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THE MYRTLE OF VENUS
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CITY LIGHT, CITY DARK
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Friday, May 24, 2002
A TRIBUTE PAGE by a woman who admires "women who have small breasts and still look amazing."
posted by clark 4:02 PM
EVERYTHING RETRO IS NEO AGAIN DEPT.: Somebody's making new, electronically up-to-date versions of the classic streamlined TV set of the early '60s, the fabulous Predicta!
posted by clark 11:26 AM
Thursday, May 23, 2002
IF WE'RE TO BELIEVE this story, a mega-bank and a mega-bookstore chain are (separately) working to stick it against small book publishers.
posted by clark 7:21 PM
NEWS FROM MEDICINE: Our ol' pal and street musician extraordinaire Artis the Spoonman had a heart attack. He's recovering steadily in a Seattle hospital, but might need a little help with the bills.
posted by clark 3:41 PM
Tuesday, May 21, 2002
IF YOU'RE IN CANADA or some other equally exotic foreign land, don't you dare click on this link to a corporate PR document whose "information is intended for U.S. residents only."
SPICE-O-LIFE DEPT.: From the Toronto Globe and Mail site, a piece praising Internet porn for the sheer variety of tastes and fetishes to which it can cater.
posted by clark 9:59 PM
IN THE RETRO-MODERN EPHEMERA GROOVE, a virtual exhibition of some 100 vintage 45 RPM record labels.
ANOTHER GENDER-MYTH CHALLENGED: As certain bestselling books have been noting lately, females can indeed do less-than-great things to other females.
F'rinstance, that Eastern Hemisphere ethnic tradition known there as "female circumcision" and around here as female genital mutilation is a practice passed on from mothers to daughters (see the item at the bottom of the page linked here).
posted by clark 8:27 PM
Monday, May 20, 2002
WHAT WE DID THIS WEEKEND: First came the highly unofficial Star Wars Un-Premiere Party, Thursday at the Rendezvous (which is still open despite a little kitchen fire last Tuesday, thank you). Singer Cheryl Serio was the most elegant hostess, accompanied by our ol' friends DJ Superjew and DJ EZ-Action.
Among the audiovisual attractions displayed on the video projector: Mark Hamill's appearance on The Muppet Show (above), the 1978 Star Wars Holiday Special (a truly bizarre spectacle indeed), and something billed as a Turkish language version of the original film but was really a whole different movie (a hilarious sword-and-scandal adventure) that happened to incorporate SW spaceship shots, with the SW producers' apparent authorization.
ON SATURDAY, the 22nd anniversary of the Mt. St. Helens blowup was celebrated by Cheryl Diane (above) and three other singer-songwriter acts in Diane's fourth annual Eruptive Revival cabaret. As you may recall, last year's edition was cut short by that nasty fire at the Speakeasy Cafe (still a charred-out ruin today). No such mishaps marred this year's show at the Cafe Venus/Mars Bar, thankfully.
SUNDAY AFTERNOON, the University District Street Fair was underway again, as tired and worn-out as I've always remembered it being. The products displayed at the "crafts" booths were barely distinguishable from those displayed in the smarmiest tourist "fine art" stores of LaConner. The food concessions were no different from the elephant ears and kettle korn sold summer-long from Puyallup to Ellensburg. The assorted musical acts tried to grab passersby's attention, but (at least the acts I saw) failed to overcome the cloudy-afternoon ennui in full smothering force.
And, of course, the booths only temporarily hid the dozen or more empty storefronts along the half-mile strip known to all as The Ave. The city thinks it knows just what to do about the retail ennui--a construction project. To the City of Seattle bureaucracy, every problem is solvable by a construction project.
But it's hard to imagine anyone other than a bureaucrat imagining that wider sidewalks and prettier street lights will draw non-student shoppers back from the malls; not while the daily papers continue to smear The Ave as A Problem Place with Those Problem People.
And as long as there's no money to do the right things for the throwaway teens (often banished by middle-class parents over not fitting a proper upstanding image) but plenty of money to do things against them (police harassment schemes that only make things worse), this situation won't change.
ON A HAPPIER NOTE, Sunday evening brought two of my all-time fave cartoonists, ex-local Charles Burns and still-local Jim Woodring, to a singing session at Confounded Books/Hypno Video.
You've gotta check out Woodring's newest, Trosper. Painted in bright pastel colors you can eat with a spoon, and printed just like an old Little Golden Book, it's a wordless, utterly engrossing little tale of a cute little elephant who just wants to have fun, in a world seemingly bent on frustrating him. It even comes with a CD by one of our fave neo-improv artistes, the incomprable Bill Frisell.
posted by clark 9:04 PM
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