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June 29, 2007

The Journey of Mankind

This cool website by the Bradshaw Foundation details the "peopling of the world", showing mankind's migrations around the world over the past 160,000 years. Fascinating.

Posted by Hamish at 10:31 AM | Comments (0)

June 28, 2007

Rolling Stone declares the music industry dead by its own hand.

Amazing. I might actually start reading Rolling Stone again if they keep this up.

Posted by Hamish at 09:47 AM | Comments (0)

June 27, 2007

Awesome pics of Mexico City...

Here's a really cool collection of photos from modern Mexico City.

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On a sad note, I just read that one of Canada's acting greats, William Hutt, died today at the age of 87. He only retired from the stage last year! He was without a doubt of the reasons I enjoy going to the Stratford Festival. His deep, sonorous voice will definitely be missed. Adieu!

Posted by Hamish at 11:28 AM | Comments (0)

June 25, 2007

Wow!

A 9.9 gigapixel image of La Gloria di Sant'Ignazio, in Sant'Ignazio di Loyola's church, Rome.

Posted by Hamish at 03:20 PM | Comments (0)

June 20, 2007

Not a good day for New Brunswick's reputation.

N.B. Yearbook pays tribute to 'liturature' This is how graduates get to prom in New Brunswick.

Posted by Hamish at 11:08 AM

June 14, 2007

The Comic Book Ad Submarine revealed!

One of the things I love about reading Boing Boing is knowing that I have a sympatico with the writers, who are all within my age group and shared the same experience of media as I did growing up. A good example of this is comic books - we all remember them and in particular, the ads they contained, enticing us to buy cases of plastic soldiers or hiring us to flog seeds or GRIT magazine door to door, or buy novelties and jokes. One of my favourites was the Polaris submarine. For $6.98 you were promised a kid-size submarine that had torpedos and a conning tower, etc. I never went for it but I always wondered. Someone on flickr has finally cracked the code on this one. The first post on BB details a flickrstream of comic book ads from the 1970's. And then today, responding to a plea for a photograph of the genuine. article, a $6.98 Polaris submarine, was answered with a square foto. complete with kid inside no doubt experiencing fits of imagination. Of course, it's cardboard. But check it out! For seven bucks that's a lot of cardboard! Having small children, I know how much fun a cardboard box can be. But a cardboard box in the shape of a submarine? Maybe it wasn't such a rip-off after all!

Submariner.jpg

Yesterday Today

Posted by Hamish at 09:51 AM | Comments (0)

June 13, 2007

Helen Bannerman's oft-maligned children's story,

Helen Bannerman's oft-maligned children's story, Little Black Sambo, has found a place on the web. This is the edition I read as a child - the imagery brings back waves of memory for me. More than a bit politically incorrect but the story itself (while fanciful) isn't racist and has been retold a thousand ways since its first publication.

Samuel Jackson is everywhere, according to Worth1000.com.

Posted by Hamish at 08:55 AM | Comments (0)

June 12, 2007

Following the maps theme...

Strange Maps is a great site if you're a geography nut. Today's map (#131) is the US States Renamed for Countries with Similar GDPs. Texas = Canada.

Footage of Bush greeting (most likely paid) wellwishers in Albania. Notice how at least one of the wellwishers probably wasn't paid enough.

Posted by Hamish at 10:30 AM | Comments (0)

June 11, 2007

America, seen through Japanese Beer Bottle Glasses

yukihime says: "In a pique of boredom this evening I scanned in and annotated the map that comes with Tengai Makyou: Daishi no Mokushiroku (The 4th Apocalypse). This is a Saturn RPG famed for its historical parody humor; the first three games take place in Japan, but the fourth is set in America.

This map is basically what would happen if you got a bunch of Japanese guys in a room, got them drunk, and then asked them to draw what they could remember about America on a bar napkin. Hell, that's probably how this game was originally designed. Anyhow, I feel the map speaks for itself.
"

(Via Yukihime.)

Posted by Hamish at 12:08 PM | Comments (0)

June 08, 2007

Guess it's their word verus ours.

Ars Technica has a walking tour (with photos) of the Creation Museum in Kentucky. Amazing.

Photographer Camilo Jose Vergara photographed the same buildings over a period of 20 years to record the effects of urban decay. Full website here.

Posted by Hamish at 11:00 AM | Comments (0)

June 07, 2007

Cat-Cam

Dude attaches micro camera to the collar of his cat. A day in the life of a cat captured on film. Genius!

Posted by Hamish at 02:09 PM | Comments (0)

June 06, 2007

Amazing in Colour

A wicked awesome collection of colour photos from the 1930's and 40's.

Some more highlights here.

Posted by Hamish at 12:57 PM | Comments (0)

June 04, 2007

Painful Irony Award of the Year goes to...

San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury neighbourhood, once the home of the Grateful Dead and the nexus of the flower child movement in the 1960's and 70's, is still home to many former hippies. But they're none too pleased about the recent influx of a new generation of do-nothing punks to their streets and alleys.

http://www.napavalleyregister.com/articles/2007/06/04/news/state/iq_3975684.txt

Time sours the Haight's love-in
By JOHN M. GLIONNA, Los Angeles Times
Monday, June 04, 2007

SAN FRANCISCO -- From his second-floor apartment at the counterculture crossing of Haight and Ashbury streets, Arthur Evans watches a new generation of wayward youth invade his free-spirited neighborhood.

The former flower child was among the legions of idealistic wanderers who migrated here during the Vietnam War to "tune in, turn on and drop out."

But Evans, who has lived at the same address for 34 years, says he has never seen anything like this crowd, who use his flower bed as a bathroom and sell pot outside his window.

They're known as gutter punks, these homeless kids with dirty dreadlocks and nose rings, lime-green mohawks and orange spray-painted faces, who panhandle with cardboard signs that riff on their lifestyles. "Please Help Us Get Un-Sober," one reads. Another: "Please Give Us Weed, Beer or Money."

Sometimes aggressive, they block sidewalks as they strum guitars or bang on bongos. Gangs of them skateboard down the middle of Haight Street. Some throw used hypodermic needles into a nearby pond they call Hep-C Lake.

Evans, 64, says they should get help, clean up or go home.

"I used to be a hippie. I wore beads and grew my hair long," he said. "But my generation had something these kids do not: a standard of civilized behavior."

Panhandler Jonah Lawrence, 25, insists it is residents who need civilizing. "They say, 'Get a job!' " he said. "And I say, 'You got clothes for me? Or a place I can take a shower so I can look for work?' It's so bogus to tell me to get a job if I have nothing."

In the 40 years since 1967's Summer of Love, Haight-Ashbury has remained a beacon for drifters, dreamers and dropouts. Most are drawn by the Haight's reputation as a safe place to hang out, experiment with drugs and search for life's direction.

They come expecting a warm welcome, but their presence has become increasingly divisive in the gentrifying neighborhood, where old-timers now rub shoulders with newcomers who are buying up the old Victorian houses for $2 million and more.

Empathetic residents say homeless kids deserve as much respect as those with roofs over their heads. "People suffer from compassion fatigue," said Pam Brennan, owner of the Haight-Ashbury Flower Power Walking Tour.

"If they're fatigued, they should go take a nap so others can work to help these kids."

But many ex-hippies-turned-homeowners are weary of the youthful intruders.

"I'm sick of stepping over gangs of kids, only to be told 'Die, yuppie!' A lot of us were flower children, but we grew up," said Robert Shadoian, 58, a retired family therapist. "There are responsibilities in this world you have to meet. You can't be drugged out 24/7 and expect the world to take care of you."

It was easier not to ask for help here in the 1960s, when communal crash pads rented for $40 a month. Back then, many young new arrivals were middle-class.

Today, young people who spend their days in the Haight spend their nights in Golden Gate Park. Many are blue-collar misfits fleeing broken homes, sexual abuse, parents with drug and alcohol problems. Some are addicted to hard drugs. Proud to live on society's fringes, they rely on a tribal closeness for survival, resisting contact with outsiders.

Sarah Thibault is a suburban outcast. She was raised in Colorado, where her father went to prison and her mother went on welfare when Sarah was 12.

The straight-A student began ditching school and doing drugs. One day, a boyfriend said, "Let's go to Haight-Ashbury."

"It sounded good. I was idealistic," she said. "I believed the '60s attitude, when people were intentionally kind to each other."

What she found when she arrived in 1999 was decidedly different. The only people who were kind to her were other homeless people.

For years, she bought and sold drugs, using so much heroin that her health began to fail.

She felt invisible. "When you're a kid on the street, people don't see you, they don't acknowledge you," she said. "The only connection you have is with other homeless kids. No matter how tired, hungry or lonely you are, people just pass you by."

Now 25, Thibault works at the Homeless Youth Alliance, a storefront outreach center that offers a no-questions-asked refuge from the streets.

Her approach to clients: play the role of a friend, not counselor. "We don't tell people to get a job," she said. "But we offer them tools to do it."

Barbara Libasci's home sits near a rock 'n' roll landmark: the house at 710 Ashbury St. where Jerry Garcia and the Grateful Dead once lived.

She has a front-row seat at a daily alternative music event she'd rather not attend. She often finds homeless kids sleeping on the lawn. They climb the picket fence to peer inside the front windows and pick flowers from the garden.

"They camp right in the driveway," said the retired nurse. "I have to tell them to move so the owners don't back out over them. They're degrading the property."

Recently, the stance against the homeless has hardened. Residents last year resurrected the Haight Ashbury Improvement Association to push the city to crack down on loitering. They have started a "court watch" program to monitor cases and push judges to sentence offenders to community service and order them into treatment.

Police have also cracked down.

Still, the Haight isn't just any neighborhood, and some say it needs to hold on to its legacy. One ex-hippie who returns frequently for its bohemian vibe said he makes a point to hand out cash to panhandlers.

"This used to be a place where kids could come to reinvent themselves, 'Like a rolling stone, like a complete unknown, no direction home,'" said actor Peter Coyote, a Marin County resident.

"Now the Haight is a grittier, less forgiving reality. But these are still our kids. You don't help them by deporting them. You do it right in your own neighborhood. If any place can do this, it's Haight-Ashbury."

Posted by Hamish at 12:30 PM | Comments (0)