"Undermining my electoral viability since 2001."

Hip Hop From The Underground

One of the things about underground/indie music is it tends to be local, meaning if you don't live in the locale you miss out on the good stuff. I was out at UP the other weekend up on a mountain high and getting the hipster claustrophobia fear -- the steamroller of gentrification... every place has a bouncer now... girls getting younger and less pretty every year... -- and the skinny-ass white kid with the stringy Alan Ginsburg beard on the decks dropped this track:

Aceyalone, The Faces

And it makes everything ok, a little too ok actually. Sexy even. I go over and ask him who it is, trying to maintain some edge, some pride, some credi-fucking-bility in this now-thrumming sharklike scene. "A.C.L.O" I hear, and it sticks, even though it's wrong, so I ask google and plus in some lyrics that stuck too ("lemme holla at ya face to face") and in three or four clicks I get around to A Book Of Human Language, an apparently seminal track from 1998. Up there with Dr. Octogon and Deltron3030, now out of print. Took me somewhat longer to score the track I heard off the peer to peer scene.

But I believe it must be that good of an album. There was some very very good shit coming out regional at that time. Outkast, the Wu Tang, Del, etc. Give that mp3 a listen and see if it doesn't tickle your lower back a bit.

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Yes, Photoshopping Howard Dean In Front Of A Swastika Is JUST LIKE Charlie Chaplin!

Apropops my previous post, on the down-side the internet's empowering publishing ability lets idiots run free. It's often less than pretty.

FWIW I don't think it's a great idea for anyone (left or right) to try and liken their political opponents to Adolph. It's tasteless. Goodwin's law, and all that, you know? But whatever, it happens.

However, the author makes a defensive attempt to point out Charlie Chaplin's work in that vein -- The Greatest Dictator -- saying "it's just a joke" like that but this only makes things worse. This unchecked aggression on the meaning of clowning cannot stand. I'm fully willing the believe she thought what she was doing is funny (which you can judge however you like), but the Chaplin comparison is insulting to anyone who's actually tried to do comedy, not to mention patently illogical.

Let's break it down. Charlie Chaplin was a comic genius (hint: you're not), who dressed himself in the likeness of Hitler (hint: you photoshopped Howard Dean, not yourself) and made a fairly relavant point about international politics (hint: your work is at best a blaring
non-sequitor... it's not even on-topic for your post). Also, quoth imdb Charles Chaplin said that had he known the true extent of Nazi atrocities, he "could not have made fun of their homicidal insanity".

So don't compare yourself to Chaplin, lady. It's embarassing for all of us.

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Internet Feels Empowering

New study shows people feel politically empowered through the use of the internet. A little acadmic vindication for me and my types, though I feel compelled to point out that there's a bit of an important distinction between "feel politically empowered" and "have increased their political power."

I think we'll get there, but to be frank we've still got a ways to go on that front.

The study also has some interesting stuff inside. Net use is about to top 80% in the US, with 2/3 of all citizens having access in the home. The fastest-growing demographic in terms of access is those earning below $30k. Close to 50% of all users are on broadband, and the net is more valued than television, meaning, if you had to dump your internet or your TV, which would you prefer... people would kill their televisions before they'd kill their internet.

Also interesting, people who visit certain websites frequently have an 80% degree of confidence in the information they get there. Considering that confidence levels in traditional media, political parties, government and even the M-F church fall well below 80%, I think there's something going on here.

Ironically, the full report costs $500 (or $1500 if you're corporate), but you can get the highlights, which is where I culled all of the above, as a PDF.

This information aught to be free.

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Internet Feels Empowering

New study shows people feel politically empowered through the use of the internet. A little acadmic vindication for me and my types, though I feel compelled to point out that there's a bit of an important distinction between "feel politically empowered" and "have increased their political power."

I think we'll get there, but to be frank we've still got a ways to go on that front.

The study also has some interesting stuff inside. Net use is about to top 80% in the US, with 2/3 of all citizens having access in the home. The fastest-growing demographic in terms of access is those earning below $30k. Close to 50% of all users are on broadband, and the net is more valued than television, meaning, if you had to dump your internet or your TV, which would you prefer... people would kill their televisions before they'd kill their internet.

Also interesting, people who visit certain websites frequently have an 80% degree of confidence in the information they get there. Considering that confidence levels in traditional media, political parties, government and even the M-F church fall well below 80%, I think there's something going on here.

Ironically, the full report costs $500 (or $1500 if you're corporate), but you can get the highlights, which is where I culled all of the above, as a PDF.

This information aught to be free.

Read More