Featuring Bootsy Collins, the accompanying music video for the Big Beats artist Fatboy Slim’s 2000 “Weapon of Choice,” reprised on the occasion as a stand-alone single, directed by Spike Jonze, was first aired on this day in 2001. Depicting Christopher Walken dancing around an empty lobby, the choral refrain of “You could blow with this or you could blow with that” references the Native Tongues’ “The Choice is Yours”—the titular album an homage to Oscar Wilde’s Lady Windermere’s Fan (“some of us are looking at the stars”) and the lyric advising to “walk without rhythm and it won’t attract the worm” quotes Frank Herbert’s establishing novel.
Friday, 23 April 2021
Thursday, 22 April 2021
9x9
carbon footprint: mining is a dirty business
kiki.object: a feminist manifesta for block-chain
bat stuck in hell: recently departed songwriter Jim Steinman’s unproduced Batman musical
the gates of paradise: William Blake’s (previously) perpetual cycle of birth and re-birththe singing, ringing tree: not to be confused with this other etherial perennial, panoptica in the Pennine Hills of Lancashire
the hawking index: an unscientific survey of popular titles’ rate of abandonment by the clustering or spread of their highlighted text
this is the type of errant pedantry up with which i will not put: a proposal that the past particle of choose should properly be corn
project ceti: ground-breaking attempt to decode whale language—see also—via Slashdot
fourth rock from the sun: Martian rover Perseverance extracts breathable oxygen from the planet’s surface soil
Wednesday, 21 April 2021
uncaptioned
The archivists at the US Library of Congress regularly put out campaigns to identify mysterious photographs, with happily an ever-dwindling cache to solve, but there are a few that still defy an engaged public and persons yet at-large. Among the malingerers is this assumptively familiar, famous and iconic image that has accrued a sizeable largess of misidentification and wrong guesses from Joan Jett to The Slits and all manner of duos in between. More puzzles to untangle at the link above and all guesses are welcome.
catagories: ๐ท, libraries and museums
doppelhaushรคlften
Via Present /&/ Correct, we quite enjoyed meditating on this series of larger family properties converted into duplex units in the heavily industrialised region of the Ruhrgebiet (previously) as captured by photographer Wolfgang Frรถhling as a consequence of the departure of the younger generation as mining and factories close and are repurposed. The defiantly contrasting exteriors of the cleaved homesteads draws one into the lives of the respective residents. More at the links above.
another one rides the bus
Tuesday, 20 April 2021
7x7
one man’s trash: a preview (plus whole film) of a documentary about spelunking in New York City’s garbage
dare mighty things: Martian rover Perseverance (previously) conducts first test flight of its airfoil drone

personnage: the almond and pebble that inspired Joan Mirรณ’s sculpture
palace of culture: a choreographed tour of Lithuania’s Socialist Modernist architecture
moon unit: Space X awarded NASA contract for lunar lander for the upcoming Artemis mission
pegged: artist Helga Stentzel (previously) creates a clothes-line polar bear to raise awareness for climate change
the long and the short of it
We enjoyed this grand tour of the continent through superlative toponymy—with of course the crowning achievement for the longest placename being a village in Wales (pro pronunciation help here), but we also get to visit Italy’s contender on the shores of Lake Maggiore and the pictured postcard from the Dutch village of Gasselternijveenschemond plus a few one-letter wonders through a variety of art and artefacts from the collections of a Europe-wide consortium of museums.
catagories: ๐, libraries and museums
reeperbahn
We quite enjoyed this peek into the industries of rope-making and yarn-spinning that gave Cable Street of the East End and Whitechapel through the lens of the late eighteenth century company of the Frost Brothers when it was documented in illustrations and photographs in 1905. Like the above-titled way in Hamburg, the area began as a straight grounds where hemp fibres were twisted into ropes for the ships that would anchor on the Thames between London Bridge and the kilns at Limehouse.