Thursday, 22 December 2011

WikiLeaks 
WikiLeaks hails SOPA: The sooner all internet infrastructure is forced to flee the US surveillance state the better for everyone

Tea for three...

艾未未 Ai Weiwei 
国父王仲夏一壶茶喝了三天。

Coffee with Jesus

(Click to enlarge)
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(Thanx Stan!)

FUCK Christmas!!!




Taking high-speed photos of objects mid-explosion is kind of Alan Sailer’s thing — he shoots everyday objects with a pellet rifle and documents their demises using specially designed gear he makes himself. The photographer has detonated everything from Red Bull cans to pomegranates to Barbie backpacks for the sake of art, with breathtaking results that more than justify all the destruction. While all of his work is worth checking out on his Flickr page, The Inspiration Grid has turned us on to his seasonally appropriate series The War on Christmas. Sailer’s bright, festive photos of exploding tree ornaments filled with colored sand, Play-Doh, beads, and more are sure to delight Christmas lovers and haters alike.
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HA!

The DM Reporter 
This week's Daily Mail Cancer List: Mon) Lard Tue) Concrete Wed) Snow Thu) Voicemail Fri) Shoelaces Sat) Slade Sun) Your reflection

Buddha in suburbia

Girlz with Gunz #164

Yevdokiya Zavaliy

Judge to Police: Relax About the ‘Weed Man’

U.S. Holds On to Biometrics Database of 3 Million Iraqis

Good Shit!!!

Smoking # 115

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I'm sorry I have a hard enough time taking nuns seriously at the best of times but one with an Air Force tattoo?

My hexmass present to myself

At the end of 2011, a year of riots, revolutions, occupations and increasing collapse of the global financial system Mark Stewart returns with the limited 7” of Children of the Revolution, perfectly capturing the restless mood on today’s streets worldwide to create the apocalyptic dancehall mutation of T. Rex’s glam classic.
His new album The Politics of Envy is due out 26th March, 2012 through Future Noise Music, and features a stellar cast, including original Clash/PiL guitarist Keith Levene, NYC punk innovator Richard Hell, Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry, Gina Birch of the Raincoats, Slits bassist Tessa Pollitt, Jesus And Mary Chain bassist Douglas Hart, Factory Floor, Daddy G of Massive Attack and all of Primal Scream.
All roads have been leading to this. The Politics of Envy cages, consolidates and hotwires the rampant barrage of elements which have infused Mark Stewart’s work since his first band, The Pop Group blasted the post-punk landscape.
Vanity Kills kicks off the resulting LP with cult film-maker Kenneth Anger on Theremin, plus Richard Hell and Bristol new blood Kahn. Followed by Autonomia, featuring Bobby Gillespie’s frenetic call-and-response chant with Stewart, who wrote the song about Carlo Giuliani, killed at the 2001 G8 demonstrations in Genoa. Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry guests on Gang War, spitting diamonds, with Tessa Pollitt blanketing the dense, heavyweight urban dubscape, before Stewart takes us into the slo-mo coldwave of Codex. Joined by Factory Floor and Youth for Want, Stewart then hits us with the album’s fine example of 21st-century schizoid wall of sound Gustav Says.
Railing against “corporate cocksuckers” and declaring “sanity sucks” on the cool disco electro Baby Bourgeois, we’re then taken into the huge, seething synth-crawl of Method to the Madness, providing one of the album’s atmospheric highlights, gouging beyond industrial or dubstep to create a frightening new take on modern mood music. Daddy G’s unmistakable deep-throat intonations make the perfect garnish for the bleak, heaving whale of a tune, that is Apocalypse Hotel. Being mutual fans of their work, Stewart gives us his version of David Bowie’s Letter to Hermione, now a spookily-orchestrated, beat-less lament. Stewart turns on the light and lets Keith Levene unleash some of his inimitable metal guitar jangle on Stereotype. They are joined by Factory Floor and Gina Birch on this slice of gorgeously-melancholic brilliance, an effortless modern pop classic, which provides the perfect end to this intoxicatingly provocative set of songs.
Continuing an unmatchable track record of anarchic pioneering and seismic influence, Mark Stewart is back with his eighth album and what must be his most high profile project to date, reasserting him as one of the great volcanic creative minds.
Disc Two: Bonus Dubs EP.
*Signed copies are strictly limited and will be sent out on a first come, first served basis. One signed copy per household. Once all signed copies have been sold the offer will be taken down and replaced with an unsigned version of the album. Signed copies are allocated upon the order processing, not when the order is placed.
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Coders Are Already Finding Ways Around SOPA Censorship

No Sopa

♪♫ David Bowie - The Jean Genie (TOTP 3/1/73)


Bonus:
Interview with John Henshall who found the footage...

The Lost recording of Jean Genie
Broadcast TOTP 3rd January 1973
A rare David Bowie Top of the Pops performance will be shown on television for the first time since it was originally broadcast in 1973.
It was believed that every recording of the singer's performing number two hit "The Jean Genie" had been destroyed.
It emerged in October that one had been found - and it will feature in a Top of The Pops Christmas Special on BBC 2.
The footage belonged to TV cameraman John Henshall, who was unaware how rare the performance was.
Mr Henshall, from Oxfordshire, worked on the show and kept a copy of Bowie's appearance.
He mentioned that he had the tape during an interview on Johnnie Walker's Radio 2 show earlier this year, after which excited Bowie afficionados contacted him to explain its status.
The film was later shown at the Missing Believed Wiped event at the British Film Institute in London, which celebrates the discovery of long-lost TV shows.
The four-minute clip shows Bowie performing alongside his then-band The Spiders From Mars, who play a slightly extended version of Jean Genie.
It will be screened in full on the Top of The Pops special.
Tapes wiped
The performance has not been broadcast on TV since it originally aired on 4 January 1973, the day after it was recorded.
It was lost when hundreds of shows were wiped to allow video tape to be reused by the BBC, because of its high cost.
Mr Henshall was unaware until recently that the BBC had not kept a copy.
"I just couldn't believe that I was the only one with it. I just thought you wouldn't be mad enough to wipe a tape like that," he said earlier this month.
Mark Cooper, executive producer of Top Of The Pops 2, said: "Bowie singing The Jean Genie is electric and the kind of piece of archive that not only brings back how brilliant Top Of The Pops could be, but also how a piece of archive can speak to us down the years.
"I can't imagine what other piece of TOTP from the early Seventies would be as extraordinary a find."
BBC Two's 90-minute Top of the Pops Christmas Special will be screened at 19:30 GMT on Wednesday

Good Minus God