Shared posts

02 Jun 22:36

Everyone On Earth (Really! Everyone) Shined Bright at the CFDA Awards

by Julianne Escobedo Shepherd on The Muse, shared by Kate Dries to Jezebel
IKEA Monkey

Shared for the picture of Janelle Monae looking over her shoulder at all of us lesser beings

On Monday, practically every fucking person on planet earth dressed up for the mighty CFDA Awards, the evening the Council of Fashion Designers of America and their benevolent queen Anna Wintour knight the great purveyors of high fashion clothing you and I will be wearing three months from now, in their Zara incarnation.

Read more...








02 Jun 13:14

David Sedaris Talks About Surviving the Suicide of a Sibling

by Blake Bailey
IKEA Monkey

I love David Sedaris. His insight into losing a sibling, and the whole experience of growing up in a large family similar to my own, always resonates with me and puts words to feelings I have a hard time articulating.

This article appears in the June Issue of VICE Magazine.

I first met David Sedaris about ten years ago, after he mentioned my Richard Yates biography on the Harvard Book Store website. I wouldn't have been more flattered if I'd discovered that Mark Twain had read and enjoyed my work, and I made a point of attending David's next reading in Gainesville, Florida, where I lived at the time. Later I moved to Norfolk, Virginia, and met David for a drink one night when his tour was in town—or, rather, I had a martini and David, as I recall, had seltzer. He sat across from me, alertly smiling, and sometimes he'd unobtrusively flip open a little steno pad and make a note. Which is to say, he's almost always working, even when he's picking up litter along the side of the road near his home in West Sussex, England (his diligence has been commended by the Queen).

On May 24, 2013, David's youngest sister, Tiffany, killed herself in Somerville, Massachusetts, and David wrote a poignant piece about this and other matters, "Now We Are Five," that appeared in the New Yorker. Tiffany had stipulated in her will that the family "could not have her body or attend her memorial service," and among her effects were a number of family photos that had been ripped to pieces. "Now We Are Five" recounts a family trip that summer to a beach house in Emerald Isle, North Carolina, where the surviving children and their 90-year-old father wonder who Tiffany really was and how things had gone so wrong. "Ours is the only club I've ever wanted to be a member of, so I couldn't imagine quitting," David writes of his family. "Backing off for a year or two was understandable, but to want out so badly that you'd take your own life?"

After reading the piece, I remarked to my wife that Tiffany reminded me a lot of my older brother, Scott, the main subject of a memoir I was about to publish, The Splendid Things We Planned. Growing up, Scott was the more promising one: better-looking, more athletic, and arguably smarter (he spoke German, our mother's first language, whereas I can hardly count to ten in anything but English). In many ways, both good and bad, he was more like me than anyone on Earth: He and only he would laugh at the same stupid shit that I did, and nowadays I often find myself laughing alone, and it will occur to me that Scott would have laughed just as hard. But Scott eventually killed himself, too, and by then it wasn't so surprising, though one always wondered to what extent the drugs and drink contributed to his mental illness or vice versa. As early as the age of ten or so, Scott would tell me he had a different family in another dimension (and no little brother) and that someday he'd disappear into their loving arms forever.

Before his local show on April 29, David and I met at the Skirvin Hilton in downtown Oklahoma City, across the street from where my father practiced law for almost 45 years. We candidly discussed our families, especially the "remarkable messes" that were Tiffany and Scott.

VICE: Though Scott and I had a certain affinity, for the most part it wasn't much fun growing up with him. Would you say that you had a relatively happy time growing up in your family?
David Sedaris:
I had a happy time with my family. I always felt safe with them. I always felt a part of them. When I think back on my childhood, I think of my siblings and me sitting around a table laughing with my mother. And I mean long after dinner was finished. We did not leave the table the second we were done eating; my father would, and then we would all breathe a sigh of relief and talk for hours and hours. Elementary school, junior high school, high school, after high school—we just always really enjoyed one another's company.

That sounds great. My heart would kind of sink when it was time to sit down for dinner with my family—or with Scott, anyway.
One thing that I've been saying to people about your book is that, if you've had someone like Scott in your family, it's a grinding wheel. He fucks up majorly, and after he begs forgiveness, you let him back. Then he wrecks the car and goes to rehab. Then he gets out and starts taking drugs—it's the same story over and over and over. What saves a reader from feeling hopeless in your book is that you portray your brother as a remarkable person. A remarkable mess, but a remarkable person nonetheless. As a brother and an author you never lose sight of that. And I think a lot of times people do, especially because they cause you so much pain, these messes. It's the remarkable ones you want to write a book about.

Speaking of remarkable messes: Was Tiffany the difficult one even when she was small?
Yes. She was a lot like my mother. The physical resemblance was almost spooky, and they had a similar personality. Perhaps because of this, our mom never really liked Tiffany. Even as a child I looked at my sister and wondered what that would be like, not to feel the warmth of my mother's love. Tiffany didn't. There was always a nervous quality about her, a tentativeness, a desperate urge to be in your good graces. While the rest of us had eyes in the front of our heads, she had eyes on the sides, like a rabbit or a deer, like prey, always on the lookout for danger. Even when there wasn't any danger. You'd see her trembling and think, You want danger? I'll give you some danger...

More from the Fiction Issue: "Three Love Stories" by April Ayers Lawson

So was she picked on?
She was picked on, though it would have been different if she were higher up in the birth order. Generally speaking, the older you are, the fewer people there are to fuck with you. I was talking to Zach Galifianakis a few weeks ago, and he told me that his older brother used to stuff his filthy underpants into Zach's mouth and say, "I'm serving you with a gag order." He said—and I thought it was very interesting—that his older brother had "formed" him. Zach is a hugely successful comedian and is grateful to have the family that he did. I think of my older sister, Lisa, and how she used to pin me to the ground and spit into my mouth. At the time it wasn't a whole lot of fun, but I certainly don't hold it against her. Tiffany, on the other hand, retained it all. I think it felt like betrayal to her to recall a happy moment. The narrative was that we were horrible to her and nothing we said or did could change it.

Did your younger siblings, Amy and Paul, connect a bit better with her?
Yes, but as Tiffany got older she couldn't hold that in her mind. She was diagnosed, we later learned, as bipolar II, though she preferred to say there was nothing wrong with her. When pressed she'd say that she was being treated for post-traumatic stress disorder and that the trauma was her childhood.


Front row, left to right: Amy, David, Gretchen, Paul, Lisa, and Tiffany

How did you find out about her bipolar diagnosis?
She had cleaned her room but left some papers amongst some trash in a plastic bag hanging on the back of her bedroom door. We never knew what was going on with Tiffany and thought, at one point, of hiring a private detective to find out what her life was like. Because of her secrecy we suspected the worst. I know that she had sex with people for money at certain points in her life.

How do you know that?
Tiffany came twice to visit me and Amy in New York. She went home to Raleigh a few times after moving to Boston, and on every occasion it would end badly. It's like it had to end that way. If there wasn't unpleasantness she'd manufacture it, just so she could leave on a bad note and keep to the narrative she'd fashioned.

There was a guy she knew in Queens who wasn't a boyfriend exactly, who'd buy her plane tickets and give her money. Maybe it's not fair of me, but I suspected it was in return for sex. There were other guys she referred to and situations she recounted in phone calls. Tiffany was very beautiful, and by 14 or so she knew how to use her looks to her advantage. There were a few exceptions, but for the most part, her relationships with men were, well... it always seemed like she was using them, playing them. There never seemed to be an innocent period with her, a period of dating or having a crush. She was sent away to a kind of reform school, a place called Élan [in Maine], when she was 14. Maybe she was innocent there and because we weren't allowed to visit we missed it. It's like she went in as a child and came out a hardened vamp.

More from the Fiction Issue: "The Love Trip" by Brian Booker

We know that Tiffany complained about being in your work.
Tiffany told me I could never write about her, and I said "fine." Then she called one day in the year 2000 and said, "Everybody thinks you don't like me. Will you write a story about me?" I wrote "Put a Lid on It" and sent it to her with a note reading, "Is this OK with you?" She said, "My boyfriend and I read it, and we laughed so hard. You captured me perfectly." Then I took some things out, sent her the revised version, asking, again, "Is this OK?" "Love it," she told me. When the book it was included in came out in 2004, she gave an interview [to the Boston Globe] and said I had invaded her privacy and ruined her life. That was Tiffany in a nutshell. I should have kept it in mind and never written the story. She was always testing the wind and tailoring her reaction according to who she was talking to. Were someone to say, "I love the story your brother wrote," her response would be, "Yes, isn't it great?" And if somebody said, "I can't believe what your brother wrote about you," she'd say, "Yes, isn't it awful?"

How do your siblings react to their appearances in your work? Have there been conflicts with the others? Or do you have a policy of letting them see a given piece before?
I always let them see it first, or almost always. I was in Asheville, North Carolina, about ten days ago, and read a new story I had written about my sister Lisa, who is always willing to laugh at herself. She was in the audience that night, and rather than having her read it in advance, I wanted to surprise her with it. When people laugh at a story about one of my family members, they're laughing because the family member in question is funny. They're laughing, most often, at quotes. Lisa knows she's funny. She's not inclined to get up on stage and do what I do, but the laughs I get with that story are hers, and she earned every one of them.

Growing up, were you closer to some siblings than others? Or did alliances sort of form and dissolve over time?
I think it's like this for everyone in a big family. Relationships shift. When I was in junior high school and high school, I was best friends with my sister Gretchen. We were inseparable. When she went off to college, I started spending more time with Lisa. Then Amy and I moved to Chicago and became inseparable. In New York it was still me and Amy. Then I left the United States, and kind of moved back to Lisa, with short forays to Gretchen. I don't see Paul that often, but things shift, and who knows ten years from now? Amy and I go to Japan together, and she comes to Europe for Christmas, as do the others. I like them all.

Is there a sibling who's relatively conservative, or are you all a bunch of live wires?
Lisa's more—a bit more sober perhaps. I wouldn't use the word conservative. But the stories she tells are wild, and she delivers them beautifully. If you're looking from the outside in, she might appear a little more straitlaced than anybody else—the suburban house, etc.—but I don't know that she really is.

You mention how Paul would occasionally make "Rooster-ish" fun of your sexual orientation. What about your other siblings? Were you out as a gay man with them before you were out with your parents? How did that go down?
That's the great thing about a big family. All you have to do is tell one person, then by sunset everybody knows. I confided in Gretchen, and she did the rest of the work for me. Except for my father, and Paul when he was young, nobody seemed to care. That's probably pretty normal, though. When you're a kid, 13 or 14 years old, you don't want your older brother to be gay. It's embarrassing to you. As a young man Paul had a few bad experiences. Once, he was doing yard work at somebody's house, and this guy pulled over to ask for directions. Paul helped him out, and the guy said, "How about if I suck your dick?" My brother was shocked and went crazy with his rake. I think he thought that this was what being gay was like: You drive around and try to pick up teenagers with rakes and shovels in their hands.


Left to right: David, Lisa, and Gretchen

So was there any friction between you and Paul about it?
Not friction, no. He was, like I said, embarrassed for a while, but he got over it.

In an interview, Amy said something about the first time you brought a boyfriend to the seaside cottage or whatever. Everybody teased him.
When my sisters brought boyfriends home, my mother would make them sleep in separate rooms—this because they weren't married. With my boyfriends, though, there were no restrictions. Funny, but the only sex my mother allowed under her roof was gay sex, perhaps because it couldn't lead to pregnancy. I didn't have a serious boyfriend until I was 27. That was the first time my family saw me in a relationship.

Did your father try to talk you out of it?
Even as late as 2005 he tried to sell me on my friend Evelyne, who is ten years older than me and lives in Chicago. "She's a great gal! You ought to marry her." I'd been with Hugh for 15 years by that point, and I said, "What do you think it says about her that she'd want to marry a gay man?" It was just so weird to me.

He gets along with Hugh OK, right? Or...?
Yes, he does, amazingly well, especially given that he's 92 and Greek. When I started on the radio my father said, "Why do you have to talk about that stuff?" I thought he meant being gay, but he was talking about cleaning apartments. He didn't want people to know that I did that for a living. That, somehow, was more shameful to him than my sexuality, which was interesting.

In your latest story about the Rooster [his younger brother, Paul], you said something about how your mom became a mean drunk at the end.
When you're writing about somebody, whether they're dead or alive, there are things that they wouldn't want the world to know. So I never really addressed my mother's drinking. Writing that story about my brother, though, I wanted to talk about how he was formed, about how different his childhood was from mine. The mother I had would never have spoken to me the way she did to Paul, would never have acted the way she did in front of him, would never have lost control like that. It's hard to admit it, but toward the end of her life she was really an unhappy person, and it broke our hearts because we loved her. Worse still, we never confronted her about it. Instead it just sat there, seeping.

More from the Fiction Issue: "The Terminal Artist" by David Means

So it was sort of doubly sad?
I suppose we all sort of enabled her. She drank like an unhappy person, and that made it all the more troubling. Would our saying something have changed the situation? Who knows. My mom was the sort who really got a kick out of her children. She enjoyed spending time with us, and the feeling was mutual. Then we were gone and the darkness crept in. I was signing books one day, and this mother came up with her two children, aged maybe 18 and 20. They were in that golden period: the kids in college, both so beautiful and content with each other. And I just wanted to protect them. "Horrible, horrible things are coming," I wanted to say. "Remember this time! Cherish it!" I remember my dad boasting to a friend, "I've got the most beautiful daughters in the neighborhood!" And he did.

Speaking of your mom and dad, usually I find the humor about your father to be non-scathing. He's a character, and he's lovable. In "Ashes," though, about your mother's cancer, there's one part where he's berating her about smoking a cigarette, and you write something like, "He'd made a commitment to make her life miserable, and he would stick to that until the bitter end." Did that hurt your dad?
The only time my father got mad at me is when I wrote a story about my grandmother ["Get Your Ya-Ya's Out!"]. I remember when Naked came out, I called him to tell him that the book was on the best-seller list, and he hung up the phone on me. Ouch. Honestly, though, he could have been a lot angrier. I think about that story you mentioned, "Ashes," and cringe. After our mother died we were all mad at my father. We blamed him for making our mother unhappy. She had free will, though. She could have left and improved her life. She could have quit drinking. What did any of us know about marriage, about being with someone for 35 years? In retrospect, he was just an easy target. So when I look at that story it just seems bratty to me, and ignorant.

Was there much physical violence between you and your siblings? You said Lisa got on top of you and spit in your mouth.
As the older brother, it's your job to torment people, to tie your sisters up in a wheelbarrow, for instance, and roll it off a cliff into the ravine. But there was rarely serious violence, never throwing a brick at anybody. A person can really get hurt that way. I remember we had a butterfly chair. You know those canvas—

With the metal frame—
Exactly. So if you were all watching TV and you decided that you wanted to sit in the butterfly chair, you'd take a pin and stick it through the canvas into whichever ass was occupying it at the time. They'd run upstairs to tell on you, and voilà: The chair was yours. But there wasn't a lot of blood drawn. Tiffany stabbed me in the eye with a pencil once. I changed the channel while she was watching Bewitched and she just went ballistic. Blood was everywhere. I had to go to the hospital, but it wound up being nothing serious. She was pretty young, third grade or something, when that happened.


Left to right: David, Lisa, and Mom

Was she remorseful?
Sure, and I don't hold it against her.

I've gotten occasional hate mail about my memoir. Strangers who go to my website, they've read the memoir and they think I'm callous and having fun at Scott's expense. And I've noticed—though the overwhelming response to "Now We Are Five" is positive—there have been some snarky things written about it too. Do you take notice of that sort of thing?
No. I mean, I know that it exists, but I don't pay it any mind. I gave a reading last year in Mississippi, and during the Q&A this woman asked, "What do you say about the charge that you were responsible for your sister's suicide?"

You suggest in "Now We Are Five" that the suicide was, in some ways, a pointed gesture against the family. Do you think that?
Tiffany wrote a seven- or eight-page suicide note that was addressed to her lawyer and said, basically, "This is what led me to do what I did." It was mainly about friends she thought were stealing from her. The letter was so tangled and desperate-sounding. One of the things I noticed while reading it was that she capitalized all of her B's: But, Because, Barely. Everything else was lower case. I only received one letter from Tiffany, and she sent it to me long ago, in 1998, I think. I wasn't aware, then, of what her writing was like. I mean, who capitalizes all their B's?

She said she didn't want any family coming to her memorial service.
Yes. She also stated that we weren't allowed to have her body. Tiffany left all her belongings to a woman she once worked for who lives in New York State. Lisa called about maybe getting a cupful of ashes, and the woman said no. She was furious about this Dutch interview I gave. A couple months after Tiffany died, this Dutch film crew came to Sussex. They followed me around for several days, and toward the end of it, the interviewer kind of pulled up very close to me and said, "I know your sister recently committed suicide. So if you could say one thing to her, if she was here right now, what question would you ask?" And I said, "Can I have back that $6,000 that I loaned you?" I said it because the moment felt so cheesy: the lowered voice, the closeness. Certain people got bent out of shape over it, but come on. Tiffany was nothing if not funny. She would have been the first one to say something like that.

More from the Fiction Issue: "The Bridgetender" by Joy Williams

There's a YouTube video, about five minutes long, of Tiffany. And it was published in 2013, so it must have been toward the end of her life. She's kind of hilarious. She tells this story about Fred Astaire and Dick Cavett—
I saw that, and it made me sad, mainly because she was so much funnier than that. She could really make you laugh, Tiffany could. Most often, though, she'd go on too long. It was rare that she'd let the other person talk, and after a while it became oppressive, especially as she got older.

How would that happen? Can you give me an example of how an otherwise amiable gathering would deteriorate because of Tiffany?
I did a live This American Life show in Boston one year. Tiffany came with me and was getting high all evening, smoking pot, and talking nonstop. Ira Glass was there, a bunch of people, some I knew and some I didn't. At the end of the night, I put Tiffany in a cab, and Jonathan Goldstein said "wow." Because she was out of control that evening. Just would not stop talking. I know when I get nervous I talk a lot, but this was—

Do you think that was the mania?
Maybe. All I know is that I've never seen anything like it. You could set the phone down while talking to Tiffany, and when you picked it up again ten minutes later she'd still be going at it, never asking anything about you, never pausing. It was just this cascade of words. There was rarely any level of engagement, rarely a sense that you were actually conversing. Maybe she was different with her friends. I don't know. I hope it was different with them.

Do you think the Élan thing—I see it was a pretty rough place—do you think that was the most valid aspect of whatever overblown grievance Tiffany had against the family?
I can't remember a single conversation where she didn't talk about that place, I mean, ten, 20, 30 years after she left it.


David at Atlantic Beach, North Carolina

You said that you hadn't spoken to her in eight years before she died, because the last argument was so nasty. Was that argument because of the Boston Globe story, or just another argument with Tiffany?
It was that, yes, and then there were other things. There was never any resolution after an argument with Tiffany. She'd call you up six months after a fight and just pretend that nothing ever happened. I usually went along with it, but this time something stopped me. I just couldn't trust her anymore. She threatened to sell my letters after that and accused me of taking down her Myspace page. As if I'd ever seen it. She accused me of buying her name as a web address, all sorts of things. You don't want to be the brother who's not talking to his sister, but sometimes...

Back when we were talking I'd see her in Boston. Some visits were better than others, and the worse would take a heavy toll. My father, though, was always up for it. He never stopped talking to her, even after she'd berate him, saying the worst things you can imagine. "Things are looking up for Tiffany!" he'd tell us, always so positive. It's sort of beautiful that he believed she was capable of change. [ Imitating his father:]

"What she needs to do is put out an album. She's got a beautiful voice! I talked to her and said, 'We gotta get you on the radio!' ... I talked to her and said, 'What you need to do is pull yourself up by the bootstraps!'" He supported her financially. And that's part of Dad's deal: If he's going to give you money, you're going to listen to all his suggestions about what to do with your life. That's probably every parent's deal. It's why you stand on your own two feet, because you think, If I have to listen to this for five more minutes, I'm going kill myself.

A few years before she died, she decided to move back to Raleigh. It didn't work out, and during the three weeks that she was there she caused some real problems. I'm told she had a knapsack with her. It was locked, and no one was allowed to go anywhere near it. We wonder if there wasn't a tape recorder in it. "Do you think I'm beautiful?" she kept asking my father. "Do you think I'm sexy?" After ten days, she left and moved in with a woman she knew from high school. That lasted a week, and she left claiming that the woman had made sexual advances toward her. This was always the story.

I suggested that my father buy Tiffany an apartment, someplace warm like Key West. There are a lot of people like her down there. In ten minutes she'd have carved out a place for herself, though it wouldn't have solved her greater problems.

Now that Tiffany is dead, or even if she weren't, do you think about writing a memoir—I mean a book-length thing rather than individual pieces? Is that something that tempts you at all?
I would love to find out who she was. But I don't have your skill, the skill to go out and talk to her friends, to hunt down people she went to Élan with and construct a concise portrait of her. We all wonder, my family and I. We talk about it all the time. We'd like to know how she survived. For close to 20 years Tiffany had a good deal on an apartment in Somerville. Her landlady was from China, Mrs. Yip, and for years my sister sang her praises. "Mrs. Yip, she's the greatest. She's teaching me tai chi!" Little by little Tiffany destroyed the apartment: pulled up the linoleum in the kitchen, overturned buckets of paint on the living-room floor, wrote on the walls. The tub was black, and the spare room was crowded floor to ceiling with junk. It became a complete wreck. This rental unit was Mrs. Yip's retirement account. Somerville is full of students, and instead of renting to Tiffany for $1,000 a month, she could have been getting at least twice that, and having tenants who didn't destroy the place. I don't know what happened between my sister and Mrs. Yip, but at some point she stopped paying rent and claimed she'd put $25,000 worth of work into the apartment. There was an eviction notice. Tiffany took out a restraining order. It got ugly, and eventually she moved into a single room in a much worse part of town, and then into another single room.

Can I ask you a question? When people write you ugly things about your book, what does that make you feel? Do you read that stuff?

Yeah. I'm not David Sedaris; I get pretty sparse reader mail, so when I do get it, I tend to respond to it. And most of it is kind. But when I get nasty stuff... OK. So there was this woman who wrote, "You should be ashamed of yourself, turning your brother out of your house at Christmas. What kind of a person are you? You're a monster." That sort of thing. So I reminded her that my brother, around that Christmas, had assaulted my mother and threatened to kill her, so I was just protecting my mother. And I really think we all did the best we could. So I told her, "Why don't you go pick on some other memoir author you don't like, or maybe you have better things to do? For your sake I certainly hope so." Something like that. And other people have said that I'm too detached from my brother's suffering, that I have a tacky sense of humor—things like that. Some people are pretty humorless, and if you don't have a sense of humor you tend to see things in a way I don't understand. It's almost as if they're talking to me in Swahili or something. I don't get it.
I never read anything about myself. No reviews, nothing.

Sometimes people tell me, "You didn't try hard enough with Scott. You didn't try hard enough to help him." Do you get that sort of thing?
In order for things to be different, Tiffany would have had to be a completely different person. I mean, why not say, "Well, if she were four inches tall, and her name were Thumbelina, everything would have been fine." I could not have saved Tiffany. If you don't want to take your medication, there's nothing anyone can do. There's not a single day that I don't think about her, though. She was a remarkable person.

Follow Blake on Twitter.

01 Jun 22:20

eartheasy: Turn your garden into a bee haven with these common...



eartheasy:

Turn your garden into a bee haven with these common plants :)

Reblogging for EH

01 Jun 18:40

Dedicated Scientist Sits on Whale Carcass to Get the Perfect Shot of a Great White Shark

by Alvin Ward
IKEA Monkey

SUPER NOPE

In case you missed this in 2008: The Discovery Channel aired this clip of a scientist's unusual method for getting closer to great whites. Perched on top of a dead whale and surrounded by sharks, a scientist snapped some close-up pictures of the deadly fish. 

After the whale washed up on the beach in South Africa, it was towed back into the ocean. As soon as the whale hit deeper water, great white sharks descended on the carcass. Realizing that this event was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, one scientist jumped on the dead whale to get a better vantage point. 

"This is about the dumbest thing I’ve ever done," he said. "Anything for a good picture."

[h/t: PetaPixel.com]

01 Jun 16:21

Ex-FIFA official cites The Onion as defense

An embattled former FIFA official has scored a spectacular public relations own-goal by citing an article by satirical news outlet The Onion in an attempt to counter criminal charges against him.
01 Jun 15:25

Watch this Young Woman Rap With Kendrick Lamar On Stage and Kill It

by Clover Hope on The Muse, shared by Erin Gloria Ryan to Jezebel
IKEA Monkey

She kills it

During his performance at the Sweetlife Festival in Maryland on Saturday, Kendrick Lamar gave fans the golden opportunity to hop on stage and rap with him. This young woman killed it.

Read more...








01 Jun 15:17

What Is Your Go To Meal to Use What’s In Your Fridge?

by Heather Yamada-Hosley
IKEA Monkey

"Garbage casserole" - just dump in whatever leftovers there are, add some pasta and some cheese, and bake. Always pretty good.

Some days you just don’t have the time to go to the store or money to order delivery, no matter how empty the fridge is. So, what’s your favorite bare-pantry recipe?

Read more...









01 Jun 01:43

Is New Jersey 'hip'?

IKEA Monkey

A: No, and they don't give two flying fucks, you piece of shit

Tony sits down with two Atlantic City comics to talk about the state's hipness and humor. "Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown" airs Sundays at 9 p.m. ET/PT.
01 Jun 01:42

Enrique Iglesias injured in drone mishap

IKEA Monkey

File under: Headlines I did not see coming

Spanish pop star Enrique Iglesias is seeking treatment after a drone cut his hand during a Saturday concert.
01 Jun 00:12

Foodiggity’s Father’s Day Gift Guide, 2015

by Chris Durso
IKEA Monkey

1) These gifts are nice, dad or not and 2) For Father's Day this year I am getting my father two 28-oz USDA Prime tomahawk ribeye chops because I know he will love them

BBQ-APRON-main

BBQ Apron Guide

Father’s Day is June 21st, and there’s only so many ties that you can buy for dad. Thankfully, there are plenty of novelty kitchen and home goods that dad will love, and The Foodiggity Shop is just the place to sell them to you.

Whether dad needs something that will help him grill, bake, make ice cubes, or protect a drink — we’ve got you covered. And, the best part is that you can save 10% on your entire order if you use coupon code DADROCKS.

Wouldn’t dad be so proud, knowing that you saved money on his gift?

 

Amp-Mug-3

Amp Mug, $11.99

Dad can finally turn his mornings up to 11 with The Amp Mug. Designed to look like a vintage guitar amp, the mug will hold the old man’s beverage of choice while his morning continues to rock. Even if he’s drinking tea. [link]

 

BBQ-APRON-main

BBQ Apron Guide, $24.99

Dad will be prepared, protected, and ready to grill with the BBQ Apron Guide. The full-length apron will not only protect the griller’s clothes from grease and sauce stains, but acts as a handy cooking guide. Instructions are printed upside down for easy access. [link]

 

freakers-threesome-590

Freaker Bottle Sleeves, $9.99-$11.99

Dads drink. We know this because they’ve got kids. And, he’ll probably appreciate his beverage well-insulated. Freaker Bottle Sleeves are here to help. Whether dad considers himself some kind of superhero, patriot, or is looking to hide in the backyard, there’s a Freaker for every dad. [link]

 

frozen-peas-main2

Frozen Peas Ice Mold, $14.99

We’ve already established that dad probably drinks (see above). But perhaps dad likes a fancy drink in a glass that requires cooling. That’s where the Frozen Peas Ice Mold comes in.

Ice spheres melt 80% slower than old-fashioned ice cubes. And, dad’s current ice trays probably aren’t giant pea pods. [link]

 

Legless-Pirate-Corkscrew

Legless Pirate Corkscrew, $14.99

Does dad need to get a bottle opened, me hearties? Well, the Legless Pirate Corkscrew is here to help. Complete with a corkscrew for a leg, and a waiter’s friend and foil cutter for arms — this pirate is ready to open any wine bottle.

Let dad know he’s a great FAAARTHER, by bundling it with a Pirate Bottle Sleeve. [link]

 

Knuckle_Pounder_view2

Knuckle Pounder Meat Tenderizer, $11.99

Dad can beat that steak like it owes him money, with the Knuckle Pounder Meat Tenderizer. Made from cast aluminum, dad’s new fist of fury will tenderize and flatten any cut. Even those cheap cuts he has to eat now, because you had to go to that fancy college. [link]

 

air-hockey-salt-pepper-action

Air Hockey Salt and Pepper Shakers, $14.99

What better way to piss off mom, than to challenge dad to a spirited game of air hockey at the dinner table. The Air Hockey Salt and Pepper Shakers are here to help do just that.

The paddles have slippery felt on the bottom for easy sliding, and there’s an included puck. Season your dinner, and then it’s GAME ON!! Sorry, mom. [link]

 

See more dad stuff over at the Foodiggity Shop.

 

30 May 14:27

Newswire: Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen won’t return for Fuller House

by William Hughes
IKEA Monkey

Good, you little witches. Don't. Always walk forward. Forward in witchy, drapey fashion.

If you woke up today hoping to see that at least a few people might be capable of resisting the sinister, siren call of a house that grows fuller by the day, well: you got it, dude. Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen have both announced that they won’t be participating in Fuller House, the planned Netflix revival of the classic sitcom about family, friendship, and laxly followed fire codes. The professional perfumiers officially retired from acting back in 2013, focusing instead on their various fashions products and smells. There was some hope that the pairor even just one! One precious, glittering Olsenoidcould be coaxed into participating in the project after consulting with their celluloid father, Bob Saget. But alas, despite the fact that The Man What Met Your Mother is still in negotiations for his own guest role on the show, it was not to be.

Executive producer ...

30 May 13:56

Former Gov. Pataki Announces White House Bid

IKEA Monkey

take it back from who exactly

In a four-minute campaign video, Pataki says "it is time to stand up, protect our freedom and take back this country."







29 May 23:18

A swim through Jellyfish Lake

by Jason Kottke
IKEA Monkey

I do not want to do this, but it is still weirdly pretty

Jellyfish Lake in Palau is home to approximately 13 million jellyfish. Their mild stings mean you can snorkel in their midst and capture beautifully surreal scenes like this:

If I had a bucket list, I think a swim in Jellyfish Lake w/ classical accompaniment might be on it. (via colossal)

Tags: Palau   video
29 May 17:23

Cry-Baby of the Week: A Woman Stabbed Someone in the Eye in an Argument Over Ribs

by Jamie Lee Curtis Taete
IKEA Monkey

The first lady

It's time, once again, to marvel at some idiots who don't know how to handle the world:

Cry-Baby #1: Sabrina Davis

[body_image width='1000' height='712' path='images/content-images/2015/05/28/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/05/28/' filename='cry-baby-of-the-week-237-body-image-1432847738.jpg' id='61103']

Screencap via Google Maps

The incident: A woman was allegedly asked not to take the last rib at a barbecue.

The appropriate response: Either giving up the rib, splitting it, or eating it really fast, depending on how nice you are.

The actual response: She stabbed someone in the eye with a fork.

Last Sunday, 45-year-old Sabrina Davis (pictured above) was at a barbecue in Muncie, Indiana. According to claims made in a police report that was filed later that evening, Sabrina reached for the last rib from a meat tray in the kitchen a little before 7 PM.

A woman named Angela Watkins, who was also attending the barbecue, was reportedly not too happy with Sabrina's rib-taking attempts. According to the police report, Angela confronted Sabrina as she was "upset that Davis was taking the last rib" and felt she had been "taking all the food."

Angela's sister, Lanika Marshall, told police that Sabrina responded by stabbing Angela in the eye with the fork that she'd been using to take the rib. The sister claims that Angela then grabbed a knife and tried to revenge-stab Lanika with it, but was held back until police arrived.

Sabrina was arrested and charged with felony criminal recklessness with a deadly weapon. During police questioning, Sabrina confirmed that the stabbing had been because Angela had taken the pan of meat away from her, but claimed that Angela had pulled a knife on her first.

Angela was treated at a nearby hospital for two small lacerations on her eye.

The police report does not specify who ultimately got to eat the last rib.

Cry-Baby #2: David Wilson

[body_image width='965' height='695' path='images/content-images/2015/05/29/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/05/29/' filename='cry-baby-of-the-week-237-body-image-1432858819.jpg' id='61131']

Screencap via Google Maps

The incident: A woman said IndyCar was better than NASCAR.

The appropriate response: Nothing.

The actual response: Her fiancé allegedly choked her.

Earlier this week, police in Johnson County, Indiana, received a 911 call from a woman in distress. Before the woman could explain the situation, the 911 operator heard a male voice ask "Who are you calling?" before saying "Everything is fine here," into the phone and hanging up.

Police were dispatched to the address, where they found a woman who claimed she had been choked by her fiancé, 57-year-old David Lee Wilson (pictured above). According to a report in The Indianapolis Star, the woman explained to police that David had been in the kitchen while she listened to the Indianapolis 500 in the living room with a friend.

While she chatted to the friend, she reportedly said that she preferred the Indianapolis 500 races to NASCAR races. This sent David, who had overheard from the kitchen, into a rage, the woman told deputies.

She alleges that David came into the living room and began "rambling" that NASCAR was better than IndyCar. He then started choking her, she said, prompting her 911 call.

Police arrested David on allegations of strangulation and domestic battery. He admitted that he had gotten angry after hearing his fiancé "talking trash" about NASCAR, but denied choking her.

Unsurprisingly, the woman reportedly told officers that she and David had been "drinking all day."

Who here is the bigger cry-baby? Let us know in this poll right here:

Previously: A guy who drowned a dog because it wouldn't stop barking vs. a woman who allegedly beat a man with a crowbar because he was snoring.

Winner: The guy who drowned the dog :(

Follow Jamie Lee Curtis Taete on Twitter.

29 May 15:38

This 42-Piece Leftover-Saving System is Only $18 Today

by Shep McAllister, Commerce Team on Deals, shared by Shep McAllister, Commerce Team to Lifehacker
IKEA Monkey

oh damn, these are great. I already have a set but they are the best.

If you deal with a lot of leftovers, you won’t find a better plastic storage system than Rubbermaid’s Easy Find Lid containers. Today on Amazon, the massive 42 piece set is only $18, which is one of the lowest prices ever listed on the rarely-discounted item.

Read more...









29 May 13:06

Obama poster's maker loses hope

IKEA Monkey

who cares

Shepard Fairey says he's run out of hope for President Barack Obama.
28 May 04:24

30 People Kicked Out Of Hotel After Scuffle Over Waffle Iron

by Laura Northrup
IKEA Monkey

Waffles: Serious Business

Few people are very amiable before breakfast, but things got really out of hand this week at a hotel in Michigan. A brawl of Chuck E. Cheese proportions broke out during breakfast at a hotel in Pere Marquette Township, Michigan. Two women began an argument over whose turn it was to make a waffle at the hotel’s breakfast bar.

How do 30 people fight over one waffle? Hotel employees called the local sheriff’s department and walked in to find what they called “a large group of people arguing over the waffle maker.” Police recounted that the dispute apparently began when one woman asked another whether she was using the waffle iron at that moment. When she didn’t respond, the first woman went ahead and made a waffle, and the two argued over whose waffle was cooking at that moment. Additional people joined in what was more of a shouting match and less of a physical dispute.

All of the people involved were asked to pack up their rooms and leave the hotel, and police stayed until all people involved in the breakfast brawl had left.

Waffle-maker dispute results in 30 people kicked out of Mason County hotel, police say [MLive]

28 May 03:29

You Won't Believe What the Baby from Twilight Looks Like Now

by Madeleine Davies
IKEA Monkey

crying

It’s been three years since The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn—Part 2 was released and Mackenzie Foy, the child actor who played Edward and Bella’s daughter Renesmee Cullen in the film, is now a breathtaking teenager.

Read more...








28 May 02:17

Death Sentence Becomes Life for 10 Nebraska Killers

by Tracy Connor
IKEA Monkey

Nebraska is changing. I predict it turns blue in 10-15 years.

The repeal of the death penalty means a new lease on life for 10 men on death row in the Cornhusker State.







28 May 02:06

U.S. military mistakenly shipped anthrax to 9 states, Korea

IKEA Monkey

oh, this is cool, I'm sure this is fine

Four Defense Department workers have been put in post-exposure treatment, a defense official said, following the revelation the U.S. military inadvertently shipped live anthrax samples in the last several days.
28 May 02:06

Serious Injuries Reported After Tornado Hits Texas Gas Rig

IKEA Monkey

All the floods and now this, where are the weirdos claiming its god being mad about gay marriage or something? Guy? Where you at. (Seriously though I hope everyone is OK, it is really scary in TX right now :( )

A tornado touched down in northwestern Texas Wednesday, damaging a gas drilling rig and resulting in serious injuries.







27 May 16:54

15 Things You Should Know About 'The Birth Of Venus'

by Kristy Puchko
IKEA Monkey

I've seen it in person, and it is indeed enormous

Completed in 1486, Sandro Botticelli's The Birth of Venus has become one of the most heralded works of the Renaissance and a lasting symbol of feminine grace and beauty. Yet there's much more to this radiant work than you might imagine. 

1. The Birth of Venus depicts several gods.

Venus, goddess of love, stands demurely on the seashell, being blown to shore by Zephyr, god of the west wind. There, one of the Horae, goddesses of the seasons, is ready with a cape to clothe the newborn deity. 

The fourth figure carried by Zephyr is meant to be either an Aura (nymphs of the wind) or Chloris, a nymph associated with spring and blossoming flowers like those flowing through the picture. 

2. It MAY CONTAIN VERY SUBTLE hidden genitalia.

And no, we don't mean what lies beneath Venus's carefully placed palm. The shell she stands on may be meant to represent female genitalia, which creates a birthing scene that reflects Venus's oceanic origins while connecting symbolically to human birth.   

3. Venus's nudity was groundbreaking. 

Christian inspiration was dominant in the art of the Middle Ages, so nudity was rarely portrayed. However, the emergence of humanism led to a renewed interest in the myths of ancient Rome, and with it a resurrection of nudes. 

4. It's an early WORK ON CANVAS.

During this period of the Early Renaissance, painting on wood panels was all the rage. But canvas' popularity was on the rise, especially in humid regions where wood tended to warp. Since canvas was cheaper than wood, its perceived status was a bit lower, so it was reserved for works that weren't intended for grand public displays. The painting stands out as the first work on canvas in Tuscany

5. The Birth of Venus was meant to hang in a bedroom. 

The piece's nudity takes on a more sensual tone when you know it was meant to hang over a marital bed. This locale and its daring depiction contributed to The Birth of Venus being hidden from public viewing for roughly 50 years. 

6. The Birth of Venus has a companion piece. 

Though it was completed four years before its sister, La Primavera can be viewed as a sort of sequel to The Birth of Venus. While the latter depicts Venus's arrival in a world on the verge of blooming, the former shows the world in bloom around the now-clothed maternal figure. It's said the pair of paintings were meant to communicate how "love triumphs over brutality."

7. It's bigger than you'd think.

The Birth of Venus measures in at roughly 6 feet by 9 feet. It's been called the "first large-scale canvas created in Renaissance Florence." 

8. The Birth of Venus survived the Bonfire of the Vanities. 

On February 7, 1497, Dominican friar Girolamo Savonarola spurred Christians in Florence to erect a seven-story pyre to burn art and other baubles like mirrors, jewelry, dice and art that were believed to promote sin. Some historical reports claim Botticelli was one of these followers and threw a few of his own works on the fire. But The Birth of Venus was spared the flames.

9. Its varnish BEGAN to obscure the painting. 

Over centuries, coats of varnish meant to preserve the painting began to turn opaque, shielding some of Botticelli's details and colors from view. But a careful restoration that concluded in 1987 gently stripped this layer away, revealing the soft and pearly colors the artist intended.

10. Botticelli pulled Venus's pose from ancient art.

The goddess’ modest gesture to cover her private parts is one favored in the Capitoline Venus, a category of statue that specifically depicts Venus in just this way. The first of these works is believed to date back to the second or third century BCE.

11. It may have been meant to replace a lost masterpiece. 

Some sources believe The Birth of Venus was modeled after the long lost Venus Anadyomene, a painting by ancient Greek artist Apelles that was once described by Roman author Pliny the Elder and known only through his written account. 

12. The Birth of Venus may have been inspired by a poem.

Other theories posit that this particular scene was based on a Homeric hymn published in Florence by Demetrios Chalkokondyles that reads:

"Of august gold-wreathed and beautiful
Aphrodite I shall sing to whose domain
belong the battlements of all sea-loved
Cyprus where, blown by the moist breath
of Zephyros, she was carried over the
waves of the resounding sea on soft foam.
The gold-filleted Horae happily welcomed
her and clothed her with heavenly raiment."

But the more common interpretation is that its inspiration was a poem by Botticelli's friend Agnolo Poliziano.

13. It took The Birth of Venus centuries to find fame. 

During Botticelli’s life, his works were often overshadowed by the artists of the High Renaissance. But 400 years after The Birth of Venus’ completion, Botticellis began making their way into the collections of European museums. His pieces finally won esteem in the 19th century, with The Birth of Venus becoming his most revered work.

14. The Birth of Venus is a landmark of beauty. 

Beyond being a beloved example of Renaissance art, the painting has also become a marker by which other eras’ beauty norms are measured. Her pose has been co-opted by various modern models. And as recently as 2014, The Birth of Venus has been used as a tool to criticize modern beauty standards. 

15. Botticelli asked to be buried at the feet of his Venus. 

Not the painting, mind you. He wanted to lie eternally by its earthly inspiration, Simonetta Cattaneo de VespuccI. Called the most beautiful woman in Florence as well as the most beautiful woman of the Renaissance, Simonetta was the muse who inspired several of Botticelli’s works, including The Birth of Venus and La Primavera. When he died in 1510, Botticelli was put to rest near this married noblewoman, for whom it is speculated he harbored unrequited love.

27 May 16:17

Man covers body with bees, sets record

IKEA Monkey

PESKY BEES

CNN's Michael Holmes and Amara Walker have the story of a Chinese man who set a world record by covering himself with entirely too many bees.
27 May 01:39

While County Struggles To Serve Mentally Ill Inmates, One Is "Literally Eating The Jail"

by Rachel Cromidas
IKEA Monkey

Tragic

While County Struggles To Serve Mentally Ill Inmates, One Is "Literally Eating The Jail" A Chicago teen jailed for an alleged low-level burglary a year ago has been "literally eating the jail," authorities say, costing the city over a $1 million in medical expenses. [ more › ]






26 May 19:17

Teens Are Trying to Summon a Demon Named Charlie Using Social Media

by Joel Golby
IKEA Monkey

SOUPING

[body_image width='1632' height='1224' path='images/content-images/2015/05/26/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/05/26/' filename='teens-are-trying-to-summon-a-mexican-demon-using-social-media-because-teens-904-body-image-1432638657.jpg' id='59845']Image by author

This article originally appeared on VICE UK.

And the Devil did push his head up through the ages of rock and bring down upon the earth a rain of lava and hellfire, and we did ask him, we did turn to him and say: Yo, the Devil, what the fuck are you doing here? We weren't expecting you here. Thought we had a thousand more years. And the Devil did crush the mountains down to dust and turn the seas to stone and the earth was rendered instantly fallow and we were like: Dude, why did you do that? Du–ude! You just killed all of the corn, man! We were going to eat that shit! What the fuck, the Devil? And the Devil did turn to us and with a voice as deep as a thousand trucks revving in an old cave, with a voice impure and dirty, and did scream into the mayhem-filled sky just a single word.

"TEENS," the Devil said. "TEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEENS!" And the night was long and black and infinite, and the earth lay dead and still, and all of us were made skeletons in an instant before the eyes of God.

What I am saying here is that teenagers are using social media to summon up a Mexican demon called "Charlie" and this seems like both the natural conclusion to things here in the corporeal realm ("How did the world end?" "Teens summoned a demon for Vine likes and then fire embraced the world." "Yeah, that... that seems about right") and also the most #teen thing to ever be done by #teens.

[youtube src='//www.youtube.com/embed/a3SB0vpCL-g' width='640' height='360']

Here's how it works, in case you want to summon a Mexican demon with an extremely un-Mexican name: You balance two pencils very carefully on each other in a cross-like arrangement, then write "YES / NO / YES / NO" in the gaps, then you chant, "Charlie, Charlie, are you there?" If you want anything to happen, then at this point you gently blow on the top pencil to spin it towards one of the answers of your choice. If you are accompanied by a #teen they will absolutely freak their shit at this and start screaming and running through the house and having those vibrant, high-octane emotions that teenagers have, and then they will make a video of this and put it on Instagram for anywhere between 40 and 55 likes. And lo, a short-lived meme is born.


Related: Boy racers are one of the UK's most enduring teen tribes.


I think it's safe to say here that #teens are not truly summoning the spirit of some Mexican devil-lite, but are in fact summoning the whole internet to an obscure hashtag to look at some pens and pencils arranged in a cross, slowly revolving while someone screams. Because that's it, isn't it? Teenagers have finally become self-aware, and are trolling the entire world with some hokey Ouija board-esque shit.

Quiz: How Satan Are You?

If you are a teenager, please don't read the following paragraphs, and just skip straight ahead to the conclusion. If you are a real person: Have you ever felt at once closer to death and further from your youth than seeing this #charliecharliechallenge shit? This is what teenagers do now. They scream at pencils. They suck their lips into a shot glass and then have to go to hospital. Because this is what #teens are: creatures without responsibility but locked into strict curfews; humans with a wriggling sense of urgent energy about them, keen to get out and crush the world and forge it anew in their own image, but still having to do exams about algebra and shit. They are colts revving in the stables of life, and they all have a really good 4G connection.

This is the thing. When I was a #teen the greatest thrill I could hope to experience was finding some glossy-print pornography under a bush or getting drunk on clear and cold and illicitly-got cider before doing a basic sex act on a park bench. When I was a #teen, going to France and buying a penknife automatically made you the coolest boy at school. Now #teens have had smartphones basically as long as they have been alive. Now #teens are all Vine celebrities or YouTube vloggers. Imagine how insane you would have gone if you had this kind of untapped internet access when you were 15. Imagine if every stupid tweet you did was dissected and presented as the end of days by tabloid papers across the world. What I am saying is this: of course #teens are summoning The Devil up from the very bowels of hell, to scorch our earth of both #teens and the adults who make it their business to ruin the lives of #teens. It's the natural conclusion to a world obsessed with instant access to taste-making semi-adults, bored and drunk on their own small power, Snapchatting one final picture of their junk to one another as the molten asteroids pelt us down to nothing.

Anyway, TL;DR: end of days is coming, teens mostly responsible.

Follow Joel Golby on Twitter.

26 May 16:24

Arnold Schwarzenegger Got Photobombed By Rob McElhenney At UFC 187

by Andrew Husband

While everyone was too busy keeping up with the fight on Saturday (not to mention new light heavyweight champion Daniel Cormier’s remarks on Jon Jones after), one intrepid Redditor noticed something different during the Pay Per View telecast. No, it wasn’t a missed detail in the fight itself. Rather, it was who was attending the fight.

Mr. Let’s-Blow-Sh*t-Up-Together himself, Arnold Schwarzenegger, was in attendance at Saturday’s big match-up. The cameras panned over to the former Governator’s spot several times throughout the PPV broadcast. However, it was the moment that It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia‘s Rob McElhenney photobombed Schwarzenegger that sent Redditor frizzle_fraz into a fit of pure delight.

That’s right, folks. Mac puteth the stare down on all UFC 187 PPV viewers during Schwarzenegger’s thumbs up.

(Via Reddit)

26 May 15:25

More Ragweed (and Allergies) May Be in Europe's Future

by Associated Press
IKEA Monkey

Climate change isn't real, part 5

Global warming will bring much more sneezing and wheezing to Europe by midcentury, a new study says.







26 May 15:24

13 dead in tornado strike

IKEA Monkey

Climate change isn't real, part 4

In six seconds, a tornado ripped through the border city of Ciudad Acuña, Mexico, with a ferocity that officials said hasn't been witnessed in more than 100 years.
26 May 15:24

Vanishing stories in a vanishing country

IKEA Monkey

Climate change isn't real, part 3

You've probably heard climate change will cause stronger storms, drier droughts and possibly mass extinctions. But one of the clearest -- and far-less-talked-about -- injustices of climate change is that it threatens to disappear entire countries.
26 May 15:24

Mom, kids missing in Texas flood

IKEA Monkey

Climate isn't changing, part 2

As the cabin she and her family were in was swept away, Laura McComb called her sister. FULL STORY