Tuesday, May 31, 2005
Chako in the hood
I'll take a Jack & Smiths!
fuckworth: but if you must know, i am drinking now.
kid d: Pleeease don't drink Jim Beam. But I approve of the Smiths anytime. I might now proceed to have some stout while listening to The Cure.
IS YOUR BLOG AS RADICAL AS YOUR SCOTCH? VICE VERSA?
Coyness is nice
Ask
by Morrissey/Johnny Marr
Shyness is nice, and
Shyness can stop you
From doing all the things in life
You'd like to
Shyness is nice, and
Shyness can stop you
From doing all the things in life
You'd like to
So, if there's something you'd like to try
If there's something you'd like to try
ASK ME - I WON'T SAY "NO" - HOW COULD I ?
Coyness is nice, and
Coyness can stop you
From saying all the things in
Life you'd like to
So, if there's something you'd like to try
If there's something you'd like to try
ASK ME - I WON'T SAY "NO" - HOW COULD I ?
Spending warm Summer days indoors
Writing frightening verse
To a buck-toothed girl in Luxembourg
ASK ME, ASK ME, ASK ME
ASK ME, ASK ME, ASK ME
Because if it's not Love
Then it's the Bomb, the Bomb, the Bomb
the Bomb, the Bomb, the Bomb, the Bomb
That will bring us together
Nature is a language - can't you read ?
Nature is a language - can't you read ?
SO ... ASK ME, ASK ME, ASK ME
ASK ME, ASK ME, ASK ME
Because if it's not Love
Then it's the Bomb, the Bomb, the Bomb
the Bomb, the Bomb, the Bomb, the Bomb
That will bring us together
If it's not Love
Then it's the Bomb
Then it's the Bomb
That will bring us together
SO ... ASK ME, ASK ME, ASK ME
ASK ME, ASK ME, ASK ME
Oh, la ...
Best JDIC?
IS YOUR POLITIK AS RADICAL AS YOUR PARK? VICE VERSA?
Monday, May 30, 2005
IS YOUR POLITIK AS RADICAL AS YOUR MUSIC? VICE VERSA?
MORE HER
HER
BAD DOESN'T WITHER
BRAD DOESN'T SUCK EITHER
DAVID DOESN'T SUCK
Saturday, May 28, 2005
RO'S LAW PUNK RAS!
JAROSLAW KAPUSCINSKI RAWKS!
YOU KNOW,LET'S GO FOR A MALT WHISKY
Friday, May 27, 2005
"neither/nor" (redux)
NEWS FLASH: Nick, the self-styled pom-pom entity of all things neither/nor, provides us with a tellingly "either/or" situation on his blog today. This reporter for one is glad to see Nick back in uniform and doing virtual reality backflips at the PoMo, de-powered, girly-girl pep rally that is his blog.
Here's a quick, post-pep rally, behind the scenes look in the cheergirls locker room for your eyes only:
Nick (head cheerperson, trying out a new cheer to pep up the girls): I said, A-W-E-S-O-M-E, oh, WOW!!! Blogging like totally FREAKS me out I said RIGHT ON! Nippon is #1!!! (kicks)
Risako (blogger, aspirant to the head cheerleader position): Kewl cheer, Nickie-poo! (does a split)
Nick (ogling her rear): Hey, thanks! (dangerously low low-five)
Yoko (lower down on the pecking order): Yatta! Hey, I'm hungy! Let's, like, go get some super tasty NOODLES or something! I recently read about this great place to get some ramen in Nakameguro on the webpage of this Canadian chick who's living in Tokyo.
Yuki (blogger and conscientious objector: on the team because she needs a P.E. credit to graduate Honors): Hey, did you guys hear that there was a referendum called "Same Work, Same Pay!" up this week that if passed, would raise the hourly-rate of pay for high-school kids working part time jobs at places like ramen shops and fast food stores in Tokyo to a rate that is equal to the rate that adults get paid?
Yoko: Huh?!?
Yuki: I mean, Yoko-chan, aren't you tired of don't the same work at your job at 7-11 as your adult co-workers, but getting paid on a different scale? We aren't old enough to vote, but there is a demo this weekend! Anybody up for going together with me?
Yoko (having trouble forming the words) V...o..t.e? What's that?
Nickie-poo (trying not to let this cat get too far out of her bag): That's just some icky BOY-stuff! Hey girls, did I hear someone say...noodles?!? (cheer-reflexes send fight-or-flight "spell a word together to promote group harmony" signal to brain) Gimmie an "R"! Gimmie an "A"!
Yuki (stopping the two mid-flying-kick): WAIT! Hold up, guys! You mean you are just going to try and cheer your way to a better future?
[very heavy silence]
Risako (senses trouble, panics, starts to spell again with renewed VIGOR) together with Nickie-wiki: Gimmie an "M", Gimmie an "E"! Gimmie an "N"!
Yuki: I think I'm gonna puke...
Nickie-poo, Risako and Yoko (together): What does that spell?
Yuki: That spells "MEN"...and I think this team could use some right about now...(sends an email to her friends David and R.)
Nickums (faux swoon): Ohhh...
Here's a quick, post-pep rally, behind the scenes look in the cheergirls locker room for your eyes only:
Nick (head cheerperson, trying out a new cheer to pep up the girls): I said, A-W-E-S-O-M-E, oh, WOW!!! Blogging like totally FREAKS me out I said RIGHT ON! Nippon is #1!!! (kicks)
Risako (blogger, aspirant to the head cheerleader position): Kewl cheer, Nickie-poo! (does a split)
Nick (ogling her rear): Hey, thanks! (dangerously low low-five)
Yoko (lower down on the pecking order): Yatta! Hey, I'm hungy! Let's, like, go get some super tasty NOODLES or something! I recently read about this great place to get some ramen in Nakameguro on the webpage of this Canadian chick who's living in Tokyo.
Yuki (blogger and conscientious objector: on the team because she needs a P.E. credit to graduate Honors): Hey, did you guys hear that there was a referendum called "Same Work, Same Pay!" up this week that if passed, would raise the hourly-rate of pay for high-school kids working part time jobs at places like ramen shops and fast food stores in Tokyo to a rate that is equal to the rate that adults get paid?
Yoko: Huh?!?
Yuki: I mean, Yoko-chan, aren't you tired of don't the same work at your job at 7-11 as your adult co-workers, but getting paid on a different scale? We aren't old enough to vote, but there is a demo this weekend! Anybody up for going together with me?
Yoko (having trouble forming the words) V...o..t.e? What's that?
Nickie-poo (trying not to let this cat get too far out of her bag): That's just some icky BOY-stuff! Hey girls, did I hear someone say...noodles?!? (cheer-reflexes send fight-or-flight "spell a word together to promote group harmony" signal to brain) Gimmie an "R"! Gimmie an "A"!
Yuki (stopping the two mid-flying-kick): WAIT! Hold up, guys! You mean you are just going to try and cheer your way to a better future?
[very heavy silence]
Risako (senses trouble, panics, starts to spell again with renewed VIGOR) together with Nickie-wiki: Gimmie an "M", Gimmie an "E"! Gimmie an "N"!
Yuki: I think I'm gonna puke...
Nickie-poo, Risako and Yoko (together): What does that spell?
Yuki: That spells "MEN"...and I think this team could use some right about now...(sends an email to her friends David and R.)
Nickums (faux swoon): Ohhh...
Wednesday, May 25, 2005
What's in a name?
____,
So do I have to call you ____?
It seems a little strange...
Do you have another nickname?
Can I call you ____? Or is there some other, more fun name other than ____?
____ reminds me of too many things...
Like the name of a whore I used to know in New Orleans when I was playing drums for a strip show.
Best,
R.
So do I have to call you ____?
It seems a little strange...
Do you have another nickname?
Can I call you ____? Or is there some other, more fun name other than ____?
____ reminds me of too many things...
Like the name of a whore I used to know in New Orleans when I was playing drums for a strip show.
Best,
R.
Monday, May 23, 2005
new title
new title
"Fuckworth" on Bullworth (Hi, Nick!)
Senator Jay Billington Bulworth: All we need is a voluntary, free-spirited, open-ended program of procreative racial deconstruction. Everybody just gotta keep fuckin' everybody 'til they're all the same color.
--------------
Darnell: I say, you ain't no real nigger, IS you?
Senator Jay Billington Bulworth: [stoned] Is YOU a real nigger?
Darnell: You callin' me nigger, motherfucka? Don't call me a NIGGER, moth'fucka!
Senator Jay Billington Bulworth: Would you prefer "motherfucker," motherfucker?
--------------
Darnell: I say, you ain't no real nigger, IS you?
Senator Jay Billington Bulworth: [stoned] Is YOU a real nigger?
Darnell: You callin' me nigger, motherfucka? Don't call me a NIGGER, moth'fucka!
Senator Jay Billington Bulworth: Would you prefer "motherfucker," motherfucker?
There be somethin' bout 'doubles'
CUT TO:
EXT. DRIVING RANGE - DAY
Ted and his friend DOM are blasting a couple buckets.
DOM
Gay? He said you were gay?
TED
He implied it.
DOM
Well you're a writer, and a lot of
writers are gay. Look at Truman Capote.
TED
Yeah, but he was successful.
DOM
Let me ask you this: When you smoke a
cigar, do you ever pretend it has balls?
Ted appears to think about this.
TED
Come on, that wouldn't make me gay.
DOM
I'm going to fix you up with my new
assistant.
TED
What's he like?
Dom LAUGHS, then watches as Ted hits a ball.
DOM
You're leaving it out. Finish your swing.
(beat)
You're going to like this one--she's half
Asian, half American.
TED
Good-looking?
DOM
I just told you, she's half Asian. half
American. They're all good looking. You
could mate Don Rickles and Yoko Ono and
they're going to have a gorgeous kid. It's
a foolproof combo.
Ted thinks about it.
TED
What's the point? Let's face it, Dom, I'm
in a slump.
(SIGHS)
Lately I've been feeling like...well...like
a loser.
DOM
Loser? You?
Ted shrugs.
EXT. DRIVING RANGE - DAY
Ted and his friend DOM are blasting a couple buckets.
DOM
Gay? He said you were gay?
TED
He implied it.
DOM
Well you're a writer, and a lot of
writers are gay. Look at Truman Capote.
TED
Yeah, but he was successful.
DOM
Let me ask you this: When you smoke a
cigar, do you ever pretend it has balls?
Ted appears to think about this.
TED
Come on, that wouldn't make me gay.
DOM
I'm going to fix you up with my new
assistant.
TED
What's he like?
Dom LAUGHS, then watches as Ted hits a ball.
DOM
You're leaving it out. Finish your swing.
(beat)
You're going to like this one--she's half
Asian, half American.
TED
Good-looking?
DOM
I just told you, she's half Asian. half
American. They're all good looking. You
could mate Don Rickles and Yoko Ono and
they're going to have a gorgeous kid. It's
a foolproof combo.
Ted thinks about it.
TED
What's the point? Let's face it, Dom, I'm
in a slump.
(SIGHS)
Lately I've been feeling like...well...like
a loser.
DOM
Loser? You?
Ted shrugs.
GST: A definition
Glitchslaptko: Proving that in at least one man's case, trash of the white variety is recyclable.
Saturday, May 21, 2005
TASTE A LA JAPAN
TASTE A LA L.A.
Friday, May 20, 2005
TOOTHPASTE A LA OLAMM
More New BooK
The Paul Virilio Reader (From Columbia University Press...PROPS!!!)
Comment: Thank God for MixMaster Paul V.! Without his ideas, I'd have no ethical basis for my new installation project that I'm working on now!
Thursday, May 19, 2005
They say it's your birthday...
...well Happy Birthday to ya, DIGIKI!
Rods from God
Pubic hair?
Ha! The term doesn't do justice to what that girl had under the hood. She was Mario Andretti, her razor was a gear-shift. All it took was a few quick, well-rehearsed motions executed daily, and she was sporting fresh...racing stripes. And that's how it was in bed --VROOMMM!!!-- just like fucking an F-1, smell of burnt rubber, skid marks and all.
Tuesday, May 17, 2005
http://www.tshirthell.com/
I tune into the radio, I dial into the video. Everybody's bragging, I'm the shit. I'm the shit. But I'm the best, so fuck the rest fuck their mamas.
Fools think that they can see me. They gots a better chance at peepin' a Houdini.
Fans gather at the places that I'm gonna be, like undercover with my lover at the Roxy.
Who wrote that beat? They gotta know who. Paparazzi's on my ass like super glue.
Put a fist up in your face that's what I'm 'bout ta do. Don't make me utilize my Bruce Lee Kung-Fu.
You thought you could be my homey. Write back home, as if ya know me.
Don't cha know ya jes a bitch-ass chump? You got yo mouth up on my ass while a squeeze a dump.
Cuz if ya workin' for the tabloid magazine, 'member when ya crowdin' round my black limousine
I ain't afraid to smack a bitch das fuckin wid my scene, so you can eat my protein. Eat on a saltine...cracker.
So what cha think ya gonna see while ya look? I'm world-wide qualified to deliver the hook!
Oh, baby...What cha think ya gonna see? Jive motha fucka why you lookin at me?
Because you look. You look to see. To see a celebrity, jes like on TV.
You wanna be me represent the W.D. Disagree? You can choke it on my wee-wee.
Cuz yo, yo! Rock star, gigolo. Wid the skillz to deliver underground oratorio.
Cuz I'm the dynamo, everybody wanna know, come wid tha guarantee, hit you with the K.O.
You thought you could be my homey. Write back home, as if ya know me. Don't cha know ya jes a bitch-ass chump? You got yo mouth up on my ass while a squeeze a dump. Cuz if ya workin' for the tabloid magazine, 'member when ya crowdin' round my black limousine
I ain't afraid to smack a bitch das fuckin wid my scene, so you can eat my protein. Eat on a saltine...cracker.
So what cha think ya gonna see while ya look? I'm world-wide qualified to deliver the hook!
Oh, baby...What cha think ya gonna see? Jive motha fucka why you lookin at me?
Monday, May 16, 2005
DUB TYPE
HICK-UP
NYC
For Mississippi
Friday, May 13, 2005
On the planet Dread it rains dub
When I was about 12 years old, and living in Sasser, Georgia (Pop. 378, near Albany the first city in the South to actually arrest Martin Luther King Jr, also known as the "Good Life City") I signed up for a bike-a-thon with my best friend Ronnie Coxwell. His folks were farmers and his big brother was a trucker. He had a really big nose and listened to Krokus and shit like that. His mother was a total bitch, but that's another story. Oh, people made fun of his nose, and that caused him to develop a complex about it. He had a black electric guitar. By the time he was 17, he had saved up enough money to buy a green 66 Mustang. I didn't think it was going to make him any more popular, but it actually did. As fast as that car was, it wasn't fast enough for him to be able to escape from his life there. I don't know where he is now.
When we were 12, and we didn't know what being popular was so we rode bicycles instead. We rode them everywhere. On the highway, competing with tractors and 18-wheelers (we'd always make this chain pulling motion in the air and get them to honk blast their horns) and speeding teenagers listening to Bon Jovi in pick-up trucks with crushed Pabst Blue Ribbon cans in the back.
Old people in Sasser drove so slow it was like they would get there faster in reverse. They also stopped right in the middle of the rode if they happened to pass someone they knew, and strike up a conversation. Imagine, two people in head-to-toe denium sitting in trucks idling in both lanes of the highway, talking about things like...the weather. The guys in the 18-wheelers knew about this and always took circuitous routs in order to avoid that town.
If you don't know what a bike-a-thon is, don't worry, we didn't either at the time. All I can say now is that this was probably the bright idea of someone church mother. Basically, a bunch of lower/middle-class kids (upper-class kids don't have to bike usually since their parents donate money directly) go around and get 'pledges' of a fixed rate per mile (not kilometer, it was America, remember?) from their friends, family, and total strangers, and then see how long they can ride their bikes in the name of some good cause, and then go around and collect the cash afterwards, donating it to the NPO for some 'big' prize. Now that I think about it, I recall we were biking for Muscular Dystrophy...it would have been better to bike for some other cause like Widespread Illiteracy or something, but that would have taken some real vision
Anyway, I went around for a few weeks before the race and got a bunch of pledges. Most people pledged like, 50cents per mile or something like that. The biggest one was from my grandmother, named Annie Ophelia Browder, who was working at a convenience store in Mobile, Alabama called Starvin' Marvin' (so she MUST have been loaded) and with it, I knew that I was going to be the pledge winner, entitling me to the grand prize of a 10 Schwinn 10 speed bike...so that I could ride in future bike-a-thons? At the time, this thought didn't occur to me. Later, I would be haunted by it. Oh, my grandmother used to let me eat all the Moon Pies I could eat when I visited her in Alabama. That was pretty cool.
Well the big day came. My mom (god bless her) drove me, fueled on a Moon Pies from a binge made possible by a recent care backage from Mobile, out to the closed-down industrial complex (I'm sure the employment rate was terrible) that we'd be using as our track. I saw my friend Ronnie there with his BMX bike and his rat-tail. His blue jeans shorts were so short he looked like nothing but legs. We quickly checked out each other's 'donation sheets' to see what the moneymaking potential of our 'competiton' was. I think we both really wanted that Schwinn. Anyway, it looked like he and I weren't doing all THAT great in the pledge department, (in Sasser, the primary agricultural products were soybeans and homophobia), but we DID manage to trick a few of our closest family into pledging pretty high sums. Of course, a few of the dozen or so kids there were from upper-class families, with larger per-pledge sums, but we knew that we could bike circles around them. We were planning to beat them with the sweat of our brows...how very proletarian of us!
To make a long story short, my friend Ronnie Coxwell and I did indeed ride the FUCK out of our bikes that day. We had made inspirational mix tapes the night before together, so we were ready to win! Side A was my favorite picks, side B was his. The race, that began at sunrise. At sunset, we were still riding...the only two kids left on the track in fact. The presiding officials actually wound up making us quit. We had ridden 120 miles. We with our perpetual sugar highs, were naturally ready for more. We had guzzled tons of the free Dr. Pepper and Mountian Dew they were giving away. Oh, we had taken off our shirts to ride for some reason. My mom coated me with Coppertone sunscreen. Ronnie's mom didn't come to the race. After we finished the race, that poor boy's upper body looked like something you'd order at Red Lobster. That was the only time I saw him without a farmer's tan, actually.
The reason I didn't go home the winner that day proudly riding that Schwinn, is that my grandmother (god bless her) stiffed me on her pledge. That right, she refused to pay the original sum that she had promised. Now that I think about it, I can't really blame her, 10 dollars per miles X 120 miles would have set my granny back more than a grand! I think the rate we settled on was 5 bucks per mile, but that put me in second place behind Ronnie. MAN I really wanted to ride home on that Schwinn.
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Well of course, if you sacrifice your body the way I did that day and still come in second, I guess you qualify for some kind of conciliation prize. I was allowed to pick ONE (1) album from a pile of records donated from local record shops (I think cassette was the dominant media form in those days) from around town. Of course there were two things I didn't think about: first, I didn't have a record player, and second, if these were donated, they must either really suck or be so unpopular that no one wanted to buy them. Thank goodness I didn't know any better! I just picked the one with the coolest cover, which turned out to be Steel Pulse's 'Earth Crisis'.
No, of COURSE I didn't have any idea what I was picking...I didn't even know there were any musical genre outside of contry music and heavy metal. I DID sense that it probably wouldn't be a good idea to show this album's cover to my father, who, last time I checked, still had little ceramic front yard 'nigger statues' with fishing poles and watermellons sitting on the dock near the lake. (What I was later to do in my rage to one of them is a story I'll save for another day.)
Anyway, I wrote this post a few days ago, but didn't get a chance to post it up until today. In the meantime, my pal Chris calls me up out of the blue ysterday and he and I go biking and hit some reggae/dub record stores in Nishi-Shinjuku. His bike (see picture) MAY very well be the coolest bike in Tokyo. Of course my bike is the second coolest! Anyway, of course they had some Steel Pulse there. What a blast from the past. Thanks for a good time, Chris!
STEPPIN OUT
CHORUS
Stepping out, stepping out
Stepping out, stepping out
Open says a me
Here comes Rasta Man
Abracadabra me seh
Catch me if you can
I know
You'll find it hard to believe that
I am
The genie of your lamp
I can
Do anything you wish but
Right now
I am commanding you to dance
CHORUS
Stepping out, stepping out
Stepping out, stepping out
Invisible music
Beam me up to the cradle of sound
(Riddle me this)
You cannot see it
Nowhere on earth
Can this reggae be found
I know
You'll find it hard to believe that
I am
The genie of your lamp
I can
Do anything you wish but
Right now
I am commanding you to dance
Rain Dub Rain Dub Rain Dub
BRIMSTONE HURRICANE CYCLONE
Ask me this I tell you why
I know
You'll find it hard to believe that
I am
The genie of your lamp
I can
Do anything you wish but
Right now
I am commanding you to dance
CHORUS
Stepping out stepping out
Stepping out stepping out
Journey through the tunnel of loce
Wisdom is respected hatred is rejected
On the planet Dread it rains dub
Climb Alladin's ladder hotter reggae hot
Open says a me
Here comes Rasta Man
Open says a me
Here comes Rasta Man
Catch me if you can, hey!
Steppin out, say's I'm steppin out
I know I am I can right now I'm steppin
Highest heights and hottest hot
Rasta this and Dreadlocks that
On the move I just can't stop
I'm in the groove and I just can't stop
Cause I'm in love with JAH music
Invisible music
PUNCHING
SHOPPING
SHOPPING 2
She's the refugee
Woah, woah...
She's the refugee
I see your face
I see you staring back at me
Woah, woah...
She's the refugee
Her mama say one day she's gonna
Live in America
She's the refugee
I see your face
I see you staring back at me
Woah, woah...
She's the refugee
Her mama say one day she's gonna
Live in America
Wednesday, May 11, 2005
Hot shit?
Tuesday, May 10, 2005
More more new books
The Umbrella of U.S. Power (The Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Contradictions of U.S. Policy) - Chomsky
Postcolonialism A Very Short Introduction - Robert J.C. Young
Regarding the Pain of Others - Susan Sontag
Postcolonialism A Very Short Introduction - Robert J.C. Young
Regarding the Pain of Others - Susan Sontag
lubber razorhand
lubber razorhand
Monday, May 9, 2005
Dead letter office
I' still waiting for Nick's reply to my comment on a recent post of his over on CO: Who says you CAN'T vote with your feet (by being an expatriate) and still vote in the actual elections in your home country?
Are Tokyo design cafes really going the way of the dodo?
We all know the recent casualties: Babe cafe, Meguro Office, Idee Workstation. Now today, while biking from Meguro to Shinjuku (I've got it down to under 30 min.) I noticed that 3rd Planet (in Shibuya under the Toyoko line tracks) is totally barren on the inside...no furniture, no nothing! There were some signs posted on the window, but I zipped by to fast to give them a read. Hopefully this is related to the work that appears to be going on on the train tracks nearby. I'd hate to lose THIS oasis too!
More New Books
Power and Terror - Noam Chomsky
On War - Karl von Clausewitz
The No-Nonsense Guide to the Arms Trade - Gideon Burrows
On War - Karl von Clausewitz
The No-Nonsense Guide to the Arms Trade - Gideon Burrows
New Books
Colossus - Niall Ferguson
The Penguin History of the 20th Century - J.M. Roberts
Occidentalism (The West in the Eyes of Its Enemies) - Ian Buruma & Avishai Margalit
The Penguin History of the 20th Century - J.M. Roberts
Occidentalism (The West in the Eyes of Its Enemies) - Ian Buruma & Avishai Margalit