I know best, apparently? (It's not true, though.)

Dec 10

buongiorno:

thisrecording:

“Lump Sum” - Justin Vernon & the Eau Claire Memorial Jazz 1 (mp3)

Holy Hell. Download this.

Holy hell is right!

buongiorno:

thisrecording:

“Lump Sum” - Justin Vernon & the Eau Claire Memorial Jazz 1 (mp3)

Holy Hell. Download this.

Holy hell is right!

Dec 09

Rembrandt’s The Artist in His Studio

Rembrandt’s The Artist in His Studio

Dec 08

My Top 5 Artists (Week Ending 2009-12-6) -

  1. Johnny Cash (92)
  2. Johnny Flynn (45)
  3. Leonard Bernstein: Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra (30)
  4. A Prairie Home Companion (11)
  5. Garrison Keillor (4)

Imported from Last.fm Tumblr by

Why?

An editorial internship with The Onion requires good fact-checking skills.

Dec 07

stationarycanary:

To celebrate the last day of Logic in Roxanne’s [and David’s] life.

You’ve made me want to stop studying! It’s as if everything will be okay.

stationarycanary:

To celebrate the last day of Logic in Roxanne’s [and David’s] life.

You’ve made me want to stop studying! It’s as if everything will be okay.

Dec 05

Blackadder: The Third credits

Blackadder: The Third credits

Nov 30

“I have very mixed feelings about Twitter. Nope, I don’t have mixed feelings. I have pure unmixed feelings. I don’t understand it. I think if people were able to take these 140 characters and develop a poetic Western form—a haiku of our own in which all human existence could be compressed into those 140 characters—that would be a satisfying thing, but that’s not what I see when I read them. Stephen’s of course are absolutely the very best, the cream of the crop; but as I look around my friends’ tweets, I see banality on all sides. I don’t understand the purpose of it. I also get bothered by the social cost of every tweet. That somewhere in a restaurant someone’s conversation was interrupted while all this fiddling went on underneath the table. I think, ‘Well, that poor person was there. They took the trouble to actually be there and they get sent to the back of the queue’.” — Hugh Laurie, Front Row Radio Four Interview

Scan This Book! -

According to Kevin Kelly in The New York Times, “the entire written works of humankind, from the beginning of recorded history, in all languages” would amount to 50 petabytes of data.