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30 Dec 16:44

London Underground Map Tin in the Doctor Who Christmas Special,...



London Underground Map Tin in the Doctor Who Christmas Special, “The Snowmen”

It’s not very often I get to combine two of my absolute favourite things in one post: Doctor Who and transit maps! Without giving too much away (spoilers, sweetie!), the tin is presented in-story as being from 1967, and it looks like the BBC props department did a pretty decent job. The map shown on the tin is indeed Paul Garbutt’s 1964 map, which can be differentiated from the very similar 1970 map – even on-screen like this – because of the enlarged “U” and “D” in the “UNDERGROUND” roundel. By 1970, all letters in the logo were the same height.

There is actually a very clever point to the exact dating of the tin to 1967, but again… spoilers!

28 Dec 23:47

Review: Django Unchained

by Chris Laverty


Starring: Jamie Foxx, Christoph Waltz, Leonardo DiCaprio
Directed By: Quentin Tarantino

MILD SPOILERS

A Quentin Tarantino movie cannot be summed up by genre. It transcends, using in this case ‘the Western’ to unfold a cruel, but humorous tale of robust men and women defined by the myth of the Old West. Case in point: Django Unchained is actually set in the Deep South. Each character we encounter is playing a role; constructing a persona comprised of violent gambits and double-talk. Sharen Davis’ costume design quietly reveals their intentions so we know these individuals before they know themselves.

Slave Django (Jamie Foxx) may be unchained in the first scene, but he does not become Django the man until the last. He is initiated as a killer by bounty hunter Dr. King Schultz (Christoph Waltz), a slight man in expensive clothes; tweed, an Inverness (actually cotton), even a chinchilla coat (faux), who used to practise dentistry before he turned to the gun. In one of the film’s most amusing moments, after giving Django freedom Schultz offers to buy him a new suit – whatever he chooses. Django selects a blue two piece with lace cravat and knickerbockers, because after years in rags this is what he assumes a gentleman, or in this instance a gentleman’s valet would wear. It is tempting to laugh because he ‘got it wrong’, but this is not true. At this juncture in the story Django does not know who he is; being mocked for wearing a preposterous suit is part of his self-discovery.

Django Unchained_Samuel L Jackson, Kerry Washington maid costume_Image credit The Weinstein Company

Django Unchained is set in 1859, two years before America’s Civil War. The exact year is important because clothing styles changed so much during that period that costume designer Sharen Davis had to narrow the film down to one interpretable look. Fabrics on display include duck, cotton, canvas, fur and leather..

Django’s amusing valet attire disarms his enemies without even cocking a hammer. Of course when Django does open fire it is clear to Schultz that he shows potential for his (law abiding) bounty hunting profession, or to “Kill white folks and they pay you for it”. Now Django adopts what will become his uniform: a flat crown, sharply upturned brim hat with studded band and short green corduroy jacket belonging to decent singing cowboy ‘Little Joe’ from TV series Bonanza. This jacket means the same to Django as Clint Eastwood’s poncho in the Sergio Leone Spaghetti Westerns. Without it he is playing a role; with it he is Django: bounty hunter, killer and hero – it ascribes his personality. Were Quentin Tarantino to make a follow up to Django Unchained, and his screenplay is surely written with that in mind, he would be crazy to ditch this costume. Django needs his green jacket and hat just as Superman needs his cape.

All the central characters can be interpreted by what they wear. Broomhilda Von Shaft (Kerry Washington) is like most women without means during the pre-Civil War period, dressed in workwear. Of course Broomhilda is a slave, but that does not necessarily imply her garments are rags. Workwear in this instance equates to a traditional maid’s uniform, or ‘in house’ (i.e. entertaining) attire. Likewise the Southern Belle dresses seen on courtesans at Kentucky Fried ‘Big Daddy’ Bennet’s (Don Johnson) ranch. These women are dressed to serve men, and as with her husband Django, Broomhilda’s true appearance is only revealed at the end of the story. Even flamboyant plantation owner Calvin Candie (Leonardo DiCaprio) is fronting a disguise. He walks and talks a peacock, his sharply cut coats hand-in-hand with even sharper retorts. But unlike his acute prospect Dr. King Schultz, Candie is physically and mentally impotent. He tempts fate yet fails to react when it obliges. Django chooses to wear Candie’s clothes during the finale to become what he despises in order to destroy his memory.

Django Unchained_Jamie Foxx lace cravat cap mid_Image credit The Weinstein Company

The blue suit chosen by Django after he agrees to team up with Schultz is period accurate attire for a valet. The lace cravat is an artistic indulgence, but adds to the intentional ridiculousness of his ‘disguise’. The same goes for Django’s sunglasses; during a time when wearing any kind of eyeglasses would have been a sign of visual impairment, he wears them to look cool.

Django Unchained feels very much contemporary Quentin Tarantino. It is Inglourious Basterds rather than Pulp Fiction, and not just for Christoph Waltz again nibbling elegantly through his dialogue. The pacing will test some for sure; there are equal batches violence and conversation, though not a whipping or word is wasted. Importantly, Sharen Davis is a good fit for Tarantino; she understands that underneath all his conspicuous directorial trademarks, layered subtlety is prevalent. Django Unchained is not a revenge tale, it’s an origin story. Tarantino cannot waste this character; he must make a sequel.

Django Unchained was released in the U.S on 25th December and will be released in the UK on 18th January.

© 2012 – 2013, Chris Laverty.

28 Dec 23:46

Disaster Movie

by editors

On the actors who unwittingly starred in The Innocence of Muslims.

Michael Joseph Gross | Vanity Fair | Dec 2012 [Full Story]
28 Dec 01:38

TARDIS Ring Box

by Brody

Youtube Link

Planning on popping the big question anytime soon? If so, you may want to get your hands on one of these TARDIS ring-boxes. Made by Paul Pape Designs, the box lights up and sounds like it is pretty customizable depending on your needs. I like the opening of the doors personally, the light inside just sets it off. 

If Doctor Who isn't your thing, no need to fret. Paul will make you pretty much anything your engaging little head can think up.

Some might say that the proposal is just as important as the wedding, and Paul is happy to help you create the perfect ringbox to help pop the question. Any theme possible, and Paul is only limited by your suggestions. 

Paul Pape Designs | Via The Mary Sue

28 Dec 01:37

DeScepter

by lucyskite
28 Dec 01:35

Follow-up: Harris Tweed at Walmart Last week, we mentioned...

by thesilentist






Follow-up: Harris Tweed at Walmart

Last week, we mentioned select Walmart stores were stocking Harris Tweed blazers for $75, but having not seen them in person we asked you — our wonderful readers — for your impressions.

About a dozen of you responded with your thoughts (several of you were kind enough to snap photos) and there were a few common threads from a majority of your responses. 

  • Sizes ranged from 38 to 50, some in short or long sizing, too. 
  • Almost everyone was impressed with the fabric and there are three types of fabrics: charcoal herringbone, blue barleycorn and oatmeal barleycorn.
  • Several found the shoulder sizing to be problematic. Some sized down to get a better shoulder fit (because of the extra padding that increased the shoulder size). Meanwhile, others couldn’t find a size that worked because of the excessive padding or shoulder divots, which turned into a deal breaker. 
  • Another issue in regard to fit was the boxy cut of the chest area, meaning most will have to make a trip for alterations. 
  • Buttons are plastic, not leather. 
  • A few people mentioned the wooden hangars were perhaps the nicest part of the whole deal. Easily, the hangar might sell for around $25 by itself at retail prices. 

While no one was able to give me a highly-detailed summary of jacket construction (frankly, I wasn’t expecting anyone to buy one and start doing a teardown of one), several readers mentioned they bought one and were pleased with it for the price. Others said they would’ve considered it if the jacket’s fit wasn’t problematic for them. 

Overall, it’s impossible to recommend a jacket at any price if it doesn’t fit (especially in the shoulders), so definitely give them a try on and be honest with yourself if it looks and feels good while wearing it.

(Thanks to everyone who wrote in and to Christopher and J.W. who sent in photos.) 

-Kiyoshi

28 Dec 01:30

A National Portrait of Drunk Driving

by johnmnelson

Ten years of national traffic fatality incidents combine to form a hex-mesh map of where deadly traffic incidents are more or less likely to involve intoxication. The structure of the transportation infrastructure frames the natures of American cities and neighborhoods and generates all sorts of questions. More on why and how this was made at uxblog.idvsolutions.com including related visuals and insets.
28 Dec 00:01

"Нежная забота"

Russian Sledges

daily bunny

Традиционная рубрика - "Картина в среду". Автор Чо Сон Хуи. 670 х 760 мм. 99 год Чучхе(2010). Второй приз на международной выставке в Пхеньяне.

Картина изготовлена из драгоценного камня, по технологии предложенной Ким Чен Иром

"Нежная Забота"

27 Dec 22:43

Edward Ka-Spel, "Ghost Logik"

by misplaced_sandwich@hotmail.com (Anthony D'Amico)
Russian Sledges

maybe I need to start paying attention to lispy dutchmen again

cover imageMy opinion of Edward Ka-Spel has undergone a dramatic overhaul over the last few years, as the last several albums that I have heard have all floored me with at least one song (often more).  While he has been admirably devoted to making weird, uncompromising psychedelia for more than 30 years, he seems to be making some of the best and most disturbing music of his career right now (as evidenced here).  That is not to say that he has become dramatically less indulgent or difficult (unlikely to ever occur), but the high points of Ghost Logik are truly mesmerizing, haunting, and unique.

27 Dec 22:41

Florence Welch and Diane Keaton

by timshl


Florence Welch and Diane Keaton

27 Dec 22:40

A 120-Year-Old Mechanical Device that Perfectly Mimics the Song of a Bird

by Christopher Jobson

A 120 Year Old Mechanical Device that Perfectly Mimics the Song of a Bird device birds automata

Get out the headphones or turn up your speakers and prepare to be impressed by archaic 19th century engineering. Relying on dozens of moving parts including gears, springs, and a bellows, this small contraption built in 1890 was designed to do one thing: perfectly mimic the random chatter of a song bird. At first I expected to hear a simple repeating pattern of tweets, but the sounds produced by the mechanism are actually quite complex and vary in pitch, tone, and even volume to create a completely realistic song. I think if you closed your eyes you might not be able to tell the difference between this and actual birdsong. It’s believed the machine was built 120 years ago in Paris by Blaise Bontems, a well-known maker of bird automata and was recently refurbished by Michael Start over at The House of Automata. Can any of you ornithologists identify the bird? If so, get in touch. (via the automata blog)

Update: And if you liked that, check out this pair of matching signing bird pistols that sold at auction last year for $5.8 million.

27 Dec 22:39

Into Everlasting Fire

by editors

A meditation on Hell.

The Economist | Dec 2012 [Full Story]
27 Dec 22:38

http://www.vvork.com/?p=25375

by mail
27 Dec 20:38

Appennino the Pavilion

by Alexander Trevi
Despite a lull in China's never-ending parade of coming-out megaspectaculars, this summer's pavilion season still seems to be as rabid as any other year. Spend even a little time in any of the spatialist hot spots, and you'll be conked in the retina with Instagrams of the newly installed and/or the unapologetically Rococo renderings for the Tumblr-Pinterest-Twitter circuit. Should you be lucky enough to make the pilgrimage to the season-ending Venice Biennale, no doubt you'll be psychosomatically Florence Syndrome'd with pavilions within pavilions within pavilions, all swarming with the toterati.

In any case, I thought I'd insert myself into all the festivities with one of my favorite pavilions: Giovanni Bologna's Appennino.

Appennino
(Giovanni Bologna, Appennino, 1579.)

Measuring about 35 feet tall, it's arguably the most spectacular feature of the gardens of Villa Medici at Pratolino, now part of Villa Demidoff, located about 7 miles north of Florence, Italy. A personification of the Apennine mountain ranges, it's sculpted as though on that liminal margin between landscape and man, its smooth skin emerging out of the rough terrain or metamorphosing back into a mountain. He even has stalactites for a shaggy beard.

This colossal sculpture recalls the figure of Atlas in Virgil's Aeneid, and also the architect Dinocrates' proposal to shape Mount Athos into a man in honor of Alexander the Great.

Appennino
(The Appennino in 1911. Source)

With seemingly all the might of his hand, he squeezes the head of a monstrous beast, which spills a cascade of water out of its hell-mouth and into a fish pond.

Of course, the Appennino isn't just a sculpture. He's also a building.

Appennino

Appennino
(Appennino sliced and split. Photos by Andreas Angelidakis. Source.)

Inside you will find a network of grottoes, their walls studded with shells, corals, pearls and crystals, and painted with frescoes of muscled men mining precious ores. In this way, Appennino is both mountains and abysses. You enter not only the belly of a garden giant but also down into the belly of the earth. There were also two working fountains, one of which portrayed Thetis, and located in his head is a chamber for a small orchestra.

Appennino
(Section of Appennino. Illustration by P. van der Ree.)

I haven't been able to confirm this in any of the literature, but I've been told that there's also some sort of fireplace in the head. When lit, smoke would billow out of Appennino's nose, thus adding, I'd imagine, another sensory element to the Mannerist theatrics of a raging battle between god and beast.

(See also Elefantasia.)
27 Dec 20:37

serial experiments lain. 1998, Sony PlayStation, Japan ver.



serial experiments lain.

1998, Sony PlayStation, Japan ver.

27 Dec 20:37

Pepsiman. 1999, Sony PlayStation, Japan ver.



Pepsiman.

1999, Sony PlayStation, Japan ver.

27 Dec 20:07

Interview with a Ginza Hostess

by editors

An interview with a woman who works in one of the exclusive hostess bars in Tokyo’s Ginza district, where an elite clientele pay heavily for champagne, whiskey, and conversation, and client-hostess relationships can span decades.

Shimon Tanaka | The Rumpus | Dec 2012 [Full Story]
27 Dec 19:27

merry chriskey

merry chriskey

Follow @drewtoothpaste on Twitter or join the TFD Facebook Page.

(NEW!) Drew's blog is The Worst Things For Sale.
27 Dec 19:26

What makes it fake? Their stories aren’t on the mainstream?

What makes it fake? Their stories aren’t on the mainstream?

27 Dec 19:23

A Glow-in-the-Dark Full Moon Cabinet

by Christopher Jobson
Russian Sledges

I like this in theory

A Glow in the Dark Full Moon Cabinet moon light furniture

Designed by Sotirios Papadopoulos the Full Moon is a beautifully designed credenza with an overlaid photo-realistic treatment of the moon that glows in the dark, an effect achieved by an eco-friendly luminous surface developed by Papadopoulos (the image above appears to be a rendering and may not be the actual piece). The furniture is available online through Generate LE. (via laughing squid)

27 Dec 19:22

Which miser makes the most?

by Economist.com

The economics of Ebenezer Scrooge

LONDON, September 1843: a queer little journal called The Economist is published for the first time. Meanwhile, less than a mile away, a 31-year-old writer, Charles Dickens, faces mounting debts and his wife is expecting their fifth child. He begins writing Christmas stories in an attempt to ease the financial strain. On December 19th "A Christmas Carol" appears and introduces to the world one of literature's most notorious misers, Ebenezer Scrooge. The initial run of 6,000 copies—financed by the author himself—sells out by Christmas eve. (It takes The Economist until 1920 to match similar circulation figures.)

Dickens's 66-page novella is credited with popularising many aspects of the holiday (including the very phrase "Merry Christmas!"). The story has since sold millions of copies and inspired myriad adaptations in print and on the screen, most recently Disney's 2009 computer-animated version, in which Scrooge was voiced by Jim Carrey. But who is the top-earning Ebenezer? To mark the 200th anniversary celebration of Dickens's birth in 1812, we have charted Amazon’s sales of every "A Christmas Carol" adaptation available on DVD over the past two years to see which one piled up the most cash.

Perhaps surprisingly, despite having the advantage of being at the forefront of public consciousness, the 2009 adaption still only manages fourth place, dwarfed by the appeal of a cockney and a fabric frog. What of Dickens himself? Earlier this year, a survey by the BBC and Interbrand declared Dickens to be worth £280m ($455m) annually to the British economy. Not a bad return for a down-on-his-luck writer trying to scrape together the cash for a family Christmas 169 years ago. Surely even Marley's ghost would approve.

27 Dec 19:21

diy project: leather lunch tote | Design*Sponge

by ragebun
Russian Sledges

non-veg lunchbox

27 Dec 19:20

Georges Méliès (1861 - 1938), the fine-ass father of French...

by likewise-edelweiss


Georges Méliès (1861 - 1938), the fine-ass father of French silent film and cultivator of dreams.

27 Dec 19:19

An Underwater Bonsai Tree by Makoto Azuma

by Christopher Jobson

An Underwater Bonsai Tree by Makoto Azuma trees plants

An Underwater Bonsai Tree by Makoto Azuma trees plants

An Underwater Bonsai Tree by Makoto Azuma trees plants

An Underwater Bonsai Tree by Makoto Azuma trees plants

An Underwater Bonsai Tree by Makoto Azuma trees plants

In his continued forays into experimental botany that blur the lines between art and science, artist Makoto Azuma (previously) has reimagined the bonsai tree, one of the oldest Japanese artforms. This latest work titled Water and Bonsai, began with a dead branch from a juniper tree which was carefully attached to java moss meant to simulate the form of leaves. The entire piece was then submerged into a modified hydroponic environment similar to some of his earlier aquatic plantscapes replete with LEDs, a filtration system, and C02 emissions that encourage photosynthesis. See more over on Spoon & Tamago.

27 Dec 19:07

Minsk, Republic of Belarus.



Minsk, Republic of Belarus.

27 Dec 19:07

"Look, Afghanistan, I’m sorry to tell you, I’m old enough to remember, forty years ago, Afghanistan..."

“Look, Afghanistan, I’m sorry to tell you, I’m old enough to remember, forty years ago, Afghanistan was arguably the most tolerant Middle East Muslim country, with a pro-Western technocratic king, with a very strong local communist party and so on. And then, we know what happened. Communist party tried to took power. They did. When they started to fail, Soviet Union intervened. Then Americans backed the Muslim fundamentalists. In other words, always bear in mind this: Afghanistan is not an old fundamentalist country that we should enlighten. Afghanistan was quite a nice, tolerant country. Its fundamentalization is precisely the result of being caught in the global politics. We, the global liberal system, generate fundamentalisms.”

- Slavoj Žižek
27 Dec 17:25

Blues Cruise

by editors

A dispatch from The National Review’s post-election cruise.

Joe Hagan | New York | Dec 2012 [Full Story]
27 Dec 17:25

New Trampled Snow Art from Simon Beck

by Christopher Jobson
Russian Sledges

knitting patterns?

New Trampled Snow Art from Simon Beck snow land art geometric

New Trampled Snow Art from Simon Beck snow land art geometric

New Trampled Snow Art from Simon Beck snow land art geometric

New Trampled Snow Art from Simon Beck snow land art geometric

New Trampled Snow Art from Simon Beck snow land art geometric

New Trampled Snow Art from Simon Beck snow land art geometric

New Trampled Snow Art from Simon Beck snow land art geometric

New Trampled Snow Art from Simon Beck snow land art geometric

New Trampled Snow Art from Simon Beck snow land art geometric

New Trampled Snow Art from Simon Beck snow land art geometric

New Trampled Snow Art from Simon Beck snow land art geometric

Since 2004 England-based Simon Beck has strapped on a pair of snowshoes and lumbered out into the the freshly fallen snow at the Les Arcs ski resort in France to trample out his distinctly geometric patterns, footprint by footprint. Each work takes the 54-year-old artist anywhere between 6 hours and two days to complete, an impressive physical feat aided from years of competitive orienteering. The orienteering also helps him in the precise mapping process which often begins on a computer before he’s able to mark landmarks in the snow that guide his precise walking patterns. All of the works above (with the exception of the portrait) are from the last few weeks, you can see several years worth of work over on Facebook.

27 Dec 17:23

For Poor, Leap to College Often Ends in a Hard Fall

by editors
Russian Sledges

Angelica Gonzales marched through high school in Goth armor — black boots, chains and cargo pants — but undermined her pose of alienation with a place on the honor roll. She nicknamed herself after a metal band and vowed to become the first in her family to earn a college degree.

“I don’t want to work at Walmart” like her mother, she wrote to a school counselor.

yfanytaam

The story of three friends from Texas and the obstacles they face trying to get a college degree in an age of economic inequality.

Jason DeParle | New York Times | Dec 2012 [Full Story]
27 Dec 17:21

those people didn’t have the strengh



those people didn’t have the strengh