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24 May 18:38

The Knife Announce Mini-Album, Shaken-Up Versions

by Genevieve Oliver

For their recent North American tour of Shaking the Habitual, the Knife crafted re-worked versions of songs from throughout their catalog. Now they’ve decided to release those songs as a new LP, appropriately titled Shaken-Up Versions. You can hear the first taste of that now, a remixed version of “Without You My Life Would Be Boring,” and watch its attendant video, which stars a bunch of hospital patients and staff getting down. We love the amped-up percussion of the new version – check it out. The whole record is out June 17th – check out the tracklist below.

The Knife, Shaken-Up Versions:
01 We Share Our Mothers’ Health (Shaken-Up Version)
02 Got 2 Let U (Shaken-Up Version)
03 Bird (Shaken-Up Version)
04 Without You My Life Would Be Boring (Shaken-Up Version)
05 Pass This On (Shaken-Up Version)
06 Ready to Lose (Shaken-Up Version)
07 Stay Out Here (Shaken-Up Version)
08 Silent Shout (Shaken-Up Version)


Read more articles like "The Knife Announce Mini-Album, Shaken-Up Versions" on PMA - Pretty Much Amazing.

Tags: The Knife, The Knife Shaken-Up Versions
24 May 18:34

Report: Twitter Looking Into Purchasing SoundCloud

by Stereogum

Twitter’s music recommendation service Twitter Music notoriously sputtered then shuttered after getting off to a fast start, but maybe they’ll have better luck hosting music instead. Re/code is reporting that Twitter is in talks to buy SoundCloud. Earlier this year SoundCloud valued itself at $700 million, which would make it Twitter’s most expensive purchase ever by far; the company acquired mobile ad company MoPub for $300 million last year. The deal makes sense in at least one other way, per Re/code’s report: “Twitter’s users frequently pass along SoundCloud links in their messages; earlier this year, a survey found that Twitter users share SoundCloud links more than any other music service, including Spotify.” Re/code also speculates that this could force SoundCloud to evolve in a manner similar to YouTube, with ads before streams and deals with the major labels surely to come. Ads before SoundCloud streams would suck! But we’ll see what develops.








23 May 19:19

‘Camp Rockaway’ tent motel: Great idea or insufferably precious nonsense?

by David Colon

Not pictured: People being laughed out of existence for saying “glamping.” via Camp Rockaway Kickstarter Sometimes near the end of a long day at the Rockaways, you might be beaten down by the sun and the alcohol you’ve enjoyed all day, and you might not want to leave. You can’t just collapse on the beach and stay there though, that’s frowned upon. You could get an AirBnB maybe, or, in the future, you might be able to collapse in a “tent hotel” called Camp Rockaway that’s set to open in 2015. Of course, we’d only recommend doing that if you think that combining camping with a “high-end boutique hotel” is alright. Which it clearly isn’t. Camp Rockaway is a hotel concept made up of safari-style tents on the water near Jamaica Bay, and is set to open in the summer of 2015. The “tent colony” idea was born out of the tent… Read More

The post ‘Camp Rockaway’ tent motel: Great idea or insufferably precious nonsense? appeared first on Brokelyn.

23 May 13:31

BuzzFeed Probably Shouldn’t Have Published Its Journalism Salary Survey

by Jesse Singal

The salary disparity between men and women has been a hot subject in recent years, what with leaning in and the confidence gap and, most recently, Jill Abramson's departure from the New York Times. So BuzzFeed decided to look into how it works within journalism.

First, the site invited a bunch of journalists to fill out a form anonymously disclosing their gender, salary, and so on. Then, after editors crunched the numbers from the almost 900 responses they had received, the site published an article with the bold headline "Here’s What Female And Male Journalists Actually Make," complete with a couple snazzy charts laying out the results.

And yes, there were disparities, though apparently they didn't kick in until higher levels of management (that is, entry-level male and female journalists are paid about the same). But it isn't worth analyzing this in much depth, unfortunately, because the survey actually tells us very little about the subject at hand due to its many flaws.

BuzzFeed acknowledges some of them:

The goal was to take an honest look at pay discrepancy. The sample wasn’t random, and the survey is far from perfect. People who felt less satisfied with their salaries, for example, might have been more likely to complete the survey. But it’s a useful step toward knowing how big the gap might be, and at what stage in our careers it widens the most.

When it comes to the science of extracting broadly meaningful results from surveys, "The sample wasn't random" should generally be viewed as a red flag waving violently while an alarm blares and firecrackers go off. You usually need a random sample — or close enough to one — if you're going to claim that your results can be interpreted in a general way. And when you scroll down the BuzzFeed article further, you get a sense of just how non-random this sample was, and of other flaws that make it really hard to take these results seriously:

1. More than half of the respondents came from New York City or Washington, D.C. Yes, BuzzFeed stamped "not a representative sample" on the main chart, but that's an understatement. Any useful survey like this will sample from a wide range of media markets. New York and D.C. are, suffice it to say, unique in a lot of ways, and the vast majority of journalists do not work in either market.

2. 83 percent of the respondents were 30 or younger. BuzzFeed's editors basically sampled their friends and their friends' friends: The survey "was emailed to BuzzFeed editorial staffers, as well as to former colleagues and contacts working at the biggest websites, newspapers, magazines, and broadcast networks in the country; they were asked to pass it along." Obviously most journalists are older than 30, so this ends up being a survey that, statistically speaking, effectively excludes most journalists.

3. The categories are hard to interpret. Respondents were asked to describe themselves as "entry level," "mid-level," "senior non-management," or "senior management." It's unclear exactly how to translate these, so there's a chance that if these categories had been phrased just a little bit differently, the results would have changed a lot.

Yes, BuzzFeed deserves some credit for tackling this subject, and greater pay transparency would be a helpful way to combat the gender pay gap in journalism and elsewhere. But on the other hand, the site clearly wasn't all that interested in going about this in a rigorous way: One of the emails in which BuzzFeed solicited responses from journalists found its way to me, and it was time-stamped 3:50 p.m. on Thursday. The piece went live a little before 6 p.m. on Friday, suggesting that BuzzFeed may have been more concerned with riding the wave of Abramson coverage than with allowing some time for a bigger (and possibly more representative) sample to emerge.

This article is going to be passed around a lot and treated like an important data point in the pay-gap discussion, mostly because the headline and charts drown out the many problems. But a survey this flawed probably shouldn't have been published.

Read more posts by Jesse Singal

Filed Under: journalism ,social science ,gender ,jill abramson ,pay gap

22 May 20:49

Kim Jong-un's "Executed" Ex-Girlfriend Seen Alive on North Korean TV

by Kelly Conaboy

Kim Jong-un's "Executed" Ex-Girlfriend Seen Alive on North Korean TV

Hyon Song-Wol, a North Korean singer said to be Kim Jong-Un's ex-girlfriend and reported to have been executed by firing squad last year, is said to have appeared on North Korean state television. She is apparently alive and well.

Read more...








21 May 18:31

Moynaq in Muynak District, Uzbekistan

A rusted fleet sits crumbling in the sunbaked desert

Moynaq is a city, surrounded by the desert of western Uzbekistan. At first glance, this seems to be one of the many Soviet cities that fell into decline after the collapse of the Soviet Union. But upon closer inspection, one can’t help but notice that there is something strange about Moynaq.

All over the city, displays of fish can be seen on murals, mosaics, posters bleached from the sun, and even on the entrance sign of the city. A monument of a fishing boat sits in front of the government building and a number of closed fish cannery factories dot the landscape - but there is not a single body of water in sight.

Moynaq was indeed once an important fishing town, but the water the city was once located on receded a long time ago. It was the ecological disaster of the Aral Sea, which turned this fishing port into a sunbaked town surrounded by the desert. The shrinking of the Aral Sea is considered one of the most severe anthropogenic ecological disasters of all time. Once one of the world’s four largest lakes, the Aral Sea has shrunk to 10 % of its former size since the 1960s.

No other city around the Aral Sea was affected by this disaster more severely than Moynaq. The water’s edge is now more than 150km away from the city, and the former fishing fleet of Moynaq sits in a surreal setting in the middle of the desert. It is a bizarre, almost post-apocalyptic experience to view bactrian camels roam around the rusting ships.

When the lake began to recede, the fisherman at first followed the water’s edge, but after a while, the rising salinity levels of the shrinking lake killed off the entire fish population. The ships were simply left in the middle of the desert. Since fishing was no longer a source of income for the city, the population began to constantly decline for more than three decades, and today entire parts of Moynaq are abandoned.

Most of the remaining population is involved in the cotton industry of the larger region which, ironically, was responsible for the Aral Sea disaster in the first place. The disaster of the Aral Sea could easily be undone, if the rivers that once fed the sea – most notably the Amu Darya river – were no longer diverted to irrigate the cotton fields. Alas, since the economy of Uzbekistan is rather weak, and alternative sources of income in the poor west of the country are not available, a refilling of the Aral Sea seems highly unlikely.








21 May 17:39

Buffering

by admin

21 May 15:01

Sorry Dude, No More Calling Chinese Officials “Boss.” Or “Dude.”

by William Kazer
Jon Schubin

I always refer to anyone in any position of authority as a laoban (老板). I will not stop because of this.

China’s Communist Party prides itself on internal discipline -- and that usually means knowing who’s boss. But in one province in southern China, cadres would rather you didn’t make their rank quite so obvious.
21 May 13:43

The Best Happy Hours in Williamsburg, Greenpoint and Bushwick

by freewilliamsburg
Jon Schubin

OK, but what about The Tradesman, where Happy Hour goes until 9? Also, it's dollar off pints at Sweet Science and Oar.

three-diamond

Three Diamond Door

Gothamist just ranked the best happy hours in the city and has three North Brooklyn picks:

LOBSTER JOINT: At this point, it’s no secret that pretty much everything at the Lobster Joint is the best—brunch, Bloody Marys, mac ‘n cheese, the backyard, you name it. And happy hour at the seafood spot’s Brooklyn and Manhattan locations is no exception, with stellar deals on food and drinks running weekdays from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. Drafts run $4 (pitchers $16) and cocktails run $6 (pitchers $24), and you can score snacks like dollar oysters and $4 lobster, crab cake and fried oyster sliders to offset all that economical booze.
The Lobster Joint is located at 1073 Manhattan Avenue between Eagle and Dupont Streets in Greenpoint, Brooklyn (718-389-8990, lobsterjoint.com) and at 201 East Houston Street between Ludlow and Orchard Streets on the Lower East Side (646-896-1110, lobsterjoint.com).

SOFT SPOT: Soft Spot’s drafts and well drinks run two for one until 8 p.m. (and until 2 a.m. on Tuesdays), they’ve got an adorable back patio, and the bar is located a block away from Vinnie’s Pizzeria, home of the Veggie Mac Attack slice. That’s pretty much all you need to know. Go sober, leave drunk, and unsettle your stomach with some garlic knots on your way home.
Soft Spot is located at 128 Bedford Ave between North 9th and 10th Streets in Williamsburg, Brooklyn (718-384-7768, softspotbar.com).

HAPPYFUN HIDEAWAY: We can’t heap enough praise atop this laid back Bushwick bar, which is wonderful enough to serve Franzia and Frito pie alongside grown-up drinks and vegan pork sliders. Happy hour runs from 4 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. and warrants a buck off all drinks, not to mention a $5 cocktail special that changes daily. Grab your drink of choice (CHOOSE FRANZIA) and head to the bar’s patio out back, where you can lounge under an umbrella and imbibe in blissful peace.
Happyfun Hideaway is located at 1211 Myrtle Avenue near Willoughby Avenue in Bushwick, Brooklyn (917-999-8282).

We’d like to add a few more.

In Williamsburg, The Charleston has $1 off all draft beers, $1 off well drinks, $5 shot & beer 12-8pm daily — plus, a free pizza with each drink!

Alligator Lounge (Williamsburg) and Lulu’s (Greenpoint) offer free pizzas too when you buy a drink — all day and night.

Other Williamsburg happy hours and specials include:
The Gutter has $1 off beers & well drinks and $3 off pitchers Monday-Friday before 7pm.
Maison Premiere has 1/2 off on oysters Mon-Fri from 4-7pm.
• At Brooklyn Brewery on Fridays, you get 5 beers for $20 bucks.
Full Circle Bar keeps the specials going late with $1 off drafts, $4 well drinks Mon-Fri, 5-9 & Sat-Sun, 2-9.

In Bushwick, Three Diamond Door has a dollar off well drinks, shots, drafts and wine weekdays from 4-8pm. Lady Jays and Oak and Iron have similar deals in Williamsburg and Greepoint, respectively.

Now go get your drink on. You’re welcome.

SEE ALL HAPPY HOURS HERE

20 May 11:42

Why You Need To Visit Denmark's Hippie Commune Before You Die

by Emmy Favilla
Jon Schubin

Went there over the summer. It was cool. Especially the Greenlandic cabin.

The self-governing town of Christiania has seen its share of ups and downs, but it’s still a place unlike any other in the world.

This is Christiania.

This is Christiania.

Stig Nygaard / Creative Commons / Via Flickr: stignygaard

Its 84 acres sit on an abandoned military base, and it was founded in 1971 by squatters and artists as a "social experiment."

Its 84 acres sit on an abandoned military base, and it was founded in 1971 by squatters and artists as a "social experiment."

maisicon / ShutterStock

While it may look like just another quaint Danish city from afar, Christiania is an autonomous "free town" within Copenhagen — a hippie commune, if you will.

While it may look like just another quaint Danish city from afar, Christiania is an autonomous " free town " within Copenhagen — a hippie commune, if you will.

Bucchi Francesco / ShutterStock

Quistnix / Creative Commons / Via commons.wikimedia.org


View Entire List ›

20 May 11:39

One Of The

'The world's greatest [whatever]' is subjective, but 'One of the world's greatest [whatever]s' is clearly objective. Anyway, that's why I got you this 'one of the world's greatest moms' mug!
19 May 17:26

A bounce house flew away with three children inside

by Joseph Stromberg
Jon Schubin

Nightmare folder. Also, greater capital region.

On Monday afternoon, a bounce house in South Glens Falls, New York was lifted 50 feet into the air by a sudden gust of wind.

A gust of wind ripped the stakes out of the ground

There were three children inside, and when the house was about 15 feet up, they fell out of it. Two boys — one who landed on a parked car, and another who landed directly on the street — were seriously injured and are currently hospitalized, while a girl suffered only scrapes and bruises.

The bounce house was reportedly staked down to the ground when it was set up, but a gust of wind apparently ripped the stakes out — one was tossed across a parking lot when the bounce house flew away.

Here's a photo of the house, taken by a witness and featured in the Glens Falls Post-Star:

Wglix3anizobjgyyidd1

Post-Star

Observers called it a "freak accident" — but this is actually the latest in a series of flying bounce house accidents across the US in recent years.

Why bounce houses keep flying away

They're certainly rare, but there have been dozens of similar incidents, including ones in Arizona in 2012 and New York State in 2011. These have led to a number of serious injuries, but no deaths thus far.

There's some thought that safety regulation is the problem. Unlike carnival rides, most states don't require trained operators for inflatables.

An inflatable is essentially a sail: a big piece of fabric that weighs very little

They all come with instructions for being properly staked down and warnings to be taken down during inclement weather, but the sheer physics of bounce houses can make it hard for someone who doesn't operate them on a daily basis to understand how easily then can be blown away — and how securely they need to be staked.

A inflatable is essentially a sail: a big piece of fabric that weighs very little, compared to its size, and can easily catch the wind.

The bounce house that was blown away yesterday weighs about 38 pounds. Its bottom has an area of about 85 square feet. If a strong gust of wind were to catch this flat surface, it's easy to imagine how it could rip out few stakes driven shallowly into the dirt and propel the house through the air.

In this case, the owner had set it up several times over the years, but didn't remember whether it had originally come with staking instructions — and the kids' parents later said they had no idea the houses could fly away on windy days.

19 May 14:16

Customize Your Own Dumplings At This Queens Food Stand

by Nell Casey
Jon Schubin

There have been rumblings that the food tour after next might be China redux...

Customize Your Own Dumplings At This Queens Food Stand There are already dozens of delicious reasons to make the food trek out to Flushing, and now we can add customizable dumplings to that list! On his drool-inducing blog Chopsticks + Marrow, Queens food fanatic Joe DiStefano delivered the DIY dumpling discovery, which debuted at his favorite stand, Tianjin Dumpling House at Golden Shopping Mall. The new concept debuted two weeks ago, with the option to combine any three ingredients into a filling for fresh dumpling skins, which are steamed on the spot. [ more › ]






19 May 14:15

Never Order "Cooked Sushi" At Japan's Best Sushi Restaurant

by Jay Hathaway

Never Order "Cooked Sushi" At Japan's Best Sushi Restaurant

A Chinese student living in Japan was attacked on social media after showing up late to a reservation at one of the finest sushi spots in Tokyo, trying to order "cooked sushi" to go, and then ranting about the food and service online.

Read more...








19 May 12:37

Clams Casino produces Lee “Scratch” Perry, “Jesus is a Soul Man”

by Daniel Koren

One of the most noteworthy producers in reggae history, Lee “Scratch” Perry, has teamed up with Clams Casino to release a new song, “Jesus Is A Soul Man,” in promotion of a new documentary about him. The Upsetter: The Life and Music of Lee “Scratch” Perry is about the artist’s life and the music he created, directed by Ethan Higbee and Adam Bhala Lough and narrated by Benicio Del Toro. A free Bittorrent Bundle is available to promote the film, featuring a download of the song, where Clams manages to give the song a cloud-rap feel by soaking Perry’s monotone vocals in reverb. The package also includes the film trailer, plus images and unreleased footage. Stream “Jesus Is a Soul Man” and download the Bittorrent Bundle below:


Read more articles like "Clams Casino produces Lee “Scratch” Perry, “Jesus is a Soul Man”" on PMA - Pretty Much Amazing.

Tags: Clams Casino, Lee "Scratch" Perry
19 May 12:28

Two Older Ladies Have a Serious Discussion About Miley Cyrus's Vagina

by Jay Hathaway

America demands to know: How do sassy older women feel about Miley Cyrus? And what about Miley Cyrus's vagina? Leave it to the best interviewer working today, the manic-manic Billy "On the Street" Eichner, to find out.

Read more...








18 May 23:45

F Train Magically Becomes G Train Without Warning, Infuriating Everyone

by Ben Yakas
F Train Magically Becomes G Train Without Warning, Infuriating Everyone Straphangers were plunged into utter confusion and despair this morning when an F train suddenly morphed into a G train without warning. According to various people who were on the train at the time, the unannounced switch happened around 9:15 a.m. Friday morning while in Brooklyn. And apparently, even the motorman didn't know what was going on! [ more › ]






18 May 05:01

Lorde Ranks Her Top 10 Arcade Fire Songs

by Genevieve Oliver

For some reason, Rolling Stone asked Lorde to rank her top ten favorite Arcade Fire songs – and, as one of the other best songwriters about the trials and tribulations of suburban life, she complied. Of course, songs from The Suburbs rank highly among her favorites (it was the first record she discovered), but she’s a fan of the band’s debut as well as their latest record Reflektor, too. No songs from Neon Bible, though? Maybe it’s just me, but I can’t get down with an Arcade Fire top ten list that leaves out “Antichrist Television Blues.”

Lorde’s Top Ten:
01 Neighborhood #3 (Power Out)
02 Neighborhood #1 (Tunnels)
03 Rebellion (Lies)
04 We Used to Wait
05 Ready to Start
06 The Suburbs and The Suburbs (Continued)
07 Flashbulb Eyes
08 Normal Person
09 Rococo
10 Afterlife


Read more articles like "Lorde Ranks Her Top 10 Arcade Fire Songs" on PMA - Pretty Much Amazing.

Tags: Arcade Fire, Lorde
18 May 04:58

Casey Affleck Joins HBO’s Lewis and Clark Miniseries

by Amanda Dobbins

He'll be Meriwether Lewis in the six-hour HBO miniseries, which is finally happening after years in development. Ed Norton, Tom Hanks, and Brad Pitt are all on board as producers; his partner has not been cast, but the real Clark was four years older than Lewis, so Ben Affleck is not, like, a preposterous suggestion.

Read more posts by Amanda Dobbins

Filed Under: casey affleck ,lewis and clark ,hbo ,casting couch

16 May 22:56

Interstellar Trailer: Matthew McConaughey Is Not Meant to Save the World

by Amanda Dobbins
Jon Schubin

It's here!


And here it is: After months of vague teasers and speculation, the full trailer — with actual plot points — for Christopher Nolan's Interstellar is now available for your viewing pleasure. The nutshell version: Earth has run out of food, and Matthew McConaughey has to go find a new place (in space!) for humanity to live; his daughter doesn't want him to go; Michael Caine has wise things to say. Okay, that's enough talking. Enjoy.

Read more posts by Amanda Dobbins

Filed Under: trailer mix ,christopher nolan ,movies ,interstellar

16 May 21:09

Don Pedro Gets Times' 'Neighborhood Joint' Treatment

Jon Schubin

Get the burritos in the back. But why is the Times dealing with the bar behind my house? Boo.

Manhattan Ave. venue/dive/restaurant Don Pedro got some primo NYTimes coverage this weekend in its “Neighborhood Joints” column. Calling it a “playground for the weird kids,” Ilise Carter writes, “…perhaps it is better not to consider why Don Pedro was given a C by the health department — better to just think it a blessing to find a neighborhood dive still operating in ever-gentrifying East Williamsburg.”

[Image via The Stents]

16 May 20:02

New York Magazine’s Approval Matrix Will Be a Neal Brennan–Hosted Sundance Show

by Gilbert Cruz

With every new issue of New York Magazine, the first thing I do is turn to the back page and read the Approval Matrix to find out what's highbrow, lowbrow, brilliant, and despicable that week. Maybe you do too. And why not? It's a feature that's a decade old and that everyone loves and says nice things about all the time, which normally would be enough for most regular magazine features, but not the Approval Matrix. No, the Approval Matrix wants more — all of a sudden everything is, "Do you know how much I'm worth?" and "I think I might move to Los Angeles and maybe work on a treatment."

So in order to keep the Approval Matrix close to home, we are letting it do a show, for SundanceTV. The Approval Matrix, produced by Ish Entertainment's Michael Hirschhorn and former Daily Show writer Rory Albanese, will premiere in July and run for six episodes. Each week, host Neal Brennan, co-creator of Chappelle's Show, and a panel of other comedians and celebrities, will hash out recent pop-culture high points, low points, brilliant points, and despicable points. Try to stay humble, Approval Matrix. Remember where you came from.

Read more posts by Gilbert Cruz

Filed Under: the approval matrix ,tv ,news ,neal brennan ,sundance

16 May 19:20

Kids Do the Coolest Things: Indie Rock Shows and Hip-Hop Classes for Tots

by Daniel Maurer
Jon Schubin

Attention: Zade Saam

(Photo: Maryanne Ventrice)

(Photo: Maryanne Ventrice)

One does not simply walk a stroller into Union Pool. So, aside from shopping at Wovenplay, what’s a parent to do if they want their kids to be little Lou Reeds? Here’s a couple of options.

Princess Superstar’s Play Skool! Hip Hop for Kids
Saturdays in June (11:30 a.m. and 12:15 p.m.) at Rough Trade, 64 N. 9th St.
Williamsburg’s Rough Trade store (we kid you not) presents these rug-rat hip-hop classes by the East Village’s own Princess Superstar, who has collaborated with everyone from Kool Keith to Grandmaster Flash. Kids from the ages of one to eight learn about “Hip Hop’s origins, practice cool dance moves, learn fun slang, write their own raps, learn about samples, and create beats with percussion instruments.” By “fun slang” we assume they mean “word to your mother.”

Kidrockers feat. Lolawolf and Tennis
May 10, 11:30 a.m. at NYU Skirball, 566 LaGuardia Pl.; tickets $28
Kidrockers is a series of kid-geared concerts that, in the past, has featured indie darlings like Adam Green, Drowners, Caveman, and The Pizza Underground. This latest installment — at NYU Skirball Center instead of the usual Brooklyn Bowl — will pair Lolawolf (the new project from actress Zoe Kravitz and Reputante’s James Levy) and husband-and-wife duo Tennis. Seth Herzog, last seen improvising a TED Talk, will share hosting duties with Colbert warm-up comic Craig Baldo.

16 May 18:59

Awesome editor.

by howie999

rikerFROGMAN
via

16 May 18:36

New: Kitty, “emob0unce”

by Daniel Koren

One of our favorite new rapper’s, Kitty, is back with a new EP called Impatiens, and an interesting titled track “☆​:​*​・°☆​:​* emob0unce °☆​.​*​・°☆,” the successor to February’s woozy “285.” Unlike the latter, the beat here is founded largely in hip hop – kind of sounds like oldschool Weezy at first – until it becomes glitchy bubble gum pop (that’s been trending lately) finding Kitty donning both her rapper/singer personas.

Regarding the new EP, Kitty explains via her Bandcamp that:

impatiens are flowers that bloom in summer, and when the first frost comes they shrivel into nothing until the summer comes again. even though their lives are short, they can grow to be seven feet tall. there are hundreds of species, all of them bitter and toxic and beautiful in bloom.

these are the impatiens that grew in me last summer and i can’t believe i felt any of this dumb shit and i REALLY can’t believe i bothered writing all of them down (i was bitter and im still toxic). but they were beautiful in bloom, so once they shriveled into nothing i turned them into 5 silly songs 4 u.

Interesting analogy, but I’ll take it. And if these last two tracks are any preview of what’s to come, it seems likely that the rapper will entirely blow up in 2014. Check out “☆​:​*​・°☆​:​* emob0unce °☆​.​*​・°☆” below which features vocalist Jake Aron. Impatiens is out on May 13th. You can pre-order it at her Bandcamp page.


Read more articles like "New: Kitty, “emob0unce”" on PMA - Pretty Much Amazing.

Tags: Kitty
16 May 15:28

23 Charming Illustrations Of Untranslatable Words From Other Languages

by Alan White
Jon Schubin

new song titles

Illustrator Anjana Iyer created these lovely designs for her 100 Days Project . She’s accepting commissions, and on the strength of this she must get a lot…

Fernweh (German).

Fernweh (German).

Via 100daysproject.co.nz

Papakata (Cook Islands Maori).

Papakata (Cook Islands Maori).

Via 100daysproject.co.nz

Iktsuarpok (Inuit).

Iktsuarpok (Inuit).

Via anjanaiyer.com

Tingo (Pascuense).

Tingo (Pascuense).

Via 100daysproject.co.nz


View Entire List ›

16 May 14:23

All Porn Video Site Comments Should Be Spinning in Three Dimensions

by Max Read on Weird Internet, shared by Sarah Hedgecock to Gawker

All Porn Video Site Comments Should Be Spinning in Three Dimensions

The 23-year-old genius behind Animated Text, creator of the greatest GIF of all time , has launched a new and wondrous project: Spinning 3D Pornhub Comments.

Read more...








15 May 22:00

Pok Pok Ny Begins Breakfast Service Today

by Alan Sytsma
Jon Schubin

Um, why? But also yum.


The best part of waking up.

According to a post on the restaurant's Facebook page, Andy Ricker's Brooklyn Thai icon begins breakfast service this morning. What to expect: The lovely steamed buns you see pictured, as well as Stumptown coffee, "grab-and-go" food, and — perhaps most important for people who don't have to head to an office — the full beverage menu. Hours are 8 a.m. to noon, and if you want them to keep the service going, you should head out and buy something.

Read more posts by Alan Sytsma

Filed Under: the most important meal, andy ricker, breakfast, brooklyn, menu changes, pok pok ny








15 May 11:56

Morning Report for April 28, 2014

by Jim

Twenty years ago today…
npr
* “Internet is coming to NPR!” (nprchives.tumblr.com)
* USA Today’s publisher says readers aren’t focusing on national or local news; they just want something interesting to read. (streetfightmag.com)
* “Journalism, by its very nature, draws a lot of people who have a real problem with authority,” and 13 other random observations from an editor. (courierpostonline.com)
* Almost one in 20 bachelor’s degrees awarded in 2011-12 was in communications/journalism. (washingtonpost.com)
nickel* A full-page ad in USA Today says a bag of old coins for $59 is a real deal; an appraiser values them at $6.50. (fortune.cnn.com)
* Salt Lake Tribune’s military and crime reporter is now covering the polygamy beat, too. (sltrib.com) | Talk about the Tribune vanishing soon is “hyperbole,” says the editor/publisher. (sltrib.com)
* How does one become a “verified” New York Times commenter? Those people “are selected algorithmically based on the breadth and quality of the comments they have submitted over time.” (nytimes.com)
* Martha’s Vineyard publication: We don’t pay interns, but we help them find jobs at local restaurants. (journalismjobs.com)
* “I think [Google's] pretty dangerous and thuggish,” says Kara Swisher, whose wife is a Google veep. (modernluxury.com)
* The old Miami Herald building is coming down. (@EvanBenn)
* A history of Rust Belt alternative weeklies. (beltmag.com)
* The manifestos of Ezra Klein, Nate Silver and other big-name journalists. (digiday.com)
* An Albuquerque crime reporter takes a few days off and heads to Colombia. “Would I go back?” writes Andy Stiny. “When’s the next flight?” (abqjournal.com)
* Colombians have had it with people spelling their country “Columbia.” (wsj.com)
* A soon-to-close news council is engaged in a legal battle over the use of “TAO.” (taoofjournalism.org)
* Send anonymous news tips, link suggestions, memos, and typo alerts to jim@jimromenesko.com | Romenesko on Facebook | Romenesko on Twitter
* Looking for a job? Want to hire a journalist? Contact Tom Kwas at jimromads@yahoo.com for information. (He’ll take care of your Sponsored Post or display ad, too.)

15 May 02:30

New Jersey Frat Bros Tag Dead Whale With Greek Letters

by Joe Coscarelli

When a dead whale washed up in Atlantic City near the Central Pier, it was just asking for some purple graffiti on its belly, like the guy who falls asleep at the kegger and gets Sharpied. The local press noted that the symbols "were not gang-related," but "appeared to be Greek letters," which are their own (traditionally whiter) kind of gang sign. 

A close look puts the blame on Tau Epsilon Phi, which is headquartered in Voorhees, New Jersey, and has chapters at nearby Rutgers, Penn, and Rowan. In addition the fraternity markings, there was also the number 94. Yes, people born in 1994 are in college now.

Read more posts by Joe Coscarelli

Filed Under: kids today ,frat bros ,oh new jersey ,atlantic city ,candy ,photo op