Tag Archives: modern

The Chill Wave Movement

This Summer I was riding the Chill Wave, one of the most important genres of music of the modern world. This music is refreshing and awesome. Some might say it's like you're on drugs, but you really don't need drugs to enjoy this. For sure it will make you feel good. Pure Ecstasy. . . ……………………………………………………. “It generally has an ‘80s influence, which is definitely pretty heavy in my stuff,” said Ernest Greene, a.k.a. Washed Out, one of the acts being touted as part of the trend. New Wave-sounding samples and ambient music is often interlaced with dance-y beats, and the approach to recording is decidedly lo-fi. Carles explained the genre this way in a post last summer: Chillwave, he wrote, “sounds like something playing in the background of an old VHS cassette that you found in your attic from the late ’80s/’90s.” Chillwave isn’t limited to a geographic region, but the South and East Coast figure prominently. Bundick is from South Carolina while Greene is from Georgia. Other so-called chillwave bands, like Small Black and Neon Indian, are New York-based, while Memory Tapes, a.k.a. Dayve Hawk, hails from New Jersey. That’s where the parallels end. Whereas musical movements were once determined by a city or venue where the bands congregated, “now it’s just a blogger or some journalist that can find three or four random bands around the country and tie together a few commonalities between them and call it a genre,” said Alan Palomo of Neon Indian. ……………………………….. More at the link: http://blogs.wsj [dot]com/speakeasy/2010/03/13/is-chillwave-the-next-big-music-trend/ + CHILL WAVE MUSIC VIDEOS BELOW added by: Einsam_Data

2010 Emmy Fashion — Who Wore What!

Filed under: Fashion , Beauty , Photo Galleries , Emmy Awards TV’s biggest night is ready for its fashion closeup. Check out who scored and who tanked in the style ratings at the Emmy Awards . Read more

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2010 Emmy Fashion — Who Wore What!

This Is Not a Bad ’70s Prom Photo …

Filed under: Ty Burrell , Fashion , Emmy Awards … it’s what ” Modern Family ” star Ty Burrell and his wife Holly actually wore to the Emmys tonight. Comedy, indeed. Read more

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This Is Not a Bad ’70s Prom Photo …

MSNBC’s Schultz Compares Tea Party Movement to Nazi ‘Brown Shirts’ to Demonize Beck Rally

Wasn’t comparing your political opponents to Nazis once a no-no? I mean, just remember how upset the liberal concern police would get if some wayward individual at a Tea Party event in some random place in the United States had a homemade sign protesting President Barack Obama and invoked Nazi Germany symbolism? Well, you would think – or at least expect a national TV host (even with considerably lower ratings than his competition ) would certainly avoid using Nazis symbolism to attack those with which they disagree, right? No, apparently it’s just a double standard. On MSNBC’s Aug. 25 “The Ed Show,” a seemingly angry host Ed Schultz said he was “fired up” about the Aug. 28 Glenn Beck event at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. “This is the story that has me fired up tonight – Glenn Beck is distorting Martin Luther King’s dream and his Tea Party followers are on edge,” Schultz sais. “You know, I just sense that we are going down a very dangerous road right now when a political organization like the Tea Party has members trying to intimidate elected public officials.” According to Schultz, since a blog had posted home addresses of some prominent Democrats – two of which won’t even be in Washington, D.C. because of the August recess, it was an indictment of the entire Tea Party movement as a violent operation. “A Tea Party blog in Maine listed the DC home addresses of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, former Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, White House former communications director Anita Hill — Anita Dunn, and also her husband White House counsel Bob Bauer. Can somebody tell me why? What is the usefulness of this? Do they actually want people to show up outside their door maybe help them get the morning paper?” And thus since this blog based Maine posted this information, the entire Tea Party movement was the modern equivalent of the Brown Shirts, an organization that aided the rise of Adolf Hitler and the Nazis in the 1930s. ” Folks, this is what the Brown Shirts did in the 1930s in Germany ,” Schultz said. “They used to target businesses, target people, target families, list names, attack their businesses. This isn’t about protesting. This sets the table for intimidation and harassment.” And this wizard of smart took a step further to say former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and Fox News Channel host Glenn Beck were liable since they weren’t policing the hundreds of thousands, if not millions of their supporters. “Hate mongering leaders of the Tea Party are endorsing this behavior with their silence, their silence is deafening on this issue,” Schultz said. “Now Sarah Palin, if I remember the news, went nuts when a reporter moved in next door to her and she was complaining about her privacy being invaded. Yet, she remains silent when members of her Tea Party publish the home addresses of the Speaker of the House and the Senate Majority Leader. For Glenn Beck, you it’s just not good enough to have a successful radio and TV show. He has to whip up the crazies to the point where they are encouraging each other to intimidate and instill fear. This could set the table for stalking because no one can tell us where all of this ends.”

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MSNBC’s Schultz Compares Tea Party Movement to Nazi ‘Brown Shirts’ to Demonize Beck Rally

NYT Accuses Mosque Protesters of Fomenting Muslim Extremism, Reveals Own Manhattan-Centric Snobbery

Still more slanted coverage in the New York Times of the controversy over a proposed mosque at Ground Zero: First in Saturday’s story by intelligence reporter Scott Shane, fretting that public opposition voiced to the speedy approval and building of a giant Islamic cultural center topped by a mosque two blocks from Ground Zero would somehow make radical Muslim extremists, who despise the very existence of America, hate the U.S. even more: ” Anti-Islam Protest in U.S. Bolsters Extremists, Experts Say ” (Note: This article was compiled from three separate articles prepared for Times Watch ). Some counterterrorism experts say the anti-Muslim sentiment that has saturated the airwaves and blogs in the debate over plans for an Islamic center near ground zero in Lower Manhattan is playing into the hands of extremists by bolstering their claims that the United States is hostile to Islam. Opposition to the center by prominent politicians and other public figures in the United States has been covered extensively by the news media in Muslim countries. At a time of concern about radicalization of young Muslims in the West, it risks adding new fuel to Al Qaeda’s claim that Islam is under attack by the West and must be defended with violence, some specialists on Islamic militancy say. For confirmation of his slanted premise, Shane went to an unlabeled center-left policy group, New America Foundation. “I know people in this debate don’t intend it, but there are consequences for these kinds of remarks,” said Brian Fishman, who studies terrorism for the New America Foundation here. He said that Anwar al-Awlaki, an American-born cleric hiding in Yemen who has been linked to several terrorist plots, has been arguing for months in Web speeches and in a new Qaeda magazine that American Muslims face a dark future of ever-worsening discrimination and vilification. “When the rhetoric is so inflammatory that it serves the interests of a jihadi recruiter like Awlaki, politicians need to be called on it,” Mr. Fishman said. Shane even suggested former House Speaker Newt Gingrich was fomenting radicalism with his opposition to the mosque: Mr. Gingrich, the former House speaker and a potential 2012 presidential candidate, said in a Fox News interview that “Nazis don’t have the right to put up a sign next to the Holocaust museum in Washington,” a comment that drew criticism for appearing to equate those proposing the Islamic center with Nazis. Asked about the view that such remarks could fuel radicalism , Mr. Gingrich sent an e-mail response on Friday that did not directly address his critics but said that “Americans must learn to tell the truth about radical Islamists while being supportive of and inclusive of moderate Muslims who live in the modern world, respect women’s rights, reject medieval punishment and defend American laws and the American Constitution.” He added that he believed “it is possible to be a deeply religious Muslim and a patriotic American.” Sigh. What doesn’t “fuel radicalism” these days, in the view of America-bashers? Besides, Gingrich isn’t the only prominent political name to come out against the project — several Democrats have as well. Yet the Times has made only muted acknowledgment of the inconvenient fact that prominent Democrats like New York Gov. David Paterson, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, and former DNC chairman Howard Dean have come out against building the Islamic center so close to ground zero, with Dean calling it “a real affront to the people who lost their lives” on 9-11. Is Democrat Dean also “fueling radicalism”? Besides the knee-jerk fretting over “fueling radicalism,” there’s a healthy dose of Manhattan-centric snobbery in the paper’s attitude toward opponents of the mosque, who obviously have no clue about what’s really going on. About four minutes from the end of an August 19 ” Political Points ” podcast at nytimes.com, reporter Sheryl Gay Stolberg took up discussion of the controversial plan to build a mosque near Ground Zero, explaining how the hicks in the sticks who disapprove of the plan, don’t know what’s going on, unlike sophisticated Manhattanites (who actually may not like it much either). Stolberg: “Here’s another reason for the disconnect. I think, in New York, especially in Manhattan, people realize that Muslims live and work in Lower Manhattan , in the area where they’re seeking to build this mosque and community center, which would also include a fitness center where young people could play basketball or swim or what have you. Out in the country, the news coverage has not been as intense, there are fewer details and it allows for the debate to be reduced to its essence, boiled down to a few words: Mosque at Ground Zero. And those words have become inflammatory around the country and I think the nuances is somewhat lost, frankly.” And a Tuesday column by metro writer Clyde Haberman in support (naturally) of the mosque included this unpleasant nativist sniffing: Obscured in the fog of this culture war are a few New York realities, perhaps not fully appreciated by outsiders like Mr. Gingrich of Georgia or Sarah Palin of Alaska . Two blocks may seem like nothing to a non-New Yorker. But anyone who lives or works in Manhattan knows that this distance can be significant. Two blocks is equivalent to several miles in other cities or in the suburbs. Your dry cleaner moves two blocks, and it’s so long, pal. He’ll never see you again. He might as well have relocated to Yonkers.

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NYT Accuses Mosque Protesters of Fomenting Muslim Extremism, Reveals Own Manhattan-Centric Snobbery

Eat, Pray, Love: Modern Lady & Friends Love Chick Flicks (and Javier Bardem)

infoMania's resident Modern Lady, Erin Gibson, gathers her lady friends for the chick flick event of the summer, Eat, Pray, Love. With particular insight, and a lot of pinot grigio, the ladies review the film, the book, and most importantly James Franco's butt. Two thumbs up! In each episode of Modern Lady, Erin Gibson explores the often-conflicting ways in which today's media tells women to work, love, and be ladies. For more Erin visit: http://current.com/shows/infomania/modern-lady/ and Current TV infoMania is a half-hour satirical news show that airs on Current TV. The show puts a comedic spin on the 24-hour chaos and information overload brought about by the constant bombardment of the media. Hosted by Conor Knighton and co-starring Brett Erlich, Erin Gibson, Ben Hoffman, Bryan Safi and Sergio Cilli, the show airs on Thursdays at 10/9c on Current TV. added by: Erin_Gibson

‘Civil War’ Apparently Only a Problem for GOP Squabbling

There’s a phrase that has been conspicuously absent the media’s coverage of the recent flap between White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs and those he dubbed the “professional left”: civil war. In contrast, media coverage of Republican infighting consistently pushes the term. Gibbs is under fire from the left for sharply criticizing liberal critics of President Obama saying that “they need to be drug-tested” and “will be satisfied when we have Canadian healthcare and we’ve eliminated the Pentagon. That’s not reality.” His comments have drawn heated criticism from the left. Democratic firebrand Rep. Alan Grayson, Fla., wants “Bozo the Spokesman” fired . Prominent activist and blogger Jane Hamsher claimed Obama is “having trouble across the board” with liberals. Lefties at the Daily Kos and Democratic Underground were frantic. Yet almost no “civil war” labels from the media, in contrast to coverage of other instances of intra-party squabbling. The ouster of Dede Scozzafava in the special election in New York’s 23rd District earned the “civil war” label 23 times from major media players, according to a Nexis search. The GOP “civil war” was invariably painted as a “Stalinist” (to use Frank Rich’s term) purge of moderates from the party in favor of more conservative, Tea Party-backed candidates. Of course all it was was run-of-the-mill intra-party politics. There was no purge – it was just Republican voters choosing the more conservative candidate in a year when conservatives’ electoral prospects seem bright. Or, as liberal Newsweek columnist Howard Fineman put it, “I`ve been a little skeptical of this Republican ‘civil war’ story. I mean, all major parties have conflicts and fissures within them.” Don’t tell that to Rich. Or George Stephanopoulos, Wolf Blitzer Keith Olbermann, Chris Matthews, E.J. Dionne, Eugene Robinson, Donna Brazile, Roland Martin, David Gergen, or John King. They all labeled Scozzafava’s ouster a sign of a Republican “civil war”. Of course none of these A-list media personalities have used the term in reference to the battle currently ongoing between the White House and the Democratic base. And this is a fight that is not part of the squabbling that takes place whenever two candidates of the same party vie for a nomination. Gibbs’s comments represent an ideological chasm between the governing left and the liberal commentariat. The latter believe that the White House has elevated pragmatism above principle, while the White HOuse believes its far-left critics are too divorced from political reality. That is a more meaningful split than political differences among two candidates for office. Consider what Congressman Grayson had to say about Gibbs: No, I don’t think he should resign. I think he should be fired. He’s done a miserable job. People I know, refer to him as Bozo the Spokesman. He’s not conveying the value of the President’s strategies, or his plans or his programs. He’s doing a miserable job, it’s that simple. He’s so far in over his head he’d have to reach up to touch his shoes…. If I wanted Fox talking points I’d change the channel to Fox, not listen to the White House. He needs to get his head on straight and do his job… He’s doing a miserable job because his heart isn’t in it. He belongs on Fox. Not as the White House spokesman. The folks at major liberal blogs were more than a bit upset as well. Consider this excerpt from far-left blogger Glenn Greenwald: You may think that the reason you’re dissatisfied with the Obama administration is because of substantive objections to their policies: that they’ve done so little about crisis-level unemployment, foreclosures and widespread economic misery. Or because of the White House’s apparently endless devotion to Wall Street. Or because the President has escalated a miserable, pointless and unwinnable war that is entering its ninth year. Or because he has claimed the power to imprison people for life with no charges and to assassinate American citizens without due process, intensified the secrecy weapons and immunity instruments abused by his predecessor, and found all new ways of denying habeas corpus. Or because he granted full-scale legal immunity to those who committed serious crimes in the last administration. Or because he’s failed to fulfill — or affirmatively broken — promises ranging from transparency to gay rights. But Robert Gibbs — in one of the most petulant, self-pitying outbursts seen from a top political official in recent memory, half derived from a paranoid Richard Nixon rant and the other half from a Sean Hannity/Sarah Palin caricature of The Far Left — is here to tell you that the real reason you’re dissatisfied with the President is because you’re a fringe, ideological, Leftist extremist ingrate who needs drug counseling. Or this entry from Daily Kos’s Jesse LaGreca AKA MinistryofTruth: Turns out calling me “F$#^ing retarded” or “On Drugs” doesn’t make me FIRED UP, it makes me think you think I’m an asshole, and that doesn’t exactly win my vote, now does it?… The fact is, Mr. Gibbs, If you’re trying to convince us NOT TO VOTE FOR YOU in 2010 or 2012, Mission Accomplished! And if not, and you are this inept at messaging, maybe it’s time you stepped down from your post, Mr. Gibbs. Or these comments from deranged users at the Democratic Underground: they absolutely never learn and this should tell you the temperature of the white house, the ease with which they say things like this. Obama is no liberal, no leftie, he has contempt for us to allow this culture of thought to exist. and what a masterstroke of timing, to say something like this to an already apparently tepid base before elections. bravo, you b*st*rds. *you* should be drug tested. the folks that helped get them elected, they want to insult. Two words come to mind one starts with an “F” and the next one starts with a “Y”. Dump Gibbs and bring back Van Jones There is clearly a battle going in inside the Democratic Party between pragmatists and ideologues. But despite the relatively high level of media coverage if Gibbs’s events, the apocalyptic “civil war” rhetoric the media touted so often with regard to Republican infighting is noticeably absent. Yet again, the media are avoiding proclaiming dire straits for Democrats, despite deep divisions within that party.

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‘Civil War’ Apparently Only a Problem for GOP Squabbling

Daily Kos Holocaust Denial: 9/11 Attacks ‘Were More About Optics Than Actual Harm’

While the Ground Zero Mosque controversy strikes the media as an opportunity for “healing” that’s being denied by stubborn conservatives, the leftists at the Daily Kos see it as an opportunity for Holocaust Denial. The blogger known as “Something the Dog Said” dropped this jaw-dropping paragraph Thursday morning about fear of Muslims: Given that they are such a small minority in this nation, it is odd that so many of our fellow citizens see them as such a threat. Yes, the 9/11 attacks were horrific, but they were more about optics than actual harm. The economy was already taking a hit before the Twin Towers fell.  The reaction of the nation to seeing two major buildings in New York fall on T.V. has boosted the attack out of proportion. While the loss of even a single life is to be condemned and the devastation these deaths caused the families of those killed, more than this number of teens are killed every year in car crashes . These are also tragic losses but we do not make the kind of high profile issue of it that the 9/11 attacks are. This blogger obviously can’t tell the difference in political meaning between a collection of teen car accidents and an intentional, ideological mass murder. This is the same blogger who just wrote on July 30 that Republicans are much scarier than jihadists: Find an issue and whip up hysteria, without consideration of the long term affects or what might be lost by the tactic.  It is just another of the legion of reasons why the modern Republican Party can not be trusted with the government of the United States or any single state for that matter. The radicalization they claim will come from mosques is just a pale reflection of the radicalization that has occurred in the ranks of their Party . If there is a group to fear, it is Radical Republicans, which is basically to say the most of the Republican Party at this point. “Optics” is a word better used for how it looks for Michelle Obama to go on a ritzy Spanish vacation, not to suggest 9/11 was really an insignificant crime. [Hat tip: Mal Adjusted]

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Daily Kos Holocaust Denial: 9/11 Attacks ‘Were More About Optics Than Actual Harm’

Capsule Hotels Get A Modern Makeover

images via Designboom eOffice notes that Japan’s famous capsule hotels “are traditionally grimy, and primarily intended as expedient sleeping solutions for drunk salarymen who have missed the last train home.” But they were models of space efficiency, providing the guest with just enough room to serve their function, providing a place to sleep. Now a new capsule hotel has opened in Tokyo, combining clean… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Capsule Hotels Get A Modern Makeover

Kanye West’s Twitter: Social Media Experts Weigh In

‘The greatest thing about Kanye’s use of Twitter is that it is really him,’ says the founder of Social Media Club. By Eric Ditzian Kanye West Photo: Theo Wargo/ WireImage For anyone who thought Kanye West might slow down his giddy Twitter pace since signing on to the social networking site last month, you thought wrong. In the last 24 hours alone, the hip-hop superstar has pounded out 23 tweets, ranging from the existentially vague (“Curate your life”) to the excessively bland (“I love the Summer but I can’t wait for Fall”) to the predictably boastful (“Ima make a book of my tweets”). And just as ‘Ye can’t get enough of Twitter, neither can his fans. He’s already reeled in over 570,000 followers, a number that should only rise as he continues to engage his audience. Last week, we checked in with some social media experts to get their takes on West’s embrace of Twitter , and in the days since, Web authorities have continued to send in their commentary to MTV News. Some are supportive of the “Power” singer’s style, while others are less than impressed. But one thing is clear: These days, no one involved in pop culture or social media can stop talking about Kanye West. “The greatest thing about Kanye’s use of Twitter is that it is really him,” said Chris Heuer, the founder of Social Media Club . “It’s not some PR flack’s idea of what he should be saying or what he should be doing with this — he is personally and directly connecting with his fans and his fans are going to love him even more because of it. In politics, they say go to the base — Kanye is doing this brilliantly.” Of course, not everyone agrees that he’s connecting in a Twitter-friendly manner. Dave Malby , a social media whiz with over 100,000 Twitter followers, maintains that Kanye is missing the point of Twitter, since he currently doesn’t follow anyone and rarely tweets back to his followers. “I find that he is not engaging with his fans. This is not what Twitter is about. Twitter is about engagement and interaction,” Malby said. “Twitter is two-way communication. Kanye would make a much bigger impact if he did what other celebrities won’t do: interact with their fans.” But perhaps West is starting to understand these fundamentals. Though he unfollowed his lone follower after giving the guy some unwanted attention, in recent days West has stepped up his re-tweeting of his followers. And, even more importantly, he’s kept up a steady stream of random, wacky and utterly Kanye-esque missives. “His posts are entertaining and yet they contain an unexpected depth and substance,” said Kim Sherrell , a new-media-savvy filmmaker with over 70,000 Twitter followers. “Like George Carlin or Larry David, Kanye excels at creating humor by examining the different ways in which our world is messed up. He is pretty good at observing contradictions.” “Kanye’s ability to reflect on his situation while tossing punches at some embarrassing realities the way he does, well, these are some of the reasons why I think he is a force to be reckoned with,” she added. “He comes across as a very rich, but deep and somewhat sincere guy who is just going through his day and learning how to get his tweet on.” Yet as he continues to get his tweet on, there’s always the chance that Kanye — a public figure who hasn’t always exercised good judgment in the public sphere — will once again get himself into trouble. Here again, however, the very social media instrument that lands him in hot water could prove to be the key to making amends. “An increase in message volume could certainly get you in trouble, just as an increase in Courvoisier consumption can,” said Heuer. “That said, in the modern social-networking-enabled world, the most important thing isn’t necessarily that we do something wrong or say something stupid, it’s how we respond afterwards that shows the true measure of the man. Is the person able to admit they made a mistake? Can they apologize sincerely and honestly? As more and more celebrities come online, more and more of the pop culture audience will see their true selves and realize they are only human, just like we are.” Related Photos What Has Kanye West Been Up To This Past Year? Related Artists Kanye West

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Kanye West’s Twitter: Social Media Experts Weigh In