Thursday, July 31, 2008

I had my doubts, but....

after hearing this, I'm convinced this thing will be just fine.





Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Charles Hamilton and tossing out some long overdue Datpiff hype

This dude's been bubbling on mixtape circuit for a year or so, people still claim his first one is better than the latest, but the production and basic song selection of the newest makes it sound more album, and less mixtape boasting exercise with the legendary DJ Green Lantern handling the business.....


definitely in the post-weezy school, but he does his own and does it well. if this fool gets some real beats behind him instead of recycle exercises he'll be fucking huge.

between the technically crafted, wittily gifted, and mostly non-cursing while being fun i'd be very surprised if this dude ain't the next big hype above lukewarm lupe and the like. just really fucking good, solid hip-hop that doesn't usually make the rounds. prone to some wannabe rockstar choruses here and there, but he'll figure it out.






latest can be downloaded here, with brooklyn girls being an obvious contender for a single had this been a real release, but one that's still a legit track among an entire albums worth of goodness.

the older one here, but honestly i don't even rock it after the new one came out.

as a warning, datpiff only let's you download 1 mixtape every 15 min unless you get a membership, so get the first first. also, explore. there's a lot of bullshit, but a million amazing tapes, often times with unreleased material that fills a whole albums worth that should have been released. and for those curious, but uninitiated, don't download anything that says "chopped and screwed". you won't be able to listen and enjoy regardless of what drink your sipping on.

Monday, July 28, 2008

Interview with Alexis Marshall (Daughters)

cuz i know how everyone likes the music part but hates the vocals with metal (rick) here is a good alternative with reasoning.

plus the album needs two thumbs up when you look back a year or so ago with the endless amounts of girl pants wearing "grind" acts. i know chunky and lee remember.

Daughters

Story by Andrew Parks

What we had here was a failure to communicate—presenting the rebirth of Daughters
You’ll have to excuse Alexis Marshall—he’s been drinking most of the afternoon and he isn’t about to censor himself. Decibel’s down for an actual honest interview, of course. And hell, we’ve been in Marshall’s position before, halfway between a six-pack and slitting our ears from cheek to cheek after one too many grindcore albums where more effort was put into naming the songs than actually writing them.

“We’re pretty sure people are upset we didn’t write another 12-song, 10-minute album with a bunch of blast beats and stupid song titles,” says Marshall, reacting to the predictable backlash to Hell Songs [Hydra Head] that’s already flooding the Jon Spencer Spazz Explosion’s MySpace page. “I hate going onstage, playing a song for 25 or 30 seconds, stopping, and then doing another one. It’s the same fucking song. You can’t tell the difference, you know?”

Amen. We’d be lying if we said we dug the mangled, best-appreciated-live mess that was Daughters’ last LP, Canada Songs [Robotic Empire]. As creepy and kooky as the riffs were, Marshall might as well have been screaming “Rarr, rarr/blargh, blargh” in the background. And though “I Don’t Give a Shit About Wood, I’m Not a Chemist” was a decent track title, a confession is in order… “I didn’t sing any words to 90 percent of Canada Songs, which is so lame,” explains Marshall. “I don’t even remember what the hell I wrote on that record anymore. It was such an easy way out, you know? Screaming is obnoxious. I’m tired of it.”

The surprise on Hell Songs isn’t a 180 degree switch to squeegee-ed singing; it’s much more bizarre—a bluesy, snaky and snarky droll that fits the halfway-house sex vibe of Daughters shows. Marshall actually begins the record by listing the misconceptions that have been cast in his direction, among them sinner, wrongdoer, evildoer, miscreant, the devil incarnated, and our personal favorite, “a good for nothing, ass-fucking son of a bitch.” All the while, the band retains a familiar Daughters backdrop of guillotine guitars and gut-smacking drums, with the exception of the compact noise experiment “Providence by Gaslight,” which climaxes in a cloudburst of violins, trumpet and upright basslines provided by members of Kayo Dot.

“There’s no way to half-ass listen to this record,” says Marshall. “When it’s heavy, it’s heavy, and when it’s weird it’s annoying as hell. Basically, I want to weed out all of the fuckheads who were here just to socialize and be seen. I could come out and say I love everyone, but that’s bullshit. I despise phonies—they’re all made of papier mâché and I hope they fucking die.”

Saturday, July 26, 2008

Hercules and Love Affair Live at the Casbah



I can only imagine that Antony of Antony and the Johnsons signed on to Hercules and Love Affair because of the underground notoriety it would provide for Hercules..., combined with the fact that the involvement wouldn't denigrate any party involved but provide more hype for either.

They don't need him. Period. Totally feel he signed on so they'd get the attention they deserved. End of story. I thank him for it, as i'd be un-awares otherwise.

The wittily named 'Horny Boys', two man horn section comprised of trumpet and trombone, applied properly in a live setting I've got a total weakness for as did everyone that likes that groove in their booty shaking.

Nomi, singing everything Antony sings and backup for Kim on the ones that he doesn't. I'm still not sure because of circumstance and demographic if Nomi is dude or not dude, no discernible adam's apple so even harder, but vocals amazing and possibly embarrassingly super hot, while kim holds her own vocally while looking like Telly from Kids.

With a band that on record is more disco focused with keyboard player, you never can be sure how it will come across, if it's for backup or what in the grand scheme, but shit was so solid. So solid.

Live band status on point. They covered Blue Oyster Cult's "Don't Fear the Reaper" and turned it into an unquestionable dance standard. Testament to greatness. Great track, but certainly not the kind to keep 600 party people jumping up and down, and they did it with ease.

Don't care the distance, if it's anywhere within a days drive, it's worth it I swear as a live show even outside of Chunky and I's fanboy status. It's perfect. Combine that with the at least 400 hot chicks that come on the arms of the 200 gay guys, it's a definite dance party with favorable ratios

As what i thought was a mostly electronic drum/keyboard record, can't say I've heard not only a re-creation, but a buildup on a foundation better than them. Even after Hot-Chip, after Rat-at-at, on and on, these fuckers killed it while everyone shaked it shaked it bay-bee.

Go the fuck and see them and if you aren't hip you're fucking blowing it for like months now. I'll spank you when i see you.


Friday, July 25, 2008

Four Mistakes That Killed the Record Industry

It turns out it wasn't the MP3. From Broken Record with Jeff Blake:

"It's expensive to develop an artist. It is common knowledge that for every 12 artists signed to a label, 10 lose money, 1 breaks even and 1 makes enough to pay for the development of all the others put together. It's a really risky business. But, the small independent labels didn't care because they wanted to discover the next Bob Dylan or Bruce Springsteen. They knew that one major success could make up for a string of costly failures.

Unfortunately, that equation doesn't work in the corporate environment. You have to justify your budget every year, every quarter. If the only way to do that was to release lowest common denominator music that would sell fast but fade just as quickly, you did it.

They even managed to forget how they got to this point in the first place somehow missing that what are now termed "heritage" artists like Springsteen, Tom Petty and others were what sustained them over the long haul, not The Backstreet Boys and Britney Spears. Those were bands and musicians developed over years and they didn't come cheap, but they made up for it in the long run."


You can read the whole article here.



Thursday, July 24, 2008

oh sweet jesus mother of aids.....



i'm totally buying a pair of fingerless gloves today....



I don't even know how i came across this. Pretty much manages to check right down the list every single aspect of pop music right now that i could possibly hate.

is it the unsexy sexuality? the confused attire? perhaps it's the bland catchiness? the kind where it's not catchy but it's repeated so much you accept it? vapid party fag mentality? ooooh, white boy non-rap that doesn't even attempt to get down? maybe the un-informed or wholly botched attempt to infuse with some elements of 80's electronic music? so much to pick apart here. with all the bases covered perhaps the genius' behind this shit even thought that i'd be entertained by being able to hate on it so much. those fucking manipulative bastards. to top it off akon is involved at least nominally, apparently farming this one out to the b-league ghost producers and recording himself into the background vocals.

bra-fucking-vo.

actually now that it's been playing on loop while i type all this, i'm kinda starting to dig it........

So it's a trilogy





Wednesday, July 23, 2008

LA Times weighs in on who, and why, batman will fight next

Who will batman fight next?



and if it's long the rest here.

Crazy Shit

* Unconscious determinants of free decisions in the human brain
Nature Neuroscience 13 April 2008

Whether or not one subscribes to the doctrine of free will, it is difficult to imagine that we're not responsible for most of life's little choices. We can accept the fact that we have unconscious yearnings and desires, upon which we act, without this ever impinging upon the idea that we are ultimately in conscious control of our actions. In the 1980s, however, Benjamin Libet performed an experiment that seemed to show that areas of the brain responsible for certain body movements activate before we are conscious of our decision to move. Researchers in Europe recently decided to test Libet's conclusion again. A group of 14 volunteers was asked to press either of two buttons, one with the left hand and one with the right, whenever they wanted, so long as they noted the time when they made their decision. Watching the patterns of activity in the volunteers' brains, researchers could predict which button the individuals would pick up to 10 seconds before they had consciously made their choice.


Nergasm- Battlestar Prequel!

Following is the trailer for the battlestar prequel series, caprica. I had no idea it was this far along; I thought they were still casting the fucker but it looks like's nearly finsihed.






thom and johnny do portishead

thom and johnny from radiohead do 'the rip' from the new portishead album. nice.


Find more videos like this on w.a.s.t.e. central


does anyone else get the feeling that these two are probably going to being playing together even if radiohead should break up?





Monday, July 21, 2008

Dark Knight





Now that everyones seen the film lets have a round table discussion. so if you still havent seen it stop reading now. ill start it off.


I think this is the best movie of the year so far. furthermore, the best superhero movie ever. If you thinking Iron man was better V, well your wrong. while iron man had humor, it did not have originality. That film was simply a well executed super hero story. the dark knight is trying for much more. achieving it and then some. i knew all the twist coming in Iron Man, but i enjoyed the journey. Dark knight i didn't know what would happen. some of the stuff i was sure was going to happen didnt. for example joker did not die, and the girl did die. wow. The whole movie gave me the feeling that anything could happen. how often does that happen.


Topics
Is the joker the best villain of all time?

Does Heath Ledger deserve an Oscar?

Will this film break all the records?

What's gonna happen in the sequel?

Is Christan Bale the best Batman?

Is Maggie Gyllenhaal Hot?

Christopher Nolan is set to make a movie version of The Prisoner next, will it be good?

Chime in on the ones you wanna talk about.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Varying personalities.

Having lived farther away from the comfort zone for most, noticed overtime varying degrees of interaction with internal struggle.....



I miss the basic comfort of feeling fully in the moment without acknowledging it, most recently Chunk's visit outside of the token freakouts on my part, but have recognized many more levels.

There's the person you think you are, not usually who you really are but a slightly lesser version of who you think you should be, if only so who you should be is a nearby attainable goal. Bullshit at best but we all love lying to ourselves.

There's the person you are with friend's, outside the constraints of constant self analyzing and bullshit you tell yourself, maybe truer in a sense because filters are off. I like this one best. Can't know who you are outside of the company you keep. I haven't kept company for a long time hence the push.

There's the overly polite person when amongst strangers that you don't feel obliged to infringe upon. The grandma you won't cuss around, the one you belittle brothers and cousins in front of so you look better in their eyes, when they don't give a shit and are gonna make you cornbread regardless with a smile.

The person who wants to be themself but is comprimising while you feel out the other parties involved with new friends you assume are future closer friends. When you throw out a few iffy topics in conversation testing waters, but generally stick to middle ground nonsense and how you like the cut of your jeans and where they could get a pair if they like the wash as much as you.

The person who doesn't give a fuck and wishes to cause a scene to make sure you are noticed for not being a part of what is going on. Usually the drunken loud fuck, but often turns into the more sinister quiet provacateur saying knowingly offensive things merely to get a rise and see how far things can be pushed before you start hanging out on the other side of the room.

There's the constant internal struggle to balance them all, usually to no avail. What's you're take on how all these fit together? I've recognized them in myself and i've been pretty oblivous in the past, so i know you mother fuckers have all played the roles.

i'm missing plenty. add on. i'm tickled.

chitty chat chat teehee.

southern rap redux

Recently, with a little help from lee, i tried to sell rick on listening to his local popular rap radio station. For those of you who haven't tried, i think rap radio is the last viable pop radio format; don't hate if you haven't given it a chance. After sifting trough shitty R&B tracks (the Journey of Rap Radio) and your SoldierBoy level shit (equal to maybe your three doors down or other bland dumbness) rap radio really delivers....in a market like ours (rural deep south) it's the only source of constant innovation and amusement, at least if your tuning in FM. Even the commercials deliver, as you might have seen from the pawn shop adverts posted previously.

So this track isn't really clever or orginal, but i heard it on 107.7 THE JAM all the time until i got my iPod juiced up again. anyway, enjoys or hate, at least you were entertained.





and if it's long the rest here.

Monday, July 14, 2008

Modern Guilt- Should Have Beck Let it Marinate?

Okay i've listened to Modern Guilt about 20 times already, which is really easy since it's only half a fucking hour long.

Wait.
Shut up.
I have no problem with the short form.

Tell me this sounds stupid, but i might feel much better about MG if it had 'EP' attached to the end. Wierd how that changes things. I would rate this as an excellent EP, but as an album it seems half-baked. And not just the length- the girth. You know what i'm saying.

So what is it about the EP that changes the rules?




get some brain in da HOV lane


Who doesn't love padding a story? In many ways propaganda and rap music are kindred spirits; both paint broad pictures without footnotes or any sort of a bibliography.

For those interested, here is brief history of American propaganda posters from from the first world on towards the present. The one at left was my personal favorite, both because of the sheer ridiculousness and b/c of it's renewed timeliness. I'm wondering though, is it possible or practical to wear a hat like that in a car with no roof? You'll notice that spectral Hitler left his hat at home. That or he's sitting on it.

Also, in the spirit of gas conservation, i thought I'd give a shout out to the late Pimp C, who often celebrated the helmet-buffing aspects of carpooling. Just check his verse from where da g's after da jump.



Sunday, July 13, 2008

Birthday Idea!


It's tough living down south. Come June or July the heat and humidity threaten the masculine charms of all men, danger crew or no. In the south not even night offers one relief from the sweaty malaise, this being especially cruel to those who wish to explore the more carnal aspects of there nature with the fairer sex as the evening presses on. We all know what I'm talking about here: ball sweat. Awful.

A few of you have already been privy to my stopgap solution- a liberal application of Johnson & Johnson's baby powder (add a little to your towel when drying off. heavenly.) But for those of us interested in taking it a step further (and unwilling to spray cologne on our testes), the good folks at Balla have found a solution. Balla Scented Scrotum Talc for Men comes in two varieties: original recipe and extra crispy.

This is a godsend, though I'm not really sure about the price. I guess that's why I'm hoping to receive it as a gift.



and if it's long the rest here.

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Guess who thinks he's burt motherfucking reynolds


Let's face it- rick is kind of an asshole, and no one really likes him. He must by now know this, because as you can see, he's decided to follow the manliest of pursuits and cultivate the facial exclamation point more commonly know as "the moustache."

What an asshat. Just look at his causal disregard for the photographer- that wave of the hand just screams "i'm in with the 'in' crowd. the sellecks, the reynolds, the goulets (r.i.p.), the jermeys, the brimleys." Faggot. Freddy Mercury had a mustache and now he's fucking dead.


I'm not sure what we should do about this, if anything at all. Maybe he's trying to hide a late-onset cleft pallet, but i think it has more to do with him watching smokey and the bandit on cable last week. Seems to me that in his mind he's a Depp, but to the rest of us he's just a dope.

a chunky t special request with some added history for fun



more special treats after jump


n'4 me, a host of kinda half ass downsouth instant classics i've got nuttin but love 4. hold down g's and trilla's f'pack's on the work chunk. chirp at me.

first up lil' wey wey pick

den Pastor Troy, Richmond County all star and originator of holla rap long before lil' jon punk ass as far as i care

suave house produced South Circle from way back. do your research.

chi-town's finest crucial conflict included second to last. i don't give a fuck, it sounds like pharcyde if they grew up in georgia.

peep on that last one hard. young bleed unsung hero's when No Limit was the shit, instead of shitty. My Balls and My Word is a near perfect album ya'll need to dangle from.

shine shine on.












Audio Addiction






Wednesday, July 9, 2008

sad day for america

http://www.under-tec.com/index.php

Love Sickness

I'd like to hear Rick's opinion on this article. Just cause he'll probably be wrong/right. And cause I'm drunk.



Our unhealthy obsession with sickness
Why is being ill now embraced as a positive part of the human experience?

by Frank Furedi

We live in a world where illnesses are on the increase. The distinguishing feature of the twenty-first century is that health has become a dominant issue, both in our personal lives and in public life. It has become a highly politicised issue, too, and an increasingly important site of government intervention and policymaking. With every year that passes, we seem to spend more and more time and resources thinking about health and sickness. I think there are four possible reasons for this.

First, there is the imperative of medicalisation. When the concept of medicalisation was first formulated, in the late 1960s and early 1970s, it referred to a far narrower range of phenomena than is the case today - and it was linked to the actions of a small number of professionals rather than having the all-pervasive character that it does now.

Essentially, the term medicalisation means that problems we encounter in everyday life are reinterpreted as medical ones. So problems that might traditionally have been defined as existential - that is, the problems of existence - have a medical label attached to them. Today, it is difficult to think of any kind of human experience that doesn't come with a health warning or some kind of medical explanation.

It is not only the experience of pain or distress or disappointment or engagement with adversity that is medicalised and seen as potentially traumatic and stress-inducing; even human characteristics are medicalised now. Consider shyness. It is quite normal to be shy; there are many circumstances where many of us feel shy and awkward. Yet shyness is now referred to as 'social phobia'. And, of course, when a medical label is attached to shyness, it is only a matter of time before a pharmaceutical company comes up with a 'shyness pill'. Pop these pills, and you too can become the life and soul of the party!

One of my hobbies is to read press releases informing us of the existence of a new illness, the 'illness of the week', if you like. Recently I received one that said: 'Psychologists say that love sickness is a genuine disease and needs more awareness and diagnoses. Those little actions that are normally seen as the symptoms of the first flush of love - buying presents, waiting by the phone, or making an effort before a date - may actually be signs of a deep-rooted problem to come. Many people who suffer from love sickness cannot cope with the intensity of love and have been destabilised by falling in love or suffer on account of their love being unrequited….'

Of course, an intense passion can and does have an impact upon our bodies. But when even love can be seen as the harbinger of illness, what aspect of our lives can be said to be illness-free? What can we possibly do that will not apparently induce some sickness or syndrome? Medicalisation no longer knows any limits. It is so intrusive that it can impact on virtually any of our experiences, creating a situation where illness is increasingly perceived as normal.

This leads to my second point - there is now a presupposition that illness is as normal as health. Earlier theories of medicalisation still considered illness to be the exception; now, being ill is seen as a normal state, possibly even more normal than being healthy. We are all now seen as being potentially ill; that is the default state we live in today.

This can be glimpsed in the increasing use of the term 'wellness', with well men's clinics and well women's clinics. 'Wellness', another relatively recent concept, is a peculiar term. It presupposes that being well is not a natural or normal state. After all, there are no such things as 'sunshine clinics' or 'evening clincs'; such normal things do not normally need an institution attached to them. And why would you have to visit a wellness clinic if you were well, anyway? It makes little sense.

As we normalise illness, our identity becomes inextricably linked to being ill
Wellness has become something you have to work on, something to aspire to and achieve. This reinforces the presupposition that not being well - or being ill - is the normal state. That is what our culture says to us now: you are not okay, you are not fine; you are potentially ill. The message seems to be that if you do not subscribe to this project of keeping well, you will revert to being ill.

In supermarkets, especially in middle-class neighbourhoods, buying food has become like conducting a scientific experiment. Individuals spend hours looking at how many carbohydrates there are, whether it's organic, natural, holistic. Spending time reading labels is one way of doing your bit to keep well.

Being potentially ill is now so prevalent that we have reached a situation where illness becomes a part of our identity, part of the human condition.

Some of us might not flaunt it, walking around saying, 'I've got a gum disease' or 'I've got a bad case of athlete's foot'. That doesn't sound very sexy, and is unlikely to go down well at the dinner table. But it has become acceptable to talk openly about other illnesses - to declare that you are a cancer survivor, or to flaunt a disability. As we normalise illness, our identity becomes inextricably linked to illness. So it is normal to be ill, and to be ill is normal.

The nature of illness changes when it becomes part of our identity. When we invest so much emotion in an illness, when it becomes such a large aspect of our lives through the illness metaphor, we start to embrace it - and it can be very difficult to let go of that part of our identity. This is why illness tends to become more durable and last longer. Sickness is no longer a temporary episode: it is something that, increasingly, afflicts one for life. You are scarred for life, with an indelible stamp on your personality. This can be seen in the idea of being a cancer survivor or some other kind of survivor; we are always, it seems, in remission. The illness remains part of us, and shapes our personality.

As this happens, illnesses start to acquire features that are no longer negative. In the past, illness was seen as a bad thing. Today you can read illness diaries in the Guardian and other newspapers and magazines. We often hear the phrase: 'I've learned so much about myself through my illness.' It becomes a pedagogic experience: 'I may have lost a leg and half my brain cells, but I'm learning so much from this extremely unique experience.' It's almost like going to university, something positive, to be embraced, with hundreds of books telling us how to make the most of the experience of sickness.

We are not simply making a virtue out of a necessity; rather we are consciously valuing illness. From a theoretical standpoint, we might view illness as the first order concept, and wellness as the second order concept. Wellness is subordinate, methodologically, to the state of being ill.

The third influence is today's cultural script, the cultural narrative that impacts on our lives, which increasingly uses health to make sense of the human experience. The more uncertainty we face, the more difficult we find it to make statements of moral purpose, the more ambiguous we feel about what is right and wrong, then the more comfortable we feel using the language of health to make sense of our lives. At a time of moral and existential uncertainty, health has become an important idiom through which to provide guidance to individuals.

A fat person today is considered to have a moral problem, rather than simply a health one
This is now so prevalent that we no longer even notice when we are doing it. For example, we no longer tell teenagers that pre-marital sex is good or bad or sinful. Instead we say that pre-marital sex is a health risk. Sex education programmes teach that you will be emotionally traumatised if pressured into having sex and will be generally healthier if you stay at home and watch TV instead.

There are few clear moral guidelines that can direct our behaviour today; but we have become very good at using health to regulate people's lives in an intrusive and systematic fashion.

Even medicine and food have acquired moral connotations. So some drugs are said to be bad for the environment, while others, especially those made with a natural herb, are seen as being morally superior. Organic food is seen as 'good', not only in nutritional terms, but in moral terms. Junk food, on the other hand, is seen as evil.

If you look at the language that is used to discuss health and medicine, or obese people and their body shapes, it isn't just about health: we are making moral statements. A fat person is considered to have a serious moral problem, rather than simply a health one. As we become morally illiterate, we turn to health to save us from circumstances where we face a degree of moral or spiritual disorientation.

The fourth influence is the politicisation of health. Health has become a focus of incessant political activity. Politicians who have little by way of beliefs or passions, and don't know what to say to the public, are guaranteed a response if they say something health-related. Some also make a lot of money from the health issue, from pharmaceutical companies to alternative health shops to individual quacks selling their wares - all are in the business, essentially, of living of today's health-obsessed cultural sentiment.

Governments today do two things that I object to in particular. First they encourage introspection, telling us that unless men examine their testicles, unless we keep a check on our cholesterol level, then we are not being responsible citizens. You are letting down yourself, your wife, your kids, everybody. We are encouraged continually to worry about our health. As a consequence, public health initiatives have become, as far as I can tell, a threat to public health. Secondly, governments promote the value of health seeking. We are meant always to be seeking health for this or that condition. The primary effect of this, I believe, is to make us all feel more ill.

Here's a prediction - Western societies are not going to overcome the crisis of healthcare; it is beyond the realms of possibility. No matter what policies government pursue, or how much money they throw at the problem, even if they increase health expenditure fourfold, the problem will not go away. As long as the normalisation of illness remains culturally affirmed, more and more of us are likely to identify ourselves as sick, and will identify ourselves as sick for a growing period of time. The solution to this problem lies not in the area of policymaking, or even medicine, but in the cultural sphere.

Frank Furedi is professor of sociology at the University of Kent, and author of Where Have All the Intellectuals Gone?: Confronting Twenty-First Century Philistinism (buy this book from Amazon (UK) or Amazon (USA)). This is an edited version of a speech he gave at Health: An Unhealthy Obsession, a conference hosted by the Institute of Ideas in London on 12 February 2005. Visit his website here.

For Chunky's Eyes Only.....

Crystal Castles as on hipsterrunoff.com





Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Holy Shit

http://movies.yahoo.com/mv/news/fs/20080708/121556400300.html

Sacha Baron Cohen as Sherlock Holmes and Will Ferrell as Dr. Watson.



and if it's long the rest here.

Monday, July 7, 2008

found this website

http://blogg.svt.se/psl/categories/video/musik-med/


i am not exactly sure what it is all about since it is not written in english but it has some really great music videos on it

the black ghosts "some way through this"

Some Way Through This - The Black Ghosts



Friday, July 4, 2008

Stunnin is a habit

My fascination/fetishization of southern rap is ongoing. chris and i had this idea for chorus only rap. to me it'd be something like the dirty south version of burial. in the meantime, ask yourself this question: have you ever seen a chevy with the butterfly doors?






Wednesday, July 2, 2008