My gosh -- not that I'm any sort of trendsetter or anything, but I subscribed to Gaping Void's email newsletter maybe 5 years or more ago. Problem was, I wanted to keep every single little drawing they sent, and the computer I had then was already bursting at the seams; if (as sometimes happened) I went a month or more without reading those emails, all of which got sorted into their own mail folder, you could practically hear the rivets popping. I finally pulled the plug on the subscription, and then somehow forgot all about it. Until now.
I'll have to see if he's got an RSS feed.
Thank you for the heads-up -- very glad to know Hugh McLeod is still in business!
That "panning for gold" gives me way too much credit. If I were really panning for gold I wouldn't have the mesh set quite so finely!
One of the things I like about Froogville, for example, is that it's all over the map, subject-matter-wise. To my way of thinking, "It's quite a jumble!" is a compliment. People panning for gold in any conventional senses are more likely to have, like, one thing [whatever it is for them] in mind. Everything else would be to their way of thinking a waste of time. These are the people who much, much prefer bookstores to be clean, well-lighted, alphabetically organized, cross-referenced... Oh, and cheap, too. I'm more the "I never know what I might find, but there's always something wonderful!" sort of guy. Even if it's damned expensive.
I picture a grizzled old prospector, one tooth in his head, camped out in Border's - building a fence round one of the narrative non-fiction shelves, angrily jabbing a shotgun in the direction of any would-be 'claim-jumpers'.
A leading presenter on China Central Television's English-language channel has revealed himself to be a xenophobic hate-monger. WHY does he still have a job? Lobby for his dismissal - by any and all means.
Days Ai Weiwei was detained
80
With ironic, sinister symmetry, the celebrity artist/activist was incarcerated on the same day that my friend Wu Yuren was finally released from 10 months' detention.
Now, like Wu, he's been released on extremely restrictive 'bail' terms - but could face re-arrest at any moment. He was detained incommunicado from April 3rd to June 22nd 2011.
Days Wu Yuren was in prison
307
"Released on parole" after 10 months; "parole" lifted another year later. The original charges against him were apparently dropped without his trial ever being formally concluded.
Froog is an escaped lawyer - but there is no need for alarm; he is only a danger to himself, not to the general public. An eternal wanderer, he now lives in an exotic city somewhere in the 'Third World' *, where he is held prisoner by an unfinished novel (or, more precisely, an unstarted novel). He spends a lot of time running, writing, taking photographs, and falling in love with women who fail to appreciate him. He also spends a lot of time in bars.
[* OK, I'll come clean: I've been living in Beijing since summer '02.]
4 comments:
My gosh -- not that I'm any sort of trendsetter or anything, but I subscribed to Gaping Void's email newsletter maybe 5 years or more ago. Problem was, I wanted to keep every single little drawing they sent, and the computer I had then was already bursting at the seams; if (as sometimes happened) I went a month or more without reading those emails, all of which got sorted into their own mail folder, you could practically hear the rivets popping. I finally pulled the plug on the subscription, and then somehow forgot all about it. Until now.
I'll have to see if he's got an RSS feed.
Thank you for the heads-up -- very glad to know Hugh McLeod is still in business!
Why am I not surprised, JES?
You spend so much more time panning for gold online than me, it's a wonder there any nuggets yet undiscovered by you.
That "panning for gold" gives me way too much credit. If I were really panning for gold I wouldn't have the mesh set quite so finely!
One of the things I like about Froogville, for example, is that it's all over the map, subject-matter-wise. To my way of thinking, "It's quite a jumble!" is a compliment. People panning for gold in any conventional senses are more likely to have, like, one thing [whatever it is for them] in mind. Everything else would be to their way of thinking a waste of time. These are the people who much, much prefer bookstores to be clean, well-lighted, alphabetically organized, cross-referenced... Oh, and cheap, too. I'm more the "I never know what I might find, but there's always something wonderful!" sort of guy. Even if it's damned expensive.
Whoa - metaphors in collision there, JES.
I picture a grizzled old prospector, one tooth in his head, camped out in Border's - building a fence round one of the narrative non-fiction shelves, angrily jabbing a shotgun in the direction of any would-be 'claim-jumpers'.
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