Stephen J Shanabrook is a New York and Moscow-based artist who uses food both as medium and metaphor. Using commonplace materials and forms generally seen as benign indulgences— sweets, chocolate, and cotton candy — he brings about disturbing new meanings, exploring the intersections of desire, violence, permanence, and death. (See his “Waterboarding” sculptures — chocolate-waterboarded choir boy Christmas statues — that we covered last week.)
[From The Disquieting Food Art of Stephen J Shanabrook – Eat Me Daily]
Month: August 2009
The Republican Party Is Turning Into A Cult
Something strange has happened in America in the nine months since Barack Obama was elected. It has best been summarized by the comedian Bill Maher: “The Democrats have moved to the right, and the Republicans have moved to a mental hospital.”
[From Johann Hari: The Republican Party Is Turning Into A Cult]
Top 8 Terrifying Child Safety Illustrations From The 70s
Famous Things Invented by Accident.
We tend to hold inventors in high esteem, but often their discoveries were the result of an accident or twist of fate. This is true of many everyday items, including the following surprise inventions.
[From Famous Things Invented by Accident :: The front of the stage :: August :: 2009]
Confessions of an eBay opium addict.
I sat there for less than a minute. Maybe I sat there for an hour; I don’t know. But something had to be done. I stuck some Klonopin under my tongue and drove to the post office, expecting to turn myself in. Give up. Take the 15 years, if they would just give me the fix. But the door was stuck. I pushed, pulled. It wouldn’t budge. No, it was locked. Closed for Columbus Day.
Columbus Day. No wonder everyone hated him. That tabard-wearing bastard had been dead for 500 years and was still causing trouble.
“Immediately, I felt redeemed. The raw reel of life became distant, pleasant. My head was an overstuffed pillow that could softly implode any minute, and it didn’t matter. Nothing could. A pleasant pressure settled on the back of my neck. I was snacky. I wanted sweets. I felt the promise of a divine massage as the pressure spread through my shoulders and opened my ribs like wings. My thoughts slowed down until just about everything seemed to fold neatly inside everything else.”
[From Confessions of an eBay opium addict | Feature | Tucson Weekly]
Facebook police raided my family barbecue.
Riot police stormed a 30th birthday party for just 15 people and shut it down, thinking it was a rave because it was advertised on Facebook.
Four police cars, a riot van and a helicopter were involved in the swoop on Andrew Poole’s gathering for his family and friends.
He was just about to light the barbecue and had not even turned on the music when the gazebo suddenly started flapping wildly and the sound of chopper blades filled the air.
[From Facebook police raided my family barbecue | Metro.co.uk]
World’s first stainless colour bubbles
I’m forever blowing Zubbles! Inventor spent 15 years creating world’s first colour bubbles that don’t stain
14 Pieces of Bad-Ass Men’s Furniture
You might know how to accessorize the ultimate man cave, but the right furniture can really make or break the look. Forgo the cozy love seats and traditional wood coffee tables for something with a bit more kutzpah. We’ve found the most Bad Ass Furniture known to man. Some are made out of real car parts, some covered with tattoos and some actually survived a war.
The 10 Most Successful Potheads on the Planet…
The 10 Most Successful Potheads on the Planet… Cool Enough to Admit It
An unemployed porno addict, sitting in his parents’ basement, playing video games, eating Lucky Charms out of the box with one hand while he lazily scratches his balls with the other. A dread-lock having, patchouli oil smelling, tie-die wearing, Phish listening, hula-hoop twirling space cadet. A burger flipping, acne having, socially inept, friendless loser… These are the common stereotypes associated with the term ‘pothead’.
Where these stereotypes originated remains a mystery to us. In reality, they couldn’t be further from the truth. Not only have 42% of Americans admitted to trying pot, but pot smokers have gone on to become some of the most successful people in our society. We’re not talking about Willie Nelson and Snoop. These guys are on the Forbes 500, they’re leading the free world, and they prove that all existing pothead stereotypes are nothing more than myths.
[From The 10 Most Successful Potheads on the Planet… Cool Enough to Admit It | World Of Mysteries]
Video appears in paper magazines
The first-ever video advertisement will be published in a traditional paper magazine in September.
The video-in-print ads will appear in select copies of the US show business title Entertainment Weekly.
[From BBC NEWS | Technology | Video appears in paper magazines]
Jon Stewart Gives Props To Barney Frank (VIDEO)
The Daily Show With Jon Stewart | Mon – Thurs 11p / 10c | |||
Barney Frank’s Town Hall Snaps | ||||
|
Rush Limbaugh Makes Gay Joke About Barney Frank: “He Spends Most Of His Time Living Around Uranus” (AUDIO)
Rush Limbaugh has made what appears to be a joke mocking Barney Frank’s sexuality in response to Frank’s tough stance with a town hall protester Tuesday night.
Tuesday, Frank asked a protester who had compared President Obama to Hitler, “On what planet do you spend most of your time?”
On his show Wednesday (via Mediaite), Limbaugh responded, mocking Frank and asking, “Isn’t it an established fact that Barney Frank himself spends most of his time living around Uranus?”
Frank was the second openly gay member of Congress and is “one of the most prominent LGBT politicians in the United States,” his Wikipedia entry states.
From a Distant Comet, a Clue to Life – NYTimes.com
By KENNETH CHANG
Published: August 18, 2009
For the first time, a building block of proteins — and hence of life as we know it — has been found in a comet.That adds to the prevailing notion that many of the ingredients for the origin of life showered down on the early Earth when asteroids (interplanetary rocks orbiting the inner solar system) and comets (dirty ice balls that generally congregate in the outer solar system beyond Neptune) made impact with the planet.
In the new research, scientists at the Goddard Space Flight Center, in Greenbelt, Md., detected the amino acid glycine in comet bits brought back in 2006 by the NASA space probe Stardust.
“It tells us more about the inventory of organics in the early solar system,” said Jamie Elsila, an astrochemist at Goddard who led the research.
Amino acids are small molecules that, when strung together into chains, form a diversity of proteins. For four decades, scientists have found a multitude of amino acids in some meteorites, the bits of asteroids that land on Earth. More recently, astronomers reported that amino acids might float throughout the cosmos, a belief resulting from their detection of the color signatures of glycine, the simplest of the amino acids, in distant interstellar gas clouds.
Some doubts remain about that claim, but if it is true, it would then not be surprising that when the clouds condense into stars and planets, the building blocks of life might be readily available there.
As for our solar system, meteorite data show that amino acids are present in its inner neighborhood, where asteroids orbit, but until now nothing has been known for certain about what might have formed farther out, where comets gather.
But on Jan. 2, 2004, the Stardust spacecraft flew through the tail of dust and gas of the comet Wild 2 (pronounced vilt two). Two years later, the probe returned to Earth, sending collected samples to the ground by parachute for scientists to analyze. Comets are thought to preserve material of the early solar system, largely unchanged for the last 4.5 billion years.
Within a few months, the Goddard scientists found glycine embedded in aluminum foil of the collecting apparatus. They had spent the time since then confirming that the glycine indeed came from the comet and not from contamination.
“It’s not necessarily particularly surprising,” Dr. Elsila said of her extraterrestrial glycine in a phone conversation Tuesday. “I would have been surprised if it wasn’t there.”
Dr. Elsila and her colleagues were able to show that the glycine from the comet had heavier quantities of the isotope carbon 13 than what occurs on Earth. They also detected a second amino acid, beta-alanine, but the quantities were too minuscule to confirm.
The findings were presented Sunday at a Washington meeting of the American Chemical Society and will be published in the journal Meteoritics & Planetary Science.
Donald E. Brownlee, a professor of astronomy at the University of Washington and principal investigator of the Stardust mission, said the discovery indicated that the chemical reactions that produce glycine, and presumably other amino acids, occurred throughout the early solar system.
“That means production of amino acids is fairly common,” Dr. Brownlee said.
That had not been a foregone conclusion, he said. Some scientists had suggested that the chemical reactions might have required warm and wet conditions that existed in early asteroids but not comets.
YouTube – AT&T — iPhone Hell
[From YouTube – AT&T — iPhone Hell]
New Folders in Snow Leopard!!!
Scary Zombie-Walk Parades – Chill Out Point
Louis CK WIth Conan Oct 2, 2008 – Video
Web citizens trying to kill Internet Explorer 6
Some Web designers are staging an online revolt against an old version of Microsoft’s Internet Explorer browser, which they say is hampering the ability of the Web to move forward in a cool and interactive way.
The designers say Internet Explorer 6, which was released in 2001 and since has been updated twice by Microsoft Corp., is crippling the Internet’s potential and slowing down the online experience. They also blame IE 6 for giving webmasters a collective headache, because they have to write special “hacks” into Web code to accommodate an outmoded browser.
An estimated 15 to 25 percent of people still use IE 6 as their portal to the Internet, according to two Web monitors.
In recent months, several Web companies have launched sites devoted to the idea of undermining or killing Internet Explorer 6. The most recent site, called “IE 6 No More,” has gained momentum this week on social-media sites like Twitter and Digg in part because a number of respected Internet start-up companies have signed onto the campaign
“This isn’t an anti-Microsoft campaign,” he said. “Microsoft makes some fantastic products. The latest version of their browser is a good browser. But with regards to IE 6 … [it] is an awful browser and no one should be using it.”
He added: “Ultimately, we’ve kind of waited long enough. That’s why there’s a big movement of support for it because the geeks out there have known about this for years and have been waiting for big sites to jump on and push it forward.”
In a statement to CNN, Microsoft said it also wants people to turn away from IE 6.
“Microsoft has consistently recommended that consumers upgrade to the latest version of our browser,” the company said. “Internet Explorer 8 offers improvements in speed, security and reliability as well as new features designed for the way people use the Web.”
Oliver said his magazine started an anti-IE 6 Web site about three months ago. The movement has been growing among savvy Web developers for years, he said, but has hit a groundswell since bigger-name Internet companies jumped aboard.
YouTube, for instance, now sends a message to Internet Explorer 6 users who visit the site, asking them to upgrade to another browser like Internet Explorer 8, Mozilla Firefox or Google Chrome.
The video-streaming site will continue to function in a basic way for IE 6 users, according to a statement sent to CNN by YouTube.
But bigger problems for IE 6 may be on the horizon as the Web becomes more complicated.
Developers are already working with a new Web language — called HTML 5 — that is expected to make Web sites able to display flashier video, save documents to computers more easily and act more like traditional computer applications.
When that shift comes, IE 6 will doubtlessly perish, said Ben Parr, a writer for the social-networking news blog Mashable.
“We’re about to hit a breaking point where innovation will be stifled if Web sites must continue to cater to this browser,” he wrote in a post titled, “IE 6 Must Die for the Web to Move On.”
The browser’s popularity is declining as newer versions of Internet Explorer become more widely used. But it’s unclear whether everyone who continues to use IE 6 does so by choice.
Many businesses have built computer applications that run on the browser, and upgrades to those systems can be costly and difficult.
That makes campaigns that tell people to switch their browser ineffective, Mark Trammell, a Digg employee, wrote on the company’s blog.
“Giving them a message saying, ‘Hey! Upgrade!’ in this case is not only pointless; it’s sadistic,” he wrote, also noting that Digg likely will stop supporting IE 6 for some of the site’s functions.
That leaves some Web sites trying to find a middle ground. They want to be cutting-edge, but they also don’t want to alienate IE 6 users and business clients.
Justin.tv, which lets people stream video live online, is among the sites trying to strike a balance.
The company is backing an anti-IE 6 Web site, but Evan Solomon, the site’s vice-president for marketing, said the best thing that will come out of this discussion is that more people will become aware that there are alternatives in Web browsers.
It’s also important to know how much those browsers control a person’s Internet experience, he said.
“It sucks for us if someone comes to the site and has a bad experience and the reason that happens is because they use a browser that was developed 10 years ago,” he said.
[From Web citizens trying to kill Internet Explorer 6 – CNN.com]
Climate Change Seen as Threat to U.S. Security – NYTimes.com
WASHINGTON — The changing global climate will pose profound strategic challenges to the United States in coming decades, raising the prospect of military intervention to deal with the effects of violent storms, drought, mass migration and pandemics, military and intelligence analysts say.
[From Climate Change Seen as Threat to U.S. Security – NYTimes.com]
One Man With Many Faces
Lawyers plan class-action to reclaim “$100M+” RIAA “stole”
Lawyers plan class-action to reclaim “$100M+” RIAA “stole”
The recording industry has spent (and continues to spend) millions of dollars on its litigation campaign against accused file-swappers, but if two lawyers have their way, the RIAA will have to pay all the money back. Not content simply to defend Jammie Thomas-Rasset in her high-profile retrial next week in Minnesota, lawyer Kiwi Camara is joining forces with Harvard Law professor Charles Nesson to file a class-action lawsuit against the recording industry later this summer.
The goal is nothing less than to force the industry to pay back the alleged “$100+ million” it has collected over the last few years. Perhaps the RIAA had good reason not to send those settlement letters to Harvard for so long.
Stopping the lawsuitsArs spoke with Camara on Tuesday as he rode to the airport for the flight to Minneapolis, where he will defend Jammie Thomas-Rasset after only two weeks of preparation. But the time crunch has in no way restricted his vision; Camara says that he is intent on dismantling the entire RIAA litigation campaign by going after its legal underpinnings.
Camara’s firm doesn’t do easy cases, and even in pro bono cases, “we want to fix a problem for a lot of people, including our client.”
That means doing more than getting Thomas-Rasset off without a guilty verdict, and it’s why Camara has already gone after the two fundamental pieces of RIAA evidence in these cases.
First up was the evidence from hired investigator MediaSentry, which tracked down IP addresses of file-sharers and provided the only evidence of observed copyright infringement. Camara has argued that MediaSentry was not licensed as a private investigator in Minnesota, that it ran an illegal “pen register,” and that its evidence should be barred. Such a move would essentially destroy the RIAA’s main evidence of copyright infringement, and it’s no surprise that the trade group has pushed back hard.
But Camara goes even further back in the evidence chain. To prove copyright infringement, the RIAA needs evidence of that infringement, of course, but it also needs to prove it owns the copyrights in question. If it can’t establish that fact, the case also falls apart.
This sounds like a long shot—surely the record labels did something as basic as register their copyrights?—but Camara tells us that it’s not so simple.
“They basically committed a technical screw-up,” he says of the RIAA. That’s because lawyers provided the court with “true and correct” copies of their copyright registrations (perhaps accurate but not “official), but these are not the “certified copies” required under federal rules of evidence.
The RIAA seemed taken aback by Camara’s pretrial complaint and asked the judge in the case to simply take “judicial notice” of the validity of its forms. But, after a telephone conversation on Monday, the judge refused to do that.
He also rejected the RIAA argument that “hey, these forms were good enough for Thomas’ first trial, so they’re good enough now.” The judge pointed out that “the Court’s Order granting a new trial in this matter granted an entirely new trial on all issues. The fact that Defendant did not object to Plaintiffs’ evidence of registration in the First Trial does not preclude Defendant from putting Plaintiffs to their burden of proof on this issue in the retrial.”
The RIAA admitted that “it will be difficult and expensive to now attempt to obtain certified copies from the US Copyright Office in time for trial.” Whoops.
Even if the RIAA comes up with the documents, though, Camara still has objections to their contents (or lack thereof). The registrations don’t include the actual “specimen,” for one thing (in this case the actual sound recording filed with the Copyright Office), so Camara says he has no way to know what was actually filed and whether it truly is identical with what Thomas-Rasset is accused of sharing.
He will also charge that the registrations are simply invalid, since they were all done in the names of the various record labels, not of the artists. But the “work for hire” law under which this was done has been improperly applied in these cases, he says, and the registrations are therefore defective.
Taken together, the two lines of attack on the RIAA’s main evidence are an attempt to cripple the recording industry case before it even reaches the question of whether Thomas-Rasset actually “did it.” Which is probably just as well, since there is some fairly compelling evidence against her, evidence good enough to secure a guilty verdict the first time around.
Getting the money backBut not even this sort of attack on the RIAA’s methods goes far enough for Camara. He tells Ars that he and Harvard Law professor Charles Nesson will file a class-action lawsuit against the industry at some point after the conclusion of the Thomas-Rasset case in an effort to make the labels pay back all monies taken in from settlements with file-sharers.
Or, in Camara’s words, he’s going to “get the $100 million that they stole.” (The RIAA tells Ars that the $100 million figure is inaccurate, and RIAA general counsel Steven Marks indicated in a recent Ars op-ed that the labels had lost money on the campaign.)
The idea behind the suit is that the RIAA has illegally threatened people, using void copyright registrations, and scared them into paying an average of $3,000 or $4,000 apiece to fend off the threat of federal litigation.
Big picture thinkingIf all of these arguments weren’t enough, the Nesson/Camara tag team have a couple more eyepoppers to make: P2P file-sharing of copyrighted material is fair use, and huge statutory damage awards against noncommercial users are unconstitutional.
Clearly, “thinking small” doesn’t interest either man—Nesson has the nickname “Billion Dollar Charlie” for a reason, and it’s not surprising to learn that Camara studied with Nesson at Harvard and calls him “the smartest person that I know.” Camara, for his part, is a sharp lawyer who was the youngest person ever to enroll in Harvard Law.
As he prepares to fly up to Minnesota today, Camara says, “We’re ready for trial.” He also says that he plans to win.
[From Lawyers plan class-action to reclaim “$100M+” RIAA “stole” – Ars Technica]
Beautiful paintings on aluminium foil
Video: Arrested for asking a policeman for his badge number | Environment | guardian.co.uk
Arrested for asking a policeman for his badge number
The Guardian has obtained this police footage of Emily Apple and Val Swain being arrested by surveillance officers after asking for their badge numbers at the Kingsnorth climate camp last year. The two women speak to Paul Lewis about their arrest, imprisonment and official complaint
[From Video: Arrested for asking a policeman for his badge number | Environment | guardian.co.uk]
3,000-year-old Michael Jackson statue? – Boing Boing
This Egyptian bust has become a popular attraction at Chicago’s Field Museum because it’s a spitting image of Michael Jackson, complete with a tweaked nose. It was carved between 1550-1050 BCE and depicts a woman. “Statue’s a Dead Ringer for Jacko” (NBC Chicago)
YouTube – Mental As Anything – Brain Brain (1983)
YouTube – The honeymoon killers
Marijuana Use Associated With a “Significantly Reduced Risk” of Head and Neck Cancers
For some 35 years the United States federal government has been well aware that cannabis possesses potent anti-cancer and anti-tumor properties. And for the past three years, government-funded researchers have speculated that these qualities may offer “protective” effects against the onset of various types of cancer in humans, including lung cancer.
Yet to date, virtually no investigators have taken the time to assess marijuana’s potential anti-cancer effects in humans — until now.
In a clinical abstract just published online on the Cancer Prevention Research website, a team of U.S. investigators report that marijuana use, even long-term, is associated with a “significantly reduced risk” of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma.
Satanist father and Christian mother fight for Sunday morning custody rights – Telegraph
Satanist father and Christian mother fight for Sunday morning custody rights
A custody battle between a Satanist and his Christian ex-wife has raised constitutional issues after both demanded the right to share their religion with their three young children.[From Satanist father and Christian mother fight for Sunday morning custody rights – Telegraph]
Brain Difference In Psychopaths Identified
Brain Difference In Psychopaths Identified
ScienceDaily (Aug. 5, 2009) — Professor Declan Murphy and colleagues Dr Michael Craig and Dr Marco Catani from the Institute of Psychiatry at King’s College London have found differences in the brain which may provide a biological explanation for psychopathy.