Monday, 9 August 2010

Dirk Hanson Dirk57 W.S. Burroughs: "The question, "why did you start using narcotics in the first place?" should never be asked. It is irrelevant to treatment"

♪♫ Metric - Gold Guns Girls

Psychic Octopus Begins Advertising Career


Paul the psychic octopus may have retired from predicting football matches, but his advertising career has just begun. The eight-legged oracle recently appeared in an advertisement for a German supermarket chain and has received more than 160 endorsement offers, including a book deal, according to the mollusk's agent.
From the depths of the ocean to the height of stardom, Paul the octopus' star hasn't gone dim yet. After shooting to fame this summer by correctly predicting the results of each of Germany's World Cup matches -- including tipping Spain to beat Netherlands in the final -- the cephalopod oracle from the Sea Life aquarium in Oberhausen was featured in recent print ads for the German supermarket chain Rewe.
The ads, which were shot about a week ago, show Paul in his trademark pose atop a transparent box after snatching a mussel from inside. Naturally, Paul chose the Rewe box.
How long did it take Paul to choose the mussel from the Rewe box? "Instantly," the mollusk's England-based agent Chris Davis told SPIEGEL ONLINE. Neither Rewe nor Davis would disclose the amount Paul earned from the ad, but the agent would only say that it was "substantial" sum. Paul's income will go to a turtle sanctuary in Greece, according to the agent.
"Paul has turned into a million-plus brand instantly," says Davis, noting that Paul has so far received more than 160 offers to hawk products. "I have had 37 offers just this morning," he said on Friday.
Rewe is so far undecided on whether it will continue its work with the cuddly octopus. "It cannot be ruled out that we will use the well-known octopus again in our advertising," Rewe spokeswoman Julia Robertz told SPIEGEL ONLINE in an e-mail. Robertz added that Paul's image will only be used in the short-term.
Paul may have bigger fish to fry, anyway. The octopus also has his eight arms wrapped around a book deal, a plush toy contract and will swim alongside David Beckham to promote England's bid for the 2018 World Cup, says Davis.
Nevertheless, campaigning for a supermarket chain may be problematic for the mollusk. On Rewe's own website, the Cologne-based supermarket calls octopus "tasty" and says that "especially coveted are their meaty arms, which also come deep-frozen and pre-fried."
A Fatwa for Paul?
The limelight has come with unexpected perils for Paul. Recently, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad accused Paul of spreading "western propaganda and superstition" and posing as a symbol of "decadence and decay," according to the British daily, the Telegraph. Davis even claims that he needs a security detail as Paul's agent following Ahmadinejad's comments.
Even so, Paul is no stranger to danger. During the World Cup, disappointed fans from Argentina to Germany threatened to roast the octopus after he correctly foresaw losses by their squads. And in China, a movie is about to hit the big screen entitled "Kill Paul Octopus," whose fictional plot reportedly revolves around gambling and match fixing at this year's World Cup.
But Paul has a legion of protectors in Spain. Shortly after the nation's World Cup victory, the city council of Carballiño, a town of 14,000 in northern Spain, made Paul an honorary citizen. Carballiño Mayor Carlos Montes traveled to Oberhausen last week to hand-deliver the honor to Paul.

(Eric Kelsey - Der Spiegel)

Hawaii implements a "put your money where your mouth is" law

The persistent quest for President Barack Obama's Hawaii birth certificate has died down since the state passed a law allowing it to ignore repetitive requests for the document.
Far fewer "birthers," who claim Obama is ineligible to be president, have asked state officials to provide the document since the law was enacted in May, according to the state.
The law has never even been put to use, said Department of Health spokeswoman Janice Okubo. The number of people seeking proof that Obama was born outside of Hawaii and the United States diminished without the law being invoked.
Continue reading
@'AP'

Sean Penn 'Very Suspicious' of Wyclef Jean's Haitian Presidential Bid

Sunday, 8 August 2010

Freedom to Fail

Google espouses a culture where it’s OK to be wrong. This is along the same lines as the difference between following your passion and bringing your passion with you. The former is just a dream (the so-called American Dream) and the latter is actually performing work and making progress.

Smoking # 79

Dennis Hopper - Sometimes in a career, moments are enough

 Dennis Hopper (at 18 yrs old) on the set of Rebel Without a Cause
“There are moments that I’ve had some real brilliance, you know.
But I think they are moments.  And sometimes, in a career, moments are enough.
I never felt I played the great part.  I never felt that I directed the great movie.
And I can’t say that it’s anybody’s fault but my own.”
–Dennis Hopper

The future?

Cardinal attacks US over Lockerbie bomber reaction

Megrahi shortly after release 
Abdelbaset Ali al-Megrahi was released last August
The leader of the Roman Catholic Church in Scotland has made an outspoken attack on the United States over the release of the Lockerbie bomber.
Cardinal Keith O'Brien said the Scottish government was right to free Abdelbaset Ali al-Megrahi last year on compassionate grounds.
US lawmakers want Scottish politicians to explain to a Senate committee their decision to release Megrahi.
But the cardinal said ministers should not go crawling to the US like lapdogs.
Kenny MacAskill, the Scottish government's justice secretary, released Megrahi, who has prostate cancer, after being told that three months was a "reasonable estimate" of his life expectancy.
Vengeance
However, he is still alive after almost a year and the decision continues to provoke anger in the United States, which was home to 189 of the Lockerbie victims.
Cardinal O'Brien said Americans were too fixed on retribution.
He said it was understandable why the families and friends of the 270 people killed on board Pan Am flight 103 in 1988 would want "justice" and "even vengeance".
But in an article for the newspaper Scotland on Sunday, he suggested Americans should "direct their gaze inwards" rather than scrutinise how the Scottish justice system worked.
"They seem to think they have got it right, and I don't think they've got it right, and I don't think most Christians would believe they have got it right either. It's not an eye for an eye, tooth for a tooth. And they really should look to the beam in their own eye rather than thinking what's wrong with us."
He added: "I think the United States government in many, many states - more than half of the states in the United States - they have a culture of vengeance."
He said the use of the death penalty meant the US kept "invidious company" with countries like Saudi Arabia and Iran.
He backed the Scottish Government's decision not to give evidence to American senators investigating Megrahi's release.

NEVER AGAIN!

Don DeLillo: 'I'm not trying to manipulate reality – this is what I see and hear'

Recycled Island: plastic fantastic?

An artist's impression of Recycled Island.
A floating city of half a million people on a vast plastic island. Does that sound like Waterworld? The vision could soon be a reality if Dutch conservationists have their way. Recycled Island is a plan to clean up 44 million kilos of plastic waste from the North Pacific Gyre, which stretches from California to Japan, and provide 10,000 square kilometres (3,861 square miles) of sustainable living space in the process. Solar and wave energy would provide power for islanders while sustainable fishing and agriculture could provide their food.
According to the website for Whim Architecture, which designed the concept: "The proposal has three main aims: cleaning our oceans from a gigantic amount of plastic waste, creating new land and constructing a sustainable habitat."
There is an estimated 100m tonnes of plastic flotsam in the Pacific Gyre, where ocean currents cause it to accumulate. The floating dump covers an area one and a half times the size of the US.
Captain Charles Moore of the Algalita Marine Research Foundation (AMRF) was the first to find the huge, floating plastic dump in 1997. On the foundation's website, he described it as "just absolutely gross – a truly disgusting plastic cesspool. [It] has to be burned into the consciousness of humanity that the ocean is now a plastic wasteland".
Because petroleum-based plastics are non-biodegradable, any plastic that enters the ocean stays there, continually breaking into smaller pieces until it is ingested by marine life or deposited on the shore. In a 1998 survey, 89% of the litter observed floating on the ocean surface in the North Pacific was plastic. In the Central Pacific Gyre, the AMRF in 2002 found six kilos of plastic for every kilo of plankton near the surface. By 2008, that figure had risen to 45 to one.
Birds like albatrosses eat the larger pieces which block their stomachs, while smaller pellets can cause fatal intestinal damage in fish.
Recycled Island could be a unique opportunity to save marine life. "The project should be carried out with great care so no negative influence to the environment is made," states the project's website. "Our ideal is to return more balance to the environment and set an example of how an environment-friendly habitat could be created."
Cian Luanaigh@'The Guardian'

Recycling!!!


What If Mad Men's Don Draper Designed Facebook Ads?

(Click images to enlarge)
Trying to convince their clients that "everything ages fast," Brazilian ad agency Moma mocked up some hilarious vintage 1960s-style ads for Facebook, YouTube, and Skype. (Including charmingly broken Brazilian English.) Yes, there's even a Keyboard Cat cameo.
The ads are currently being published in Meio & Mensagem, a Brazilian newspaper.

♪♫ Breathe Owl Breathe - Own Stunts

Karl Rove Wants WikiLeaks 'Criminal' Julian Assange 'Hunted Down And Grabbed And Put On Trial'

John Perry Barlow JPBarlow
Wyclef Jean, to Sean Penn's charge that he diverted donations: "I am Haitian." What's more Haitian than kleptocracy?

TorrentReactor Buys and Renames Russian Town

TorrentReactor, listed among the five most popular torrent sites on the Internet, has surprised friends and foes by acquiring a small town in central Russia. The town formerly known as Gar has reportedly been bought for the equivalent of $148,000 and was quickly renamed after the Russian-based torrent site.

The last time a torrent site attempted to buy some land, the plan miserably failed. Early 2007 The Pirate Bay launched its ‘Buy Sealand” campaign. The plan was to raise enough money so they could buy the micronation of Sealand and offer “high-speed Internet access, no copyright laws and VIP accounts to The Pirate Bay.”
Within a few weeks the campaign raised some $20,000 from potential citizens, but this wasn’t enough. Sealand turned out not to be an option as it was prized at 750 million euros, which equals to nearly one billion US dollars. Other alternatives were considered but most islands lacked a proper Internet connection.
Now, three years later the Russian based torrent site Torrentreactor has reportedly bought some land of their own, without any help or funding from the outside. TorrentReactor founder Alex informed TorrentFreak about the peculiar move which puts the torrent site on the map in rural Russia.
The town of Gar, founded in 1958 by a religious group connected to the Russian Orthodox Church, was bought for 4.5 million rubles ($148,000 or 115,000Eur). Gar is located in the center of Russia and has only 214 inhabitants who make a living from selling home-grown vegetables in a nearby town.
With the financial injection from TorrentReactor the people of Gar (now the people of TorrentReactor) will be able to get connected to the Internet. Right now, there are only three computers available in the entire town, and just one is connected to the Internet via a dial-up connection.

“Most of it will be split among villagers and the rest will be used to re-equip the local school, repair roads, purchase agricultural equipment and machinery. Also torrentreactor.net company decided to pay for broadband Internet connection in the settlement which will result in about 900,000 rubles ($30,000) because there are no networks nearby,” TorrentReactor says.
Although some might see it as a vanity buy, or an overly expensive marketing campaign, the TorrentReactor team stresses that the humanitarian motive came first.
“We realize it’s just a drop in the ocean comparing to the amount of money needed to help thousands of other villages. But we at least do something to support complete strangers. We are proud that we are able to do so and hope we will be proud of this in the future,” the TorrentReactor team said.
According to TorrentReactor the local authorities were skeptical about the deal at first, but they went ahead with it after the right price was negotiated. TorrentFreak contacted the Tomsk authorities for a comment on the unusual deal, but thus far they are yet to respond.
Because we were unable to verify the deal from both ends, we have to inform our readers that TorrentReactor is known to carry out pranks and ludicrous actions. Earlier this year their partner site shipped condoms to the RIAA, MPAA and various other anti-piracy outfits, informing them that their bullying tactics are not appreciated.
Although the condom action was verified and legit, TorrentReactor’s latest announcement has not yet been officially confirmed by Russian authorities. TorrentFreak readers who live in the area or have more information are encouraged to get in touch with us to provide additional details.

via torrentfreak

for details see the TorrentReactor site:
The majority of villagers found it hard to define what a website is and none could describe what torrentreactor.net Internet portal might do. But some of them tried to make assumptions. Two leading theories were heard:
* Torrentreactor.net is a large american nuclear station. (Villagers thought it was located on the outskirts of Toronto. But after they were explained that Toronto is the largest city in Canada some of them change their views.)
* Torrentreactor.net is an environmental organization fighting against building new nuclear reactors around the globe which is clearly stated by «net» suffix (in russian «net» means «no»).

Mike Huckaby @ Kapterka [djstation.ru 90.0 Fm 30.12.09]

  

Saturday, 7 August 2010

Prepare for 'Zero History' narrated by William Gibson

The Poetry of William S. Burroughs

William S. Burroughs is generally considered a novelist. To make the case that he was also a poet is neither revisionist nor perverse but absurd. After all, Burroughs paid about as much obeisance to genre or medium as he did to the law. His work consistently ignored the traditional boundaries between forms of creative production — to the point where, if you were really to collect Burroughs’ “poetry,” you would be hard-pressed to explain why you might leave out Naked Lunch. It may well be the most “poetic” text he ever wrote.
And what of the cut-up? Is it poetry, prose, or something else altogether? Oliver Harris has broached the question in his essay “‘Burroughs Is a Poet Too, Really’: The Poetics of Minutes to Go.” Harris writes that, in Minutes to Go, poetry “is not understood in terms of words on the page but as the ‘place’ reached by a particular use of chance operations on pre-existing words.” It is a method “to be grasped by doing,” not a “content to be understood by interpretation.” This insightful analysis could serve as an introduction to this somewhat quixotic attempt to collect the poetry of William Burroughs, and Oliver Harris has very graciously allowed RealityStudio to republish it.

Poems by William S. Burroughs

New York Governor Signs Needle Exchange Bill

New York Gov. David Paterson (D) Saturday signed into law a bill, A08396A, that will protect needle exchange participants. Although needle exchanges are permitted in New York, some participants in such programs have been arrested for possession of needles and syringes, while others have been charged with drug possession for residues left in syringes. The new law is designed to address that conflict between public health law and penal law.
The law, also known as the Governor's Program Bill No. 23, will: 
Clarify in the Penal Law that a person does not act unlawfully by possessing a hypodermic needle or syringe if he or she participates in a needle exchange or syringe access program authorized under the Public Health Law;
Provide that possession of a residual amount of a controlled substance on a needle or syringe does not constitute a criminal act if the individual is permitted to possess such needle or syringe under the Public Health Law; and
Require the Division of Criminal Justice Services to periodically notify law enforcement agencies and prosecutors about the right of individuals to possess syringes under a qualifying public health program and how to verify that a person is participating in such a program.
"The success of needle exchange and syringe access programs has been repeatedly verified to be instrumental in reducing the transmission of blood-borne diseases," Gov. Paterson said. "I proposed this legislation to prevent people from being arrested unnecessarily, thus ensuring that syringe users are not deterred from participating in these important programs." 
"I want to commend Governor Paterson for signing this landmark legislation," said Sen. Thomas Duane. "By signing the syringe access legislation, Governor Paterson has once again put New York at the vanguard of a good public health policy that has proven to reduce transmission of HIV and other blood-borne diseases. Furthermore, New York's Penal law now finally conforms with its rational and compassionate health policy." "Throwing an infected syringe into the gutter, out of fear of prosecution for possession of a trace of substance, is bad for public health and safety," said Assemblyman Richard Gottfried. "Stopping the arrest of drug users for possessing a used needle is a common sense way to protect public health and safety."
"It's important that we encourage drug injectors to utilize our public health programs without fear of arrest," said State Health Commissioner Dr. Richard Daines. "Syringe exchange programs help reduce transmission of HIV and offer access to drug treatment and other services to those most in need. We encourage injectors to return all used syringes so they are not disposed of in a way that would put others at risk." It is a good day when, in some small way, the imperatives of public health are not sacrificed on the altar of the drug war. Saturday was a good day for New York.
Location: 
Albany, NY
United States

Little Feat's Richie Hayward - not good news...

From his wife...

UPDATE NO. 1, yesterday...
Really rough night.....
Fever up, chills, fever down....tepid baths,.fluids, more fluids..cold
cloths,....lots of toilet time....confusion....then calm around 3:30
am.....normal body temp....and a few hours sleep x
However this am....
Off to the hospital.

UPDATE NO. 2, this morning...
Richie is in ICU now.
Within one hour in emerg....he had a chest xray, blood work done, saw
the specialist and doc on call, was on IV antiobiotics, and liquid ventilin.
He will be there for three days....four if needed....then another few on
the ward on IV antibiotic.
Richie has pneumonia on both sides of his lungs. fear is liver failure,
and kidney function is being kept close.
His Oxygen levels were very frightening...which is why he is in ICU.
They want to have him on 24 hour Oxygen, as well as seven days worth of
IV antibiotic.
It is the "liver friendly" antibiotic so as to not cause failure....and
his physio is coming in tomorrow to help loosen the chest area.
He is confused....and tired....and scared,...he was sad to see me leave
tonight.....but I promised him I will be back by 8:30.

UPDATE NO. 3, this afternoon...
I was called in this am at 6:00 to be with him, as the decision was made
to put him on life support systems.
His Oxygen levels were 45-55 thru out the night, and he needs to be
above the 90 zone. He was just not able to do it on his own.
The pneumonia on both sides is so pronounced, that he fought a good
fight,....and now the machines need to take over for him, and make
rainbows happen.
They have him on Liver Friendly med's,...but a couple of them are
necessary to fight the infections, and they may hurt his liver. He is
being monitered 24 hours a day,...with a private nurse taking stats at a
desk right beside him.
His Liver is the main concern.
They will keep him on Life support as long as it is needed until his
lungs can take over and do the work themselves.
<http://www.nojazzfest.com/chat/editpost.php?do=editpost&p=352580>
(Thanx Robbie!)

Net neutrality is foremost free speech issue of our time

If we learned that the government was planning to limit our First Amendment rights, we'd be outraged. After all, our right to be heard is fundamental to our democracy.
Well, our free speech rights are under assault -- not from the government but from corporations seeking to control the flow of information in America.
If that scares you as much as it scares me, then you need to care about net neutrality.
"Net neutrality" sounds arcane, but it's fundamental to free speech. The internet today is an open marketplace. If you have a product, you can sell it. If you have an opinion, you can blog about it. If you have an idea, you can share it with the world.
And no matter who you are -- a corporation selling a new widget, a senator making a political argument or just a Minnesotan sharing a funny cat video -- you have equal access to that marketplace.
An e-mail from your mom comes in just as fast as a bill notification from your bank. You're reading this op-ed online; it'll load just as fast as a blog post criticizing it. That's what we mean by net neutrality.
But telecommunications companies want to be able to set up a special high-speed lane just for the corporations that can pay for it. You won't know why the internet retail behemoth loads faster than the mom-and-pop shop, but after a while you may get frustrated and do all of your shopping at the faster site. Maybe the gatekeepers will discriminate based on who pays them more. Maybe they will discriminate based on whose political point of view conforms to their bottom line.
We don't have to speculate. We can look to the history of the media gatekeepers for examples.
Back in the 1990s, Congress rescinded rules that prevented television networks from owning their own programming. Network executives swore in congressional hearings that they wouldn't give their own programming preferred access to the airwaves. They vowed access to the airwaves would be determined only by the quality of the shows.
I was working at NBC back then, and I didn't buy that line one bit. Sure enough, within a couple of years, NBC was the largest supplier of its own prime-time programming. To take advantage of this new paradigm, Disney bought ABC, Viacom (the parent company of Paramount) bought CBS and NBC merged with Universal.
And since these conglomerates owned both the pipes through which Americans received information (in this case, TV networks) and the information itself (in this case, TV shows), they developed a monopoly over what you could watch.
Today, if you're an independent producer, it's nearly impossible to get a show on the air unless the network owns at least a piece of it.
Now Comcast, the nation's largest cable provider, and NBC/Universal want to merge. This new behemoth would be able to charge other cable carriers more for NBC, MSNBC, CNBC, Bravo and the 35 other cable networks it will own in whole or in part. This means that other carriers won't be able to afford as many choices -- and it means that your cable bill will go up.
Comcast is also the nation's largest home internet service provider. And as more and more of our television is provided through the internet, other internet giants such as Verizon and AT&T will have to look toward merging with CBS/Viacom or ABC/Disney.
We'll end up with a few megacorporations in control of the flow of information -- not just on TV, but now online as well.
From my seat on the Judiciary Committee, I plan to do everything I can to stop these mergers or at least put rigorous restrictions on them. But if this trend toward media consolidation continues, the free and open internet will be a thing of the past unless we write the principle of net neutrality into law right now.
This isn't a liberal or conservative issue. Everyone has a stake in protecting the First Amendment.
And it isn't even strictly a political issue. The internet's freedom and openness has made it a hotbed for innovations that change our lives. It's been an incredible engine of job creation.
The internet was developed at taxpayer expense to benefit the public interest. If we let corporations prioritize some content over others, we'll lose what makes it so valuable to our economy, our democracy and our daily lives.
Net neutrality may sound like a technical issue, but it's the key to preserving the internet as we know it -- and it's the most important First Amendment issue of our time.
Al Franken @'CNN'

Why the Taliban Is Winning the Propaganda War

REpost: 1945-1998-by Isao Hashimoto


Thank you...

To Hannah and Zoe for making me forget the pain last night and to everyone who sent best wishes.
You are all so kind...
XXX

RIP - FatboyFat

Friday, 6 August 2010

*gulp*

This one is for you Rexy boy!
W/ love XXX

"I will protect you Monkey - you is family..."

Last night on Earth...(sad)

We have had (Nervous) Rex for 18 of his 19 years and he is going to be sadly missed...
the best dog ever!
X
X
X

The Camera Lens Mug

Get it

♪♫ Dog Door - Bros. Quay/Tom Waits

Amazing

 
'Exile Towers'

Does kicking someone in the balls improve viral advertising?

The use of comedic violence in viral advertising is becoming widespread, but as yet no examination of what influence it may have on consumer response has been undertaken. Two experimental studies using a commercial panel sample investigate the effects of this executional cue on ad message involvement, brand memorability, likelihood of being passed on to third parties, and attitude formation. Results suggest that humorous ads that combine higher levels of violence intensity with more severe consequences appear to elicit greater involvement with the ad message, better retention of brand information, higher pass-along probability, and greater ad likability. Attitudes toward the brand remain unaffected. Furthermore, justification for the violence and relatedness to the product brand appear to be important considerations when using high intensity-severe consequence comedic violence. The paper specifies conditions under which advertisers can expect to gain maximum impact when using violent humor in viral advertising campaigns.
Source: "The Impact of Comedic Violence on Viral Advertising Effectiveness" from Journal of Advertising, Volume 39, Number 1 / Spring 2010, Pages: 49 - 66

WTF???

Michael Moore MMFlint
Verizon & Google on Monday plan 2 announce the end of the Internet as we know it. "Free" & "fair" are the two dirtiest words in capitalism.

The End of The Internet as We Know It?

Thursday, 5 August 2010

Banned TV ad for Captain Beefheart's 'Lick My Decals Off Baby'


Thanx Stan!
(Update)
BIG thanx to HerrB!!!

Harold Chapman's best shot

Peter Orlovsky and Allen Ginsberg in Paris's Place St Germain-des-Prés in 1956
Beat generation … Peter Orlovsky and Allen Ginsberg in Paris's Place St Germain-des-Prés in 1956 Photograph: Harold Chapman
 It was 1956, and I was working in a crummy nightclub in London, waiting on tables, collecting dishes, trying to take photographs. I overheard all these conversations about how fantastic Paris was – "That's where it's at, man," everybody said.
So I hitchhiked there, planning to photograph everything in Paris for a book; a ridiculous ambition – it would have been the size of four telephone directories. At a bookshop called the Mistral, I found the address of the Beat Hotel – though it wasn't called that then. It was just a 13th-class hotel, absolutely rock-bottom quality, at 9 Rue Git-Le Coeur that everybody told me was full of crazy people: poets, artists, writers.
I lived there until 1963, taking photographs with my ancient Compax camera, which I'd picked up in a junkshop. I would pile a load of coats on top of my bed, and dive under them with my developing tank. Then I developed the photographs in the wash basin, and hung the films out to dry with coat-pegs on a piece of string. It was a very haphazard method, and I lost a lot of great photographs to it; but my philosophy has always been to save what is good, and forget what is lost.
Among the many writers I photographed were Allen Ginsberg and his partner Peter Orlovsky. One winter day in 1957, they took me for a walk: Ginsberg translated the French street names for me and pointed out the beauty of the architecture. In the Place St-Germain-des-Prés, they decided to sit down on this double-sided bench. I took this picture, just one frame. (I was very economical – film was very expensive.)
Ginsberg and Orlovsky had just moved to Paris, after all the aggravation surrounding the obscenity trial of Ginsberg's Howl. He has this smile of wonderment on his face, as if he's looking into the future, thinking of the voyages around the world he's going to make, the poems he's going to write. Orlovsky has a look of angst. Pessimism and optimism make the perfect balance for a couple to live together – which they did, on and off, for many years.
From the Beat generation, I learned that I could just do anything: they had broken all the rules. I didn't need to worry about composition or anything like that. I based the rest of my life on that understanding. People used to say: "You're crazy – you'll never sell those photographs." But The Beat Hotel has become a cult book. One copy sold several years ago for almost $2,000. So I had the last laugh.
CV
Born: Deal, Kent; 1927.
Studied: "I've had no education whatsoever: I successfully ran away from every school I ever went to. I studied photography just by doing it."
Influences: "The French street photographers – Cartier-Bresson, Doisneau, Willy Ronis. And Bill Brandt, for his fantastic contrasts."
Top tip: "I can only repeat the advice that Cartier-Bresson once gave me, 'Be honest to your subjectivity.'"
Laura Barnett @'The Guardian'

♪♫ Eddie Vedder & Rahat Fateh Ali Khan - The Long Road

Anamorphic Typography

Empire of the Kop empireofthekop Liverpool Echo : News: Liverpool FC owner Tom Hicks wants out of owning sports clubs http://bit.ly/9Zok74 #lfcfollowback #fb
Mona Street exilestreet @empireofthekop Shouldn't that read that sporting clubs want Tom Hicks out of owning them?