Okay, so I’m really late on this one (Sorry Vin and Jay) but here’s the first episode of Southside 412 featuring all kinds of Southside Madness during the Ides of March March…Keep an eye out for Slacker Joe and Phat Man Dee – two more of my favorite people from the South Side of town.
Hey all, sorry about the lack of post over the last week or so, been finishing up a paper on innovation and diversity (yikes), and my tiny brain can only do so much. So, apologies, apologies all around.
I love the RZA, I totally wouldn’t have survived my adolescence if it wasn’t for Wu-Tang. This is a vid from back in the day. A totally under appreciated track.
So among the things one can say about Mr. West, apart from his transformation into a Japanese teenager, and his sometimes ridiculous ability to put a song together from samples to instrumentation to production, is that his videos are always way different from your standard video channel rap crap. You don’t get a lot of mean looking cats standing in front of the pj’s, or a lot of mean looking cats riding on big ass chrome-y wheels, but that gets a little tired, right guys?…right?
Anyways, case in point is the second video Kanye did for Flashing Lights. And, though I still like the first version better, this is pretty good stuff. Feeling like Katrina with no FEMA…
I like to cook, even if it’s just for me and the D. This amazing Chef’s knife from Ken Onion is made from layers of high carbon steel and has a ergonomic hardwood handle. This way, the next time I accidently cut myself (which happens, uh, about everytime I get near something I could cut myself with) it’ll just take my whole hand off. Combine all those trips to the hospital into one biggie, y’know, less of a chance of dying from staph…God, what a morbid turn this took. I’m done.
(Acquire, buy it at Orvis)
Starting April 24th, there is a Bearbrick Art and Charity Auction in Beijing. If anyone wants to pay my way to China, let me know. Here’s some of the preview Bearbricks (1000%) from Milk:
Hello all. Until I feel like actually saying something here, here’s a bunch of crap from my myspace. Keep it moving:
I like these quotes…
Once, if I remember well, my life was a feast where all hearts opened and all wines flowed.
One evening I seated Beauty on my knees. And I found her bitter. And I cursed her.
I armed myself against justice.
I fled. O Witches, O Misery, O Hate, to you has my treasure been entrusted!
I contrived to purge my mind of all human hope. Of all joy, to strangle it, I pounced with the stealth of a wild beast.
I called to the executioners that I might gnaw their rifle-butts while dying. I called to the plagues to smother me in blood, in sand. Misfortune was my God. I laid myself down in the mud. I dried myself in the air of crime. I played sly tricks on madness.
Et le printemps m’a apporte l’affreux rire de l’idiot.
–Rimbaud, A Season in Hell
It is even part of my good fortune not to be a house owner.
–Nietzsche, The Gay Science
Venus had twisted her lips in prayer. Agenbite of inwit: remorse of conscience. It is an age of exhausted whoredom groping for its god.
–Joyce, Ulysses
This means that they (Bacon and Descartes) failed to solve the great problem: How can we admit that our knowledge is a human-an all to human-affair, without at the same time implying that it is all individual whim and arbitrariness?
Yet this problem had been seen and solved long before; first, it appears, by Xenophanes, and then by Democritus, and by Socrates (the Socrates of the Apology rather than of the Meno). The solution lies in the realization that all of us may and do err, singly and collectively, but that this very idea of error and human fallibility involves another one-the idea objective truth: the standard which we may fall short of. Thus the doctrine of fallibility should not be regarded as part of a pessimistic epistemology. This doctrine implies that we may seek for truth, for objective truth, though more often than not we may miss it by a wide margin. And it implies that if we respect truth, we must search for it by persistently searching for our errors: by indefatigable rational criticism, and self-criticism.
–K. Popper, Conjectures and Refutations
What they were most determined for me to swallow was my fellow creatures…I remember little or nothing of these lectures. I cannot have understood a great deal. But I seem to have retained certain descriptions, in spite of myself. They gave me courses on love, on intelligence, most precious, most precious. They also taught me to count, and even to reason. Some of this rubbish has come in handy on occasions, I don’t deny it, on occasions which would never have arisen if they had left me in peace. I use it still, to scratch my arse with.
–Sam Beckett, The Unnameable
What was the freakiest thing you ever snorted blow off of when you were a prominent coke fiend?
I came home one day, took off my windbreaker, and three bindles of cocaine fell to the floor. Well, my dog, Chili, who has short hair, came in and laid on her back with her legs in the air, and she rubbed all my cocaine on her back and side. I yelled, “No, Chili! No” So I got a straw, and I started brushing her hair and snorting where I saw cocaine. Back, butt, side — not a spot was left. It took me 25 minutes to snort all the cocaine the dog had on her coat. The fringe benefits of this were that the fleas, the dog hair, the mud, and the sweat went in my nose, too. It’s not a good flavor coming off the dog. (Busey in a Maxim Interview)