Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Friday, February 18, 2011

Disappointment 2.0


TEXT: Hello and greetings from Charlottesville, Virginia, and welcome to my Facebook page! I have a lot of Facebook friends who I’ve never met or haven’t seen in a while – people who live in every corner of Virginia, in other states, and even around the world! Making a video is a great and fun way to reach out to you and for you to get a better idea of who I am and what I’m all about. I hope you enjoyed this video and will show me some love by making a comment and hitting the “like” button! Thank you and have a great day!

THREAT LEVEL MIDNIGHT


Like I know kitsch is supposedly not as good when it's faked, but "The Scarn" is as good as "Lep in the 'hood, come to do no good," right?

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Whet your appetite

the new crunchholdoh album is done and drops soon. Here's a taste:







[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]





Tuesday, February 15, 2011

We Messed with the Zohan


The original title of which was: "The Israelis Are Our Heroic Allies, Even Though They Are Ridiculous, Effeminate Jews"

Sunday, February 13, 2011

RIP Luis Eduardo, deseo que le conociera mejor



yo, headphones if u got em


Shoutout my Tio Abuelo, Luis Eduardo, dead a week now (almost exactly). Love to my Abuelita who had to bury a brother the day before her birthday. Not quite sure why this los panchos song except that I've been listening to it nonstop and I kinda remember hearing that he liked it (but who doesn't like los panchos? who? who?). I do anyhow.

Revisionist History

Thursday, February 10, 2011

"'Group!' 'Group!'"


Columbus was so long ago he might as well have been the fuckin' movies.

Saturday, February 5, 2011

"In my view, the most significant discovery of the annotations is that Gravity's Rainbow unfolds according to a circular design. Across the novel's four parts, historical events intersect the Christian liturgical calendar, inferring possibilities for return and renewal, but possibilities that Pynchon's satire hopelessly equivocates. This means that readers might have a novel as elegantly modeled as Joyce's Ulysses and have their deconstructionism too. Indeed, one might well read Gravity's Rainbow as the terrible dynamic of a culture huddling on the brink of nuclear winter."

--A Gravity's Rainbow Companion: Sources and Contexts for Pynchon's Novel by Steven Weisenburger

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Mostly for the Ladies


A compilation of people dancing alone to Ginuwine's "Pony." I mean, doesn't it kind of make you question established notions of solitude?