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Thursday, January 27th, 2011

Subject:jack white pimps the elderly
Time:3:36 pm.

Tuesday, January 18th, 2011

Time:12:14 pm.



Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

Time:8:43 pm.
you once said i worked for you, now...
'bout time you started showing some return, huh?

Saturday, May 9th, 2009

Subject:porn and the message it sends to our youth
Time:1:05 am.

Wednesday, February 4th, 2009

Time:9:03 pm.



bye lux

Thursday, January 1st, 2009

Subject:happynewyear
Time:3:48 am.

Thursday, May 22nd, 2008

Subject:i think your user name should be chocolatebirchbark
Time:12:10 am.


thank you [info]chocolatebark
Comments: Read 6 or Add Your Own.

Wednesday, May 21st, 2008

Subject:my day, everyday
Time:11:32 pm.


thank you [info]beatnikside

Monday, May 12th, 2008

Subject:all i needed was a goodnight's sleep
Time:7:23 am.

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

Subject:people can fuk off pt 3
Time:10:55 pm.

Subject:cuz everyone can fuk off already pt. 2
Time:10:20 pm.

Subject:cuz everyone can fuk off already
Time:9:43 pm.
http://www.geocities.jp/azaplink/ear/ear_haircat.htm


Wednesday, March 7th, 2007

Time:10:30 am.
Mar 7, 2007 9:55 AM
Subject R.I.P. Jean Baudrillard
Body: Jean Baudrillard, 77, Critic and Theorist of Hyperreality, Dies
by PATRICIA COHEN, New York Times / March 7, 2007

The French critic and provocateur Jean Baudrillard, whose theories about consumer culture and the manufactured nature of reality were intensely discussed both in rarefied philosophical circles and in blockbuster movies like “The Matrix,” died yesterday in Paris. He was 77.

Michel Delorme, director of Galilee, Mr. Baudrillard’s publisher, announced his death, which he said followed a long illness.

Mr. Baudrillard, the first in his family to attend a university, became a member of a small caste of celebrated and influential French intellectuals who achieved international fame despite the density and difficulty of their work.

The author of more than 50 books and an accomplished photographer, Mr. Baudrillard ranged across different subjects, from race and gender to literature and art to 9/11. His comments often sparked controversy, as when he said in 1991 that the gulf war “did not take place” — arguing that it was more of a media event than a war.

Mr. Baudrillard was once considered a postmodern guru, but his analyses of modern life were too original and idiosyncratic to fit any partisan or theoretical category. “He was one of a kind,” François Busnel, the editor in chief of the monthly literary magazine Lire, said yesterday. “He did not choose sides, he was very independent.”

With a round face and big, thick glasses, Mr. Baudrillard was known for his witty aphorisms and black humor. He described the sensory flood of the modern media culture as “the ecstasy of communication.”

One of his better known theories postulates that we live in a world where simulated feelings and experiences have replaced the real thing. This seductive “hyperreality,” where shopping malls, amusement parks and mass-produced images from the news, television shows and films dominate, is drained of authenticity and meaning. Since illusion reigns, he counseled people to give up the search for reality.

“All of our values are simulated,” he told The New York Times in 2005. “What is freedom? We have a choice between buying one car or buying another car? It’s a simulation of freedom.”

This idea was picked up by the American filmmakers Andy and Larry Wachowski, who included subtle references to Mr. Baudrillard in their “Matrix” trilogy. In the first movie of the series, “The Matrix” (1999), the computer hacker hero Neo opens Mr. Baudrillard’s book “Simulacra and Simulation,” which turns out to be only a simulation of a book, hollowed out to hold computer disks. Mr. Baudrillard later told The Times that the movie references to his work “stemmed mostly from misunderstandings.”

He was also a fierce critic of consumer culture in which people bought objects not out of genuine need but because of the status and meaning they bestowed.

Born in 1929 in Reims, Mr. Baudrillard later attended university in Paris, earning a doctorate in sociology while teaching German to high school students. He published his first book, “The Object System,” in 1968.

In 1986 he published a kind of travelogue called “America,” in which he wrote, “America is the original version of modernity,” referring to what he considered the almost complete blurring of reality and unreality. To his French readers, he said: “We are a copy with subtitles.”

He retired in 1987 from the University of Paris X, Nanterre, and then devoted himself to writing caustic commentaries and developing his philosophical theories. Although he shunned most media, he frequently wrote for newspapers.

“The Spirit of Terrorism: And Requiem for the Twin Towers” was published just a year after 9/11. In it, he argued that Islamic fundamentalists tried to create their own reality; the resulting media spectacle would give the impression that the West was constantly under threat of terrorist attack.

The current American invasion of Iraq is an effort to “put the rest of the world into simulation, so all the world becomes total artifice and then we are all-powerful,” he told The Times. “It’s a game.”

Like other postmodernists with whom he was often associated (despite their differences), he was frequently criticized as obscure. “If the texts seem incomprehensible, it is for the excellent reason that they mean precisely nothing,” Alan Sokal and Jean Bricmont wrote in their 1998 book “Fashionable Nonsense: Postmodern Intellectuals’ Abuse of Science.”

Mr. Baudrillard was not unaware of the problem. “What I’m going to write will have less and less chance of being understood,” he said, “but that’s my problem.”
Comments: Read 2 or Add Your Own.

Wednesday, November 29th, 2006

Subject:dear toronto lovelies
Time:11:20 pm.
Saturday December 2, 2006 @10pm
CANADIAN PREMIRE OF MUHAMMAD AND JANE
AT THE TORONTO ARAB FILM FESTIVAL
location: Ontario College of Art and Design is located at 100 McCaul Street
"A laconic drifter (Piotr Tokarski) born in Iraq returns to Chicago to straighten out his U.S. immigration status, and though a friend warns him of the prevailing anti-Muslim sentiment, he unwisely hooks up with a desultory woman (Melina Paez), accompanies her to a hedonistic party, and attracts the attention of the FBI. Local video maker Usama Alshaibi is the sort of canny visual stylist who can sustain a mood... the handheld videocam, tight close-ups, and disorienting angles create a potent sense of paranoia. The haunting score is by Andy Ortmann and Camilla Ha." -Chicago Reader
Comments: Read 2 or Add Your Own.

Tuesday, November 28th, 2006

Subject:yanked from the teebee
Time:2:20 pm.
'if you're going to serve a dish of revenge, you better set two plates'
confucius
Comments: Read 2 or Add Your Own.

Sunday, November 26th, 2006

Subject:saintwhocares
Time:3:48 am.
oh yes,darings!
YES!!
i love ducky doolittle, too

iknow i'm missing someone in here, somewhere...

oh ya!

ladies and gentle men...
i give you kevin shields
Comments: Read 2 or Add Your Own.

Wednesday, November 8th, 2006

Subject:*
Time:3:15 am.
Many an artist, male and female, has had a nervous breakdown or a drug addiction: Janis Joplin, Vincent Van Gogh, Sylvia Plath. But there is a difference between succumbing to the dark or pathetic forces within oneself and fetishizing them—imagining that your neuroses are as interesting as your talents.


Ariel Levy

Monday, September 11th, 2006

Time:5:16 am.



Saturday, April 1st, 2006

Subject:if yer in the nyc area
Time:8:57 am.
it's kid baco's birfday:



go wish him some love.

saw the thee fembots this evening. very nice to see t.dot faces. i bailed before cuff the duke

i've got an audio loop playin' by http://www.photomontage.com. it's in french and i am wishin' i were in saint tropez... .
Comments: Read 3 or Add Your Own.

Thursday, March 30th, 2006

Subject:peep show
Time:12:32 am.
i'm tryin' to watch the ladies, but the cam show doesn't seem to be loading for me properly... fricken machine!

awaiting boss' call so that i can meet them for our sit down... someone on my list mentioned something about a lunar eclipse or somethin'. perhaps that explains why the store was filled with prodominately retarded people today. i actually had to ask someone to stop treating me like i was something they had just scraped off their shoe. one notorious bitch condemmed my request, saying i had to deal with it as it was my job. ahhhhhhh, WRONG! while i may be a lacky in a store, NOONE has the right to dish out abuse at me and not get some of it back in return.

THE CUSTOMER IS NOT ALWAYS RIGHT!
Comments: Read 8 or Add Your Own.

LiveJournal for fuzzy dunlop.

View:User Info.
View:Friends.
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You're looking at the latest 20 entries. Missed some entries? Then simply jump back 20 entries.