Thursday, January 31, 2013

Radio's Hero Of The Weird, Art Bell, Announces (Maybe) His New Show

Radio's Hero Of The Weird, Art Bell, Announces (Maybe) His New Show:
This was the World Wide Web, in the mid-1990s.In its 1990s prime, the late-night radio show "Coast To Coast AM" was an unscripted audio mix of "Twin Peaks" and "The X-Files." It was corny, uncomfortable, laughable, utterly paranoid, completely of its time, and occasionally terrifying. Because it was broadcast in the middle of the night, if you listened it was generally because you were alone: driving a deserted highway, fighting insomnia, cramming for a test, finishing some code, working a graveyard shift.

A parade of crazies appeared every night, people with no apparent sense of humor, explaining the most obscure and ridiculous theories and conspiracies. And then, because this was also the golden age of weird crap on the early World Wide Web, you could look up these dingbats and discover... oh good god, so "Major Ed Dames" is a real retired military officer who really did "remote viewing" for a secret government project called "Stargate," that's a real thing? This was always the terrifying part about the show: Some of it, maybe all of it, was true.

Behind it all was exactly the kind of person you would avoid in real life: Art Bell, a chain-smoking hermit and deejay with a creepy knowing laugh who worked from a mobile home compound in the high desert near Area 51, which still doesn't officially exist, although the federal government eventually conceded there was something related to defense and/or intelligence at the (dry) Groom Lake section of the Nevada nuclear test site north of Las Vegas. And now, a dozen years since he left the weeknight show for good and made a series of increasingly perplexing retirements/comebacks on the little-heard weekend version of the program, Art Bell has announced (on Facebook) that he's in talks to begin a new radio show, apparently free of the "Coast to Coast AM" corporate overlords at Premiere Radio Networks in Los Angeles. Are the weird times coming back?

Rock of the Westies.

It is always vague and mysterious with Art Bell. The man could make anything, including where his cats were hiding in his home studio on any given night, sound like the space monsters had arrived. "Emotional roller coaster" is an overused and hopefully outdated phrase, but it exactly describes the plunge from "Oh for chrissakes, listen to this idiot" to "Lock the doors and turn on all the lights!" that always awaited the Art Bell listener. The transition from voyeuristic hilarity to terror was that quick, and of course that was the reason to keep listening.

Art Bell is tragic proof that fame and fortune certainly don't guarantee a pleasurable life. He first quit the radio show at the height of its popularity, in 1998, reportedly because some local psychopath had sexually assaulted Bell's young son with the stated goal of infecting the child with HIV. In 2006, Bell's third wife died in the couple's RV parked outside a trashy casino-motel in Laughlin, Nevada, the kind of place where you can still find penny slots and half the clientele drag along portable oxygen canisters. He apparently sat around his Mojave desert compound for a while after the death of Ramona Bell, and then decided to move to the Philippines and marry a girl he met over the Internet. He finally came back to Pahrump, Nevada, but immigration problems kept his fourth wife out of the United States for many years. Bell had a full compliment of health problems when he was still in his 40s, including back injuries from falling off a telephone pole, and his lifetime of chain smoking can't be making him feel much better.

And yet, for all of his very public foibles and misfortunes, Bell had the best voice on radio and a master's touch with the callers, guests and soundboard. The show was about suspense, about that one unexpected-yet-expected moment that would scare the listener into another two hours of insomnia, hearing every sound of the house settling as an invasion of sinister entities. To listen during an actual, unfolding freakout was the peak "Coast to Coast with Art Bell" experience: during the 1997 Phoenix Lights incident, for example, as people in Nevada and Arizona called in with eyewitness descriptions of the gigantic black craft moving silently over highways and exurbs, or as a Texan calling from a small plane claims he's flying into Area 51, or the convincingly frantic "former employee" from the fabled Dreamland base with its subterranean halls of escaped interdimensional beings.

The nightly show continues without Bell, and is apparently more popular than ever. In the 21st Century version you can hear tonight, the host is a genial radio veteran named George Noory. Because he's relatively normal sounding on the air, he brings in guest crazies like Alex Jones to yell staged hysterics for a few minutes now and then. I gave up on the show nearly a decade ago—by that point, I only skimmed the podcast while walking the dog in the daytime, when sunlight disinfects even a rare quality program of any nocturnal creepiness. When I've tuned in on the occasional late-night drive in recent years, the biggest surprise is how much dumber the callers seem, speaking in stereotypically crypto-racist redneck grammar crashes, regardless of their national point of origin.

If the show still attracts a few stoned college kids, open-minded scientists or sleepy newspaper reporters on the night desk listening in, they aren't being chosen for the open lines. ("East of the Rockies, West of the Rockies," there were special toll-free numbers for everyone, including pop-up numbers for specific classes of paranormal incident, or highway patrol officers who had witnessed a certain type of unidentified flying object.) On the Reddit post dedicated to news of Bell's latest return, the comments are mostly along the lines of "Noory phones it in from the land of mediocrity."

While the Art Bell show followed a compelling mythological arc that nearly corresponded to fictional (?) "mytharc" of "The X-Files," Noory's show is a grab bag that reflects the growing idiocy of both America's working class and the aural clown assault of talk radio in general. The 1990s program was amazingly apolitical—of course they were up to no good, or making treaties with the aliens, or whatever sinister plot. But they included Republicans and Democrats, Reagan and Clinton, the U.N. and the Nazis, the reptilian aliens and the gray aliens. We weren't quite to the point where every American awake after midnight on a weekday was an absolute psychopath with a hundred guns under their bed. Art Bell routinely made climate change and global warming the topic of his nightly show, in a time before the fossil fuel industry had created the "climate hoax" meme that may be the final cosmic joke on humanity. Despite Noory's calm demeanor and attempts to steer his guests and listeners away from the mouth-breathing constants of daytime AM, the show suffers both from Noory's sleepy acquiescence to the least entertaining claims and the general lack of imagination of the other participants.

Art Bell already sounded old-fashioned in the 1990s, with his delightfully square bumper music—"Dancing Queen" by ABBA was a perennial fade-in from the ABC news on the hour and advertorial spots featuring Bell praising a sponsor's brand of tabletop radio. It's tough to imagine how he'd sound any more current in the second decade of the 21st Century. Radio itself has changed to the point that the only likely listeners are people with no other options: no iPhone, no Pandora or Spotify, no choice but to work a loading dock or security booth until dawn, no one to love or sleep next to, in the sad American night.

The cultural attraction of a return to Art Bell's inimitable live radio broadcast is the chance for a revival of the medium itself. Since he vanished from the nightly airwaves, a whole generation has grown up and become pointlessly addicted to Twitter and Snapchat and Vine and whatever approximation of live radio currently occupies people and their iOS devices. If they've come across AM radio at all, they know it as the home of hysterical low-income whites obsessed with a fantasy socialism that might make their lives less of a constant struggle, if it was a little bit more real. Art Bell was the standard-issue late-night soundtrack for young hackers of the 1990s, as this remembrance of Aaron Swartz makes clear. People hungry for "Weird Twitter" could do worse than to sit in their car at 2 a.m. listening to the now-67-year-old Art Bell scare the living crap out of them.




You might also enjoy: A Spooky Monster From Every State (with "Coast To Coast AM" inspiration)




Ken Layne is an occasional host of "Weird Twitter," and also lives in a remote compound in the high elevations of the Mojave Desert.


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Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Photo

Photo:

retro-girl811:Vintage Hanes Stockings Ad

retro-girl811:

Vintage Hanes Stockings Ad
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retro-girl811:

Vintage Hanes Stockings Ad

Golden Blossom Honey ad, 1969

Golden Blossom Honey ad, 1969:

Golden Blossom Honey ad, 1969

Amaia Arrazola Illustration

Amaia Arrazola Illustration:

via http://aamaiaa.blogspot.com.es/

gallifreygal:glugglugs:mortalityplays:It has come to my...

gallifreygal:

glugglugs:

mortalityplays:

It has come to my...
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gallifreygal:
glugglugs:
mortalityplays:
It has come to my attention that many of my American friends have never seen Father Ted.
This is an intervention. It’s for your own good.
Father Ted is a classic british sit-com about three Irish Catholic priests living together in the tiny, remote parish of Craggy Island. Ted is an egotist, Dougal is an idiot, and Jack is a lecherous drunk. Beyond that, nothing I say can do justice to the places it goes.
It is one of the best-loved and least reverent bits of TV ever to come out of the UK, and if you have any taste at all for the bleak, the absurd or the downright surreal, you owe it to yourself to click these links. Each episode is only 25 minutes long, and more or less perfect from beginning to end.
Season One
Episode One - Good Luck, Father Ted
Episode Two - Entertaining Father Stone
Episode Three - The Passion of Saint Tibulus
Episode Four - Competition Time
Episode Five - And God Created Woman
Episode Six - Grant Unto Him Eternal Rest
Season Two
Episode One - Hell
Episode Two - Think Fast, Father Ted
Episode Three - Tentacles of Doom
Episode Four - The Old Grey Whistle Theft
Episode Five - A Song For Europe
Episode Six - The Plague
Episode Seven - Rock-a-Hula Ted (aka. Lovely Girls)
Episode Eight - Cigarettes and Alcohol and Rollerblading
Episode Nine - New Jack City
Episode Ten - Flight Into Terror
Episode Eleven - A Christmassy Ted (Christmas Special)
Season Three
Episode One - Are You Right There, Father Ted? 
Episode Two - Chirpy Burpy Cheap Sheep
Episode Three - Speed 3
Episode Four - The Mainland
Episode Five - Escape From Victory
Episode Six - Kicking Bishop Brennan Up the Arse
Episode Seven - Night of the Nearly Dead
Episode Eight - Going to America
Watch an episode. Watch four. It doesn’t really matter what order you see them in. Just…please. Do this thing and realise what has been missing from your life.
Ah, g’wan. 
I keep meaning to watch more Father Ted episodes. So I’m rebloggening for reminding.

Game of tag has been going for 23 years

Game of tag has been going for 23 years:
Ten friends started playing tag in high school and just never stopped. Now they fly across the country, hide in the bushes, and sneak into houses to tag the other players.

"You're like a deer or elk in hunting season," says Joe Tombari, a high-school teacher in Spokane, who sometimes locks the door of his classroom during off-periods and checks under his car before he gets near it.

One February day in the mid-1990s, Mr. Tombari and his wife, then living in California, got a knock on the door from a friend. "Hey, Joe, you've got to check this out. You wouldn't believe what I just bought," he said, as he led the two out to his car.

What they didn't know was Sean Raftis, who was "It," had flown in from Seattle and was folded in the trunk of the Honda Accord. When the trunk was opened he leapt out and tagged Mr. Tombari, whose wife was so startled she fell backward off the curb and tore a ligament in her knee.

"I still feel bad about it," says Father Raftis, who is now a priest in Montana. "But I got Joe."

(via @torrez)
Tags: games

Friday, January 25, 2013

Music: Newswire: Andrew Bird is developing his own kids’ TV show

Music: Newswire: Andrew Bird is developing his own kids’ TV show:







Years from now, when people think of Andrew Bird, they may remember him not as a singer-songwriter and violinist whose work blended tropes from jazz, pop, and folk, but as the man behind the Professor Socks universe. In a recent interview with HitFix, Bird reveals that his latest project is a TV show for kids, inspired by Sesame Street and the work of iconic puppeteer Jim Henson.
The star of Professor Socks’ TV Show will be an academic “who’s out to lunch on most scientific facts,” and who will spend each episode using a magic dresser full of magic socks (though it’s unclear whether both the dresser and the socks are magic) to explore different “vocational worlds.” He'll be aided by a librarian and a fox—both of whom, it’s presumed, will be wacky and/or whimsical in some way.
Aside from mentioning that he wrote ...

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Thursday, January 24, 2013

bombing:3D Paintings by Shintaro Ohata [Artists...

bombing:

3D Paintings by Shintaro Ohata

[Artists...
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bombing:
3D Paintings by Shintaro Ohata
[Artists statement]
Shintaro Ohata is an artist who depicts little things in everyday life like scenes of a movie and captures all sorts of light in his work with a unique touch: convenience stores at night, city roads on rainy day and fast-food shops at dawn etc. His paintings show us ordinary sceneries as dramas. He is also known for his characteristic style; placing sculptures in front of paintings, and shows them as one work, a combination of 2-D and 3-D world. He says that it all started from when he wondered “I could bring the atmosphere or dynamism of my paintings with a more different way if I place sculptures in front of paintings”. Many viewers tend to assume that there is a light source set into his work itself because of the strong expression of lights in his sculpture.

Sunday, January 20, 2013

You Thought the Long Walk Was Long

You Thought the Long Walk Was Long:

THE LONG (NOW SHORT) WALK A view from Susan Robbs local land-art walk.
  • Images courtesy Susan Robb
  • THE LONG (NOW SHORT) WALK A view from Susan Robb's local land-art walk.

Congratulations to Stranger Genius winner Susan Robb, the Seattle visual artist who has won a Creative Capital grant this year. (A birdie told me that there were several Seattle artists among the finalists, which is cool. Robb and Degenerate Art Ensemble—also yay—ended up the Seattle winners.)
Robb is going to use the money to walk the entire Pacific Crest Trail, a significantly longer walk than the 40-mile Long Walk that she and Stokley Towles inaugurated in the summer of 2010 (which my feet and I arduously participated in along with 50 other people). She calls the project Wild Times.
From her proposal:
Like art, wild spaces—those environments untrammelled by humans as well as those derelict, graffiti-scrawled urban lots, and meta-sites being reclaimed by nature, are important not because they "do" something or have "value." Quite the opposite. Wild spaces free us from the tyranny of fixed meaning. And inherent in that freedom is the possibility for authenticity, transformation, and connection to each other that no technology, product, art commodity, or service can truly provide.
Robb is planning to walk, over six months, along the "only continuous footpath transecting America." The PCT starts at the Mexican/American border and runs up to Canada.

Sigh. Also from the Long Walk.
  • Sigh. Also from the Long Walk.
This isn't an endurance exercise in which an individual body is tested for strength. It's about trekking into issues of "utopia, migration, and wildness" while trekking literally. (It's not Marina Abramovic, it's Jeremy Deller, say.) Talks and performances will happen along the way, in venues like libraries and town halls, but also potentially a "laundromat, motel room, or hiking supply store." Base camps—in galleries and museums but also "private homes, elementary schools, and perhaps even prisons"—will await Robb and "fellow thru-hikers," for restocking and from which Robb will send transmissions. What she'll be looking to find and to create are "unscripted zones." (The idea reminds me of Isaac Layman's Land Grab.)
Robb's proposal doesn't say how she plans to identify fellow walkers, but maybe you'll be able to join. The Long Walk has had a waiting list every year. Check out its active blog.
Walking and migration have gotten plenty of love as art forms in themselves in the last few years, picking up where Richard Long began, back in a Bristol meadow in 1967. I especially love Francis Alÿs's journey (not entirely by walking, of course) from Tijuana, Mexico, to San Diego, California—without ever crossing the U.S. border. Here's the postcard from the 1997 trip, which he called The Loop.

The caption reads: In order to go from Tijuana to San Diego without crossing the Mexico/United States border, I followed a perpendicular route away from the fence and circumnavigated the globe, heading 67 degrees South East, North East and South East again until I reached my departure point. The project remained free and clear of all critical implications beyond the physical displacement of the artist.
  • The caption reads: "In order to go from Tijuana to San Diego without crossing the Mexico/United States border, I followed a perpendicular route away from the fence and circumnavigated the globe, heading 67 degrees South East, North East and South East again until I reached my departure point. The project remained free and clear of all critical implications beyond the physical displacement of the artist."

The artist produced this free, unlimited-edition postcard in 2011, and I picked one up in Queens and put it on my refrigerator. The sentence I can't stop returning to is, of course, "The project remained free and clear of all critical implications beyond the physical displacement of the artist."
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Saturday, January 19, 2013

Stained Glass Windows Made from Laser Cut Paper by Eric Standley

Stained Glass Windows Made from Laser Cut Paper by Eric Standley:
Stained Glass Windows Made from Laser Cut Paper by Eric Standley  sculpture paper
Stained Glass Windows Made from Laser Cut Paper by Eric Standley  sculpture paper
Stained Glass Windows Made from Laser Cut Paper by Eric Standley  sculpture paper
Stained Glass Windows Made from Laser Cut Paper by Eric Standley  sculpture paper
Stained Glass Windows Made from Laser Cut Paper by Eric Standley  sculpture paper
Stained Glass Windows Made from Laser Cut Paper by Eric Standley  sculpture paper
Stained Glass Windows Made from Laser Cut Paper by Eric Standley  sculpture paper
Stained Glass Windows Made from Laser Cut Paper by Eric Standley  sculpture paper
Inspired by Gothic and Islamic architecture artist Eric Standley constructs intricate stained glass windows from numerous sheets of laser cut paper. His most recent work, Either Or Arch 5.1 (top), is made from over 100 sheets alone. See much more of his work in his artworks gallery. (via laughing squid)

Flickr Finds No. 27

Flickr Finds No. 27:
Flickr Finds No. 27 flickr finds

Spencer Bowman
Flickr Finds No. 27 flickr finds

Wong Kei
Flickr Finds No. 27 flickr finds

hui+
Flickr Finds No. 27 flickr finds

Mikko Lagerstedt
Flickr Finds No. 27 flickr finds

Jack Davison
Flickr Finds No. 27 flickr finds

Hengki Koentjoro
Flickr Finds No. 27 flickr finds

Sabine Timm
Flickr Finds No. 27 flickr finds

Paul Garnett
Flickr Finds No. 27 flickr finds

Mark Burban
With the launch of a wonderful new app as well as a slight website redesign, Flickr has seen a tremendous influx in usage over the past few weeks. I couldn’t be happier as it’s been my favorite photo site for years and I’m really hoping Marissa Mayer continues to throw available resources at the service. Here are nine of my favorite images seen on Flickr over the last two weeks. Check out hundreds of previous photos by looking at the Flickr Finds tag.