Two Guys Too Wasted To Set Up Tents
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From: http://pitchfork.com/
At this point, Weezer may be better at creating WTF internet memes than making songs. Here they go again with the cover for their upcoming record Hurley, due out on Epitaph September 14. As Spinner reports, the cover is a close-up photo of Jorge Garcia-- aka Hurley from "Lost"-- as you can see. He looks happy to be off the island.
In an e-mail interview, Weezer frontman Rivers Cuomo told us the rationale behind the sleeve: "We just wanted to use that picture of Jorge Garcia's face on the cover. It's such an amazing album cover, and we didn't want to have any other words on it, so we just figured everyone was going to call it Hurley, so that's what we call it."
In other Hurley news, the record features a track called "Run Away" that's co-written by none other than Ryan Adams. Listen to the new Weezer single "Memories" here and click on to read the rest of our brief e-mail Q&A with Rivers about Hurley:
Pitchfork: Why did you decide to sign with Epitaph Records for this release?
Rivers Cuomo: Our seven-record deal with Geffen was up. [Epitaph owner and Bad Religion guitarist] Brett Gurewitz made us an offer we couldn't refuse. He is a fan of the band and was helpful with getting the mixing and mastering done at the end of the record. It is cool to have a label head that is also a songwriter, in a band, and produces records.
Pitchfork: What are some advantages of being on Epitaph as opposed to Geffen?
RC: The record deal is about a million times better. We own the masters. It's an experiment and we're all going to find out what the advantages are.
Pitchfork: Could you have re-signed with Geffen if you wanted to?
RC: Yes.
Pitchfork: Did you work with Ryan Adams in the studio? Did you guys bond over obscure metal albums?
RC: We were mostly so excited with what we were writing that we didn't have a chance to talk about old metal. In any case, I think his knowledge of metal lore is deeper even than mine, so I was out of my league.
Pitchfork: Some people reacted negatively to the mainstream pop production and sound of Raditude. Does Hurley continue with that sound or is it different?
RC: Hurley is definitely a raw, unpolished, high energy "alt-rock" album.
Pitchfork: Now that you're on an independent label is your music going to be more "indie" i.e. less polished and pop-sounding?
RC: No.
Pitchfork: Are any of the songs you did with Katy Perry going to be on this new Weezer album?
RC: Nope.
Pitchfork: Are there any more Weezer-brand products in the works a la the Wuggie?
RC: No.
Posted by Ryan Dombal on August 9, 2010 at 2 p.m.
Tags: Weezer, Ryan Adams, WTF, Art
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Labels: LOST, Music News, Tv Shows
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Labels: 420, marijuana, Marijuana Advocates
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Labels: 80's Movies, Sci-Fi, Sci-fi / Fantasy
The first woman in the United Kingdom to have all her major organs transplanted has now signed on to a lifetime of hospital visits -- but this time as the doctor.
Allison John, 32, made medical history in 2006 after she received her fourth organ transplant -- a kidney from her father, 61-year-old David John, to add to her previous heart, lung and liver transplants.
Mutliple organ transplants are rare, but with conditions such as cystic fibrosis in which multiple organs can fail, they can be necessary. One U.K. woman has needed and received a new heart, lung, kidney and liver as a result of her cystic fibrosis.(The Image Bank/Getty Images)
A life plagued by illness and frequent hospital visits has not deterred John from her dream of becoming a doctor, however. After 14 years of interrupted study, she finally received her medical degree from Cardiff University last month, according to the U.K. press.
John will begin rounds as a junior doctor at Neville Hall Hospital in Abergavenny, England.
Considering that her combined heart-lung transplant alone has only a 40 percent survival rate in the first five years, according to the United Network for Organ Sharing, John is extremely fortunate to have survived three separate transplant operations.
"At the moment, I feel I'm in the best shape physically that I've ever been and I'm so excited about the future," John told the U.K. press.
Why would one person need so many organ transplants?
Just weeks after her birth, John was diagnosed with cystic fibrosis, an incurable genetic condition that results in the formation of thick mucus that plugs up the tubes leading to the lungs and liver -- though other organs also can be affected by it.
"Cystic fibrosis can result in lung and liver damage, as the thick mucus causes inflammation and infection that destroys [organ] tissue," said Dr. David Cronin, associate professor of transplant surgery at the Medical College of Wisconsin.
According to the U.K. press, John's liver was transplanted first, at age 15, but just a year later, doctors told her she would also need a lung transplant and she received a combined heart/lung transplant less than a year later.
Given she already had undergone a liver transplant, it might sound strange that doctors would give John a lung and heart transplant once her lungs failed, but there are advantages to adding the heart into the mix, Cronin said.
"At the time that transplant was done, doing heart and lung transplants together was much safer and easier than doing an individual lung transplant," he said. "When you do both, you take the heart and lung out as one unit from the donor and put it into the recipient. Basically, you're doing a heart transplant and the lungs come along for the ride."
Also, the liver failure experienced by those with cystic fibrosis can put extra stress on the heart, so transplanting the heart, as well can be beneficial to survival, said Dr. Fredric Gordon, medical director of liver transplantation at the Lahey Clinic Medical Center in Massachusetts.
Would each successive transplant surgery be riskier than that last?
Not necessarily, Cronin said. While risk of infection would be there with each operation, the past transplants, once established, would not necessarily increase the risk of the next ones.
She also already would be on immunosuppressive drugs, so she wouldn't have to start those or increase the dosage for the subsequent surgeries, Gordon said.
Ironically, but not surprisingly, John's final organ transplant actually was a product of her first three. Organ recipients must be on a lifetime regimen of drugs to suppress their immune system in order to stave off the body's rejection of the new organ. The drugs however, have side effects that can slowly weaken the kidney.
"John had what 30 percent of liver transplant patients and 40 to 50 percent of heart transplant patients develop in the five years after transplant: kidney failure as a side effect of the immunosuppressive drugs," said Cronin.
Given that John will have to remain on immunosuppressant drugs for the rest of her life, her donor kidney may suffer the same fate as her original one because of the drugs, Gordon said.
It is a problem that transplant surgeons only have been able to detect in more recent years, as patients survive long enough to experience that particular side effect five, 10, 20 years down the road, Cronin said.
"[John] has done miraculous[ly]," Cronin said. "It's more than 10 years and it looks like she's full steam ahead."
Copyright © 2010 ABC News Internet Ventures
Posted by gjblass at 3:21 PM 0 comments
Labels: Kidney Transplant, Organ transplants, Organs
From: http://www.independent.co.uk/
For 4,500 years, no one has known what lies beyond two stone doors deep inside the monument
For 4,500 years, the Great Pyramid at Giza has enthralled, fascinated and ultimately frustrated everyone who has attempted to penetrate its secrets.
Now a robotics team from Leeds University, working with Egypt's Supreme Council of Antiquities, is preparing a machine which they hope will solve one of its enduring mysteries.
The pyramid, known as the Pyramid of Khufu after the king who built it around 2,560BC, is the only wonder of the ancient world still standing. At its heart are two rooms known as the King's Chamber and the Queen's Chamber. Two shafts rise from the King's Chamber at 45-degree angles and lead to the exterior of the monument. They are believed to be a passageway designed to fire the king's spirit into the firmament so that he can take his place among the stars.
In the Queen's Chamber, there are two further shafts, discovered in 1872. Unlike those in the King's Chamber, these do not lead to the outer face of the pyramid
No one knows what the shafts are for. In 1992, a camera sent up the shaft leading from the south wall of the Queen's Chamber discovered it was blocked after 60 metres by a limestone door with two copper handles. In 2002, a further expedition drilled through this door and revealed, 20 centimetres behind it, a second door.
"The second door is unlike the first. It looks as if it is screening or covering something," said Dr Zahi Hawass, the head of the Supreme Council who is in charge of the expedition. The north shaft bends by 45 degrees after 18 metres but, after 60 metres, is also blocked by a limestone door.
Now technicians at Leeds University are putting the finishing touches to a robot which, they hope, will follow the shaft to its end. Known as the Djedi project, after the magician whom Khufu consulted when planning the pyramid, the robot will be able to drill through the second set of doors to see what lies beyond.
afp/getty images
Posted by gjblass at 2:47 PM 0 comments
Labels: Egypt, Egyptian Temple, Egyptians, great pyramids, robotic, Robotics, Robots
Ghetti, who is originally from Brazil, uses his little lead canvases to explore all types of subjects. The image above depicts a part of his 26 pencil letter series – one pencil tip for each letter of the alphabet.
Getting familiar with Dalton’s technique makes the work even more interesting, as he refuses to work with a magnifying glass, and only uses three tools – a razor blade, sewing needle and sculpting knife. He explains his process: “I use the sewing needle to make holes or dig into the graphite. I scratch and create lines and turn the graphite around slowly in my hand”
Just days after announcing his intention to run for president of Haiti, Wyclef Jean stopped by the Rolling Stone offices to discuss this "new chapter" in his life. Jean outlined the main issues facing Haiti as it recovers from the devastating earthquake that struck earlier this year, how his presidential bid was inspired by Nelson Mandela and anti-apartheid activist Steve Biko, and why his lack of political experience might work to his advantage in office. Watch video of Wyclef's visit above.
Jean says "the number one problem in Haiti is corruption," and in addition to repairing the nation's infrastructure, he would make it a priority to move all of the earthquake-displaced citizens out of their makeshift tent cities and into "agrarian villages" that will provide basic necessities like food, water and shelter. Jean also foresees a solution for the unemployment problem. "With everything going on in Haiti right now, the contracts that will be coming in within the next six months to a year, you should be able to put a population to work right now."
Jean tells RS that his non-partisan Viv Ansamn ("Live Together")party would allow him to hear suggestions from all sides before makingdecisions. "What I learned from Nelson Mandela is [the need for] dialogue," he explains. "In order to do this, you need to be coming from a neutral perspective, you need to be willing to listen to everyone's point of view."
Jean says the presidential term would allow him to "give five years of service" to the country he lived in as a boy, likening it to Haitians who come to America and serve in our military. For much more on Wyclef Jean and his run, look for our feature in an upcoming issue of Rolling Stone.
Posted by gjblass at 2:34 PM 0 comments
Labels: Haiti, Rolling Stone
Black and white are the safe choices in the design world. The color of luxury is elegant and subdued. Yet, at the same time, even top-tier designers, artists and luxury brands have always used bright colors as well. It is not about either or. It is not black-and-white or color. Click here to explore: http://www.thecoolhunter.net/design/
Just try telling those who love Dale Chihuly’s art, Versace interiors, Karim Rashid’s Corian eco-house or Renzo Piano’s Central St Giles facades in London that the “designer look” is always predominantly black and white.
And although bright color is often associated with being a sort of primitive, wild, folk-art aesthetic, and therefore black and white would seem the serious and civilized alternative, color is not just wild, frivolous, and primitive.
Just think of your favorite brand’s logo and you will most likely visualize some color. Imagine a weekly market at a Peruvian mountain town, an Indian wedding party, a Norwegian fishing town, Marimekko fabrics, a Cirque du Soleil show or Avatar, and you cannot avoid feeling uplifted and happy because of the colors.
Posted by gjblass at 12:48 PM 0 comments
Labels: Changing Colors, color Schemes, Colors, Design and Architecture
By Andrew Ganz Faced with an eyesore of a parking lot fronting one of its main cultural attractions, the city of Budapest contracted with a German parking solution company to create an innovativeautomated underground parking garage. The result? A computer-controlled system that seems like it’s out of a 1960s whiz-bang futuristic sitcom. With four parking levels capable of holding a total of 404 vehicles, the Woehr Multiparker 730 is an efficient solution to a problem facing most urban areas all over the world. We can’t find an estimate of the system’s cost – which was no doubt substantial – but that doesn’t stop us from enjoying the video. Check it out below.
From: http://www.leftlanenews.com/video-automated-underground-garage-debuts.html
More info here : http://www.woehr.de/en/projekte/budapest_m730/index.htm
Posted by gjblass at 12:38 PM 0 comments
Labels: Budapest, Parking, Smart Parking Meters
We received the following photos last night from a person who works with this girl. Her name is Jenny (not confirmed) - we're working our contact for Jenny's last name. Yesterday morning, Jenny quit her job with a (flash)bang by emailing these photos to the entire office, about 20 employees we're told. Awesome doesn't begin to describe this office heroine. Check back as we will be updating if we get more details.
Posted by gjblass at 12:14 PM 78 comments
Labels: employment, Employment Opportunities, Hilarious, Job Economy
By Kristi Harrison
From: http://designcrave.com/
Once just associated with street hoods and breakdancers, graffiti has taken on a whole new fan base in the past few years. Artists like banksy and Alexandre Orion have garnered international acclaim for their work, and their street art is recognized the world over. And some even say they’re making money while they’re at it.
Here are some amazing examples of graffiti art found all over the world.
Posted by gjblass at 12:08 PM 0 comments
Labels: art, Graffiti, mural, Street Graffiti, Urban Art