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nerds-yearbook · 1 year
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On March 16, 2003 King Features ran their final new Sunday Strip of "Flash Gordon", which had ran from 1934. (Real Life Event)
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dirtyriver · 1 year
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As usual, Francesco Marciuliano can't resist tearing down that poor 4th wall.
Sally Forth, May 19, 2023
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Some Christmas merriment from some legends by Jim Keefe!
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comicsbyte · 6 days
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Shakti Comics Set 13
Shakti Comics Set 13 featuring The Phantom and Flash Gordon!
Shakti Comics
#ComicsByte #phantom #flashgordon #shakticomics #newrelease #preorder #ThePhantom
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smashedpages · 4 months
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Happy birthday to Jim Keefe!
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jedivoodoochile · 10 months
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The Phantom & Tarzan by Jim Keefe.
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dustedmagazine · 1 year
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Dust Volume 8, Number 12
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Blood Incantation (but not Blood/Incantation)
Dusted closes out 2022 with blood and incantation.
Specifically, this Dust features two separate recordings with identical band names, one a split release by a pair of metal bands, one named Blood, the other Incantation, the other also metal but more atmospheric whose name is Blood Incantation.  It’s a lot of blood. A lot of incantation.
But never fear if your tastes are less sanguinary. We’ve also got experimental klezmer, power pop, sound art, new weird traditionalism, synth pop, deep house, death metal and jazz both free and more traditional. This edition’s contributors include Bryon Hayes, Jennifer Kelly, Bill Meyer, Jonathan Shaw, Ian Mathers, Patrick Masterson and Jim Marks.
Baltic Furs — Contemporary Ruin (Round Bale Recordings)
Contemporary Ruin by Baltic Furs
For its final release of 2022, the Minnesota-based Round Bale Recordings label offers a cassette from someone in its inner circle. Baltic Furs is the alter ego of Matt Irwin, a graphic designer whose optical artistry enswathes some of the label’s output. Irwin is a drummer-cum-synthesist whose aural hue leans toward the inky black end of the spectrum. On Contemporary Ruin, both Irwin’s percussionist origins and his tendency toward the inchoate are on display. Dreamlike, dimly lit images attempt to bring themselves into focus as warped, bell-shaped tones emanate from unholy objects. Irwin is signalling the coming of an impending disaster: it could be the end of the world or a demon emerging from its resting place. He’s happy to let the listener decide their fate. The latter half of the cassette begets emergent strains of melody that seem to brighten as the music runs its course. The tenderness is nascent and without form, but it’s also indicative that Contemporary Ruin is the first page in the next chapter of Irwin’s engaging narrative.
Bryon Hayes
 Black Ox Orkestar — Everything Returns (Constellation)
Everything Returns by Black Ox Orkestar
Even when it dances, klezmer has a melancholic air. It commemorates, after all, a Jewish-East European culture that flourished despite centuries of persecution until ending, abruptly, in the Holocaust. True, Jewish emigres brought this rollicking but wistful concoction of clarinet and fiddle, elegy and celebration, with them in the diaspora. It reached, even, the experimental precincts of Montreal, where members of Godspeed You! Black Emperor and Thee Silver Mt. Zion formed Black Ox Orkestar in the early aughts, then left it fallow for a decade and a half. Everything Returns is their lovely (and timely) return, a pensive exploration of cross-cultural discourse that melds Jewish, gypsy, Arab and European traditions in bittersweet rumination. This is music made of shadows and sighs, but ready, nonetheless, for the fight. It’s opening salvo, “Tish Nign,” layers wordless vocals over piano, then gathers its strength in martial cadences of bass clarinet. “Skotshne” sparkles with cimbalom, a dulcimer-like instrument with a ghostly echo; it skitters over a skeletal foundation of drums and acoustic bass. But it’s “Viderkol” that stops you short, a dusky lament hedged in by the low hum of clarinet, a run of piano. Even sung in English, it has a foreign, historical aura, as the principals remember the lost with the gentlest, least bitter sort of sadness. “There’s something in us that could make us whole,” they sing, and maybe they mean music and remembering.
Jennifer Kelly
 Blood/Incantation — Split 7” (Hell’s Headbangers)
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Not Blood Incantation, but Blood and Incantation (see what they did there?) collaborate on this divertingly atavistic split record. Blood Incantation seems to provide the newest front opened in the Hipster Metal Wars — and to be honest, this reviewer can’t really fault the offended (“ambient death metal?”). If anyone might have any sort of right to defend the traditional boundaries of the kingdom of Metal ov Death, the dudes in Blood might be able to claim it. The German band has been making records since 1986, and the two new tracks on this split record are still the same old moldy stuff, a grinding, guttural assault on good taste. Incantation is by contrast the fresher face, having only started releasing music 1990—but the band certainly has the bigger name. Their tune, “Quantum Firmament,” is also the more engaging side of the split. Whether you find this record to be more than a sort of scenester-snarky, vinyl-mediated pun may depend on the degree of your interest in Incantation’s music; if you dig the band, “Quantum Firmament” is worth hearing.
Jonathan Shaw 
 Blood Incantation — Timewave Zero (Century Media)
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Denver death metal psychonauts Blood Incantation have never concealed their love of ambient, cosmische, new age synths, et al. They also were clear even before putting out their second record Hidden History of the Human Race that their third would be their own entry into those fields. A 40-minute, two-track EP, Timewave Zero has (based on comments) clearly come as an unpleasant surprise to a grouchy, vocal minority of their existing fanbase. but those more into avowed influence Klaus Schulze than blastbeats, death metal growls and intense riffs will find that Blood Incantation know what they’re doing. This isn’t just the quartet noodling around with some neat synth sounds; there’s pacing, sculpting and evidence of a compositional eye on both halves of the EP. Timewave Zero, then, is admirable on multiple fronts, both as a totally solid record and as evidence of a band determined to follow its muse even in the face of requests to keep making more of the same.
Ian Mathers 
 Dazy — OUTOFBODY (Lame-O)
OUTOFBODY by Dazy
Power pop is harder than it looks. It balances on a knife edge between crusty fuzz and open-hearted tunefulness, and it’s easily tipped towards noise or daffiness. But James Goodson, out of Richmond, gets the blend just about right, a bit to the sweet side of Teenage Fan Club, a bit more muscular than the Raspberries. Indeed, the buzzy, frictive “On My Way” sounds like the Dirtbombs crossed with James, which is to say gloriously clangorous but with its earnest heart showing. “Motionless Parade” swoons and jangles in the vein of True West and the Rain Parade, while “Choose Your Ramone” hilariously amps it up, with a blistering, squalling guitar solo that is neither Joey nor Johnny. Goodson may never be a big star (or a Big Star), but it’s fun watching him try.
Jennifer Kelly
 Bruno Duplant — Nox (Unfathomless)
nox by Bruno Duplant
Art reckons with life on Nox, which is one of the nine full-length recordings that the ultra-productive French sound artist has realized in 2022. The artist’s statement references observations, both recent and antique, of certain bad navigational habits of humans, to wit, they closely circle things that will scorch them. At least moths, who aren’t noted for their brain mass, have an excuse… But even if you aren’t acquainted with the musician’s intent, you’re likely to grasp this immersive, 40-minute-long piece’s intimations of decay. Gathered and generated sounds creak, crackle, and bob around the listener like the chunks of debris that swirled around your surfboard that one time you fell asleep on the beach at low tide and woke up in the middle of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch.
Bill Meyer
 Kelman Duran — “Loko” (self-released)
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Kelman Duran is a low-key LA-based Dominican producer who’s made his name on art school dancehall and reggaeton edits, notably 2017’s excellent 1804 Kids. But “Loko” is another animal, blisteringly zooted deep house filth all taut and suspended in that leery-eyed fork in the road where the head says no and makes the good decision but the heart speaks louder, beats yes, makes an ellipsis for you to fill in. Adriana Roslin’s epileptic video (in which she appears, by the way) is the perfect accompaniment, exuding the self-assured swagger of a fashion school grad-turned-social media manager by day and club rat queen by night; you’ll see what I mean when you watch. It’s unclear if this is a brief diversion from his usual speed or a turn toward a more permanent 4/4 producing mode, but either way, Duran has left one of the best dance tracks of 2022 rather late in the going. How late? Consider: At the time I write this, Dust is scheduled to go live in about two hours; “Loko” has been up for less than 24. But we weren’t going to miss out. You shouldn’t, either.
Patrick Masterson
 Family Ravine — Jumpthefox (Round Bale Recordings)
Jumpthefox by Family Ravine
With his Family Ravine project, Kevin Cahill navigates a similar path to that of Henry Flynt, welding his avant-garde sensibility to traditional musical styles. Jumpthefox follows hot on the heels of Away & Instinct, and both records document Cahill’s polyglot approach to music making. The musician has created an Interzone-like fusion of American, British and European folk forms, which he has processed through his tireless creative instinct. Cahill builds a fluid-like loam from loops and fragments, which he layers repeatedly into a strange topography. Working primarily with stringed instruments and melodica, Cahill materializes his songs in a spectrum of shades, from shimmering and bright to muted and foreboding. It must be magical to hear his songs being crafted in real time, but we’ll have to settle for experiencing the finished product. This writer is certainly not complaining.
Bryon Hayes
  Hot Chip — Freakout/Release (Domino)
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Consistent quality is a great asset for a band and a thrill for fans, but it can have the opposite of a silver lining for us music writers. Freakout/Release is another topnotch set of emotionally mature, sometimes melancholy synthpop bangers from the now sort-of-venerable Hot Chip (their eighth!). It’s not as if they’re not trying new things, heck here you actually hear a couple of guest vocalists (Lou Hayter on “Hard to Be Funky” and a blistering Cadence Weapon on “The Evil That Men Do”) and the title track is more rough-and-tumble than the Chip usually gets. “Down” rides a Universal Togetherness Band sample to dancefloor glory, while tracks like the hopeful “Broken” and the gossamer “Not Alone” show their more emotive strengths. It’s another great record in a career full of them, and if it’s hard to know what more to say, it feels unfair to them to leave it at that.
Ian Mathers
 Keefe Jackson / Jim Baker /Julian Kirschner — Routines (Kettlehole)
Routines by Keefe Jackson / Jim Baker / Julian Kirshner
Routines? I don’t know. On the one hand, the title might acknowledge that the three musicians on the album can, either together or separately, be counted upon to be heard in some small space that hosts Chicagoan improvisers, on a pretty routine basis. But the music itself is far from routine, unless you want to take a step back and acknowledge that each musician habitually figures out apposite responses to any given situation. Jim Baker can be relied upon to completely change any sound environment with a pivot of his seat, since that will determine whether one is going to hear his restlessly assertive voice on the piano and or the ozone-scorching sizzles he obtains from his ARP 2600. Keefe Jackson can likewise be counted upon to be equally engaged playing either sopranino or tenor saxophone, but lightning disruption he launches from the first differs profoundly from the mercurial forcefulness he summons on the second. Kirshner can also be expected to keep things moving without lapsing into cliché. But the trio keeps enough variables in play that you’ll never know quite how the music is going to get from start to end.
Bill Meyer
 Philip Jeck — Resistenza (Touch)
Resistenza by Philip Jeck
Touch has never been about staying in the past, so it makes sense that the firm would experiment with new formats. Resistenza is a digital-only recording issued on what would have been the 70th birthday of the late Philip Jeck, whose passing was just one of those that has made 2022 an especially rough slog. It’s simultaneously a bit sad and quite poetic that the first (and hopefully not last) posthumous release by an artist whose work was all about the stubborn physicality of vinyl would be a non-physical edition. It comprises two live recordings, both made in 2017-18. The more recent is “Live in Torino,” a fittingly ephemeral sequence of sounds snatched from old records and manipulated into ghostly scraps that spin and bob like the luminous traces left by deep sea fishes. “The Longest Wave,” which was recorded in Jeck’s home town of Liverpool, is quite the opposite. Jeck is joined by Jonathan Raisin, whose piano trills augment Jeck’s already lush flow. The best moments come when the turntablist breaks out some sub-aquatic bass figures that ballast Raisin’s delay-dampened drizzle of notes.
Bill Meyer 
 Niko Karlsson — Its Own Phantom (Feeding Tube)
Its Own Phantom by Niko Karlsson
Look out the window of your Finnish country cabin in the winter and your view is likely to be reduced to a few essentials. Grey sky, green trees, white snow — that’s about it. Its Own Phantom is an apt soundtrack for an afternoon spent gazing upon such a vista. None of its tracks are in a hurry, and each sweep of hand across strings (mostly guitar, sometimes banjo or sitar) unleashes a stream of melodious sound that’ll draw your mind into an imaginary space situated somewhere beyond the farthest visible fir. The term “acid folk” implies a potentially psychedelic experience generated by not entirely voltage dependent means. Let’s call this tape snowshoe folk; it may not induce hallucinatory states, but it has its own way of elevating the listener beyond the cold ground.
Bill Meyer
Eva Klesse Quartett — Songs Against Loneliness (Enja)
Songs against loneliness by Eva Klesse Quartett
Holiday season got you feeling isolated? Eva Klesse is here to help you feel better with Songs Against Loneliness. This new set of jazz originals by her quartet (joined occasionally by guitarist Wolfgang Muthspiel) is soothing but not sleepy. Klesse, a drummer, composed five of the 13 tracks here, and the other members of the group, Evgeny Ring on sax, Marc Muellbauer on double bass and Philip Frischkorn on piano, contributed the rest of the compositions.
In practice, apart from the titles of the tracks (“Glory Glory Misfits,” “Der Eremit,” and so on), there is nothing ponderous (or overly perky) about the melodies and arrangements on display here. The quartet’s decade of playing and recording together (apart from Muellbauer, who replaces Robert Lucaciu this time around) is evident in its cohesiveness. Muthspiel and Klesse have worked together before, and his contributions here are fully integrated into the quartet’s sound, beginning with the poignant chords that open the title track “Minor Is What I Feel.” That track and some of the others seem carefully composed, while others, such as “Past, Tense,” are more improvisation. This cut builds slowly from a solo by Muellbauer to the full quartet. Klesse’s rattling percussion keeping things together without ever quite settling on a rhythm.
So take heart if you’re feeling left out and let these well-crafted tunes serve as your soundtrack for the journey back from loneliness. And if you’re already in the holiday spirit, Songs Against Loneliness will help keep you feeling warm and fuzzy.
Jim Marks
 Mdou Moctar — Niger EP Vol. 2 (Matador)
Niger EP Vol. 2 by Mdou Moctar
This is the second in a series to collect early cassette tape recordings of the Niger-ian guitar phenomenon as he and his band travelled, often by bus, to informal gigs: weddings, rehearsals, house parties. The vibe is not much different from Moctar’s studio recordings, pacing torrid runs of guitar with homespun handclaps and hand drums. The difference comes in the ambient sounds. A motorcycle zooms away at the end of “Iblis Amghar,” birds chirp and people go on with the ordinary activities in their lives, even with such incendiary music going on around them. And, indeed, it is fire, this music, balancing locomotive percussion and hypnogogic trance, as on driving, dreaming “Ibitilan” or the searing blues of “Asditke Akal.” “Chimoumounim” sounds as if it comes in from a great distance, its groove approaching, then taking up a central place in our ears and hearts. Moctar’s grooves sound great in the studio, but maybe even better here in their natural space.
Jennifer Kelly
 Mister Water Wet— Top Natural Drum (Soda Gong)
Top Natural Drum by Mister Water Wet
Top Natural Drum is Kansas City producer Iggy Romeu’s third album as Mister Water Wet. It’s also his first to arrive via a label other than West Mineral Ltd., the imprint founded by his buddy Brian Leeds, who most know as Huerco S. Although they’re connected, Romeu and Leeds have taken divergent paths. Romeu’s first two MWW outings were colorful and strange in comparison to Leeds’ grainy, monochromatic fog banks. He brews up his ambient tinctures with hints of jazz, hip hop and elements sourced from his Puerto Rican roots. Romeu is also careful to add subtle bits of the arcane to his concoctions, revealing himself to be a master crate digger. With Top Natural Drum, he drops the ambient veil to show off some rhythmic chops. The result is a series of head nodding beat-scapes sure to please those who spent the 1990s with their ears glued to the turntablism scene.  
Bryon Hayes
 The Modern Folk Trio Band — Always Be Recording (Island House)
IH-002 Always Be Recording by modern folk trio band
The Modern Folk Trio Band is actually a quintet, formed around J. Moss’s languid, liquid guitar, but including Austin Richards, Zach Barbery, Remi Lew and Trevor Schorey trading off on additional guitars, bass, drums and synthesizers. This cassette includes three tracks, two lengthy and one succinct, but all three fluid and luminous. “Diet Coke Extra Ice” winds placidly through slow, chugging lyricism, its lead guitar high and clear and full of light. “Slide Solo,” the short one, is just what its name implies, an interlude of intriguingly bent and haunted sounds, tinged by blues but not exactly boxed into it. And “Hot Jam,” the final cut, is not as viscerally physical as its title suggests, but rather a glistening, nodding, extended drone, grounded by the thud of drums but reaching always for an ethereal other-ness. Throughout, a loose improvisatory air presides. If you’re always recording, sometimes you get something good.
Jennifer Kelly
 Woody Sullender — Music from Four Movements & Other Favorites (Woody Sullender)
Music from 'Four Movements' & Other Favorites by Woody Sullender
What’s the difference between listening and performing listening? If you have the time and credit, you could take up the matter while you pursue an MFA. Or you could go to www.fourmovements.woodysullender.com and download Four Movements, a video game space that “consists of several navigable environments where the virtual participant can perform listening” and live the difference. It is the work of an artist and musician who has studied under Maryanne Amacher and previously performed banjo music under the guise, Uncle Woody Sullender, and it provides the sort of disparate yet cohesive sound experience one might expect from a person whose creative map contains such aesthetic/methodological coordinates. Cantering banjo in just intonation coexists with techno beats, a Robert Hood cover sounds like a streamlined remembrance of Conlon Nancarrow’s player piano music, and moments arise when you might wonder if this guy’s spent some salon time with Horse Lords.
Bill Meyer
 Tchornobog/Abyssal — Split LP (Lupus Lounge)
Tchornobog / Abyssal by Tchornobog
You get two epically scaled tracks of death metal-adjacent mayhem on this split LP. More bang for your buck? More yuck, for sure. Markov Soroka’s utterly whacko project Tchornobog is given the A side, and his 25-minute song “The Vomiting Choir” pummels and roils, blackened on its edges but still very much belly-down in layers of rancid muck (see that title…). There aren’t many opportunities to lift your face out of the sodden slurry and grab a breath — which is sort of impressive for a song so long, and by its halfway point, pretty oppressive, too. So, you may be grossed out by the bubbling, gurgling noises that become audible around the 11-minute mark, but at least the mix is a little less clogged up with clangor and crunch. Abyssal’s contribution, titled “Antechamber of the Wakeless Mind,” is only a minute shorter, but the song seems by contrast rather mannered, alternating slowly suppurating death-doom with long spells of churning, dissonant riffage that always feel consciously composed. The split is not a pleasant experience so much as it is an interesting experiment in differing modes of metal excess.
Jonathan Shaw 
 temp. — Taking notes (American Dreams)
Taking Notes by temp.
temp.’s Erica Mei Gamble is a producer, DJ and video archivist based in Chicago—and one half of the experimental electronic duo Dungeon Mother, but her Taking notes represents a significant step forward for the artist. It gathers music previously posted on Soundcloud into a chilly, cerebral and surprisingly cohesive statement; that is, it sounds very much like an album. It starts in wordless abstraction, the cut “Air” lofting translucent tones of synthesizer onto a pristine background. They pulse and flare like northern lights, unearthly also visceral. “Yah” finds the ghost in the machine as a human cry punctures glistening electric pulses; the cut is clean and a little spooky, like a quieter Shackleton. But it's “What’s Beyond,” performed with Gamble’s Dungeon Mother collaborator Sarah Leitten, that fully realizes the juncture between unreal, ominous sonics and fragile human consciousness. Leitten chants poetry against a seething mesh of synth tones, her words encompassing both natural and super-natural imagery (For example: “I’ll dance with the stars above/and I hold the moon in my hands/and I drink the sun with my eyes/and I am the darkness/I am the abyss.”) Later, with Emme Williams in “Trying to Climb,” Gamble stakes out a minimalist corner of the disco floor, with beats that glitch and blot and corrode and a half-remembered recorder melody tootling in the background.
Jennifer Kelly
  Wild Pink — ILYSM (Royal Mountain)
ILYSM by Wild Pink
John Ross got the idea for his song, “Hold My Hand” while lying on an operating table, waiting for the anesthetic to knock him out before surgery. Ross, who is the main creative force behind Wild Pink, found out he had cancer mid-way through recording this fourth full-length. His uncertainties around this diagnosis, combined with his dogged insistence to finish anyway, define this album, whose bright, soft indie pop textures wrap around some very dark textures. Consider, for instance, “Hell Is Cold,” with its thumping rhythms, its half-focused glitch textures, its shimmering layers of piano. Ross sings just above a whisper, here and elsewhere, in a confiding tone that tickles the hairs inside your ear. Yet while the sonically, the song bounds and wafts, its message doesn’t. “I know I’ll be free when I die,” sings Ross, and the song ends abruptly like a life snuffed out. Likewise, the title track, aims at the kind of soccer stadium anthemic-ness that sends beach balls bobbling out over festival crowds. “I love you so much,” Ross intones over surging synths and pounding drums. Still, despite its ebullience, the cut has a vertiginous feel, as if the bottom is dropping out. Like many people facing difficulties, Ross reached out to friends for aid. The album has striking cameos from Julien Baker (“Hold My Hand”) and a multigenerational brace of guitarists, J. Mascis (who rips a sidewinder “See You Better Now”), Ryley Walker (breezily anthemic in “Simple Glyphs”) and Yasmin Williams (shimmering and gorgeous in “The Grass Widow in the Glass Window”). And yet, for all that, and despite the serious subject matter, the music mostly feels bland and oversaccharine, except for the sludgy, guitar-driven fury of “Sucking on Birdshot” and, at the end, “ICLYM” shuffling out like the Beta Band in shambolic triumph.
Jennifer Kelly
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ultralazycreatorfan · 5 months
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Kotlc as happenings from the annual work Christmas party (note: we work with public works/the people who clean your water, run sewers, make sidewalks, etc)
Sophie (with Tam): so last year someone was really worried we’d be tattooing each other (Keefe) and someone was very sad we weren’t (also Keefe)
Fitz: if I were a wolf my name would be Fitzroy ✨Wastewater✨
Biana: there are so many men… I like this table (all women)
Keefe, after Tam gets a life straw in white elephant: you can test it by coming to the wastewater plant <3
Dex: Jim Carrey is a frightening creature
Tam: did you bring a high chair for Keefe?
Linh: I accidentally put one of your personal gifts in the white elephant pile. If someone opens it… I will be taking it back…
Ro, whispering: I hope someone eats these muffins… they taste like fish… I’d love to see it (evil giggling) (no one ate the muffins)
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I really love the way that shows like Our Flag Means Death and Good Omens and The Righteous Gemstones interact with queerness.
I love how it is just part of these shows, that characters can be queer and just exist as they are and we never need a PSA about it.
Good Omens had two lesbians, a nonbinary demon, two male presenting entities who are madly in love with each other, a shop owner with a partner who presents femme.
Righteous Gemstones essentially had a whole arc of BJ who is straight and cis becoming comfortable with his femininity and wearing pink and other colors and clothing styles his family made him feel like a freak for but Judy and her family makes him feel safe to be his true self. Kelvin and Keefe had whatever they had going on and nobody in the family questioned it or judged just judged Keefe for being a weird goth dude. Kelvin and Keefe kissing wasn’t a big deal for the others, they just now accept he’s part of their family.
Our Flag Means Death has had tons of poly relationships, we have Ed and Stede together, Pete and Lucius are engaged, we have whatever Izzy is doing with Fang and Frenchie, we had Jim and Olu and now Jim and Archie and maybe Olu, we have Jim a nonbinary person. We have so many queer characters and romances.
It is all so casual and there. There is no speech, there are no scenes and episodes explaining why somebody is gay or trans, they just are and it is so comforting snd beautiful.
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bookbitchesworld · 1 month
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JIM QUH SX GUQS INHOWD OHU QED. IM SO EXCITED FOR THE KOTLC MOVIES. I JUST HOPE THEY DONT MESS THEM UP (like the old Peter Johnson movies) ALSO WALKER SCOBELL AS KEEFE. PLEASEEEEE. I WOULD DIE.
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luxe-pauvre · 1 year
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BEST OF 2022
Read:
Incarnadine, the Bloody Red of Fashionable Cosmetics and Shakespearean Poetics
Psychology, Misinformation, and the Public Square
Everyone Is Beautiful and No One Is Horny
agency/satisfaction
Actually, Let’s Not Be in the Moment
Do Brain Implants Change Your Identity?
Adam Savage on Lists, More Lists, and the Power of Checkboxes
Our Pseudonymous Selves
The skincare con
consistency is proficiency
Hundreds of Ways to Get S#!+ Done - and We Still Don’t
The digital death of collecting
The Mundanity of Excellence
Icons: Eli Keszler in Conversation with Adam Curtis
modern malaise
The Dangerous Populist Science of Yuval Noah Harari
Is There Such A Thing As Good Taste?
The Odor of Things
What It Takes To Put Our Phone Away
Personal Style Is Dead And The Algorithm Killed It
The Philosopher of Feelings
Orwell’s Roses by Rebecca Solnit
Expert by Roger Kneebone
Empire of Pain: The Secret History of the Sackler Dynasty by Patrick Radden Keefe
The Act of Living by Frank Tallis
Seven and a Half Lessons About the Brain by Lisa Feldman Barrett
The Joy of Science by Jim Al-Khalili
The Tyranny of Merit: What’s Become of the Common Good? by Michael J. Sandel
Sedated: How Modern Capitalism Created Our Mental Health Crisis by James Davies
Watched:
Literary Rendezvous at Rue Cambon: Girl.
In the library of Charlotte Casiraghi
Brave New World vs Nineteen Eighty-Four featuring Adam Gopnik and Will Self
Peaky Blinders (S6)
Killing Eve (S4)
The Decade the Rich Won
Everything Everywhere All At Once
Severance
Listened To:
Alt J’s The Dream
Beyonce’s Renaissance
Went To:
Swan Lake @ Royal Opera House
Fabergé in London: Romance to Revolution @ the V&A
Ancient Greeks: Science and Wisdom @ the Science Museum
Vision & Virtuosity by Tiffany & Co. @ Saatchi Gallery
Henry Marsh in conversation with Will Self
Feminine power: the divine to the demonic @ The British Museum
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doumekiss · 1 year
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My personal favorites of 2022
Books (Fiction)
Omniscient Reader's Viewpoint (Singshong)
The Murderbot Diaries Series (Martha Wells)
In other Lands (Sarah Rees Brennan)
Nona The Ninth (Tamsyn Muir)
Carrie Soto is Back (Taylor Jenkins Reid)
Nettle and Bone (T. Kingfisher)
The Nobleman's Guide to Scandal and Shipwrecks (Mackenzi Lee)
A Wizard's Guide to defensive Baking (T. Kingfisher)
The Iliad (Homer)
The Odyssey (Homer)
Tracy Flick Can't Win (Tom Perrotta)
Amber and Clay (Laura Amy Schlitz)
Nothing to see here (Kevin Wilson)
Sorrow and Bliss (Meg Mason)
Sea of Tranquility (Emily St. John Mandel)
Books (Non-fiction)
Nothing to Envy : Ordinary Lives in North Korea (Barbara Demick)
Empire of Pain : The Secret History of The Sackler Dynasty (Patrick Radden Keefe)
On the move : a life (Oliver Sacks)
The Road to Jonestown : Jim Jones and The Peoples Temple (Jeff Guin)
This is going to hurt (Adam Kay)
Voices from Chernobyl : The Oral History of a Disaster (Svetlana Alexievich)
Rogues : True Stories of Grifters, Killers, Rebels and Crooks (Patrick Radden Keefe)
Mean Baby (Selma Blair)
An Anthropologist on mars (Oliver Sacks)
I'm glad my mom died (Jennette McCurdy)
Killers of the flower moon (David Grann)
Awakenings (Oliver Sacks)
Last Night at the Viper Room (Gavin Edwards)
The Man who mistook his wife for a hat (Oliver Sacks)
Cultish : The Language of Fanaticism (Amanda Montell)
Mangas/Manwhas/Comics
Dungeon Meshi (Ryoko Kui)
Witch Hat Atelier (Kamome Shirahama)
Omniscient Reader's Viewpoint (Singshong, Sleepy-C)
Sousou no Frieren (Tsukasa Abe, Kanehito Yamada)
Beware The Villainess (Bbongdda Mask)
The Trash of The Count's Family (Yoo Ryeo Han)
The S-Classes I Raised (Geunseo)
Fun Home (Alison Bechdel)
Semantic Error (Jeo SuRi, Kim Angy)
I think our son is gay (Okura)
Villain Initialization (CuZn Moyou Tangman Culture)
Kobayashi-san Chi no Maid Dragon (Coolkyousinnjya)
Couple of Mirrors (Li Zongchen)
Antique Bakery (Fumi Yoshinaga)
Sign (Ker)
TV Shows
Severance - S01
Yellowjackets - S01
Interview with the vampire - S01
Abbott Elementary - S01-S02
The Sandman - S01
Taskmaster - S12-S14
Spy x Family - S01
Dexter : New Blood - Minisseries
Our Flag Means Death - S01
Ghosts - S01-S02 (US)
Kevin Can Fuck Himself - S02
Kotaro Lives Alone - S01
Bocchi The Rock - S01
Chernobyl - Minisseries
Beastars - S01-S02
Movies
Pearl
Encanto
Fire Island
Everything Everywhere All at Once
X
What did you eat yesterday : The Movie
Perfect Blue
Bright Lights
Luca
House of Gucci
The Last Duel
The Eyes of Tammy Faye
Spiderman : No Way Home
Class Action Park
Our Father
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dirtyriver · 2 years
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We've already seen Hil reading Mary Shelley's Frankenstein illustrated by Bernie Wrightson. That kid's got great taste.
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solreefs · 2 years
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Kotlc characters as things people have said/done in my drivers’ ed class
Forkle: In my professional opinion, “just flooring it” is never a good idea.
Tiergan: What is it with you guys and hitting children? How about just don’t hit people in general?
Keefe, while watching a video about car crashes: Damn he got LAUNCHED.
“what should you look for in a parking lot in the winter?” Marella: FIRE
Dex: *takes meticulous notes on how to do donuts in a parking lot while not writing down any notes on traffic signs*
Sophie: If I walk out to my car and my seat is gone… well then that’s a problem for later isn’t it.
“what is something you should check for inside your car before getting in?” Linh: Jim Carey.
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comicsbyte · 5 months
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Shakti Comics - Set 12 Pre-Order - Phantom and Flash Gordon
शक्ति कॉमिक्स - सेट 12 प्री-आर्डर - फैंटम और फ़्लैश गॉर्डोन (Shakti Comics - Set 12 Pre-Order - Phantom and Flash Gordon)
Shakti Comics
#ComicsByte #comics #comicbooks #newrelease #preorder #thephantom #flashgordon #phantom
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out-of-control · 8 months
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hi i sent the original jaxjim theory anon and im keefed and i didnt realize that yoru discord usernames were usernames and i thought you were saying "dick game baptismal they fuck like crazy KILL YORUSELF they fuck like crazy dick game baptismal" and so on and so forth. can u guys elaborate on all the insano car crash metaphors in jaxjim divorce saga.
KATZ: before meeting Jim, Jax already has a relationship with car crashes. his mother was killed in a car crash and so even though he was never in it, it's become this thing that looms hugely over his whole life. like he and Erin were so close and he sees the crash not just as something that killed her but something that Took Her Away From Him and so since he feels so alienated from and by the crash and he's spent years and years trying to understand it/get closer to it. like when he was a teenager he dug up fucking police reports because he was obsessed with the idea that by understanding everything about her death he could sync up with her again somehow and maybe fill this hole that opened up inside him when she died. like. Jax didn't get Erin's birth date tattooed on his arm, he got her death date. so even before Jax ever meets him he has this whole thing going on where he's obsessed with the crash from his own past and. feels left behind by not having been in the car crash and so he tries to map out other violence onto his body to make up for it.
but in addition to having his weird like desire to manifest car crash stigmata to honor his dead mother, he also is deeply affected not only by the violence of her death but the isolation of it. she died alone and scared and in pain. and that breaks his heart. and it's that whole thing more than the violence aspect that first drives him towards Jim, actually. because he sees Jim as alone. and his brain sort of makes the connection between Jim the car crash victim and Erin the car crash victim, but ALSO between Jim as a literal car crash survivor and Jax as a more metaphorical car crash survivor (he wasn't in it, but it ruined his life regardless). and it was that sort of empathy of being like. so you went through this horrible traumatic pain and now there is no one to help you carry it. and subconsciously at least Jax wanted to shoulder that. just a little. he wanted Jim to not be so sad on a summer's evening. so he said do you wanna get out of here.
so that's the background. and although it's lovely that car crash related trauma brought them together it's also absolutely part of the reason it drove them apart. after Erin died, Jax sort of lost the ability to see her as a person. to an extent I think most people do that with their mothers but since she was dead too Jax heaped all of his misery into the same pile and really developed this belief that if only she had lived, his entire life would be perfect. which is of course silly. some things would undoubtedly be better, but some things are unavoidable. and although Erin can't really be affected by this on account of being dead, I think that the whole "let me sanctify you" thing freaked the fuck out of Jim. because well Jim is just some guy but Jax treats him like he's holy. lot of pressure there.
FEO: <- has nothing to add to this
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