Shared posts

07 Mar 20:30

A Child's Intuition

07 Mar 20:20

SUPER MEGA COMICS


ATTENTION SUPERMEGANAUTS, are you into the board gaming hobby but missed the Kickstarter for my game "Mage Tower, A Tower Defense Card Game"? Well it's coming out soon and you can jump on board the Mage Tower train, and get the game, by supporting the new Kickstarter for expansion artwork: http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/648592395/mage-tower-a-tower-defense-card-game-art-for-expan This is the FIRST DAY of the project and also the MOST IMPORTANT day. I've been working on this for the past year and it's a cool game AHH so if you're into that stuff you should check it out!!! Also I'm doing another 30 DAYS OF MEGA so that means a lot of comics YESSS.
30 DAYS OF MEGA AGAIN COMIC #3: CAVE TOUR


Vote News 2-26-13
Who would did wants to read the interview with me, Johnny Smash, on the Great Works Review Blog??: http://greatworkreview.blogspot.com/2013/02/super-mega-comics-brimmer-webcomic.html
-JohnnySmash
JohnnySmash@gmail.com

2-25-13
AHHHHHH if you missed the Kickstarter for my game "Mage Tower, A Tower Defense Card Game" well it's coming out soon and you can still get a copy a month early on the new Kickstarter I'm doing to raise money for expansion artwork AHHHHHH http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/648592395/mage-tower-a-tower-defense-card-game-art-for-expan
-JohnnySmash
JohnnySmash@gmail.com

New Fan Art

(No new fan art.)
07 Mar 20:19

Titters

by michaeldeforge

For the Believer


07 Mar 17:13

Dark, Lanterns, Tables, and Waiters, and Stars.

by Jordan Crane
Taylor Swift

This is even better if you read this whole thing like a single Fall song

06 Mar 23:24

GO TO: 3/6 (tonight) RAMMING SPEED / HOT GRAVES / PHANTOM GLUE / RAMLORD @ Cambridge Elks Lodge

by dan
Taylor Swift

Oh my GOD I wish there were three of me (one would go home and be responsible, one would go home and be irresponsible, and by the third I'd feel OK going out and being social)

577977_10151489441489297_1502175413_n

An all ages explosion of heady heaviness over in Central Sq. if you’re lucky and smart enough. That’s what is just sitting there waiting for the likes of you who want to bang your head, and know enough to follow the sounds of the all encompassing and insanely fun history-of-metal-as-a-band known in these parts as the almighty RAMMING SPEED. They have a new record coming out this summer on PROSTHETIC RECORDS, but until then catch the action live. PHANTOM GLUE, one of my absolute favorite local metal-whatever bands is also playing. And if you like your metal full of awesome riffs, a little bit of psychedelia and whole lot of sludge then you should not be anywhere else than here tonight. Florida’s HOT GRAVES bring the “D-beat death thrash” for fans of Venom and last but NOT least RAMLORD seal the deal with their blackened crust. At one of our favorite venues, the Cambridge Elks Lodge.

@ Central Square Elks Lodge
55 Bishop Richard Allen Dr, Cambridge, MA
$7 Requested Donation
7pm-11pm // Respect the Space

The post GO TO: 3/6 (tonight) RAMMING SPEED / HOT GRAVES / PHANTOM GLUE / RAMLORD @ Cambridge Elks Lodge appeared first on The Boston Hassle.

06 Mar 20:23

Courtesy

06 Mar 19:14

Albini on Cobain

by adamkempa
Taylor Swift

I'm going through some of my older feeds, so pardon the "published" date. Anyway, this is pretty heartbreaking, and a good reminder that Albini's notorious curtness is more of a rhetoric trope than a complete indicator of personality. (I will not attempt to herein dissect his personality.)

     While going through a stack of old issues of the Chicago Reader for another project, I happened upon the April 14th, 1994 issue, which featured a few selected reactions to Kurt Cobain’s then-recent suicide.

     The first words in the feature come from Steve Albini, and the no-nonsense type treatment that the Reader’s designers gave to his copy seemed to match his tone perfectly. I was surprised when I googled to find that this article seemingly hasn’t made it onto the internet.
 

     So, here it is in full: “Nevermind the Bullshit: An Outsider’s Reminiscence:”

     The phone started ringing about midday Friday. Journalists from all over the globe, being stalled in their bloodthirsty quest for gory details from anybody who might know anything, had begun grasping at straws, trying to find someone with a pithy, incisive comment on Kurt Cobain’s suicide. Probably because my phone number is easy to come by, and probably because a few of the more dense practitioners thought I would have an ax to grind, they called me. They all called me. Radio guys, newspaper guys, magazine guys. English, Japanese, Italian. Certain fuckups who knew I wouldn’t speak to them had their stoolies and underlings call me.

     I didn’t have much to tell them. I knew Kurt Cobain, sure, but so did a lot of other people. I wouldn’t call him a friend, but not because I didn’t like him. I met him too late in the game for a real friendship to have been possible. By then, he was already a millionaire rock star. He was surrounded by people whose status and income depended on his popularity. All of those people and more presented themselves as his friends.

     He was smart enough and realistic enough to know that someone popping out from behind a bush trying to be his friend probably had an angle. He was weary from those people being his friends. Out of respect for what remained of his patience, I never pressed him for any intimacy.

     My impression of him is probably as skewed as anybody else’s. I saw him during a resolute period, where he and his band were operating at capacity: productive, confident and (mostly) at ease. There were obviously episodes before then and since where things were not going so well, but I’m disinclined to speculate why. Plenty of other people who knew him less than I did will do that for you.

     I was and remain an outsider to the daily goings-on within the band and in Kurt’s life, like a small child dazzled and a little frightened by a carnival, which others around him took little notice of. As an outsider. I had benefit of a neutral perspective when weird things occurred, as they do in the lives of all important people.

     I realized how different their world was from mine the first day I was in the band’s company. Krist Novoselic had brought a pile of settlement papers with him from Washington for the band to sign. The settlements were for different nuisance law-suits that had sprung up like fleabites once the band became successful. Sign here, and give a few grand to someone who claims a splinter from a broken bass guitar got in his arm, requiring traumatic tweezing. Sign here, and give a house down payment to some bastard who says somebody in Nirvana was once in a band that was once in debt to him for a phone bill. Sign here, and pay off somebody for remembering that his high-school band was once named “Nirvana.” Sign here, and put some greedy bastard’s kid through military school because he wore a Nirvana T-shirt to a wake, traumatizing the guests.

     The nonchalance with which these parasites were bought off, as though it were a common and insignificant chore, dumb-founded me. The band, before breakfast, had dispersed more money to liars and cheats than I would make in a year or more.

     There seemed to be no end of badgering crap. Everybody, everywhere wanted a piece of them; wanted them to pony up and pay the street tax on the road to popularity. In addition to the periodic bleedings they had to endure, there was the constant intrusion of the world at large into their lives. A journalist with a chip on her shoulder had almost cost Kurt his daughter, whom he loved with more enthusiasm than any other thing. The authorities, once tipped, belligerently ignored the plight of the thousands of truly unloved and uncared­ for children whose parents didn’t happen to be famous, in an attempt to make an example of a nontraditional couple.

     Another pair of would-be journalists (crazed groupie chicks, actually) had been hounding Kurt, his wife, and all of their friends while “researching” a “book.” Their research apparently included seducing Family members, swiping personal artifacts, and accosting them in public, in an attempt to cause a “scene.”

     Traveling in rock­-music circles makes dealing with death inevitable. There is a persistent and pathetic association between extremes of lifestyle, indulgence, obsession and rock music. ln the last couple years, l’ve seen a half­-dozen friends and acquaintances die or pretty much so. It’s a drag, and it’s a shame, but as long as there are suckers for the myth of the outlandish rocker, there will always be people to encourage them and profit from their decline. They’re also going to die once in a while. That’s part of the myth, too.

     Every thinking person has, at some point, contemplated ending his or her life. Few of us do it, but everyone can appreciate the impulse and occasionally entertain the thought. Given the magnitude of the life that was dropped in his lap, it would be pompous and naive to criticize Kurt Cobain for acting on it.

     Kurt Cobain’s death was not an accident. It was a shame.

Steve Albini, a Chicago-based recording engineer, worked with Nirvana last year on its third and final studio album, “In Utero.”

06 Mar 17:52

Emma "Grandma" Gatewood

by jeb
Thumbs_3386-grandma-gatewood-

“Make a rain cape, and an over the shoulder sling bag, and buy a sturdy pair of Keds tennis shoes. Stop at local groceries and pick up Vienna sausages… most everything else to eat you can find beside the trail…and by the way those wild onions are not called “Ramps”… they are “Rampians” … a ramp is an inclined plane.

Ultralight Backpacking Pioneer/All Around Badass Emma Gatewood on Appalachian Trail gear lists in 1970. Gatewood was the first woman to do the AT solo in one season, and she did it the first time at the age of 67. Because she “thought it would be a nice lark” (“It wasn’t”).

06 Mar 13:47

Shut Up Woman Fett On My Horse

by jwz
Taylor Swift

ATTN: Graham