Americans Can Go Without Sex Longer Than The Internet, Study Finds — Internet — InformationWeek

Sex
Americans Can Go Without Sex Longer Than The Internet, Study Finds — Internet — InformationWeek:
Americans Can Go Without Sex Longer Than The Internet, Study Finds

If they can’t access the Internet when they want to, Americans say they worry that they’re missing out on something important.

Pranks 2!

Pranks2
http://www.researchpubs.com/books/prank2prod.php
Imagine we are fish swimming in the sea, and no matter where we look we see advertising, branding, marketing, and corporate/governmental coercive messages everywhere.What we once thought of as news, knowledge, politics, culture, art, music, and wisdom has all become one with this ocean of marketing and mind-control. What to do? How to keep one¹s sanity, sense of freedom, and unique identity? What can we do to resist?

Coyle & Sharpe, Legendary Early 60’s Street Pranksters

Coyle & Sharpe, Legendary Early 60’s Street Pranksters:
Coyle & Sharpe
In the early 1960’s the legendary team of Jim Coyle and Mal Sharpe, known as Coyle & Sharpe, would roam the streets of San Francisco playing pranks on people using a microphone hidden in a brief case.

Perhaps 40 years ahead of their time, Coyle and Sharpe defined what is now commonplace on radio and TV with shows such as Howard Stern, Da Ali G. Show, Cash Cab, and more. Coyle and Sharpe met in a boarding house in San Francisco in 1959. Coyle was a benign con man who had talked his way into 119 jobs by the age of 25. Sharpe had just graduated college and had drifted out to the West Coast to check out the Beatnik scene. The pair found they had a mutually sick sense of humor. To avoid real jobs, Coyle and Sharpe thought they could make a living pulling pranks or “Terrorizations,” as they then called them. In 1964, they were hired by KGO in San Francisco to do a nightly radio show called Coyle and Sharpe On The Loose. In 1964, they recorded two albums for Warner Bros., The Absurd Impostors and The Insane Minds of Coyle and Sharpe. They did a hidden camera television pilot, The Impostors, contained on this release. In 1967, Coyle left California to pursue a career in tunneling. He died in 1993 while burrowing under the City of Barcelona. Sharpe continued to work in media where he did hundreds of man-on-the-street interviews for radio and television. In the year 2000, The Whitney Museum hosted a centennial exhibit, The American Century. Coyle and Sharpe were featured in the Soundworks Exhibit.


Here’s a video of Coyle & Sharpe doing “The Warbler” in 1963.
Coyle & Sharpe
Last year Mal released a Coyle & Sharpe box set: “These 2 Men Are Impostors”
Coyle & Sharpe
In March of this year Mal’s daughter Jennifer Sharp and Jesse Thorn of The Sound of Young America launched an excellent Coyle & Sharpe podcast, using audio from Mal’s archive including material that has not been heard since the 1960’s. Jesse also did a great interview with Mal back in August 2006 and Jennifer has a wonderful collection of Coyle & Sharpe photos and memorabilia that she has posted to Flickr.
For more info on Coyle & Sharpe, check out their website.

Fox News Makes Fun of Burning Man Suicide

Red-Eye-Fox-Burning-Man
Fox News Makes Fun of Burning Man Suicide:
So yeah, I’m well aware that Fox News is often off-base and irresponsible with their reporting, but this might be one the most disgusting things I have seen them do in a while. On their show Red Eye, host Greg Gutfeld and his cast of “experts” proceed to make fun of the recent suicide at Burning Man during the opening of the show. Here’s the link to the video and thread on Tribe.net. They’ve hit a new low with this one.

Oh and remember Julia Allison, the clueless woman who showed up at our Laughing Squid Paradise Lost event, refusing to pay to get in or even have her hand stamped. Well she is one of the “experts” on the show, where she pretends that she’s never heard of Burning Man. Um yeah, right.

NetNewsWire 3.1b18 – RSS/Atom newsreader. (Shareware)

NetNewsWire 3.1b18 – RSS/Atom newsreader. (Shareware):


NetNewsWire 3.1b18

NetNewsWire is an easy-to-use RSS and Atom newsreader for Mac OS X. Its familiar three-paned interface — similar to Apple Mail — can fetch and display news from thousands of different websites and weblogs, making it quick and easy to keep up with the latest news. Features include:

  • A tabbed browser lets you read web pages with the convenience of staying in the same window.
  • Search your news items with a standard Apple search widget — as in Mail and other applications.
  • Downloads podcasts and enclosures, and sends podcasts to iTunes with with your choice of genre and playlist.
  • The flagged items feature lets you mark items that you want to keep — they stay forever or until you mark them as unflagged.
  • Mac OS X 10.4 (Tiger) compatible, and includes Automator actions to control functions in NetNewsWire.
  • Other features include syncing, smart lists, search subscriptions, built-in styles, and AppleScript support.
  • Includes a built-in categorized list of feeds that can be easily subscribed to.
  • If NetNewsWire Lite is already running, quit it before running NetNewsWire.

Squirrels Complete Insane Obstacle Course – Video

Squirrel-Obstacle-Course
Squirrels Complete Insane Obstacle Course – Video:
Squirrels Complete Insane Obstacle Course

Squirrels will do anything for their next meal – even figuring out complicated obstacle courses. This squirrel had no problem getting past this “Rube Goldberg like” track. But I like the squirrel at the end that figured out how to get free candy from the vending machine – maybe he can teach me that trick.

Natural History Magazine

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Natural History Magazine:
Experimenters working with both kinds of dark-matter detectors know that a formidable competitor looms on the horizon. The Large Hadron Collider (LHC), built at CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research, just outside Geneva, is now scheduled to begin serious operation in mid-2008. Once up and running, the LHC will be the world’s biggest particle accelerator. Dug several hundred feet under the Swiss and French countryside, it will accelerate two clumps, or “beams,” of particles many times around a ring more than five miles across, before smashing the two beams into each other.