Sunday, 4 December 2011

Occupy a Dispersal Order!

Michele Shocked
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#OccupyOregon (Livestream)

♪♫ Flash & The Pan - Hey Saint Peter


Fear not, web series spreads HIV message

Public Image Ltd - Death Disco (Alternate Take)

Riot Gear’s Evolution

:)


Bonus:
Maddow from October 4, 2011

Spike Lee 
Mr. Herman Cain has pulled Da plug on his Presidential Run. Can I Get An AMEN and A Thank You Sweet Jesus?

Consurgo

In this steampunk styled short film, created in our second year of school, a girl loses the ball she's playing with and it ends up on the street. Her father tries to get it back for her, but then something brutal happens. The girl, full of tears, doesn't know what to think when a monstrous creature appears and seems to be after her and her father.
Consurgo is latin for 'to arise' and blends perfectly with the story. This sad story picks up halfway to something incredibly fantastic
Info
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Alan Moore Reacts to Frank Miller’s OccupyWallStreet Rant

daveweigel 
"Politics is a dirty game." You know what else is dirty? Sexually harassing women. Just puttin' that out there.

Who's drone? Our drone!

Occupy the Airspace: Surveillance Drones for the 99 Percent

Meetin' WA (Godard meets Woody Allen - 1986)

For Stan!

The great debate that no one's talking about

'I'm a firm believer that a lot of the best creativity comes from restriction'

Carl Craig on samplers, software, iPad apps and more

Age 13: The Inner Life of an 'At-Risk' Teenager (1955)

Age 13 is a melodramatic 1955 educational “social warning” film from director Sid Davis that depicts a grieving teenager named Andrew as he struggles to cope following his mother’s death. As the story goes begins, Andrew’s radio coincidentally stops working the same time his mother dies which sets him in the wrong direction. Later, Andrew is sent to the school psychologist’s office for a Rorschach test after shooting off a gun in the schoolyard (!). In the end, he runs away from his bitter stepfather but eventually is taken in by family members and shows the ‘first signs of winning his inner struggle’ with the love of his adopters. As campy as the film can be, it does show a fun slice of 1950s life of the “working-class Inglewood, Hollywood and other parts of the Los Angeles basin” where it was filmed. Age 13 is in the public domain and available from the Prelinger Archives.
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