synchronoptica
one year ago: one-night houses (with synchronoptica), the discovery of Lucy (1974), Diamond Geezer plus It’s Black Friday, Charlie Brown!
synchronoptica
one year ago: one-night houses (with synchronoptica), the discovery of Lucy (1974), Diamond Geezer plus It’s Black Friday, Charlie Brown!
the mccallisters: Maculay Culkin digitally inserted in other Christmas movies by the Brothers Bell—via Waxy
to get me, somebody would have to shoot through the fake news: what a second Trump term means for journalism—see previously
predatory pricing: Elizabeth Warren calls out industry over .com domains
firehose: Bluesky posts as they happen
this hour has twenty-two minutes: US national coding lessons have the look of extended commercial advertising
walk right in—it’s a round back, just a half a mile from the railroad track: the title figure of the seasonal Arlo Guthrie song, Alice Brock, has passed away, aged 83
life with grandpa: an unsettling example of perverse puppetry from the cult The Family International
holidays are coming: Coca-Colas’s AI commercial spot improved—via Web Curios
Though I would too defend Maurizio Cattelan piece of a banana duct-taped to a wall as legitimate art in the route of Duchamp or Warhol (and not an object with actual permanence like the hyper-realistic and satirical sculptures in the artist’s repertoire but rather a perishable piece of fruit and a roll of duct tape that need replacing with a certificate of authenticity and instructions on how to display the work—see also), the sale of a third edition (the first two were acquired by museums for a more reasonable sum of one-hundred and twenty thousand dollars) to an entrepreneur for just over six-million— well over its million dollar reserve price and paid in Bitcoin, one of the only lots for which the auction house would accept payment in that form—makes me think that the resurrection of the Trump regime, for all the obvious nefariousness, was also a vehicle to bring back the grift of crypto and NFTs. The main element of the work was purchased the morning of the auction from a local fruit vendor for 35¢, appreciating in value fifteen-million fold, by the end of the day. The two other copies were eaten while on exhibitions, as will this one, whose new owner is happy about the portable nature of the work that could be mounted anywhere.
synchronoptica
one year ago: an apparent breakthrough in general artificial intelligence (with synchronoptica) plus a counter-culture Thanksgiving tradition
seven years ago: more Thanksgiving greetings
eight years ago: another pause for Turkey Day
nine years ago: recommended gift catalogues
ten years ago: poetry and language
Via Friend of the Blog par excellence Nag on the Lake, we are introduced to the esteemed French-Russian surgeon, Serge Voronoff (see also, though we were hoping they were one in the same personage) who gained international fame for his xenotransplantation experiments (see previously) as a meanings of restoring virility and vitality by grafting simian glands onto human recipients. Controversial and subsequently debunked as quackery, Voronoff’s practise and outrageous claims made him very wealthy—initially he moved from research on the thyroid to transplanting testes from executed criminals onto millionaire clients but soon demand surpassed donors and the doctor turned to using chimpanzee (see above) tissue instead. We learn about this work, which has echoes of modern rejuvenation movements and seemingly similarly ill-informed courtesy of a defiant letter to the editor penned by playwright George Bernard Shaw in May 1928 on behalf of the titular London’s Regent’s Park zoo’s most famous resident of the monkey house, not keen on donating—ahead of Voronoff’s much-anticipated visit to the UK in response to detractors maintaining that the implantation would cause humans to take on the baser attributes of their close relative—as read by Andy Serkis (previously—here’s an alternate source as the original link has been sadly zombified by AI slop)—Golem and Caesar from Planet of the Apes.
Beginning on this day in 2004, the series of protests (see also) lasting two months and one day called the Orange Revolution (Pomarancheva revoliutsiia, the colour of the campaign of Western-oriented Viktor Yushchenko and adopted by his supporters) caused political upheaval and reform and was sparked by the outcome of a presidential run-off perceived to be marred with fraud, corruption and voter intimidation, which favoured Russia-aligned candidate Victor Yanukovich. The Ukrainian Supreme Court was swayed by the acts of non-violent civil disobedience and general disruption, backed by international observers that questioned the election’s validity and annulled the results of the initial second round and ordered new voting, under close scrutiny, which were judged free and fair and ultimately installed Yushchenko in office with a “public inauguration on 23 January 2005.
On this day in 1974 during the General Assembly, the United Nations adopted a resolution recognising and reaffirming the right of the Palestinian people to self-determination (after the 1917 and 1948 agreements) “without external interference; the right to national independence and sovereignty and the inalienable right of return to homes and property from which they have been displaced and uprooted.” Simultaneously, the UN officially regarded the Palestine Liberation Organisation as a representative of the Palestinian people and granted observer status.
synchronoptica
one year ago: Freigeld, money with an expiration date (with synchronoptica)
seven years ago: DC’s Bible museum, dismantling net neutrality plus UK water utilities employ dowsing
eight years ago: Xerox and zines, a forthcoming Dune remake, an experimental electromagentic propulsion drive plus Trump’s dictatorial tendencies
nine years ago: the Parable of the Puddle plus assorted links worth revisiting
eleven years ago: the Noun Project
enemy of the people: veteran journalists expect Trump to go after the press by every possible means
net elevation: calculate the differential between the birth place and the death place of the good and the great—via Waxy
panda diplomacy: Russia donates seventy animals to North Korean zoo with a plane sanctioned by the US normally dispatched to Syria—via Super Punch
jellyfish dream theatre: a visit to the Kamo Aquarium in Yamagata prefecture, home to the largest collection of medusazoa
cryptobro: investigating undisclosed financial interest in various schemes, BBC trolled by Paul Logan impersonator
icc: the International Criminal Court has issued warrants for the Israeli president, former defence secretary and Hamas’ military leader on charges of war crimes
ai pimping: the growing industry of machine-generated influences
exclusive gladiator experience: AirBNB’s booking at the Colosseum incites outrage
test-fire: in response to strikes with Western missile systems, Putin orders the firing of experimental hyper-sonic armament deep into Ukraine
allotted to companionship: a look at how a certain demographic spent their time in the 1930s as compared to today—via tmn
grim meat-hook future: resistance to Trump’s authoritarian regime could result in a military coup—read the comments
synchronoptica
one year ago: assorted links worth revisiting (with synchronoptica) plus a lost demo tape rediscovered decades later
seven years ago: endangered elements plus more links to enjoy
eight years ago: more fun with shadows plus Eigengrau and colour perception
nine years ago: Alan Moore’s Star Wars
ten years ago: ransomware plus dialect and distinction
The stupidities of American politics and culture wars is grindingly wearisome and beyond the bandwidth of most to follow—although that’s by design and the slights large and small cannot go unnoticed. Trump’s nominee for Education Secretary, a former wrestling executive officer, to dismantle the agency at a pivotal time when public school districts are underfunded and higher learning is facing an existential crisis with the prospect of artificial intelligence supplanting expertise is shocking enough, though the feeling is a little blunted given the fact the same individual headed the Small Business Administration during his first term. In the same news cycle, however, the Republic-controlled incoming Congress welcomed—on Transgender Day of Remembrance, memorialising victims of transphobia—the first openly member to identify as such by introducing a measure for the House of Representatives that would ban in the Capitol transgender women from using bathrooms designated for cisgendered women. Unclear if it will be brought to the floor to vote on house rules, the sponsor decrying an assault of women’s rights and safety with this ideology, which the target of the vitriol, newly elected member from Delaware, dismissed the proposal as a distraction from the job of governance and will make do, their platform and focus, telling of its poverty, being “Kamala is for they/them. President Trump is for you.”