. That's great news about your lowered cholesterol! Can you feel the difference? ** Steevee, Hi. I think you're the person who turned me on to Vince Staples, if I'm not mistaken. I haven't seen that doc, but the footage of Vidal and Buckley going at it head to head is always reliable 'ha ha' porn. I imagine you get that 'mistaken' thing with the other Steve Erickson at least once in a while, no? For me, it's a mixup with the DC who made the TV shows 'Miami Vice' and 'Chicago Hope' and other stuff. There have been a few times when an interviewer has come prepared to ask me a lot of questions about my other career as a TV director/writer. And I used to get long messages on my LA phone/ answering machine frequently from people trying to pitch me on their scripts. ** Richard, Hi, Richard! Always a true pleasure to see you here! Yeah, someone alerted me to that New Yorker thing, and it was a once-in-a-lifetime kick of strangeness to share a sentence with Larry Kramer. He and I, as you can imagine, never got along. How are you doing? Extremely well, I hope. Hugs, love, Dennis. ** H, Hi. My pleasure. I haven't received any emails yet. Very glad you like Berrigan's 'Sonnets'. Yes, they're dreamy, I think. I'll share what you forgot to mention. Everyone, H has an add/more info re: the offer of free books yesterday. In H's words: 'The receiver could eradicate up to 20 percent of books if one wishes so as that will save my shipping cost and that person does not have to keep the books of no interest.' Thank you very much for sending the blog day! I'll go find it in just a while. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. They were a hilarious match. Ooh, nice about the Cairns/ Robbe-Grillet thing, and I didn't know about the Didion bio. Thank you. When I was a little kid, I remember my parents being really into some TV show called 'I Married Joan'. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. The new RP Boo album is really, really fun. I've been seeing stuff, especially in my news feed, about the kerfuffle over Jeremy Corbyn, but I couldn't figure out what the deal was. ** Schlix, Hi, Uli. Ugh, condolences about your laptop's summer heat issues. Thighpaulsandra is pretty all over the place. Which is interesting. Uneven. I need to get the new Wire (magazine)! I did a little test of the new Tame Impala too and, apparently like you, I wasn't very impressed, at least on first listen. RIP: Dieter Moebius. Yeah, I was sad to hear that. What a weird thing for Roedelius to say. Wtf?! ** G.r. maierhofer, Hey! No, I haven't received 'Marcel', at least not yet. ** Misanthrope, Welcome back to the game. Is evil the opposite of good? Nah. Bad is the opposite of good. Evil would be the opposite of ... what ... divinity? Which also doesn't exist. That's my two cents. Always nice when teen idols/ stars turn out to be complex people. I'm always happy to hear that. Oh, jeez, re: the LPS mom stuff. I hope your mom can move things along or at least get to the bottom of something today. ** Postitbreakup, Pretty different, as far as I can tell. Disney World doesn't have Mr. Toad's Wild Ride, which is one of the great works of art of all time, for instance. 'LCTG' is so incredibly not going to get anywhere near the Oscars, ha ha. Our next one, which should be a lot less 'controversial' maybe, might, at least on a snowy day in hell. ** Kyler, No, 'How's it' is, like, ... maybe it's a California thing? It's just like, oh, 'What's up?' or 'What's happening, man', and so on. The 'it' is silent or whatever. 'It' is good with me. Today 'it' is a visit to Versailles with Zac and visiting d.l. Bernard Welt. 'It' should be quite pleasant, don't you think? We'll see. ** Bill, Hi, Bill. Yeah, I saw that about Don Joyce. Very sad indeed. I was quite surprised that he was 71 years-old. I had never imagined that he was that much older. ** Okay. Due both to the fact that this until-now dead post seemed to deserve a new life and to the fact that I am currently scrambling to keep up with my new post-making duties, you get this oldie today with a brief addendum/update. See you tomorrow.

Later (mostly) Luis Buñuel Day

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'Luis Buñuel was a singular figure in world cinema, and a consecrated auteur from the start. Born almost with cinema itself, his work moves from surrealist experimentation in the 1920s, through commercial comedies and melodrama in the 1950s, to postmodernist cine d’art in the 1960s and ’70s. Claimed for France, where he made his celebrated early and late films, for Spain, where he was born and had his deepest cultural roots, and for Mexico, where he became a citizen and made 20 films, he has more recently been seen as a figure in permanent exile who problematises the very idea of the national in his films.

'A surrealist, an iconoclast, a contrarian and provocateur, Buñuel claimed that his project was to pierce the self-assurance of the powerful. His work takes shape beneath the “double arches of beauty and rebellion”, as Octavio Paz put it. Recently, his sons have reasserted Buñuel’s view of Un Chien andalou, as “a call to murder” against the “museum-ifying” of the celebrations of his centenary. While this exaggerates somewhat his radicalism and outsider status, there is considerable consistency in his attacks on the bourgeoisie, whose hypocrisy and dissembling both amused and enraged him. “In a world as badly made as ours,” he said, “there is only one road – rebellion.”

'Buñuel is in fact satirising his own class, to which he comfortably and unabashedly belonged. He understood the neuroses and pettiness of his middle class Catholic upbringing well. “I am still an atheist, thank God”, he famously said. It is one of his many paradoxes: he was both inside and outside. While a ferocious critic of the ideologies of the powerful in his films (the unholy trinity of bourgeois complacency, religious hypocrisy, and patriarchal authority), he enjoyed the fruits of this social order in his personal life. His wife’s memoirs Mujer sin piano (Woman without a Piano), written to fill out Buñuel’s own, in which she and her children are mentioned hardly at all, reads like the remembrances of a Stockholm-syndrome afflicted captive. Jeanne Rucar, who met Buñuel in 1926 and married him in 1934, tries to tell a love story but the pain and losses he inflicted on her, including that of her beloved piano, to a bet made by Luis without her consent, constantly shine through.

'Without going as far as Paulo Antonio Paranaguá, who asserts that the “he” of the title is Buñuel himself, it is safe to say the director of El (1953), adapted from a novel by Mercedes Pinto, knew the material intimately. Part of his genius was this ability to stand outside his cultural self, dissecting desire and the torturous routes of its suppression in bourgeois, patriarchal Catholic societies. His films focus on male desire, and his female protagonists are often mere projections of it. But the characterisations of Viridiana, Tristana, and Sévérine in Belle de jour most notably, also reveal the way in which bourgeois society distorts and represses these women’s basic needs and desires “conspir[ing] to keep them in a position of subservience and servitude.”

'The bourgeoisie interested him particularly because its good manners demand the repression of desire. His readings of Freud inspired him to study his class as a laboratory for the twisted return of the repressed. But it was the social and economic power of the bourgeoisie that made him want to implode it from within. If Henry Miller was right when he stated that “Buñuel, like an entomologist, has studied what we call love in order to expose beneath the ideology, mythology, platitudes and phraseologies the complete and bloody machinery of sex,” Luis was also, like an entomologist, interested in the relationships of power in sex, politics and everyday life; not just the mating dance, but the dance of homosocial power disguised beneath it, and all the other forms of power that can be exercised as violence and more subtle forms of repression.

'Miller’s reference to the study of insects is apt; Buñuel did in fact consider becoming an entomologist. It also situates his directorial perspective. His sometimes unlikeable characters are engaged at a distance that wavers between pathos and bathos. We see their humanity, but he “blocks the pleasure of psychological identification […] by disturbing the aesthetic framework that solicits and guarantees it.” Buñuel’s stylish witticisms, or rather, witticisms of style, establish a relationship with the viewer over the heads of his characters. This relationship is free of concessions; there’s no effort at being liked or even understood. Commenting on The Exterminating Angel, Joan Mellen shows how he parodies the tracking shot by not allowing sufficient space to complete it. “Such overt intrusions of style”, she notes, “announce the real hero of Buñuel’s films, his the only consciousness we can respect”.

'Yet this supremely individualistic, uncompromising director was always supported and surrounded by other talents that let his own flourish. Buñuel always wrote in collaboration: initially mostly with Luis Alcoriza, then Julio Alejandro, and finally Jean-Claude Carrière. This aspect of the “Buñuel apparatus” has been underexplored; perhaps these other writers were in fact just the midwives to Buñuel’s talents, and it is hard to quantify their contribution.

'More than other directors, Buñuel has etched indelible images into film culture. The “Buñuelian” can refer to shots of insects, a sheep or other farm animal appearing in posh settings, cutaways to animals eating one another, bizarre hands, odd physical types and, especially, fetishistic shots of feet and legs (said Hitchcock of Tristana: “That leg! That leg!”). The term also implies the confusions of dream and reality, form and anti-form, an irreverent sense of humour, black, morbid jokes that hint at the constant presence of the irrational, the absurdity of human actions. Buñuel shares this sensibility with the Spanish esperpento, the distancing black comedy that has been considered an authentic Spanish film tradition.

'He also shares with the esperpento an acid view of the powerful and their excesses, as well as a sense of sexuality as debasing and enslaving. Desires, sexual and political, are continually intertwined in his films. More than a call to murder, his best films are a call to an attempt at anarchist freedom, however futile, both in love and society.'-- Dominique Russell, Senses of Cinema



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Stills
























































































_____
Further

Luis Bunuel @ IMDb
Luis Bunuel @ The Criterion Collection
Luis Bunuel Film Institute
Luis Bunuel Official Website
Luis Bunuel Fan Site
'The Essentials: Luis Bunuel'
Luis Bunuel overview @ Senses of Cinema
Luis Bunuel's 10 Favorite Films
'Buñuel - The Beginning and the End'
Luis Bunuel @ mubi
'THE LIFE AND TIMES OF LUIS BUÑUEL'
'The Religious Affiliation of Director
Luis Bunuel'

'Conversation with Luis Buñuel on "Belle de jour"'
'A Charismatic Chameleon: On Luis Buñuel'



______
How to Make the Perfect Dry Martini



“To provoke, or sustain, a reverie in a bar, you have to drink English gin, especially in the form of the dry martini,” writes Buñuel. “To be frank, given the primordial role in my life played by the dry martini, I think I really ought to give it at least a page.” He recommends that “the ice be so cold and hard that it won’t melt, since nothing’s worse than a watery martini,” then offers up his procedure, “the fruit of long experimentation and guaranteed to produce perfect results. The day before your guests arrive, put all the ingredients—glasses, gin, and shaker—in the refrigerator. Use a thermometer to make sure the ice is about twenty degrees below zero (centigrade). Don’t take anything out until your friends arrive; then pour a few drops of Noilly Prat and half a demitasse spoon of Angostura bitters over the ice. Stir it, then pour it out, keeping only the ice, which retains a faint taste of both. Then pour straight gin over the ice, stir it again, and serve.” In the clip above, you can witness the man himself in action, a sight that gets me wondering whether Buñuel ever crossed paths with John Updike. Imagining such a meeting sets the mind reeling, but few quotes seem as apropos here as the New England novelist’s observation that “excellence in the great things is built upon excellence in the small.”



___________
Bernard Welt on Bunuel & Dali's 'Un chien andalou'


from a talk on "The Aesthetic of the Dream in Surrealist Film," Corcoran Gallery, DC, June 2011

+

Even: As You and I (1937)



'A great parody which obviously came from quite early American admirers of 'Un chien andalou', including Harry Hay, who went on to be big in gay liberation and radical faeries. I'm guessing a lot of people have never seen it.'-- Bernard Welt



________
fromMy Last Breath, by Luis Bunuel




During the last ten years of her life, my mother gradually lost her memory. When I went to see her in Saragossa, where she lived with my brothers, I watched the way she read magazines, turning the pages carefully, one by one, from the first to the last. When she finished, I’d take the magazine from her, then give it back, only to see her leaf through it again, slowly, page by page.

She was in perfect physical health and remarkably agile for her age, but in the end she no longer recognized her children. She didn’t know who we were, or who she was. I’d walk into her room, kiss her, sit with her awhile. Sometimes, I’d leave, then turn around and walk back in again. She greeted me with the same smile and invited me to sit down—as if she were seeing me for the first time. She didn’t remember my name.

… As time goes by, we don’t give a second thought to all the memories we so unconsciously accumulate, until suddenly, one day, we can’t think of the name of a good friend or relative. It’s simply gone; we’ve forgotten…I search and search, but it’s futile, and I can only wait for the final amnesia, the one that can erase an entire life, as it did my mothers’.

So far I’ve managed to keep this final darkness at bay. From my distant past, I can still conjure up countless names and faces; and when I forget one, I remain calm. I know it’s sure to surface suddenly, via one of those accidents of the unconscious. On the other hand, I’m overwhelmed by anxiety when I can’t remember a recent event, or the name of someone I’ve meet during the last few months. Or the name of a familiar object. I feel as if my whole personality has suddenly disintegrated; I become obsessed; I can’t think about anything else; and yet all my efforts and my rage get my nowhere. Am I going to disappear all together? The obligation to find a metaphor to describe “table” is a monstrous feeling, but I console myself with the fact that there is something even worse—to be alive and yet not recognize yourself, not know anymore who you are.

You have to begin to lose your memory, if only in bits and pieces, to realize that memory is what makes our lives. Life without memory is no life at all…our memory is our coherence, our reason, our feeling, even our action. Without it, we are nothing. Memory can be omnipotent and indispensable, but it’s also terribly fragile. The menace is everywhere, not only from its traditional enemy, forgetfulness, but from false memories…our imagination, and our dreams, are forever invading our memories; we end up transforming our lies into truths. Of course, fantasy and reality are equally personal, and equally felt, so their confusion is a matter of only relative importance…I am the sum of my errors and doubts as well as my certainties…the portrait I’ve drawn is wholly mine—with my affirmations, my hesitations, my repetitions and lapses, my truths and my lies. Such is my memory.


If someone were to tell me I had twenty years left, and asked me how I’d like to spend them, I’d reply: “Give me two hours a day of activity, and I’ll take the other twenty-two in dreams, provided I can remember them”.

During sleep, the mind protects itself from the outside world; one is much less sensitive to noise, smell and light. One the other hand, the mind is bombarded by a veritable barrage of dreams that seem to burst upon it like waves. Billions of images surge up each night, then dissolve almost immediately, enveloping the earth in a blanket of lost dreams. Absolutely everything has been imagined during one night or another by one mind or another, and then forgotten. I have a list of about fifteen recurring dreams that have pursued me all my life like faithful traveling companions.

Sometimes, too, I dream that I’m back home in Calanda, and I know there’s a ghost in the house (undoubtedly prompted by my memory of my father’s spectral appearance the night of his death). I walk bravely into the room without a light and challenge the spirit to show himself. Sometime I swear at him. Suddenly there’s a noise behind me, a door slams, and I wake up terrified. I also dream often of my father, sitting at the dinner table with a serious expression on his face, eating very slowly and very little, scarcely speaking. I know he’s dead, and I murmur to my mother or sisters: “Whatever happens, we mustn’t tell him!”

I find it impossible to explain a life without talking about the part that’s underground—the imaginative, the unreal.

I treasure the access to the depths of the self, which I so yearned for, that call to the irrational, to the impulses that spring from the dark inside the soul. It was the surrealists who first launched this appeal with a sustained force and courage, with insolence and playfulness and an obstinate dedication to fight everything repressive in the conventional wisdom.

As a footnote to surrealism, let me add that I remained a close friend to Charles de Noailles until the end. Whenever I went to Paris, we had lunch or dinner together. On my last visit, he invited me to the home where he’d first welcomed me fifty years before. This time, however, everything had changed. Marie-Laure was dead, the walls and the shelves stripped of their treasures. Like me Charles had become deaf. The two of us ate along and spoke very little.

I was born at the dawn of the century, and my lifetime often seems to me like an instant. Events in my childhood sometimes seem so recent that I have to make an effort to remember that they happened fifty or sixty years ago. And yet at other times life seems to me very long. The child, or the young man, who did this or that doesn’t seem to have anything to do with me anymore. Until I turned seventy-five, I found old age rather agreeable. It was a tremendous relief to be rid at last of nagging desires; I no longer wanted anything—no more houses by the sea or fancy cars or works of art. I no longer showed myself in bathing suits in public swimming pools, and I traveled less and less. But my life remained active and well balanced; I made my last movie at seventy-seven.

I am an old man, and that’s all there is to it. I’m only happy at home following my daily routine: wake up, have a cup of coffee, exercise for half an hour, wash, have a second cup of coffee, eat something, walk around the block, wait until noon. My eyes are weak, and I need a magnifying glass and a special light in order to read. My deafness keeps me from listening to music, so I wait, I think, I remember, filled with a desperate impatience and constantly looking at my watch.

Noon’s the sacred moment of the aperitif, which I drink very slowly in my study. After lunch, I doze in my chair until mid-afternoon, and then, from three to five, I read a bit and look at my watch, waiting for six o’clock and my pre-dinner aperitif. Sometimes, I cheat, but only by fifteen minutes or so. Sometimes, too, friends come by to chat. Dinners at seven, with my wife, and then I go to bed.

It’s been four years now since I’ve been to the movies, because of my eyesight, my hearing, and my horror of traffic and crowds. I never watch television. Sometimes an entire week goes by without a visitor, and I feel abandoned.

… For a long time now, I’ve written the names of friends who’ve died in a special book I call The Book of the Dead. I leaf through it from time to time, one name beside the other, in alphabetical order. There are red crosses next to the surrealists, whose most fatal year was 1977-78 when Man Ray, Calder, Max Ernst and Prevert all died within a few months of one another.

Some of my friends are upset about this book—dreading, no doubt, the day they will be in it. I try to tell them if helps me remember certain people who’d otherwise cease to exist.

The thought of death has been familiar to me for a long time. From the time that skeletons were carried through the streets of Calanda during Holy Week procession, death had been an integral part of my life. I’ve never wished to forget or deny it, but there’s not much to say about it when you’re an atheist. When all is said and done, there’s nothing, nothing but decay and the sweetish smell of eternity. (Perhaps I’ll be cremated so I can skip all that) Yet I can’t help wonder how death will come, when it does.

... Sometimes I think, the quicker, the better—like the death of my friend Max Aub, who died all of a sudden during a card game. But most of the time I prefer a slower death, one that’s expected, that will let me revisit my life for a last goodbye. Whenever I leave a place now, a place where I’ve lived and worked, which has become a part of me—I stop for a moment to say adieu. I say aloud. “I’ve had so many happy moments here, and without you my life would’ve been so different. Now I’m going away and I’ll never see you again, but you’ll go on without me.” I say goodbye to everything—to the mountains, the streams, the trees, even the frogs. And, of course, irony would have it that I often return to a place I’ve already bid goodbye, but it doesn’t matter. When I leave, I just say goodbye once again.

I’d like to die knowing that this time I’m not going to come back. When people ask me why I don’t travel more, I tell them: Because I’m afraid of death. Of course, they all hasten to assure me that there’s no more chance of my dying abroad then at home, so I explain that it’s not a fear of death in general. Dying itself doesn’t matter to me, but not while I’m on the road. I don’t want to die in a hotel room with my bags open and papers lying all over the place.

On the other hand, an even more horrible death is one that’s kept at bay by the miracles of modern medicine, a death that never ends. In the name of Hippocrates, doctors have invented the most exquisite form of torture ever known to man: survival. If they would only let us die when the moments comes, and help us to go more easily! Respect for human life becomes absurd when it leads to unlimited suffering, not only for the one who’s dying but for those he leaves behind

As I drift towards my last sigh I often imagine a final joke. I convoke around my deathbed my friends who are confirmed atheists, as am I. Then a priest, whom I have summoned, arrives; and to the horror of my friends I make a confession, ask for absolution for my sins, and receive unction. After which I turn over on my side and expire.

But will I have the strength to joke at that moment?

Only one regret. I hate to leave while there’s so much going on. It’s like quitting in the middle of a serial. I doubt there was so much curiosity about the world after death in the past, since in those days the world didn’t change quite so rapidly or so much. Frankly, despite my horror of the press, I’d live to rise from the grave every ten years or so and go buy a few newspapers. Ghostly pale, sliding silently along the walls, my papers under my arm, I’d return to the cemetery and read all about the disasters in the world before falling back to sleep, safe and secure in my tomb.



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Extras


The Life and Times of Don Luis Buñuel


Un cincéaste de notre temps: Luis Buñuel (with english subtitles)


REGARDING LUIS BUNUEL 01/10



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Remembered
from Film Comment




Buñuel had his favorites among actors: Michel Piccoli, Julien Bertheau, Delphine Seyrig and Jeanne Moreau. In Spain, he cited Francisco Rabal, but not Fernando Rey, who was widely seen as the director’s alter-ego in several films. Here, in turn, is what some of his collaborators remember about Buñuel:

CATHERINE DENEUVE: Buñuel didn’t like to talk too much. It would physically tire him. But we had a mute understanding. Shooting Tristana went better than Belle de Jour, because there was a nicer producer, but mostly because Buñuel himself was very happy about shooting in Spain for the first time since Viridiana. He was euphoric. He had a wonderful sense of humor. One thing he stressed was, ‘Above all, no psychology!’ I accepted it wholeheartedly, especially because it came from him.

JEANNE MOREAU: I consider him my Spanish father, and I called him that. We met simply because of box-office considerations: he didn’t know what actress he wanted for Le journal d’une femme de chambre, and the producers offered me. We met in an apartment in St. Tropez for lunch and enjoyed so much being together that we also had dinner. He was a fantastic person. He was the only director I know who never threw away a shot. He had the film in his mind. When he said “action” and “cut,” you knew that what was in between the two would be printed.

He worked with me mostly on physical movement. We didn’t speak too much about the character. But, as in life, sometimes you express yourself better and end up saying more by talking about something else.

FRANCO NERO: Buñuel always told me that the best thing was not to show things to the audience, but instead to trigger their imagination. In Tristana, there was a scene with Catherine Deneuve nude at the window, looking at the boy in the square who was staring at her, hoping to catch a glimpse of her naked body. The camera stayed on her face. It was sexy, without being explicit.

I think all geniuses are like children. The Italian poet Giovanni Pascoli said, “In every man hides the soul of a child—when it abandons him, he becomes nothing.” One morning Buñuel came to the set and couldn’t find his bag. The whole crew was looking for it and he refused to start working before it was found. He kept wailing, “My bag! My bag!” Just like a little boy. Finally, it was found and he grabbed it and withdrew into a corner, hiding. I followed him and saw that he took out a ham sandwich and started eating. He simply wanted to eat. When he saw me, he jumped and said, “What are you doing? Please don’t tell anybody. I’m hungry. . . If they see me, it will be a bad example, because they will all want to eat. But I’m hungry. . . ”

Another day—he said he was deaf, but I doubt it—he stopped a man who was dumb and said to him, “You’re dumb? I’m deaf!” and laughed about it for half an hour.

BULLE OGIER: Actors are instruments to convey the director’s ideas—which is why I find all my roles difficult: I can’t betray the director. For Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie, however, I didn’t have all that much to do. Buñuel loved actors as human beings and treated them nicely, but was completely indifferent to them as actors—who played what, who I was. . . What mattered to him was that the film reflect the script, because he always wanted to be a writer. You had to render exactly what he wrote. You couldn’t make any departures.

MICHEL PICCOLI: He never liked to give psychological explanations or discuss motivation. He was very polite and lovable, very attentive to people, and he had a great sense of humor. And a terribly perceptive eye. If you made a mistake or told an ugly joke or hurt somebody, he would judge you immediately. Otherwise, he was very sweet—but with the calm that accompanies great authority.

He was very kind with actors and suggested things gently, and they knew he was right. They knew he had no hesitation about his work, no doubt at all. In one scene in Belle de Jour, Georges Marchal had to go down the staircase, in a close-up, and you imagined him masturbating. It wasn’t easy. Buñuel told him, “Think of the setting sun.” It was wonderful: at the same time that he gave no explanation—he simply told him to go down—he also told the actor he thought of him as a sun.

He was severe in life and very hard to please. He was a great Spanish bourgeois by birth, and very well organized. He was very good about working within the budget, because when he was young, he had experienced economic hardship, especially in the U.S. He lived very modestly.

We had great fun. He used to joke like a kid, always telling the same jokes. He never wrote letters, except when there were very precise reasons for it. Each time, he signed, “Disrespectfully yours.” For my part, I used to taunt him that it was Catherine Deneuve and I who made him. I said, “For years, nobody saw your films , except intellectuals, until we did Belle de Jour.” And he’d become very animated and agree and say, “You’re right, thank you.” We laughed and joked all the time. His laughter came out of a terrible anguish, but was non-stop.

He was once interviewed in Spain by French TV, which sent a crew with two trucks. He told them, “I could make a film with what it cost you to bring all this here.” He told them he preferred to do the interview in Toledo. They asked him if he liked that town especially and he answered, “No. I detest it. It’s full of flies.” Then they asked him if in El, he was influenced by Sade. He said no. The interviewer insisted: “In the movie, the man sews up the woman’s vagina.” Buñuel responded, “When your wife betrays you, you get drunk. I simply sew her up. There’s nothing sadistic about it.”

He respected others. When De Richaux died, I went on the radio to talk about him. I asked him if he wanted to do the same, and he said, “No. I never speak about dead friends. I just give stars as you would a restaurant: Sadoul, 5 stars. De Richaux, 4.”

When we were shooting Belle de Jour, I posed for some publicity photos for Lui and Buñuel saw them and said, “You call this an actor? It’s a puppet! The great actor Piccoli doing a thing like that! What a horror!” He folded the magazine under his arm and kept it throughout the shoot, making frequent references to it. I loved him.



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13 of Luis Bunuel's 35 films

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Nazarín (1959)
'There are a couple of things that make Nazarín special for me. One is the fact - and this may be very chauvinistic - that Buñuel's best period is the Mexican period. I think that the early, surrealist period is sort of non-linear, full of free creation and he's very much under the influence of Dalí and the Surrealist group. But the moment he goes to Mexico, he starts to really become more of a storyteller, and less of an image-maker. He finds himself coming into his own there, and his narrative becomes much more sophisticated. His French period, which would be the late period in his life, is a mixture of both: he goes back to being, for my taste, too free. And the other thing that I love is that Nazarín is about what it means to be solidary, or charitable, which are two different things. And I think as a Roman Catholic - or lapsed Catholic! - Nazarín is especially important for me because it really talks about the difference between an institutionalised, higher-than-thou charity, and the final moment in the movie, which is pure solidarity. It's a human act, not an act of hifallutin' charity. If you made Nazarín right now," he adds, as a salutary afterthought, "probably the reviews would be less favourable, because people now expect screenplays to explain characters, not to show them. But it's a paradigm I think of what is a great screenplay, which is, you let the character be defined by his actions. Reviews would say right now, `Although the movie is interesting, Buñuel never hints at what makes Nazarín the the way he is, and all the characters are all-action.' We have been contaminated by this way of screenplay writing in America, and now it's extended throughout the world.'-- Guillermo del Toro



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La fièvre monte à El Pao (1959)
'Aroused citizens assassinate an unpopular Caribbean despot, then two men vie for his gorgeous widow Ines. Ojeda is a steamy, isolated island, the penal colony for an oppressive dictatorship. A reactionary seizes the murdered governor's post, and rushes to eliminate his romantic rival, an idealistic underling. The bureaucrat Vazquez hopes to marshal the angry residents of the capitol, El Pao, plus the many political prisoners, to oust Governor Gual. French actor Gerard Philipe died during the filming. This was his last film and scenes had to be shot using a double, or rewritten to complete the picture.'-- collaged



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The Young One (1960)
'Spanish-Mexican director Luis Buñuel’s second and last English-language film, La Joven, is generally perceived as a pallid and failed film, and one might well agree that, for the most part, it does seem to be an atypical Buñuel product, having none of his signature surrealist-based flourishes. Perhaps, given the film’s various subject matters—racism, pedophilia, false claims of rape, and moral lassitude—all played out on a small Carolina island in the American south, that he need present no more of an exaggerated or unsettling world view. The marvel of this small film—and the film is, to my way of thinking, far superior to how it was seen by the critics and audiences of its day—is that it presents these issues in the US context in a way that few other films of its day could manage. True, during the shooting of the film in 1960, a film with similar concerns, Stanley Kramer’s The Defiant Ones appeared. But Kramer’s work, although notable for pairing (quite literally with handcuffs) a racist (Tony Curtis) and a Black man (Sidney Poitier), was also far more in the Hollywood mode, declaring its liberal sentiments on its sleeve. Buñuel’s work is far more nuanced and troubling for that very reason. The director and film, although they clearly have a strong point of view, present their various characters with great subtlety, refusing to outright judge them.'-- Douglas Messerli



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Viridiana (1961)
'A great many directors, when asked to name their favourite film-maker, invoke the name of Luis Buñuel. It isn't surprising, since he was undoubtedly a genius who had the invaluable capacity to offend and delight at the same time. You could choose any of a dozen of his films as one of the best 100. Viridiana is my choice, since it caused the maximum annoyance to people one is quite glad to see offended. It was made in Spain in 1960 after Franco had told his minister of culture to invite the country's leading film-maker back from exile in Mexico to make whatever film he liked. But once he completed it, Buñuel sensibly decamped, deliberately leaving a few out-takes behind to be instantly burned by the authorities. People have said that Buñuel was first and foremost a Spaniard and then a surrealist, and it is no accident that the ending of Viridiana resembles that of L'Age d'Or, his great surrealist masterpiece made 30 years previously. But there's a despair about this film which wasn't in that earlier work. "I should like", he once famously said, "to make even the most ordinary spectator feel that he is not living in the best of all possible worlds". The forces of darkness, he suggests, await us all. The perfect candidate for Prozac then. But then we would never have had Viridiana, one of the great feelbad movies of all time.'-- Derek Malcom



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The Exterminating Angel (1962)
'Luis Buñuel’s ferociously brilliant The Exterminating Angel (1962) is one of his most provocative and unforgettable works. In it we watch a trivial breach of etiquette transform into the destruction of civilization. Not only does this story undermine our confidence in our social institutions but it challenges our powers of cognition and perception, which are shown to be easily distorted by unreliable narratives. Perhaps most threatening, despite the emotional distance from the characters that Buñuel’s satiric vision grants us, we are ultimately forced to see that we in the audience are also objects of his attack. The plot is easy to summarize, though the characters’ motivations remain mysterious. Buñuel describes it as “the story of a group of friends who have dinner together after seeing a play, but when they go into the living room after dinner, they find that for some inexplicable reason they can’t leave.” For equally inexplicable reasons, after preparing dinner for the guests, all but one of the servants feel compelled to flee the mansion. Trapped in the living room, the guests soon begin to panic. The narrative places us in the same position as the guests, puzzling over why they can’t leave, how they might escape, and what it all means. Buñuel made this daring film at the end of his eighteen years in Mexico, and it was his only work from that period on which he had complete artistic freedom.'-- Marsha Kinder



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The Diary of a Chambermaid (1964)
'The Diary of a Chambermaid was a crucial turning point in Luis Buñuel's career because it would officially usher in the French period of the director's later years. In 1963, Buñuel met producer Serge Silberman in Spain and together they decided on an adaptation of Octave Mirbeau's Jounral d'une femme de chamber, which Buñuel had read several times and Jean Renoir had previously directed less famously in 1946. Buñuel wanted to shoot the film in Mexico with the great Silvia Pinal in the lead but Silberman refused, wanting the director to make the film for him in France. At Cannes, Buñuel met screenwriter Jean-Claude Carrière, with whom he would work almost exclusively for the rest of his life, and with the help of Louis Malle, Buñuel met and subsequently cast the great Jeanne Moreau as the Parisian chambermaid who arrives at a country estate in provincial France and is overwhelmed by one sexual scandal after another. Buñuel once said, "Sexual perversion repulses me, but I can be attracted to it intellectually."Diary of a Chambermaid features endless images of characters entertaining each other's foot fetishes. Buñuel has acknowledged that this so-called fetish of his seems to transplant itself from his mind and into his films almost entirely subconsciously. If Buñuel refuses to ponder the irrational implications of these images in Diary of a Chambermaid, it's probably because the film is Buñuel's most realist expression of his life-long fixation with ribbing bourgeois orders.'-- Slant Magazine



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Simon of the Desert (1965)
'Simon of the Desert (1965) was the last film Buñuel made in Mexico, the last one in which he used Mexican actors, and most significantly the last one on which he worked with the great Mexican cinematographer Gabriel Figueroa. Buñuel got all kinds of sharp, ironic effects from glossy color photography in the six films, five French and one Spanish, he went on to direct before he died, but there is a purity and grace in Figueroa’s images that is unequaled in Buñuel’s body of work. Writing enthusiastically of Simon of the Desert, Pauline Kael suggests Buñuel’s movies “have a thinner texture that begins to become a new kind of integrity, and they affect us as fables.” She is thinking of his indifference to the large emotions directors usually want their actors to go for, but we could also consider Figueroa’s contribution to this effect. His images are as much about the desert as about Simon, and we can almost see the thinness of the air. The movie is incomplete because the producer, Gustavo Alatriste, ran out of money after five reels. If the ending—the sudden flight from the medieval desert to 1960s New York—looks hasty and improvised, this is because it was hasty and improvised. It has an interesting kick to it, though. We watch furiously shaking bodies on a densely crowded dance floor, an image of life as sheer convulsion, and the devil says this is the last dance of all. It is called “Radioactive Flesh.” The idea that hell is rock and roll, or vice versa, is pretty banal; Kael remarks that “what is presented to us as a vision of a mad, decaying world in its final orgy looks like a nice little platter party.” But Simon is not dancing, or even particularly preoccupied with the dance. He has a fringe now instead of his wild and woolly hair, a black polo-neck sweater, and a pipe. He looks like a man disguised as a French intellectual, a fraud now rather than a saintly fool—and it’s clear that the modern difficulty for the hermit is finding anything resembling moral solitude in a crowd. In comparison, a literal pillar in the desert looks like a dusty luxury.' -- Michael Wood



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Belle de Jour (1967)
'There are the films we see – and then there are the films we think we see. The tale of a bored Parisian housewife (Catherine Deneuve) who spends her afternoons working in a brothel, Belle de jour (1967) was the greatest international success of its director, Luis Buñuel. It is also, in a way that no other film quite matches, not one movie but two. An avant-garde experiment and a glossy commercial product, a piece of Surrealist erotica and a high-toned bourgeois comedy of manners, an invitation to sensual abandon and a slyly moralistic cautionary tale. It is also – most crucially – the film we are actually watching and the one we are running (surreptitiously, perhaps) inside our own heads. In terms of explicit sexual activity, there is little in Belle de jour we might not see in a Doris Day comedy from the same year. Yet audiences, then as now, tend to come out of the film feeling we have just had a front-row seat at an orgy. Buñuel, like the veteran Surrealist he was, excels at making us see things we are not shown and imagine things we do not see. Nowhere does this art flower more fully than in Belle de jour. “Belle de Jour is a masterpiece”, writes Elliot Stein, “the many-faceted and perfect Golden Bowl that crowns a lifetime’s work”. An atypical masterpiece, perhaps, in its extreme visual refinement. Not qualities that even his most fervent admirers expect from Buñuel, the film’s polished mise en scène and lustrous (almost Sirkian) use of colour are the antithesis of his usual image as a cinematic slob.'-- David Melville



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The Milky Way (1969)
'The Milky Way is unique in Buñuel’s filmography. Two contemporary pilgrims start out, as pilgrims have done since the Middle Ages, on the road from the Rue Saint-Jacques, in Paris, to Santiago de Compostela, in Galicia, Spain. It is the traditional picaresque format of the down-and-out surviving as road bums. It is also the even more traditional tale of the knight-errant and his squire in search of faith and honor. Buñuel blends these traditions into a sort of filmic space-time continuum. The pilgrims are contemporary. But time and space accompany them in a perpetual present and a simultaneous geography. The protagonists of heresy and orthodoxy act out their beliefs in ancient Palestine, in early medieval Europe, in the Age of Reason, and in today’s inns and swank restaurants, and on its superhighways. The Holy Virgin, her son Jesus and Christ’s kid brothers, the Marquis de Sade, the Jansenist dueling the Jesuit, Satan himself (or is it Death?) dressed as a rock star, an impertinent theological -maître d’ and his waiters, a bleeding child by the wayside, a wildly stiff schoolmarm and her robotic little pupils reciting anathemas, the pope facing a firing squad, the Whore of Babylon waylaying travelers, sententious bishops and fugitive mad priests—this fantastic cast of characters, in itself a tongue-and-cheek parody of Hollywood’s “cast of thousands,” visually acts out, before our very eyes, the arid abstractions of Christian heresy. Was there ever such a thing as the Holy Trinity? Was Christ God, man, and Holy Ghost simultaneously, in sequence, or was he only, at all times, God the Father masquerading as a mortal being, so as to be recognized? Was Jesus only the human body of a Divine Ghost? Were his sufferings mere appearances? If he suffered, was he a god? If he was a god, how could he suffer? Was Christ simply a particle of God’s mind? Are we allowed to distinguish between the acts of Jesus the man and the words of Christ the god (as the blind men in the film fail to do)? Was Christ really two men, one born of God the Father, the other of Mary the Mother? Did Mary conceive the way light passes through a pane of glass? Did Jesus have kid brothers?'-- Carlos Fuentes



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Tristana (1970)
'In terms of storytelling Tristana is as straightforward as they come. Deneuve plays the title character, a beautiful orphan adopted by a nobleman called Don Lope Garrido (the larger than life Fernando Rey). Captivated by his beauty and innocence, Don Lope falls for his daughter and makes her his wife, in practical if not legal or religious terms. As if the arrival of sex opened a new world for her, Tristana begins to see outside the confines of her sad life and begins an affair with an artist by the name of Horacio (a stunning Franco Nero). The film shares themes with one of his previous works, Viridiana, which was also written by Pérez Galdós and which makes us ponder on why the director had such a preference for telling old fashioned melodramas when it came to adapting literary works. Did he feel there was something subversive in having classic-but-rarely-groundbreaking literature be captured on film? Were there layers of hidden text that he inserted but that which we’ve failed to notice? Stories about the making of Tristana, reveal that in fact the director was aware that everything might mean something and knew that some of these things might be impossible for us as audience members to detect and it’s in his use of twisted humor that we remember why he’s such a highly regarded filmmaker.'-- Pop Matters



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The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie (1972)
'Luis Buñuel's surreal masterpiece from 1972, co-written with Jean-Claude Carrière, is stranger and more sensual than ever. The weirdness under the conventions throbs even more insistently and indiscreetly, now that those conventions themselves are historically distant. We can see with hindsight how Buñuel's subversion absorbed the various modish forms of agitprop and radical chic, and subverted those as well. The action revolves around some half-a-dozen well-to-do metropolitan sophisticates who are forever attempting to meet up for dinner parties and elegant soirees only to find the event ruined by an absent host, or some mysterious misunderstanding, or bizarre turn of events, and then one will awake to find it all to be a dream, yet the distinction between dream and waking does not become any clearer. The surrealist and anthropologist in Buñuel was fascinated by the ritual of the dinner party: without a host, this social event resembles humanity frantically inventing intricate rules for itself in the absence of God. It is still superbly disturbing when everyone assembles around a dinner table in an unfamiliar house and then, when one wall suddenly moves away, they discover themselves to be on stage in a blaze of unnatural light, inspected by an auditorium full of frowning theatregoers. "I don't know my lines," mutters Sénéchal (Jean-Pierre Cassel) to himself in a cold sweat. An exotic and brilliant hothouse flower of a film.'-- The Guardian



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The Phantom of Liberty (1974)
'Decades after its release, Buñuel’s brilliantly anti-narrative film Le Fantôme de la liberté (The Phantom of Liberty, 1974) not only seems to anticipate many of our current obsessions and human foibles, but stands out as much more than a Surrealistic satire or comedy; it is in many ways a politically charged manifesto that not only overthrows narrative as we know it but also seems almost frighteningly prescient in it’s treatment of the routine celebrity of terrorists and mass murderers and, more importantly, in the way it anticipates the humankind’s own destruction of the world through our own imbecilic and suicidal pollution of the earth. In many respects, The Phantom of Liberty plays as if it was made for 21st century audiences. Buñuel delighted in repeatedly saying that he made the film in collaboration with Karl Marx (the title refers to the first line of the Communist Manifesto); but the title is also a personal nod to a line spoken in Buñuel’s La Voie lactée (The Milky Way, 1969): “Freewill is nothing more than a simple whim! In any circumstance, I feel that my thoughts and my will are not in my power! And my liberty is only a phantom!” Buñuel firmly believed that chance governs our lives, and as much as they could, Buñuel and his screenwriting companion Jean-Claude Carrière tried to invite chance at every opportunity into the writing of The Phantom of Liberty.'-- Audrey Foster



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That Obscure Object of Desire (1977)
'As That Obscure Object of Desire nears its conclusion, there is an image that reminds us of the relationship between Buñuel and his narrator. Mathieu, with Conchita at his side, is drawn to a Paris shop window to watch a woman mend a torn dress. Buñuel cuts to a close-up of the lace, bloodied and stretched across an embroidery hoop, as stitch after stitch narrows the gaping hole. He holds the shot until no traces of the tear remain. In his autobiography, Buñuel speaks of being unexplainably touched by this strange and seemingly hopeful vision. This was the final shot on the shooting schedule, hence the final shot of the filmmaker’s illustrious career. Surely, at one level this vision of closure is a statement by the artist about his art, about his lifelong commitment to “enshrining” the beauties his camera can discover. But it is not the last shot of the film. After the lace is mended, Mathieu and Conchita walk on. Suddenly, in the foreground of the frame, a terrorist sets off a bomb. Flames engulf the screen, blocking the couple from our view. Are they consumed in this apocalypse? If they survive, do they move on to new, ever crueler, cycles of violence, or will their desires—at last—be satisfied? Buñuel offers no answers. As Buñuel films these flames, they are beautiful, too. The shot, however, is a vision of destruction, not of redemption. But it too makes a statement. The world whose destruction he is envisioning is the world of his own creation. In Buñuel’s art, what is principled, and what is perverse, cannot be separated. Buñuel is a moralist. He is also a terrorist.'-- William Rothman



the entire film




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p.s. Hey. RIP: Ingrid Sischy. ** James, Hi. Who's Benjamin Gibbard? Oh, I'll google him in a bit. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. Right, Joan Davis, it's all coming back to me. My parents weren't very culturally sophisto, but they did have the odd interesting interest. I grew up hearing Nichols & May albums playing in the background a lot, for instance. No, Mr. Kramer and I did not hit it off. Back in the early-to-mid '80s, I thought his raging egomania was kind of hilarious to be around, but I don't think there was anything about me or my personality that he found charming. ** H, Hi, no, no response as of yet. Why, I don't know. Maybe the age requirement and income level things were confusing? But we'll see by Monday. I don't mind long blog posts, as you can surely tell, ha ha. I'll look the post over thus weekend and figure out the best way to present it, probably in one go, I think. Thank you again so very much! I read John Berryman back when he was kind of a thing, or a popular poet to read. And I have to say I never quite got into it, although, back then, his 'Dream Songs' or whatever they're called were quite hip, etc. Yeah, he was someone I always felt like I should like a lot better than I actually did. ** Steevee, Hi. That would have been amusing. There was one interviewer who'd worked out this whole analysis of how my books and 'Miami Vice' fit together, and I felt really bad telling him the truth. I know that Mr. Kramer read 'Closer', maybe 'Frisk', and, yes, you nailed it. He thought my work and I were cut-throat traitors to 'my people' and so on. No, I didn't see the Death Grips singer death hoax thing. I must have slept through it. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Those Harlow reviews came from a now-defunct escort reviewing site whose formatting I used as the model for the escorts reviews site in 'The Sluts'. I would be most grateful, honored, and excited if you want to put together a post or two, very much! Thank you for wanting to! I don't know that clip, no. I'll watch it in a while and forward the link to Gisele in case she doesn't know it. Thank you yet again! Have a great weekend! ** Sypha, I don't know 'Sugar', by name anyway. I'll look it up. I avoid dentists like the veritable plague, but I don't it would be a rare or difficult-to-implement thing if you asked them to knock you out during the cleaning. Sounds like a rich and sweet trip to Providence, and that Lovecraft store sounds very cool. Really happy you had a big day out. ** Thomas Moronic, Thanks, buddy boy. You have promising weekend intentions? ** Chris Dankland, Hi, Chris. I'll let you know, and I'll link to it on Facebook as soon as it's public. Mm, the only incarcerated person I ever corresponded with was a long time ago, and he was friend who'd ben imprisoned for a time for dealing hash. Different times. John Waters loves to correspond with prisoners, as you probably know, and, at one point, he sent a copy of my book 'Jerk' to Wayne Henley, who was one of the teenaged henchmen of serial killer Dean Corll, and who is a character in 'Jerk'. Henley sent back a letter to me care of John telling me how hilarious he thought the book was -- which was pretty weird since he's not exactly portrayed as heroic -- and asking me to be his pen pal. He included an autographed photo of himself. But I was really not interested in writing back and forth with him. I think those are my only two experiences with prisoners and correspondence. Have you done that, or is that an idea that interests you? No, I hadn't heard about the bukkake porn shoot robbery. That's hilarious. I did see the eyeballs-up-the-butt thing this morning. It was at the top of my newsfeed. His expression in his mugshot is so perfect or something. Bon weekend! ** Misanthrope, Hi, G. You guessed correctly. Oh, your mom got shy or wary or whatever. Yeah, looks like you have to be the 'man' of the house yet again. What a horrible saying: 'man of the house'. Jesus. I just searched for 'evil' + 'antonym' and got: virtuous, benevolent, honorable, etc. Those seem better and more specific than 'good'. Brent C. made a special in-person honored guest appearance at an event at the Tom of Finland Foundation in LA not long ago, so maybe he's just working his celebrity nowadays. ** Kyler, Oh, your sleepiness must have had the effect of making your sense of humor even more subtle. Versailles was nice, very crowded, but nice, yes, thank you. ** Postitbreakup, Hey. Harlow was a pretty famous escort back in the day, as escorts go. And he made a porn or two. Maybe that? ** Bill, Hi, Bill. Yep, if that saga had happened just a little later in time, I can only imagine that one of the culprits or side figures, Brent Corrigan probably, would have worked it into a reality show. On Logo, I guess. Except I don't think there was a Logo then. Seth Fried: no, I don't think I know him. Hm. Interesting. I'll seek him out, for sure. Thank you a lot for the alert. New demo! Hold on. Oh, man, that's great! You are really on a roll right now! Don't you think? I'm going to imbed it down below and slide it onto my Facebook wall. Oh, wait, it won't let me imbed it here. Okay, no problem. Really awesome, Bill! Everyone, the amazing maestro of art, sound, and other things Bill Hsu has a new demo up of a new video-represented work by him, and it's fantastic, so go look at it. 'Flush'. Here it is. ** Schlix, Hi, Uli. Huh, that is strange. Like you, I greatly prefer the latter explanation, which does sound like the real reason, knowing Cluster to the degree that I do. Very strange. Have a really good weekend! It's 14 degrees here at the moment! Crazy, i.e. great. ** Right. As I've mentioned before, my old friend and d.l. Bernard Welt is in Paris at the moment. He mentioned to me last week how much he loves Bunuel, and I realized I hadn't done a Bunuel post for some reason. So I did, and I even included a little video of Bernard himself talking about Bunuel. Score! Hope you like it. See you on Monday.

Vacances d'été composé de vingt-deux couplets (for Zac)

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p.s. Hey. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. Bernard was telling me about Sondheim's Bunuel mashup. Wow. I saw 'Ken Death Gets Out of Jail'. Huh. If memory serves, having seen the film, I'm not entirely surprised that he relapsed. Iceberg Slim: Now there's a terrific writer whom I should really read again/anew. ** James, Hi. Yeah, really sad about Ingrid Sischy. To me, it's her era editing Artforum that's the touchstone. She did important things there. I started writing for them just before she left, so I got to interact with her a bit, and she was great, a trip. No, I don't have a 'perfect man' thing about Pierre Clementi. He looks great, for sure, but it's his performances, choices, artistic daring, the films he directed, etc. that are what most make him a hero to me. 'EA' is very well worth bumping up in your queue. ** Douglas Payne, Hi. I wrote to you minutes ago. Sure hope you get it. Let me know what's best, assuming you do. I like Almodovar's films pretty well. He's not a particular favorite director of mine, which is just a taste thing, I guess, but I almost always like what he does. Are you big on his work? ** Bernard Welt, Hi, B. Well, no, thank you. Where would that post be ... or, heck, where would I, human, be without you? ** Bill, Hi. Bernard seems like he's having plenty of fun, at least from the peanut gallery of my perceptions. Cool about the gig incorporating 'Flush'. Too cute? You have some dour collaborators there, man, ha ha. ** Misanthrope, Hi. In my personal opinion, Bunuel made a lot of films that are a lot greater than 'An Andalusian Dog'. But, heck, is it even possible to grow up and take even one simple film class in school without seeing that? Which is cool. I don't know about Brent's current state of mind, of course, but the couple of people who interacted with him at the Tom of Finland thing said he was a complicated sweetheart. I keep telling myself, and I really need to do it asap, that I should put together a professional, detailed will for mostly the very reason that, if I don't leave instructions about my work, and if I don't delegate someone to make the decisions about my stuff, the power and control will automatically go to someone in family, and my immediate family, barring Cody, don't like or even know my writing at all, so that would make for a complete disaster. In other words, yeah, I know I need to do that, and I have to get off my ass and do it. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Cool. Thank you so much for sending the post! I'll go look for it and get back to you. It sounds totally great. Kippenberger! ** Steevee, Hi. Vimeo in particular doesn't work? Something to do with their ... formatting? Fingers crossed about the upgrade. No thoughts of getting yourself a new laptop or something? ** H, Hi. No, I haven't received any emails. I don't what happened. But group participation things here haven't worked very well for a while, which is why I stopped doing them. I'm putting together your guest-post, and I will let you know when it will appear soon. Thank you! Well, let's try with the G. Schneider thing and see what happens because ... why not? Everyone, d.l. H, not dissuaded by your lack of interest in the offer of books the other day, has another offer. Please give H your eyes and ears, thank you. H: 'But if anyone interested in Gregor Schneider moca catalogue in a very good to like new condition, I will trade it with similar conditioned eve sedgwick between men, or Derek Jarman sketchbooks, or something else. Thank you. Interested person just email me to uncoeurblanc @ g m a i l. com. Thank you very much about the rare book! ** Damien Ark, Hi, Damien. I saw your email in my box this morning, but I was in post-sleep, pre-coffee delirium at the time, and I will open and read it soon. Hope you're having a good day with, and even without, your own projects. ** Sypha, Very nice Bunuel anecdote, thank you. I still haven't tested 'Sugar', but the day is young. ** Etc etc etc, Hi, Casey. The new literary gif book comes out on September 10th. Yeah, like with 'ZHH', it will be published by Kiddiepunk, download or online viewing only, free of charge. It's called 'Zac's Control Panel', and it consists of 7 short-to-semu-short gif works. Thank you so very much for wanting to write something about it. That's super kind of you, man. ** Right. I regret to inform most of you, ha ha, that today I'm sharing a new gif work by me. It's Zac's birthday today, and the work up above is one of my b'day gifts to him, but it's also for everybody out there who's interested in my gif work too, of course. You know who you are. Until tomorrow ...

Hoaxes

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In the 1970s and early ’80s, the East German Olympic program employed the electronic composer Martin Zeichnete to create workout soundtracks for the GDR’s teams — shimmering, motorik pulse-music that, in combination with a top-secret doping program, would aid the athletes in their goal to become the ultimate Menschen-Maschinen. Now, Edinburgh’s Unknown Capability Recordings has collected some of Zeichnete’s work as Kosmischer Läufer: Cosmic Music of the East German Olympic Program 1972-83. In an interview published in Slow Travel Berlin, Zeichnete discusses how he was influenced by West German artists like Kraftwerk, Cluster, and Neu!; he discovered the music — banned in the GDR — by listening to Düsseldorf radio broadcasts he managed to pick up in his native Dresden. As an amateur runner, he had the idea that hypnotic, repetitive music might help athletes focus. When, in 1972, the German-Brazilian inventor Andreas Pavel introduced the Stereobelt, a predecessor of the Walkman, Zeichnete knew how to make his dream a reality. Strangely, a Google search for “Martin Zeichnete” only turns up links related to the compilation; a Google search for German-language documents returns no results at all. (Indeed, “Zeichnete” — which is also the third-person preterite of “to draw” — doesn’t appear to be a common German surname, although “Drew” does happen to be the name of one of the label’s founders.) The interview published in Slow Travel Berlin turns out to have been published on Scribd.com by Unknown Capability Recordings, the label responsible for the anthology, back in February. Neither interview includes photographs of Zeichnete, and he doesn’t appear in a series of promotional videos for the release. And the more you listen to the music, the more it begins to sound both too pristine, given the tapes’ alleged age, and too stylistically perfect in its aping of Neu! and Kraftwerk.







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Very strange and bizarre footage which purports to show a weird stick-insect type creature, crawling down some buildings in Russia.






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A girl who was reported to have died after being hit in the head with a shovel is still alive - despite a hoax death article being posted on the internet. Last week, a video of a girl getting hit in the head with a metal shovel generated a whopping 500,000 views in the first two days of being uploaded online. Rumours circulated on the internet soon after that the teenage girl suffered serious head injuries and dropped dead while she was watching the movie Mean Girls at home. The clip shows two girls called Miranda and Emily fist fighting over Emily's boyfriend, who threatens her rival with an air soft gun which shoots plastic BBs. Instead, when Miranda charges at her, Emily picks up a metal spade and throws it at her with full force. It hits Miranda in the back of the head, who then falls on the kerb, cracking the side of her skull on the road which leaves her unable to hear out of her right ear.





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Wrestling is fake






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Cast your mind back to 2003 and you'll remember two Russian pop stars who dressed in school uniforms, sung about being lesbians and snogged on stage a lot. Yes, we are talking about t.A.T.u. and their Number 1 single "All The Things She Said". Speaking on Russian TV, one half of the duo, Yulia Volkova, said that she would not accept her son as gay, because men are made to have sex with women and make babies and anyone who doesn't is wrong. "Yes, I would condemn him" she said, "because I believe that a real man must be a real man. God created man for procreation, it is the nature. The man for me is the support, the strength of... I won't accept a gay son." But before you get on your high horse and say that fake lesbian Yulia doesn't like gay people, she also says being homosexual is still "a little better than" killing people. "I just want my son to be a real man, not a fag," she said. "I believe that being gay is all still better than murderers, thieves or drug addicts. If you choose out of all this, being gay a little better than the rest."





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Hotelicopter







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In 2009, a strange Facebook account appeared out of nowhere and friended people en-masse. The name on the account was Junko Junsui, and she had a message for anyone willing to listen. Thus began a strange mystery that would continue for years to come, as countless people across the internet became enamored of Junsui, her story, and the shadowy organizations she claimed were hiding in plain sight. Some people actually accepted the seemingly random request, and, upon investigating further, found that Junko was not just a friendly Russian beauty, as her profile initially made it seem. Rather, she appeared to be a part of a weird alternate reality game involving a terrorist group called ‘The Junsui,’ Russia, and private military companies—all of which were warring with one another across the internet. Many found untangling Junko Junsui’s web to be a thrill, which makes sense: the confusing premise seemed as if it was lifted straight out of a Metal Gear Solid plot. Shadowy organizations, corrupt governments, overzealous groups defined by genetic modification, a huge conspiracy: Junko Junsui delivered on all fronts. But more than that, people found the entire thing disturbing, too. One of the most notable early clues in the ARG led players to discover video clips of a woman trapped inside of a room. If there was a “puppet master” behind it all, that person seemed particularly antagonistic toward people who participated. Junko Junsui is said to have became irate in her Facebook posts whenever people posted her communications on forums, sometimes allegedly outing anonymous participants who believed they were just playing a game. In the end, there was no grand conspiracy. There were no terrorist groups, and no shadowy government organizations. There was only a slick game that got out of hand, and players that desperately wanted to believe in something.










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This photo, taken by Jim Templeton, shows his daughter sitting in a marsh in the north of the UK. However, what makes this photo interesting is the fact that Templeton claims there was no one standing behind his daughter when he took the picture. It is clear to see that in the photo, which Kodak have examined and confirmed has not been tampered with, there is a figure which seems to resemble a ‘spaceman’ in full astronaut clothing. This has lead to many ‘believers’ claiming that Solway Firth, the location the picture was taken, could be an area of ”space-time displacement” that allows ‘non-Earthlings’ to be seen and captured on film. The most likely explanation is that photographer’s wife is stood in the background, with her back towards the camera and her blue dress appearing white due to overexposure.





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In 1770, an astonishing robot was unveiled that possessed the artificial intelligence needed to defeat any human players in a game of chess. Nicknamed “The Turk,” this animatronic chess champion was created by Wolfgang von Kempelen, and it toured Europe and America until it was destroyed in a fire in 1854. That’s when it was revealed it wasn’t a robot at all, but an elaborate hoax, with a human chess master hiding inside The Turk all along.







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Irena Kolokov was caught off guard when she turned up to meet her boyfriend, Alexey Bykov, 30, but found what appeared to be a horrific car accident when she arrived. "We'd arranged to meet at a certain place, but when I arrived there were mangled cars everywhere, ambulances, smoke, and carnage," Kolokov told Orange News. "When I saw Alexey covered in blood lying in the road, a paramedic told me he was dead, and I just broke down in tears." His face covered in fake blood and his head wrapped in gauze, Bykov staggered up to his love, who was so distraught that when her boyfriend approached her she shoved him off while crying uncontrollably. "I wanted her to realize how empty her life would be without me and how life would have no meaning without me. I think it worked," he said.






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This is a Moon Melon, scientifically known as asidus. This fruit grows in some parts of Japan and it’s know for its weird blue color. What you probably don’t know about this fruit is that it can switch flavors after you eat it. Everything sour will taste sweet, and everything salty will taste bitter, and it gives water a strong orange-like taste. This fruit is very expensive. It costs about 16000 JPY (which is about 200 dollars).





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Naked Came the Stranger is a 1969 novel written as a literary hoax poking fun at contemporary American culture. Though credited to "Penelope Ashe", it was in fact written by a group of twenty-four journalists led by Newsday columnist Mike McGrady. McGrady's intention was to write a deliberately terrible book with a lot of sex, to illustrate the point that popular American literary culture had become mindlessly vulgar. The group wrote the book as a deliberately inconsistent and mediocre hodge-podge, with each chapter written by a different author. The book was submitted for publication under the pseudonym "Penelope Ashe" (portrayed by McGrady's sister-in-law for photographs and meetings with publishers). The publisher, Lyle Stuart, was an independent publisher then known for controversial books, many with sexual content. According to Stuart, he appropriated the cover photo (a kneeling nude woman with very long hair down her back, photographed from behind) from a Hungarian nudist magazine. By the end of the year, the book had spent 13 weeks on the New York Times Best-Seller List. As of May 2012, the book's publisher reported the book had sold 400,000 copies.






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A 1931 photo in the Berliner Illustrirte Zeitung showing the US Navy airship "Los Angeles," blown by a gust of wind, lifting a ship into the air.





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Erik Nordenankar's self-portrait – which straddles the entire globe – was allegedly created by tracing the route taken by the specially-primed case on its 55-day journey around the world. The artist claimed he gave the case to DHL, the package delivery firm, with exact co-ordinates detailing the stages of its tour. When the package was returned to Stockholm he claimed he downloaded the GPS's route memory to produce the enormous drawing above. It is composed of a single 110,00km-long line that passes through six continents and 62 countries. But after bloggers pointed out holes in Nordenankar's claim, DHL confirmed to the Telegraph that the artwork was an "entirely fictional project".






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Michael Jackson is alive


Memorial Strangeness


Michael Jackson This is it backwards


Michael Jackson is alive proof not fake not scary


Michael Jackson Death Hoax - LaToya's best slip ups


MICHAEL JACKSON IS ALIVE, I SAW HIM IN PARIS !



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In June of 1972, a woman appeared in Cedar Sinai hospital in nothing but a white, blood-covered gown. Now this, in itself, should not be too surprising as people often have accidents nearby and come to the nearest hospital for medical attention, but there were two things that caused people who saw her to vomit and flee in terror.The first being that she wasn’t exactly human. she resembled something close to a mannequin, but had the dexterity and fluidity of a normal human being. Her face, was as flawless as a mannequins, devoid of eyebrows and smeared in make-up. From the moment she stepped through the entrance to when she was taken to a hospital room and cleaned up before being prepped for sedation, she was completely calm, expressionless and motionless. The doctors thought it best to restrain her until the authorities could arrive and she did not protest. They were unable to get any kind of response from her and most staff members felt too uncomfortable to look directly at her for more than a few seconds. But the second the staff tried to sedate her, she fought back with extreme force. Two members of staff had to hold her down as her body rose up on the bed with that same, blank expression. She eventually fought herself free, causing serious injuries to the staff members, then walked out of the hospital. There was never a sighting of her again.





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A living Wooly Mammoth shot by a German camera man in 1943 while being transported to Siberia.





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It seems almost incredible that Ursula Bogner’s musical talents should have remained undiscovered until now. Yet in view of her biography, this might have been just as inevitable. It was on a flight to Vilnius that I met Sebastian Bogner, Ursula’s son, who told me he was on a business trip for a pharmaceutical company. The usual small talk soon led to the topic of his mother Ursula, who also ‘liked to play around with synthesizers’, albeit purely on an amateur level and in a dedicated music room fitted especially for this purpose in the parental home. In the late 1960s, Ursula Bogner started to record her own music on reel-to-reel tapes. With some of these titles, we only found individual tracks of pieces recorded on a four-track-recorder – in these cases, I had to recombine the separate tracks to recreate the original piece. Unfortunately, I could not involve Ursula Bogner in the mixing process as she passed away in 1994. Invoking the original’s authenticity might seem insensitive, yet there was no other way to release them in their entirety. Ultimately, only three of the tracks featured on this CD/LP are such ‘reworkings’. All other titles were taken straight from the original reels. Covering a fairly short period of her creative career, they also convey a peculiar coherence in both form and content. A coherence that reflects her accessible, rhythmic and sometimes even ‘poppy’ side. Naturally, my own preference played a part in the selection process. All my personal favourites made it on the CD/LP, and whenever I listen to this collection, I invariably succumb to the titles’ light-hearted nonchalance. This might leave many hours of undiscovered gems, but a further compilation is already in the works.







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Miscellaneous





















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Donald Charles Alfred Crowhurst (1932–1969) was a British businessman and amateur sailor who died while competing in the Sunday Times Golden Globe Race, a single-handed, round-the-world yacht race. Crowhurst had entered the race in hopes of winning a cash prize from The Sunday Times to aid his failing business. Instead, he encountered difficulty early in the voyage, and secretly abandoned the race while reporting false positions, in an attempt to appear to complete a circumnavigation without actually circling the world. Evidence found after his disappearance indicates that this attempt ended in insanity and suicide.







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We found out recently, through conducting customer surveys, that the crust is overwhelmingly the most popular part of the pizza experience, and also that the majority of Domino’s devotees crave extra crust once they’ve finished their meal. These findings, along with our love of surprising people and pushing boundaries, led us to the Edibox. With every future Domino’s delivery, you’ll see the Edibox upgrade option: double the dough to enjoy alongside double the glorious garlic and herb dip. And the best bit? You won’t have to fight to fit that square box into a round bin – this is a waste-free dining experience.





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When three young men in Georgia claimed to have run over an alien in 1953, they caused a media frenzy. The 2ft hairless, creature with eerie, dark eyes was quickly confiscated and taken to Emory University to be examined. Experts revealed it was in fact a Capuchin monkey that had been made to look alien by having its tail cut off and fur its removed with depilatory cream. It was then the boys confessed that they'd come up with the idea over a card game. One of them bet his friends $10 he could get himself in the local paper within a week. He bought the poor monkey at a petshop, gave it a lethal dose of chloroform before removing its hair and tail.





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Nat Tate was an imaginary person, invented by writer William Boyd and created as "an abstract expressionist who destroyed '99%' of his work and leapt to his death from the Staten Island ferry. His body was never found." Boyd published a book about Nat Tate as a real biography. Gore Vidal, John Richardson (Picasso's biographer), and David Bowie were all participants in the hoax. "Nat Tate" is a combination of the names of two London art galleries, the National Gallery and the Tate Gallery. Boyd and his conspirators set about convincing the New York glitterati (social elites) that the reputation of this influential abstract expressionist needed to be re-evaluated. Bowie held a launch party on April Fool's Day eve, 1998, and read extracts from the book, while Richardson talked about Tate's friendships with both Picasso and Braque.







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Ashley Casey Martin reportedly posted photos of herself with what appeared to be injuries — or at least what she thought appeared to be injuries. What she posted with the photos led to her post going viral. In fact, the use of makeup (in particular, black eyeliner and shadow) appears to be more than a little obvious. In fact, it looks similar to the eye makeup used by at least one member of the band The Misfits. Are they her inspiration for this harebrained hoax?





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This incredible video of an eagle swooping down and snatching a toddler with its talons from a Montreal park has been watched more than 1.2 million times. Social media verification experts at Storyful point to evidence of fakery, including Twitter user @thornae’s animated GIF showing inconsistencies with the eagle’s shadow. New Statesman writer Alex Hern also points out that “there is the slightly odd motion of the child after the eagle lets go of it. Not only does it carry on going up — which would just be momentum — but its ascent actually speeds up a bit before falling.”






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While cleaning up after the 1959 Tulare County Art League exhibit in Visalia, California, a group of janitors and maintenance men remarked to each that they could make "modern art" that was just as good. So the next year, they set out to prove it. They took a piece of scrap metal from which holes had been cut for door latches, and they painted it black. One of the group remarked that the metal vaguely resembled the shape and size of a cat. So they titled the piece "Peterfid Tomcat"— deliberately misspelling the word "petrified." And as a finishing touch, they put a $350 price tag on their creation. Then they snuck their piece into the display area of the exhibit. Its presence raised no eyebrows. In fact, it was promptly awarded a ribbon for merit.






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This photo shows the Cooper family sitting around a table, just days after they had moved into their new family house in Texas. What the family was unaware of is that when the photograph was developed, the image of what appears to be a falling body emerged in the left hand side of the room. Although the photo has been cropped, hence the family not appearing in the centre of the image, it was examined by experts, and deemed to be genuine. But as film was so expensive in the 1950s, it was common for people to re-use film. This meant that two separate images could be developed on top of one another.





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A video apparently showing an cocky Italian teenager lying under a speeding train has tuned out to be a fake. The 26-second YouTube clip shows the prankster seemingly lying down on tracks in Perugia, Italy, before goading an oncoming locomotive as it races towards him. Seconds later he lies flat on the track as the train appears to whizz over him at high speed.







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In September, 1726 Mary Toft began to give birth to rabbits. The local surgeon, John Howard, responded to her family’s summons and hurried to Mary’s house where, to his amazement, he helped her deliver nine of the animals. They were all born dead, and they were actually rabbit parts rather than whole rabbits. Nevertheless, this didn’t lessen the amazing fact that she was giving birth to them. Then, when a famous London physician, Sir Richard Manningham, threatened that he might have to surgically examine Mary’s uterus in the name of science, she wisely decided to confess. She explained that she had simply inserted the dead rabbits inside her womb when no one was looking, motivated by a desire for fame and the hope of receiving a pension from the King.





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Since his suicide in 1991, the literary reputation of Jerzy Kosinski has continued to sink. At one time he was one of the most promising writers on the American scene, pounding out three hits in a row-the cult classic The Painted Bird, Steps (winner of the 1969 National Book Award), and Being There (filmed in 1980 with Peter Sellers in the starring role). With their grisly violence and a sexuality bordering upon the sadomasochistic, the books raised Kosinski into the ranks of America's celebrity class. He appeared repeatedly on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson, played the role of Lenin's stooge Grigory Zinoviev in Warren Beatty's film Reds, posed for the cover of the New York Times Magazine, and presented the Oscar for screenwriting in the spring of 1982, watched by 600 million people. Even as his star was ascending, however, Kosinski was all but finished as a writer. His last six books became progressively more trivial, self-absorbed, and unreadable; and there drew closer the day of his exposure as a literary fraud. In June 1982, the Village Voice revealed that Kosinski (for whom English was a second language) had made extensive use of translators and collaborators to write all his books, and then had concealed the fact. George Reavey, a poet who was embittered by his own lack of literary success, complained to anyone who would listen that he wrote The Painted Bird. But Reavey was only one of several who could have made the same complaint, and not only about The Painted Bird. Being There so closely resembled a prewar Polish bestseller called The Career of Nikodem Dyzma as to deserve the charge of plagiarism. Kosinski never fully recovered from the Voice's expose. The remainder of his life, as he himself said, was spent running from it.






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Are certain of the fake actors of the Sandy Hook hoax directly connected to the Rockefeller cabal? They are, regardless, all fakes and hucksters, that is those who claim that the event was real and testify to the same. There are no exceptions. All the people involved at the most crucial levels in Sandy Hook are actors playing a pre-determined role.








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This photo seems to depict a man in what would be described as modern-day hipster clothing – in 1940s Canada. Sceptics were quick to attack the image, claiming it must be photoshopped, however, after much research it was confirmed that copies of the same picture are kept at the Bralorne Pioneer Museum in British Columbia, Canada. So is this guy a time-traveler or just a very modern looking 1940s man? Well its hard to tell. His clothes, sunglasses and modern looking camera could all have technically been made in 1940, however, historians have said it would have been extremely unusual to see a man walking around looking like this at the time. Kodak have confirmed that small cameras, like the one our ‘hipster’ appears to be holding were available in 1940, however were rare due to their high cost.





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Benjamin Vanderford is a 22 year old banker who in his spare time enjoys video art, as well as music; Ben is also known as The Great White Hype on the label Record Label Records. He is an experimental freestyle rap artist, who records all his rapping in one take Last August, Vanderford was seen being decapitated on a tape which was quickly picked up by an Islamic website and then disseminated around the net and western media. The fact that the entire event was staged by a group of San Francisco friends was only made apparent when Reuters showed up at Ben's apartment complex. For his side, Ben faulted the mass media for publicizing the stunt without first verifying that the video was genuine.








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John Ernst Worrell Keely was a US inventor from Philadelphia who claimed to have discovered a new motive power which was originally described as "vaporic" or "etheric" force, and later as an unnamed force based on "vibratory sympathy", by which he produced "interatomic ether" from water and air. Despite numerous requests from the stockholders of the Keely Motor Company, which had been established to produce a practicable motor based on his work, he consistently refused to reveal to them the principles on which his motor operated, and also repeatedly refused demands to produce a marketable product by claiming that he needed to perform more experiments.











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p.s. I'm going to see if I can do the whole p.s. while holding my breath. ** Bernard Welt, As told you in person, I passed the poem along to Zac and he loved it and said thank you very much. I had a bad feeling that gif might be from 'American Horror Story'. Everyone, Bernard Welt thinks you might be interested in this record of Bowie covers by Lea DeLaria. ** Damien Ark, I have no idea where that gif came from. ** David Ehrenstein, Yes, an exploding sheep. I will send Zac that link and message, thank you. ** James, The 'ha ha' was the only comedic part. Zac didn't have a birthday cake, as far as I know. Thank you for thanking me. ** Etc etc etc, Thank you. Your piece on Kendrick Lamar and black postmodernism was/is excellent. Everyone, etc etc etc aka Casey Henry has written a piece on Kendrick Lamar and black postmodernism for Los Angeles Review of Books and you will be more knowledgeable and grateful for that personal improvement if you read it. Thank you. ** Thomas Moronic, I will tell him, and thank you. ** Steevee, Good luck with that. I'll pass your HB along, thank you. Everyone, here's Steevee's review of the Israeli film THE KINDERGARTEN TEACHER. ** _Black_Acrylic, Thanks, Ben. ** Chilly Jay Chill, Thank you very much. Yes, I'm very interested in that Criterion edition of 'The Thin Red Line'. I've read reports/reviews of the new Malick re: its screening at the Berlin film festival, but I don't know anyone who's actually seen it. ** Cal Graves, Hi. Thanks. Does she put on a big show? I would think. No, still haven't visited the zoo. It was too hot. Now it's not, so I will. Failed-at-holding-my-breath-a-long-time-ly, Dennis. ** Chris Dankland, Thank you, Chris. I really, really appreciate that. I don't know that emoji poetry site, but, yes, I'll be there. Thank you. He was? A hoax? No surprise, I guess. That is a depressing and depressingly not at all surprising bit of news re: prisons. I like your new short book reviews. I too am desperate for a new Zachary German book. Is there something in the works, do you know? Everyone, Chris Dankland has written short reviews of the books he has read this year on Dankland and they're very good and informative so I recommend you read them. ** Misanthrope, Joe Mills as executor, scary. No Hulk Hogan day in the pipeline. I'll pass long your birthday salute. ** The post today introduces itself, I'm sure. Bye.

_Black_Acrylic presents ... Martin Kippenberger - The Happy End of Franz Kafka’s ‘Amerika’ Day

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Since I first saw his work back in my student days, the German artist Martin Kippenberger has been a big influence on me. I was always sympathetic enough to his fabled ‘bad boy’ persona but the art itself has a specific tone, a brand of humour that I find key, and as a student poring over his oeuvre in the art school library I felt I’d found a kindred spirit. In 2006, a couple of years after graduating, I took the train down to London with my Mum to see the Kippenberger retrospective at Tate Modern. That show included his magnum opus, the 1994 installation The Happy End of Franz Kafka’s ‘Amerika’, which is an overwhelming, dizzying experience. I hope this Day can manage to give a sense of it.





Martin Kippenberger (25 February 1953 – 7 March 1997) was a German artist known for his extremely prolific output in a wide range of styles and media, superfiction as well as his provocative, jocular and hard-drinking public persona.

The Happy End of Franz Kafka’s ‘Amerika’ (1994) explores the fictional utopia of universal employment, adapting Kafka’s idea of communal job interviews into an artwork. The installation consists of a diverse assortment of objects and furniture, assembled to suggest a playing field for conducting mass interviews. There are over 40 tables and twice as many chairs, from classics of twentieth-century design, such as chairs by Arne Jacobsen and Charles Eames, to worn-out tables bought in flea markets, remnants of previous Kippenberger exhibitions, and even work by other artists.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_Kippenberger





Based on Kafka's novel 'Amerika', Kippenberger re-imagines the final scene of the unfinished book and suggests an alternative ending. At this point in the story the lead protagonist Karl Rossmann (after traveling across America) applies for a job at 'the biggest theater in the world' where 'every one is welcome' and 'whoever wants to become an artist should sign up!' Claiming that he also never finished reading the book, Kippenberger approaches the unfinished condition of the novel as an open possibility for an uncharacteristically 'happy ending’.

The wide variety of tables and chairs present an abundance of possible meanings and outcomes for Karl Rossmanns interview at the theater, whilst suggesting a range of personalities and psychological types. Although an installation, the work becomes a comment on the importance of communication, relationships and dialogues. Fundamentally the social processes involved in an artistic practice.
Jack Brindley
http://openfileblog.blogspot.co.uk/2011/03/martin-kippenberger-happy-end-of-franz.html





Kippenberger wanted to supply a happy ending to Franz Kafka's unfinished novel, Amerika. The Kippenberger solution took the form of a sprawling installation, which provides the high point of the Tate Modern retrospective. An arrangement of about 50 chairs and tables stands on a green mat imprinted with the lines of a football pitch. The assorted furniture - including 20th-century design classics, chairs and tables "adapted" by other artists as well as refashioned by Kippenberger himself - is arranged as though for interviews. In Kafka's novel, the protagonist applies for a job advertised at "the biggest theatre in the world". "Whoever wants to become an artist should sign up," the advert invites.

Kippenberger's desks and chairs are implausible, uncomfortable settings, each a sculptural tableau in its own right. There are Eames chairs and Jacobsens, a table set with jars of body parts (on which filmed talking heads by artist Tony Ousler are projected), chairs set with African carvings, desks with Kippenberger's own paintings stashed underneath, a metal table rimed in thick paint and gloopy silicon. Standing amid it all are rickety, concentration-camp-style watchtowers and a lifeguard's tower. Unfortunately, viewers won't be able to wander within the installation, but will have to be content to observe from the stadium bleachers at either side, like spectators at the big game.

Most alarming of all are the motorised ejector seats that whir perilously around a circular track, in orbit of a gigantic model of a fried egg. It is all, of course, a model of the art world, but it looks like a torture garden. I imagine Nicholas Serota and Tate Modern director Vicente Todoli strapped in, being whirled around at unimaginable G-forces. I think Kippi would have liked that. It would have made a Happy End.
Adrian Searle
http://www.theguardian.com/culture/2006/feb/07/2





Kippenberger and the MOMA show make the best cases for themselves with “The Happy End of Franz Kafka’s ‘Amerika’ ” (1994), a vast installation in the museum’s atrium. The work represents the recruitment center for the Nature Theatre of Oklahoma, where Kafka’s immigrant hero applies for work, as a warren of office furniture and bizarre objects on an abbreviated soccer field. There are thrift-store and classic modern chairs (an Eames, a Gehry), similarly miscellaneous lamps, concentration-camp and lifeguard watchtowers, and a carrousel of two cockpit ejector seats around a sculpture of a fried egg. Bleachers are provided from which we may gaze our fill at nothing happening. It makes stirring sense for Kippenberger, a paladin of uncalled-for gestures, to identify with the disconcertingly upbeat “Amerika,” so at odds with Kafka’s signature tales of dread. I can think of few other artists so richly deserved by their times. For that very reason, whenever I go to contemplate a contemporary art work for pleasure, it will not be a Kippenberger.
Peter Schjeldahl
http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2009/03/09/taking-a-toll





At the centre of gravity of Kippenberger’s oeuvre is the installation organized around a closed book, ‘The Happy Ending of Franz Kafka’s Amerika’ (1994). Notoriously, Kippenberger never finished his reading of Kafka’s novel, but relied on a colleague’s account of the closing chapter. In some ways, this is entirely appropriate, since Kafka did not finish his work on the text, and in any case, he had not visited the settings he described, fabricating an America of the imagination based on received ideas of the United States. The vast array of chairs and tables that predominate in the installation recalls the scenario in Kafka’s immense ‘Nature Theatre of Oklahoma’, where the offer of total employment involves a series of humiliating job interviews. Kippenberger’s simulation of a received version of Kafka is inflected by the recent history of the movement of labour and the ubiquity of immigration centres, all organized ultimately around the interview situation. If the twentieth century starts with Manhattan as the location for the imagined opportunities of economic migration, it ends with the cross-border traffic of Kippenberger’s Europe, in which one interview leads to another in a process that involves the re-making of the self as a permanent condition. Whether this condition has the potential for reanimation or diminution is clearly an open question: the ‘happy ending’ has not yet been written.

Postmodern desire is for received ideas of the desirable, relayed mechanically by a culture industry whose keenest observer and most tenacious parasite was the incorrigible Martin Kippenberger.
Rod Mengham
http://magazine.saatchiart.com/articles/the_incorrectness_of_martin_ki





Although most of Kippenberger’s oeuvre tends toward the creation of a vast, interconnected artwork, The Happy End of Franz Kafka’s ‘Amerika’, 1994 is unique in that it might be considered his masterwork and the culmination of his achievement. Based on Kafka’s novel Amerika, the installation re-imagines a section of the book when the protagonist Karl Rossmann, having travelled across America, applies for a job at the ‘biggest theatre in the world’. ‘Everybody is welcome!’ proclaims the call for employment, ‘Whoever wants to become an artist should sign up!’. Kafka never completed the novel, which he abandoned writing over ten years before it was posthumously published in 1927, and Kippenberger claimed that he never finished reading it, hearing the story second-hand from a friend. The unfinished condition of the book leaves open the possibility, unusual in Kafka’s fiction, for a ‘happy ending’.

The Happy End of Franz Kafka’s ‘Amerika’ explores the fictional utopia of universal employment, adapting Kafka’s idea of communal job interviews into an artwork. Kippenberger described the situation depicted in his installation as ‘a circus in town, looking to employ reliable hands, helpers, doers, self-confident handlers and the like. Outside the circus tent, in my imagination, there would be tables and chairs set up for job interviews’. The installation consists of a diverse assortment of objects and furniture, assembled to suggest a playing field for conducting mass interviews. There are over 40 tables and twice as many chairs, from classics of twentieth-century design, such as chairs by Arne Jacobsen and Charles Eames, to worn-out tables bought in flea markets, remnants of previous Kippenberger exhibitions, and even work by other artists.

The Happy End of Franz Kafka’s ‘Amerika’ is Kippenberger’s most complex work, presenting the viewer with an overabundance of possible meanings. At one level, the installation refers to the competition between artists and constant judgements within the art community. Yet the variety of furniture also suggests a range of personalities and psychological types, and the interview format reflects the artist’s belief in the fundamental importance of relationships and dialogues.
Jessica Morgan
http://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-modern/exhibition/martin-kippenberger/martin-kippenberger-room-guide-introduction-6





In Martin Kippenberger’s epic installation The Happy End of Franz Kafka’s ‘Amerika’ (1994) a roomful of unmatched desks and chairs are arranged on a green sports ground, with bleachers on each end. The piece takes its title from Kafka’s unfinished last novel from 1927, which ends with its protagonist applying for work at the Nature Theatre of Oklahoma after reading an advertisement stating: ‘Whoever wants to be an artist should sign up’. Kippenberger’s installation was an effort to complete Kafka’s work without fixing it to a single narrative; each desk represents a job interview, to be carried out by Kippenberger and his colleagues, collected and published. The Happy End… is a concept, but it also signifies a performance, of every job applicant and every artist, and the capacity to reinvent the same subject with each performance.

Although viewers were kept off the actual ‘Amerika’ installation, the bleachers allowed access to the imaginary interviews. From a distance the absurdity of the process, and of those repressive cultural conventions that engender it, begins to focus. From the laughter of the condemned comes, always, the funniest joke.
Natalie Hatted
http://www.frieze.com/issue/review/martin_kippenberger3/





Kippenberger's late masterpiece The Happy End of Kafka's Amerika takes the modern working world as its subject. In the unfinished Franz Kafka novel Amerika (or The Man Who Disappeared) the protagonist is looking for work. The poster that leads him to an absurdist interview taking place on a grand scale reads, "At the racecourse in Clayton, today from 6 a.m. till midnight, personnel is being hired for the Theatre in Oklahoma! The great Theatre of Oklahoma is calling you! It's calling you today only! If you miss this opportunity, there will never be another! Anyone thinking of his future, your place is with us! All welcome! Anyone who wants to be an artist, step forward! We are the theatre that has a place for everyone, everyone in his place! If you decide to join us, we congratulate you here and now! But hurry, be sure not to miss the midnight deadline! We shut down at midnight, never to reopen! Accursed be anyone who doesn't believe us! Clayton here we come!"

In Kafka's work interviewers evaluate interviewees in an expansive environment. We know that the questions do not regard whether the potential worker has pursued a work which will clear a space for play which will lead to freedom. We know the questions are of the kind determining whether the potential worker will be of the sort that will suit the needs of the interviewer. Kafka's protagonist makes the claim of being an engineer just to get the process over with. So here Kippenberger creates a sculpture that presents a seemingly endless array of interview tables and chairs--not at a racecourse but on a soccer pitch--and this diversity, a wild diversity shared by all the work's constituting elements, is itself a demonstration of play, a demonstration of freedom, which takes as its subject not enforced servitude but voluntary servitude. Some freedom is not only work but revolt.

To make the association of work with servitude or bondage clear, Kippenberger has placed on the edge of the sports field observation towers of the kind one would find in a prison or concentration camp. The towers emphasize that there is a direct relationship between the enforced servitude of the concentration camp and the voluntary servitude of the workplace. Work will not set you free if it is not your work.

Not only do the disparate designs for the chairs and tables (some found junk, some design classics, some hand made, some made by other artists--Tony Oursler and Jason Rhoades included) suggest a subversion of the standardized interview process so does the very design of the field. The use of the sports field as the ground for the sculpture emphasizes that there are rules to the game of servitude and Kippenberger's work insists on directing our attention to the absurd rules of the interview process in Kafka's Amerika. The goal areas are not laid out in the proper places for a standard soccer field. The should be across from one another at each end of the longest part of the field. Instead they are across from one another at what would be the midpoint of the field so that they are as close together as they could be. This negation of the design becomes revolt. The revolt itself, as discussed, is the result of play.

Goldstein says, "Kippenberger embraced failure as a generative strategy." Looking at The Happy End of Kafka's Amerika this failure can be reevaluated.
Erik Bakke
http://www.slashseconds.org/issues/003/002/articles/ebakke/index.php









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p.s. Hey. Today the honorable artist of view and sound Ben Robinson who also just happens to be the no less honorable d.l. _Black_Acrylic would like to fasten your interest and attention span to this major work by the always fascinating, late and much missed visual artist Martin Kippenberger, and it seems to me that he has done a stellar job with no small amount of help from Kippenberger's talent, naturally. Why don't you get to know what's up there through _B_A's finessing lens and then tell _B_A what happened to the inside of your head when you did that? Thank you. Thank you ever so much, Ben! ** David Ehrenstein, That is indeed a fine film. As you can imagine, I went out of my way to keep JT Leroy out of that hoaxes post for the obvious reasons, but yes, indeed. ** Bacteriaburger, Wow, hey there Natty! Really great to see you, man! How are you? ** Douglas Payne, Hi. The Sandy Hook truthers are definitely among the weirdest of the weirdly believing folks out there. I imagine the psychology-inclined would have quite the field day with their internal lives. I wrote you this morning. We seem to be in the final stages of nailing it down. Yes! Hm, if I were to pick a favorite Almodovar film off the top of my head, it seems that, having now briefly scoured my memory, I would end up making the kind of non-idiosyncratic choice of 'All About My Mother'. That's interesting -- a friend in Paris just urged me to watch Polanski's 'Venus in Furs' not two days ago. Will do asap. Thanks! No, I'm behind on current movies right now other than things I've watched online in relation to making posts about filmmakers here. Like I said, 'Jurassic World' was garbage. I want to see the new Noe, 'Love', but everyone I know says it's not good. You? ** Thomas Moronic, Hi, T. Great thoughts on hoaxes. Yeah, a great hoax creates a really exciting and kind of ideal collaborative relationship with the susceptible. You know how interesting that is for me. Thinking of my novel as immaterial triggers in the form of a material objects is really big in my stuff. I think a really good hoax is like a cross between an art form and dissertation maybe. I like when they use 'the facts' to create their whirlpool. The obvious and classic example of a great hoax for me was the 'Paul is dead' hoax, so intricate and persuasively using the same real material used to create the 'Paul is alive''truth'. The David Icke-style ones don't interest me much -- the ones that rely on the Illuminati and the paranormal and shape-shifting and stuff, but I've never been a huge fan of science fiction. I like the ones that persuasively make you go, like, 'Oh, shit, I think that ashtray is actually a diamond mine!' Awesome about the great reaction to your novel! Sweet! Dude, if RS doesn't want it, or even if they do, there are plenty of other options out there. ** Cal Graves, Hi, Cal. I'm good, thank you very much. Funny you ask about the film because just last night we received confirmation that our film will have its world premiere at a really good festival here in Paris in early September. As soon as the details are worked out, we'll make a formal announcement and release the teaser trailer and stuff. So, yeah, we're happy. If memory serves, the Kosinski novel I liked the best is one that doesn't get mentioned that much: 'Cockpit'. I think I'll have that zoo under my belt by, at the very latest, a week from now. Indian food, yum. My fave is Matar Paneer? Oh, with Cheese Naan on the side. What's yours? I-guess-a-failed-experiment-is-better-than-resting-on-one's-laurels-ly, Dennis. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Ha ha. Thank you again and again for the great post today. I am bowing to you and high-fiving you and shaking your hand and giving you the Turner Prize all at the same time. I'll go read that story you linked to. Thanks. Thank you, thank you about the impending Belgian New Beat Day! In addition to all of the above, I'm also drooling. Sorry about the drool part, ha ha. ** Steevee, Hi. Oh, wow, that Leary/CIA thing really doesn't seem plausible at all. As far as I know, it's the 'lesbian' thing that was the hoax part. Good morning to you, sir. ** Michael_karo, Thanks, pal! That's completely out to lunch about the current day flat earth believers, and it's really beautiful too. What a curious head space to use as an escape from the mindfuck of post-tech reality. Government conspiracy believers are so boring. Those theories are like the hoax equivalent of plagiarism or something. ** Bill, Hi. Thanks, man. Yeah, the East German krautrock tapes and the fake electronic music composer thing were my favorites, push comes to shove. Music seems like a really good place in which to base a hoax. Music just inherently creates a smokescreen element or something. I remember 'Fake'. I think I might even have gone to it once, or I might be thinking of one of Steve's other ventures. That guy was/is amazing. Oh, that's interesting about the 'rigid,' explicit' structure. Huh. I'm not sure I understand how that problem raised its head in the piece, but, if you redo it and end up uploading it, maybe that'll solve the mystery. Good luck getting it as perfect as you want by Saturday. ** Misanthrope, If only, right? Yeah, I've read a little about the Hulk controversy thing. I don't know. I'm waiting to see how it coagulates. ** James, Hi. I am familiar with the Hughes bio hoax. I almost included it. It's funny or something because I thought, that one's too obvious, but now that you bring it up, I realize that no one under the age of whatever has any idea about it.  Oops! Thank you! ** Okay. Be with Ben and Martin until further notice, thank you. See you tomorrow.
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