January 2012
22 posts
Jan 27th
1 note
Jan 25th
Jan 25th
Jan 24th
Jan 24th
1 note
Jan 20th
303 notes
Jan 19th
2 notes
Jan 18th
174 notes
See also: mono.kultur #30. casualoptimist: via robot6.comicbookresources.com
Jan 17th
8 notes
Jan 15th
1 note
Jan 15th
1,706 notes
Jan 14th
2 notes
“While the losses of the private sector are absorbed, the successful public sector is being stripped of assets in health, energy, transport and other sectors and handed over to the inherently unstable private sector…. ‘Austerity’ is the transfer by the government of household incomes to the business sector. It is not working in any part of Europe, in or out of the eurozone area....
Jan 14th
1 note
Jan 13th
389 notes
Jan 12th
2 notes
Jan 12th
Jan 11th
9 notes
Jan 10th
1 note
Jan 10th
52 notes
“As a predictor of bipartisan coöperation, Bill Daley’s resignation as White House chief of staff is as auspicious as watching the canary quit and tiptoe out of the coal mine.” Another crackling entry from Evan Osnos.
Jan 10th
Jan 3rd
12 notes
Jan 2nd
December 2011
28 posts
Listentooearlytoolate: Goodbye, 2011, from Stephan...
Dec 31st
4 notes
Two bits from Lev Grossman’s list of “Top 10 Moments in Reading in 2011” for Time, the first from James Gleick’s The Information and the second from Walter Isaacson’s Steve Jobs, unfairly ripped out of context and set next to each other: 1. “In 1948 [Claude] Shannon, an engineer at Bell Labs, published a paper called ‘A Mathematical Theory of...
Dec 28th
Dec 27th
202 notes
“People smoke, Dichter explained, because it is both a sign of virility and a...”
– In America in the 1930s a Viennese psychologist named Ernest Dichter implored advertisers to explore consumers’ unconscious desires. His insights revolutionised marketing and brought sex to advertising.
Dec 27th
213 notes
Dec 27th
44 notes
I’m very big on podcasts and at the moment I’m listening to David Hockney and Andrew Marr putter around the artist’s farm in East Yorkshire. It’s reminded me that, if you’re looking for a good holiday-themed listen, there may be no better 45 minutes this year than last week’s Start the Week: Giles Fraser (who recently resigned as Canon Chancellor of St...
Dec 26th
1 note
Dec 26th
Dec 24th
112 notes
Dec 23rd
1 note
Dec 21st
428 notes
Dec 20th
Favorite series currently ongoing: “most snowiest time of the year” at sixmartinis and the seventh art. Even the stills from color films are black and white. And small. Keep scrolling.
Dec 19th
“Kim Jong-il did not die on the run, or in a hole, or behind bars, or on the gallows. His final act of surprise was to outlast even those authoritarian peers who showed greater capacity for compromise: Qaddafi, Mubarak, and the other tin-pot potentates swept from power in this year of awakening.” Evan Osnos on what might and, more ominously, what might not happen now.
Dec 19th
Dec 19th
1 note
Reactional Night drops tristfully Over the nasturtia In Manlius Silico’s garden. The moon, wandering about En deshabille, Fawns on th’adulterous stars. Come, Manumbra, Come, I will explain to you The abstruse technicalities Of the Greek and Roman systems Of Colonization. Quien Sabe? Those Spaniards Were gay chaps - A little impalpable, but, there! I think they do this stuff much better In France....
Dec 19th
Dec 18th
292 notes
Dec 18th
671 notes
“Herewith. Hope it serves, As always, Christopher.” June Thomas’s guide to the best of Hitchens in Slate. See, too, the Atlantic archive. And “Hitch’s Columns” for Vanity Fair.
Dec 16th
“This exhibition is based on a dream that I had some years ago, and which subsequently inspired a series of essays written for BBC Radio. In my dream I was visited by the musician and conceptual thinker Brian Eno, who informed me solely and with great purpose, ‘Germany Is Your America.’” Today would be the last day to see it at Broadway 1602.
Dec 15th
Dec 14th
“Cézanne was discovering a complementarity between the equilibrium of the body and the inevitability of landscape. The indentations of some rocks in the forest of Fontainebleau have the intimacy of armpits. His late baigneuses form ranges like mountains. The deserted quarry at Bibémus looks like a portrait. What is the secret behind this? Cézanne’s conviction that what we perceive as...
Dec 13th
New Yorker editor David Remnick on why — and exactly how — Gingrich’s reference to the Palestinians as an “invented” people was meant to reverberate up and down certain Floridian corridors.
Dec 12th
Dec 11th
142 notes
Dec 9th
1 note
Dec 7th
1 note
Dec 5th
Dec 1st
16 notes
Dec 1st
2 notes