Friday, 18 September 2009

Icon



The Rolling Stones - Sympathy For The Devil



The Rolling Stones in the studio working on the song Sympathy For The Devil. From the film "Sympathy For The Devil/One Plus One", directed by Jean-Luc Godard in 1968.

Anita in the cape TAPING 'Sympathy For The Devil'

Performance

Directed by Nicolas Roeg & Donald Cammell (1968).
with James Fox, Mick Jagger, Anita Pallenberg, Michele Breton.

For Fox Sake! # 2

Thanx Carolyn!

A seedy tee

Get it
HERE
For tomorrow!

Heavy Trash - Dark Hair'd Rider

Thursday, 17 September 2009


WTF???


The 7 most inappropriate products for children
@ 'HuffPo'

Spank!!! # 13 (Bob's lucky day!)

Spank!!! # 12

Richard Hell on 'Tonight Live' (Australia) 1993

I was at that reading at The Lounge here in Melbourne and my copy of 'Artifact' has Betadine spilt all over it! (Don't ask?)
PS: Jennifer Keyte is bad enough, but thank god Vizard was not presenting the show that night.

RIP Mary Travers

Mary Travers seen here with Bob Dylan and Donovan

Pot and New York

...The kicker in this is the apparently almost unknown fact that possession of 25 grams, or seven-eighths of an ounce—much more than the few joints that are getting people arrested—is not a crime in New York State and has not been since the passage of the Marijuana Reform Act of 1977, or 32 years ago. (Right here add sound of potheads slapping their foreheads, like, how come they didn’t know that?) There are exceptions, however. If the pot is “burning or open to public view,” then the 25-gram deal is off. It is this provision that has been the basis for the arrest outbreak, many civil libertarians contend.

The scenario of what happens on the street, as told to me by several arrestees, is remarkably similar. It goes like this: You’re black, or Spanish, or some white-boy fellow traveler with a cockeyed Bulls cap and falling-down pants. The cops come up to you, usually while you’re in a car, and ask you if you’re doing anything you shouldn’t. You say, “No, officer,” and they say, “You don’t have anything in your pocket you’re not supposed to have, do you, because if you do and I find it, it’ll be a lot worse for you.” It is at that point, because you are young, nervous, possibly simple, and ignorant of the law, you might comply and take the joint you’d been saving out of your pocket. Then, zam: Suddenly, your protection under the Marijuana Reform Act vanishes because the weed is now in “public view.” The handcuffs, the paddy wagon, and the aforementioned court date soon follow.
@ 'New York Magazine'

Mickey Hart celebrates Walter Cronkite