A strange twaining of two articles that I read about cultural norms—well the first is more an ageless tradition while the second is maybe a marketing gimmick.
Saturday, 7 March 2015
bathwater or hearty and hale
Friday, 6 March 2015
five-by-five
callin’ oates: a hotline for your Hall and Oates needs
noachian deluge: fully one hemisphere of the red planet may have been covered by a vast ocean
thrilla in manila: the city with the distinction of being the selfie-capital of the world has a new museum exhibition that puts visitors in the art
acme: some cartoon rules of etiquette from animator Chuck Jones
product-placement: creative illustrations seen in every day, random objects as they lay
Thursday, 5 March 2015
nave and apse
Globe-trotting photographer Richard Silver has developed and perfected a technique to capture the panoramic sweep of the beauty and majesty of the ceilings of churches and cathedrals. Too big to be contained in one image by the usual methods, these vertical wide-angle shots certainly don’t diminish the scope and grandeur of the architecture (to a much greater affect than pictured here and maybe a little better behaved than crawling around on the floor vying for the right position—places of worship are meant for another type of crawling around on the floor), with a dizzying quality that feels almost circular but they are certainly places all to visit in person.
maison du bลuf
I don’t know if this herd of happy, drunk cows still roams the prairies of Canada, and I don’t think its experiment whose conclusions I’d care to try, but apparently cattle served red wine are not only more contented and healthy, produce higher quality beef, but also release less methane—a greenhouse gas whose contribution to climate change is nothing to sniff at.
five-by-five
pantheon: murals of Greek gods superimposed against chaotic graffiti
sharper image: due to popular demand, Sky Mall catalogs are returning
these kids today and their y2k: classic countdown to Armageddon
the flower of battle: a beautifully illustrated fifteenth century guide to marshal arts
backmasking and beelzebub
From the Red Scare to recovered memories (with all the cringe-worthy hysteria of satanic sacrifice, subliminal song lyrics, and the general hallmarks that typify the industry of scaring the privileged classes), Alternet presents an outline that covers in brief the eruption of successive social panics in the US. Even though some of these terrors passed in the main as quickly as they came, their formative causes that appealed to the mass imagination and insecurities on a resounding level and their knock-on effects are still lingering and primed to champion the next. These assaults are not only against science, understandably fuelled by businesses outside of public-purview whose own privilege is fail-safe, but can be rallied against reason itself. This does not seem to bode well for the world at large, who's now even more closely committed to the rage
and mania of Americans.
and mania of Americans.
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