​Basquiat Playing Cards

"Basquiat Playing Cards are a tribute to one of America’s most influential and beloved modern artists—featuring authentic sketches, drawings, and paintings from the brief but spectacular career of an inspirational icon. Jean-Michel Basquiat’s signature neo-expressionist style has transcended cultures and engaged the social landscape for several decades. His work combines elements of street graffiti and social commentary in the context of fine art. Some consider his paintings as a form of introspective visual poetry. Every aspect of Basquiat playing cards features artwork approved by the estate of Jean-Michael Basquiat. From the tuck case to the fronts and backs of every single card, you will find official Basquiat art—a unique visual language that continues to inspire future generations. ...”

Thérèse Raquin - Émile Zola (1868)

"Thérèse Raquin is an 1868 novel by French writer Émile Zola, first published in serial form in the literary magazine L'Artiste in 1867. It was Zola's third novel, though the first to earn wide fame. The novel's adultery and murder were considered scandalous and famously described as ‘putrid’ in a review in the newspaper Le Figaro. Thérèse Raquin tells the story of a young woman, unhappily married to her first cousin by an overbearing aunt, who may seem to be well-intentioned but in many ways is deeply selfish. Thérèse's husband, Camille, is sickly and egocentric and when the opportunity arises, Thérèse enters into a turbulent and sordidly passionate affair with one of Camille's friends, Laurent. ...”

The Dnipro River, Axis of Life and Death in Ukraine

"The thunder of artillery echoes night and day over the mighty Dnipro River as it winds its way through southern Ukraine. With Russian and Ukrainian forces squared off on opposite banks, fighters have replaced fishermen, surveillance drones circle overhead and mines line the marshy embankments. Carving an arc through Ukraine from its northern border to the Black Sea, through Kyiv, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson, the Dnipro shapes the country’s geography and economy, its culture and its very identity. And now it helps define the contours of battle — as it has for millenniums, a barrier and a conduit to warring Scythians, Greeks, Vikings, Huns, Cossacks, Russians, Germans and many more. ...”

Getting ready to plunge into the water of the Dnipro River to mark the Orthodox Christian feast of Epiphany in Dnipro.

Oh, Run Into Me, But Don't Hurt Me ! - Female Blues Singers Rarities 1923-1930

"Between crudeness and despair, a few forgotten female blues singers. If, out of these fourteen female singers recorded in the 1920's, some have managed to put food on the table for a while, none became famous or rich, and most remain completely unknown. What can be said about a singer whose entire work fits on a single-sided 78rpm record? (It makes me think of those antique authors of whom all we have are titles of work). What circumstances led to this recording? Who decided to do it? For whom was it intended? Why wasn't it followed by more recordings? Hypotheses get lost in places and times themselves forgotten. What remains are these miraculous voices. ...”

Clouds of Sils Maria - Olivier Assayas (2014)

"This multilayered, immensely entertaining drama from the great contemporary French director Olivier Assayas is a singular look at the intersection of high art and popular culture. The always extraordinary Juliette Binoche is stirring as Maria, a stage and screen icon who is being courted to star in a new production of the play that made her famous—only this time she must assume the role of the older woman. Kristen Stewart matches her punch for punch as her beleaguered assistant, called upon to provide support both professional and emotional for her mercurial boss. ...”

​Russia accuses Ukraine of trying to kill Putin with Kremlin drone strike

"Moscow has accused Kyiv of staging a drone attack intended to kill the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, in the Kremlin, and vowed to retaliate. The Kremlin said on Wednesday that two drones had been used in the attack, but that they had been disabled by Russian defences. In a statement published on its website, the Kremlin stated it considered the attack a planned terrorist act and an attempt on the life of the president of the Russian Federation. ... Putin’s spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, said Putin was not in the Kremlin at the time of the attack. Peskov added that Putin would spend the day at the Novo-Ogaryovo state residence outside Moscow.The Ukrainian president, Volodomyr Zelenskiy, denied that Ukraine was involved in the attack. ...”

Drone seen exploding over the Kremlin

Abortion Wins Elections - New York Magazine

"New York Magazine commissioned Pentagram’s Emily Oberman and team to create powerful illustrations for the cover story of its March 27, 2023 issue, a blueprint for how Democrats can harness the issue of abortion to win elections, and overturn Dobbs. New York asked Pentagram to come up with a bold, unexpected typographic treatment on the subject of abortion rights. The cover image features the words ‘Abortion Wins Elections,’ arranged in the shape of an American flag, evoking both traditional patriotism and optimism, characteristics not often associated with abortion. ...”

Chicano Moratorium

"The Chicano Moratorium, formally known as the National Chicano Moratorium Committee Against The Vietnam War, was a movement of Chicano anti-war activists that built a broad-based coalition of Mexican-American groups to organize opposition to the Vietnam War. Led by activists from local colleges and members of the Brown Berets, a group with roots in the high school student movement that staged walkouts in 1968, the coalition peaked with a August 29, 1970 march in East Los Angeles that drew 30,000 demonstrators. …”

August 29, 1970: A Day Every Chicana/o Must Always Remember

Ukraine Wants to Push Forward. Not So Fast, Says Its Black Soupy Mud.

"The troops of Ukraine’s 43rd Separate Artillery Brigade have just about everything they need to begin the expected spring counteroffensive. They are well rested, have plenty of ammunition and are now in possession of several advanced German-made self-propelled howitzers, which have replaced their old Soviet artillery pieces. But for the moment, they are barely moving forward, stalled not by ferocious Russian attacks, but by an enemy no less tenacious: the viscous central Ukrainian mud. ... Deep and black, with a consistency similar to a mixture of cookie dough and wet cement, the spring mud is one obstacle that the Ukrainian military, for all its ingenuity, finds difficult to overcome. It jams weapons and steals the boots from soldiers’ feet. Wheels and treads spin and spin, only digging military vehicles deeper into the mire. ...”

Some harbor hope that a deal involving Gershkovich could also help Kara-Murza, who is well-known in Washington circles

Metal Box Rebuilt in Dub - Jah Wobble (2021)

"... Metal Box Rebuilt in Dub is something of an oxymoron, in titular terms at least. Dub technique and effect were paramount amongst the original album’s calling cards and it was nigh on perfect. What Wobble does, then, is revisit the album without the keening vocals that at least gave the pop kids something to cling onto; while adding the kind of sheen that only forty years of advancing technology could provide. It is less, however, a rebuilding than it is a re-sketching, with piano and orchestration making odd bedfellows to our memories of, say, the original ‘Swan Lake.’ ...”

​Ash Grove

"The Ash Grove was a folk music club located at 8162 Melrose Avenue in Los Angeles, California, United States, founded in 1958 by Ed Pearl and named after the Welsh folk song, ‘The Ash Grove.’ In its fifteen years of existence, the Ash Grove altered the music scene in Los Angeles and helped many artists find a West Coast audience. Bob Dylan recalled that, ‘I’d seen posters of folk shows at the Ash Grove and used to dream about playing there.’ ... When travelers returning from Cuba gave talks or showed Cuban films, the Ash Grove became the target of angry demonstrations and threatened violence by Cuban exiles. A series of fires, including what patrons believed was an arson attack, led to the club’s demise in 1973. …”

​Life in Ukraine’s Trenches: Gearing Up for a Spring Offensive

"In a thicket of trees between two vast farm fields, a plywood trapdoor built into the forest floor opened to reveal stairs leading underground. Inside was a subterranean bunker, cut into the black earth, where Ukrainian troops from a mortar unit awaited coordinates for their next target. The men squeezed past one another down a shoulder-width dirt corridor lit with LED strips, staring at tablet computers showing a live drone feed of the terrain outside. Blast waves from artillery shells and rockets shook the bunker, and a radio crackled with a warning of incoming Russian helicopters. But the soldiers were focused on their screens, specifically on a line of Russian troops and heavy equipment dug in a short distance away and marked with red plus signs. That would be their target. ...”

Soldiers from Ukraine’s 110th Territorial Defense Brigade taking cover as they fire a mortar round on nearby Russian positions on Monday in Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia region.

Patti Smith - Summer Cannibals (1996)

"In early 1994, my late husband Fred Sonic Smith and I were preparing a second album together. We had several songs in mind, one being Summer Cannibals. While strumming the chords, Fred told me a story of his youth in the MC5. He woke up early one morning at a stopover in Georgia, feeling a lot of conflicting emotions. He loved playing music and was a true musician, but the stress and excess of being on the road was taking its toll. He already felt, at the age of twenty, as if he was being devoured. ...

Swagger and Tenderness: The South Bronx Portraits by John Ahearn & Rigoberto Torres

"Inspired and enabled by the people who live in the vibrant community where the Bronx Museum is located, local artists John Ahearn and Rigoberto Torres have become world-famous for their portraits of their South Bronx neighbors. ... This major survey exhibition mirrors the creative and loving residents of the South Bronx whose personal stories and innovative aesthetics both reflect and shape culture internationally. Ahearn and Torres are often praised for uplifting their subjects, thus representing social justice, diversity, dignity, and equity. ...”

“Joe Conzo at 17,” 2020, Acryic on plaster

Pet Shop Boys Lost In Russia

"Pet Shop Boys have released a new EP, Lost [YT playlist], of four tracks recorded in 2015 for Super, but held off the album for not fitting thematically. The Lost Room meditates on the alienation of military school, with images from the German film Die Junge Törless [Trailer, 3m] used in the video. I Will Fall is a love song Neil said he could hear George Michael singing. Skeletons In The Closet might be talking about Russia's unwillingness to deal with Stalinism. Kaputnik continues the Russia theme. And finally, Living In The Past seems to be a VERY new song, and again deals with Russia. The video has a demo version of the song. ...”

2008 September: Pet Shop Boys, 2010 November: Pet Shop Boys - 1985-1989, 2011 January: Behaviour, 2011 May: Very, 2011 December: Bilingual, 2012 March: "Always on My Mind", 2012 August: Nightlife, 2012 September: "Where the Streets Have No Name (I Can't Take My Eyes off You)", 2012 December: Release, 2013 March: Pandemonium Tour, 2013 November: Leaving, 2014 April: Introspective (1988), 2014 August: Go West, 2015 January: "So Hard"(1990), 2015 February: "I'm with Stupid" (2006), 2015 July: Thursday EP (2014), 2016 May: "Twenty-something" (2016), 2017 September: Left To My Own Devices / The Sound of the Atom Splitting (1988), 2019 May: It's A Sin (1987), 2021 April: Pet Shop Boys Share Live Cover Of Blur's 'Girls & Boys'

Critic films hilarious taste test of best croissants in Paris while surrounded by riot chaos

"Paris may be on fire and full of stinking rubbish - but that should not prevent you from enjoying your morning croissant. That's the message from fearless video reviewer Luis Sal, who braved riots and strikes on a city-wide taste test of flaky pastries last Thursday. The 25-year-old Italian found himself at the centre of a day of action against President Emmanuel Macron's decision to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64 without a parliamentary vote last month. 'My name is Luis and today I'm in Paris to try the top five croissants, and we're going to see which one is the best,' he says in a YouTube video which had 650,000 views within a day of being posted. Luis is immediately shoved in the back by a riot policeman, as La Rotonde – Mr Macron's favourite Paris restaurant – burns in the background. ...”

Liverpool and how it became the football mural capital of the UK

"It is a glorious spring morning in north Liverpool and John Barnes is gazing up at the latest striking addition to Anfield’s growing collection of street art. Covering the entire end wall of a terraced house on Balfour Street, a five-minute stroll from the stadium he once graced as a player, it consists of two images of Barnes: a close-up of his face — brow furrowed, lips pursed — and another of him unleashing a left-footed shot. …”

Russian Lawyers Ask Court to Ease Crackdown on Speaking Out

"A group of leading Russian lawyers on Tuesday asked the country’s highest court to declare unconstitutional a law banning criticism of the armed forces, in a rare display of opposition to the draconian censorship imposed by the Kremlin in the wake of the invasion of Ukraine. The complaint, filed by three lawyers and supported by 10 more, most of whom are still in Russia, asked the Constitutional Court to strike down the measure, which has emerged as the Kremlin’s most effective tool for stifling dissent in the country. ... The censorship laws effectively ban anything that does not correspond to the Kremlin’s depiction of the war, which it continues to call a ‘special military operation.’ They have virtually silenced debate in Russia. ...”

A man walks past an inscription reading 'No to war' left on a wall in Moscow on Jan. 26.

The Comedians Who Helped Define Generation X

"Last May Prime Video launched the sixth season of the legendary sketch comedy show The Kids in the Hall. Not a reboot, but a continuation following a 27-year hiatus. The five actor-comedians who make up the troupe — Dave Foley, Bruce McCulloch, Kevin McDonald, Mark McKinney, and Scott Thompson — are older and some of their preoccupations have changed, as death, which pervaded the original series, creeps closer and the generation gap between the troupe and young audiences widens. But to the relief of most critics and fans, they’re still outsiders looking in at mainstream society with curiosity and contempt. ...”

Tucker Carlson, a source of repeated controversies, is out at Fox News.

"Fox News said Monday that it was parting ways with Tucker Carlson, its most popular prime time host who was also the source of repeated controversies and headaches for the network because of his statements on everything from race relations to L.G.B.T.Q. rights. The network made the announcement less than a week after it agreed to pay $787.5 million in a defamation lawsuit in which Mr. Carlson’s show, one of the highest rated on Fox, figured prominently for its role in spreading misinformation after the 2020 election. In making its announcement, Fox offered a terse statement of gratitude. ...”

2022 May: How Tucker Carlson Stoked White Fear to Conquer Cable 



​At Ukraine’s Gravesites, a Spring Ritual Hints at Renewal

"STARYI SALTIV, Ukraine — The families milled about, greeting one another and exchanging news, or sitting at picnic tables laid with candy, Easter eggs and freshly baked bread, reviving village life in an improbable place: the cemetery. Outside the cemetery’s checkerboard of graves, which were festooned on Sunday with fresh flowers and where children ran about collecting candy, the village of Staryi Saltiv is a grim tableau of ruins. ‘You can see people are returning to clean the cemetery, and the village is coming back to life,’ said Natalia Borysovska, a seamstress whose house was destroyed last year. She had no home to return to after fleeing — but still a family plot to tend.Sunday was a traditional day of remembrance in Ukraine, called Provody. Families spend time in cemeteries each year on the first Sunday after the Orthodox Easter, tidying up graves and leaving food and flowers for their dead loved ones. ...”

Alla Chyhyrynska, 64, at the grave of a relative on Sunday in Shestakove, outside Kharkiv. An annual day of remembrance draws villagers to cemeteries in Ukraine.

​Watch Cab Calloway Actually Perform “Mr. Hepster’s Dictionary,” His Famous Dictionary of Jazz Slang (1944)

"Who’s up for a good dictionary on film? Colin Browning, assistant editor of The Bluff, a Loyola Marymount University student newspaper, has some kopasetic casting suggestions for a hypothetical feature adaptation of the ‘Merriam-Webster classic.’ He’s just muggin’, of course. Still, he seems like a young man who’s got his boots on. Dig?…no? In that case, you’d best acquaint yourself with the only cinematic dictionary adaptation we’re aware of, the Mr. Hepcat’s Dictionary number from Sensations of 1945, above. Musical team Al Sherman & Harry Tobias drew directly from Cab Calloway’s Cat-ologue: a Hepster’s Dictionary, a lexicon of Harlem jazz musicians’ slang originally published in 1938’ when choosing terms for Calloway to define for a young protégée, eager to be schooled in ‘the lingo all the jitterbugs use today.’ In between, Calloway, lays some iron in white tie and tails. ...”

​19th century architectural remnants hiding in today’s Metropolitan Museum of Art

"Every week, thousands of people come to see the millions of artifacts on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, one of the city’s treasures for indoor art viewing and outside people watching. But hidden inside this majestic museum building and its many additions fronting Fifth Avenue from 79th to 84th Streets are some fascinating architectural artifacts. They’re not officially on exhibit, nor do they come with captions explaining their origins. These are the remnants of the museum’s first incarnation as a much smaller Romanesque- and Gothic-style structure dating back to 1879—nine years after a group of citizens decided Gotham needed a world-class art museum, then put plans in place to make it happen. ...”

Ukraine war: The Russian ships accused of North Sea sabotage

"Russia has a programme to sabotage wind farms and communication cables in the North Sea, according to new allegations. The details come from a joint investigation by public broadcasters in Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Finland. It says Russia has a fleet of vessels disguised as fishing trawlers and research vessels in the North Sea. They carry underwater surveillance equipment and are mapping key sites for possible sabotage. The BBC understands that UK officials are aware of Russian vessels moving around UK waters as part of the programme. The first of a series of reports is due to be broadcast on Wednesday by DR in Denmark, NRK in Norway, SVT in Sweden and Yle in Finland. ...”

​Best Reggae Producers: 10 Pioneers Of Jamaica’s Musical Legacy

"The best reggae producers pioneered new sounds and recording techniques. They also ensured that Jamaica was recognized as a country capable of creating worldwide stars. From helping to sow the seeds of hip-hop to ushering in the ‘version,’ or creating utterly unique music that couldn’t have been made by anyone else, in any other place, the best reggae producers deserve to be held up alongside any other sonic innovators in musical history.Here are the best reggae producers of all time. ...”

Sir Coxsone Dodd

Time and Its Other: The Temporal Landscapes of Béla Tarr

"There is something almost tormenting and inhuman about the cinema of Hungarian director Béla Tarr. The characters and faces feel foreign or even alien, as well as the situations they find themselves in. It is as if an apathetic fisherman has hooked something more alive even than fish that refuses to resist. But isn’t resistance a condition of life, or is it just the way we have come to think of it? The famous escape – what Fitzgerald calls ‘the journey into a trap’ – is an opportunity or a crack, an image of the resistance-against-and-beyond the already monolithic rolling of the hours, but not salvation, never salvation. Tarr makes me want to help the catch, to unhook it and throw it back into the depths from which it came. But I know – its wounds are incurable. ...”

2012 January: The Man from London, 2012 January: The Turin Horse, 2022 September: Damnation (1988), 2022 September: : Sátántangó (1994)

The Turin Horse (2011)

​The Making of Modern Ukraine, Yale’s famous course on Ukrainian history by Professor Timothy Snyder

"’Everyone needs a future. We need a politics of the future; we need an event that can break us out of our rut and which will point us towards a future. I believe it’s very important that Europeans and others help to offer Ukrainians a future after this war in the form of membership in the European Union, and in the form of generous aid which allows Ukrainians to rebuild,’ said Professor Timothy Snyder, a famous historian in his speech at the Kyiv Security Forum on May 8, 2022. This fall, Dr. Snyder is making his lecture course on Ukraine at Yale University, The Making of Modern Ukraine, available to all interested. ... As stated in Yale University’s course catalog, the course represents a ‘study of Ukraine from the Cossack rebellions of 1648 to the democratic revolution of 2004. Topics include the decadence of the Polish-Lithuanian Republic, Russian and Austrian imperial rule, the collapse of traditional Jewish and Polish social life, the attraction of Russian culture, the emergence of a Ukrainian national movement, civil war, modernization, terror, the consequences of Nazi occupation (including genocide and ethnic cleansing), problems of democratic reform, and European integration since 1991′. In somber times of russian invasion into Ukrainian sovereignty, the course also underlines the uniqueness of Ukraine’s national identity. ...”

​Netflix Will End Its DVD Service, 5.2 Billion Discs Later

"Call up your Luddite loved ones and your nostalgic friends who still cherish physical media. After 25 years, Netflix is ending its DVD-by-mail business. Before it was upending the entertainment industry and ushering in the streaming era, Netflix was a company whose business model revolved around sending DVDs through the mail in easily recognizable red-and-white envelopes. At its peak, in 2010, roughly 20 million subscribed to the DVD service. But the practice has long felt anachronistic, and the company said on Tuesday that it will ship its final DVDs to customers on Sept. 29. How many customers? ...”

​Elevating the Underground: The ’70s NYC Loft Jazz Scene

"... That’s how [Wadada Leo} Smith describes the origins of the loft music scene that arose in 1970s New York City, a DIY network of literally homegrown venues created by and for musicians who transcended the conventions of jazz—even the term itself. ... Nevertheless, ‘loft jazz’ is the tag commonly attached to the movement that began in earnest when players turned their downtown NYC homes into performance spaces, mostly in Greenwich Village East and West; Soho; and the Lower East Side.In the pre-gentrification ‘70s, much of Manhattan’s southerly section was a textbook example of urban blight. But that’s what made it possible for musicians to occupy loft spaces on the cheap. ...”

​A $787.5 Million Settlement and Embarrassing Disclosures: The Costs of Airing a Lie

"In settling with Dominion Voting Systems, Fox News has avoided an excruciating, drawn-out trial in which its founding chief, Rupert Murdoch, its top managers and its biggest stars would have had to face hostile grilling on an embarrassing question: Why did they allow a virulent and defamatory conspiracy theory about the 2020 election to spread across the network when so many of them knew it to be false? But the $787.5 million settlement agreement — among the largest defamation settlements in history — and Fox’s courthouse statement recognizing that the court had found ‘certain claims about Dominion’ aired on its programming ‘to be false’ at the very least amount to a rare, high-profile acknowledgment of informational wrongdoing by a powerhouse in conservative media and America’s most popular cable network. ...”

A 1962 sign from the John Birch Society imploring people to impeach Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl Warren.