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now you've got a fever but I think you'll need a ladder

Penulis : Unknown on Sunday 28 February 2010 | 22:27

Sunday 28 February 2010


New work appears in the new Eleven Eleven: several prose poems all called "The Age of the Tire Boat." These are from a project called No One Sleeps Beneath the Train Except the Light, in which the things that happen include deer shit raining from Arnold Schwarzenegger's shower. They are forthcoming in the anthology Thirty Under Thirty from Starcherone. Lots of cool people in there, and in this new 11:11. Very stoked to be among.
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MC O: re-available from Transmission!

Penulis : Unknown on Thursday 25 February 2010 | 14:59

Thursday 25 February 2010


Logan Ryan Smith re-woke the gila monster of a chapbook press called Transmission, and he's selling/soon to be making chapbooks again! You can buy MC Oroville's Answering Machine, as well as awesome little books by Dorothea Laskey, Sarah Meneffe, and other terrific folk.

If you're interested in what MC O is all about, check out my interview with Ani Smith.
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you probably already saw this on HTMLBIGFOOT, but

Penulis : Unknown on Wednesday 24 February 2010 | 11:58

Wednesday 24 February 2010

Kevin Sampsell was nice enough to ask me some questions while I hung out in Portland, and Bryan Coffelt was nice enough to make it all spiffy. Me, meanwhile, I was nice enough to ramble on for eleven minutes and hammer the words "terrific" and "mythology" with freakish consistency.

"I don't have to long for a better thing to tell stories about." from bryan coffelt on Vimeo.

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clay aiken pyramid illuminati

Penulis : Unknown on Tuesday 9 February 2010 | 10:40

Tuesday 9 February 2010


Just finished another story with some crazy talk. Of the on the bus kind, though not on a bus. Of the only fifteen minutes into the spiel do you realize you've got somebody differently-stabled. For some reason I am really attracted to this talk. It's not blabber, it's conspiracy-on-the-answering-machine stuff. Here are a few reasons why I believe I'm attracted to it, which have been vetted and hired from a series of more bullshit reasons that would sound better but be less honest:

1) I am a little crazy. I feel calm in the presence of "actual" crazies and way less calm in the presence of somebody talking about their new afghan. Or saying "mmm" in that way faintly resonant of the orgasm but culturally accepted. For some reason I associate this kind of non-crazy talk with good posture. It drives me crazy.

2) I am envious that I am not as crazy as "actual" crazies. It seems very sweet and bold to have so a vision clearly individuated. Get it, vision? There is no doubt, upon hearing the crazies do their crazy, that they see a different world than you see. And that this world is, by way of its mangled structure, inaccessible to you. Not unworking, just inaccessible. Think maybe of a computer, appliance, or car that only you can start/drive/whatever. This is the world of a crazy. It seems really fun. Or at least it seems really fun to me. I'm sure it seems annoying to people like busy people. I never want to talk to a crazy. That is exasperating. But I feel very calm when I am temporarily in their presence and I am fully aware that I have my exit route planned, thus of course dehumanizing the crazy and turning the crazy into some kind of rollercoaster, which is not doubt a flaw in my empathy. But it is true. When I am on a bus with a crazy, or at a bus stop with a crazy and the crazy's sticker-flocked shopping cart, or when I watch the crazy walk into the middle of the street, kneel, pray, and then walk back onto the sidewalk—ignoring the honks of very angry busy car people—to perhaps harass some momentarily open-seeming (i.e. non-busy) person, to perhaps explain to this person about how a giant flamingo controls the stage lights we call the moon: if I am witness to these situations, I feel much calmer than I feel in more normal situations. I was going to put normal in quotes, but that would be sort of wishful thinking. And, even worse, would perpetuate the falsely dichotomous narrative of "normal VS. weird," simply recasting it in some sort of immature punk-scenester fluffery of "well, maybe nothing's normal, dude, maybe everything is weird." This, of course, is wrong. Everything is not weird. Or normal. Everything is everything. The louder each thing, the more comes listening.
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Oshin おしん [Episode 1 to 297] Updated

Penulis : Unknown on Sunday 7 February 2010 | 02:34

Sunday 7 February 2010





Titulo en japones: おしん
Titulo (romaji): Oshin
Episodios: 297 de 15 minutos aprox. c/u
Estilo: Drama humano
Publicado entre el 4 de Abril de 1983 y el 31 de Marzo 1984

In 1901, Oshin, at seven years, is sent off by her father to work as a babysitter, in order to support her family. With the physical and verbal abuse by her employer, Oshin insisted on sticking it through for the sake of her family. However, when she is accused of stealing money, she runs away and for days suffers through snow blizzards as she walks back home to be with her mother. But the blizzard is so rough on her, she nearly freezes to death. She's rescued by a man who himself is a fugitive, and stays with him until the snow melts.

Upon her return to her home, Oshin is once again sent back out - this time to Kaga-ya in Sayaka to work as a babysitter. She makes good friends with the daughter, who is the same age as Oshin, and stays at the Kaga-ya until she turns 16. But even after returning home once again, her father wants her to once again go back out and work as a bar maid. Realizing that the bar maid job is a cover for prostitution, Oshin runs off to Tokyo to follow her older sister Haru's dream of becoming a hair stylist.

More info ---> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oshin

Size: 640 x 480
File 80 ~ Mb x 1
Format x264 in mkv

waiting for mirror (megaupload has shutdown)




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A Man Who Was Superman



Movie: A Man who was Superman | Supermanyi Eodeon Sanayi
Release Date : January 31, 2008
Country : South Korea
Director : Yoon-Chul Jeong
Starring : Jeong-min Hwang, Ji-hyun Jun
The two join forces in “A Man Who Was Superman,” a story about an unlikely “hero” (Hwang), who goes out of his way to help ― or rescue ― the planet by helping senior citizens cross the street and hand-standing in the middle of the road “to push away” the detrimental effects of the sun. Jun plays the role of Song Su-jeong, a cynical documentary filmmaker who records his story.
Kryptonite is a fictional substance that weakens Superman’s powers in the original American comic series. In the movie, his character claims to have kryptonite stuck in his head, and when Song (Jun) discovers through an X-ray that there really is something in his brain, she knows she has the story of her life…

Download
Video
Code:
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=Z8F0D0GW
English subtitle
Code:
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=4B0Q8CUW



Shared by : Hystericmoon
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AVATAR MOVIE

Avatar - Soundtrack (2



rapidshare download on

West Movie Link Station

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Drama Korea (Korean Drama) 2007

Jumong Salah satu serial MBC yang mengambil inspirasi dari sejarah Korea yang berhubungan dengan dinasti Goguryeo (sekitar 37 SM-668M). Ditulis oleh penulis veteran Choi Wan Gyu (Hur Jun, Sang Do, dan All In) dan Jung Hyung Soo (Damo). Jumong adalah drama berlatar belakang sejarah Korea paling mengesankan dan menduduki rating teritnggi selama 2006, mendominasi layar kaca dengan rating 40 %. Episode terakhir (81) ditayangkan 6 Maret lalu berhasil menembus rating 51,9 % dengan rating 40,9 %. Jumong adalah tokoh legendaris yang mendirikan dinasti Goguryeo, Raja Dongmyeongseong. Cerita dimulai dengan konflik antara Gojoseon, kerajaan kuno Korea dengan pasukan Han dari China. Perselisihan ini akhirnya membuat peninsula Korea terpecah.


Hello! Miss Hello! Miss (Hello! Baby) dibintangi artis Lee Da Hae yang baru saja menghibur pemirsa TV lewat My Girl dipertemukan dengan Lee Ji Hoon yang sebelumnya membintangi Wonderful Life. Hello Miss diadaptasi dari novel Kimchi Mandu (16 episode).

Dalja’s Spring Dalja’s Spring (16 episode) berkisah tentang Oh Dal Ja (Chae Rim), seorang wanita lajang berusia 33 tahun yang bekerja sebagai seorang MC di sebuah acara teleshopping. Dia bimbang antara tetap melajang atau menikah sebelum tua. Drama ini mencoba menunjukkan realitas cinta wanita 30-an secara lucu dan komikal.


By Land and Sky By Land and Sky mukai tayang 15 Januari lalu dan saat ini di Korea masih tayang di Korea dengan episode yang panjang 100 episode. Suk Ji Soo (Han Hyo Joo) adalah wanita baik dan pengertian serta perhatian pada keluarga. Jeong Mu Young (Park Hae Jin) berjuang melalui berbagai cobaan. Mu Young tidak menyukai ayahnya karena lahir saat ayanhnya selingkuh dengan wanita lain. Keluarga Ji Soo dan Mu Young memiliki sifat saling bertolak belakang. Keluarga Ji Soo bahagia dan keluarga Mu Young tidak. Yoo Eun Ha (Hong Soo Ah) adalah gadis ceria dan kulit sempurna tanpa keriput. Serial ini berfokus pada berbagai masalah dalam keluarga moderen saat ini.


When Spring Comes When Spring Comes (16 episode) adalah kisah sukses dari seorang pecundang. Keluarga adalah orang terdekat yang kita sayangi, tetapi juga bisa menjadi orang yang menyakiti kita. Cerita ini mengenai ayah yang mantan napi dan putranya yang berprofesi sebagai jaksa penuntut. Mereka melewati permasalahan cinta keluarga, kebencian, rasa kasihan, kemarahan dan pengampunan.


Dae Jo Young Serial yang mencakup 100 episode ini berkisah tentang Raja Dae Jo Young dan pahlawan lain di kerajaan Balhae. Yi Hae Go adalah musuh Jo Young dan mereka bertempur demi cinta Cho Rin. Cho Rin berasal dari suku Georan dan dia mencintai Jo Young. Tetapi Jo Young akhirnya menikahi Suk Young, keponakan raja Bojang.

H.I.T H.I.T (Homicide Investigation Team) sebanyak 20 episode ini adalah kisah cinta pria dan wanita yang memiliki pandangan tersebdiri mengenai pekerjaan. Masing-masing melalui permasalahan dan kebimbangannya, tetapi apada akhirnya saling memahami satu sama lain. Serial ini membeberkan kehidupan sehari-hari jaksa penuntut Kim Jae Yoon (Ha Jung Woo) dan polisi bernama Cha Soo Kyung (Ko Hyun Jung) serta nilai-nilai yang dianut mereka dan mengungkap suka-duka profesi mereka.

Bad Woman, Good Woman Song Gun Woo (Lee Jae Ryong) telah menjalani dua kehidupna bersama dua wanita selama 6 tahun. Dia menikah dengan Sae Young (Choi Jin Sil) dan memiliki wanita simpanan Suh Kyung (Sung Hyun Ah). Istrinya adalah wanita yang emosional dan mudah menangis saat orang berbuat baik kepadanya. Sae Young menginginkan pernikahan yang sempurna, tetapi mereka memiliki kesulitan memiliki anak. Dia syok berat saat tahu suaminya memiliki wanita lain. Serial ini mulai tayang 1 Januari lalu dan memiliki 100 episode ini mendapat sambutan yang cukup bagus di Korea.

Que Sera, Sera Kang Tae Joo (Eric Mun) adalah pegawai biasa di sebuah department store. Shin Joon Hyuk (Lee Kyu Han) sedikit sakit jiwa karena permasalahan keluarganya, tetapi penampilannya baik dan berkemampuan kerja tinggi. Keduanya saling jatuh cinta pada tokoh utama Han Eun Soo (Jung Yoo Mi) di saat bersamaan dan dikisahkan sebanyak 17 episode.


Thank You Thank You (sebanyak 16 episode) adalah serial pertama Jang Hyuk setalah keluar dari wajib militer. Min Ki Seo (Jang Hyuk) dan Lee Young Shin (Gong Hyo Jin) berperan sebagai pasangan yang sangat membenci kehidupan masing-masing pasangannya pada pandangan pertama. Namun selanjutnya mereka mulai tertarik. Ki Seo adalah seorang dokter yang selalu menganggap remeh orang lain sampai akhirnya ia bertemu dengan Young Shin dan anaknya yang sangat membutuhkan bantuannya. Ia berubah menjadi sosok yang hangat dan menyenangkan.


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awesome is the color of my true love's eyes

Penulis : Unknown on Tuesday 2 February 2010 | 13:21

Tuesday 2 February 2010


Had a lovely time this weekend in Charm City (is that a mom-jeans move, like calling San Francisco "Frisco?") with the beautiful and amazing and witty and funny and gentle-with-my-lost-salt-and-vinegar-chip-bitterness Carolyn C.Z., and among the company of many Baltimore wizards (surely a word that everyone needs; we need to campaign this word into the same gender neutrality "actor" has achieved), who are all dear and kind and sometimes tall and will get a shoutout in a later, official Baltimore paragraph, not because shoutouts are some sort of icky social convention to which we must capitulate for sake of nuzzle-rubbing, but because I genuinely feel affection for the strange energy these people inflict on my ability to live, and by extension the people themselves, and by extension the names of these people, and by extension the sweetly dorkish clutter of glyphs that beam their names into your attention. They done gonna get named, yo.

Here is that paragraph: thank you to Adam Robinson, Justin Sirois, Backseat Owl, Michael Kimball, Joseph Young, Tita Chico, David Erlewine, Jen Michalski and non-Baltimore but still awesome Todd Zuniga, Dave Housley, and others I am forgetting because I am not perfect but my affection is.

I won the Baltimore Literary Death Match by performing two love poems between action figures, and then drawing Michael Kimball as a train conductor and Rafael Alvarez as a spectacled bunny, i.e. a spectacle. In other words, I made a perfect fool of myself and was rewarded, as we sometimes are before we die. Thank you to everyone. Thank you especially to Jen M and Dave Adverb.

From the Department of That's-So-Baltimore: giant flamingos (see above), paraplegic ticket takers, five people on a scooter on the sidewalk in the snow, readings in a hostel, huge bars, white car with red hood, cafes in old houses, tiny wives in high chairs at a bar, the G-Spot being a club in an old mill that's (wait for it) hard to find, and of course the lovely collaborative energy of Balitmore's witty inhabitants, who are as easy to get along with as Baltimore's snow is to melt.

What's funny is that this mini-love letter to Baltimore also rehearses—in some strange way I'm not going to insult you by explaining—my reaction to the negative reactions toward the list Elisa Gabbert and I made of contemporary poetry "moves" over at HTMLGIANT. Many people have mentioned the list in a fun way, which reminds me why I sometimes like hanging out with poets who post things on the internet, and many people have mentioned the list in a baffling way—or, more accurately, have talked about things that have nothing to do with the list as though these things are somehow the list's fault—which reminds me why I often don't enjoy hanging out with poets on the internet.

A few salient points, which are probably going to sound "reverse snobby," i.e. glib, which I don't care about sounding, because it's better than sounding "non-reverse boring:"

1) Any taxonomy taken in good faith is taken as merely an invitation to discussion, the "good faith" part of that meaning that in order to save yourself anger and headaches, you quietly ignore whether it was intended to be something more grandiose than an invitation to discussion. Hint: not I, said the fly.

2) I got most of my examples from a txt file called "good poetry.txt" And from books I had on hand. Why would I have books on hand? Because I've read them and remember them. Elisa has said she got her examples from books she had on hand. You can take all that as you will. Moves can get tired, but you can also get tired from dancing and that can feel good, that getting tired, because you had a good time. Sometimes you go dancing with your friends because you like them. I don't know what world you think you're saving if you hate dancing and/or friends, but it's not this one.

3) Poets: you're not magicians, you're not gods, you're not any more mystical than a foggy day. Not even magicians are magicians. Duh. It is not scary to talk about dancing unless, as Frank said, "you flatter yourself into thinking that what you’re experiencing is 'yearning.'" Duh. Of course it's yearning. Here's a dance called the can opener. Do you want to try it on Saturday? Cool, me too! Oh man, it's Saturday! Wow. That was fun. I'm sure glad I didn't pretend the can opener was mystical and stress myself out about doing the can opener, because then I'm not sure it would've been so fun.

4) Who are all those people on the list?! Oh my God. I know what would be fun! Let's talk about where they teach/who they know/what they've won! That is so much more fun than dancing! Oh. Wait. Oh yeah, it's not.

4a) Let's use the words "experimental," "innovation," "adventurous," etc, as though what we we're doing isn't making language experiences, but instead is making race cars and safari plans. Yeah, that sounds awesome. Inflating by way of abstract analogy what we do, without respect to what is actually enjoyable about what we do, is why everybody likes poetry and talking about poetry so, so, so much. Oh wait.

5) REAL POETRY DOESN'T USE TRICKS! REAL POETRY USES TRUCKS! REEL POETRY ABUSES DUCKS! RAIN POETRY SUES TUCKER! RENT YOUR POETRY FROM ST. SHUCKS!

6) Of course these moves are figures of rhetoric. Of course we didn't invent them. Of course they are not new. Sometimes people say things when they are mad and it's like they are pointing at me and telling me "WHAT ABOUT THE FACT I AM WEARING A COAT." Okay, coat-wearer, what about the fact you are mad?

7) A more gentle way of approaching #5 would be to say that honestly I was surprised that so many people read "moves" as "cliches," and upon reflection, I can understand that, because the act of poets reading about poetry on the internet and talking about poetry on the internet so often comes during an anxious space where the poet is not writing poetry, is not reading poetry, and is probably thinking "poetry sucks and burns my toast. Why the fuck am I doing this. I hate myself." Were I to read this list in that mood, I would view those moves as cliches too, probably, and I would not be generous and not have good faith in my reading and would not think about why we chose to use the word "move," which is a complicated word that invites discussion. I/we maybe didn't think enough about this mood while we were making the list—though, now that I say that, I think it's actually more fair to say I didn't think about this mood enough while I was posting the list, because Elisa seems to have been smarter than me in pre-viewing these moves with nuance and critical thinking. She was less surprised that so many people were like "man, what a great list of stupid things to do; I hope I don't do these things! Hey, look at this list, and don't do these things!" I was very surprised that people approached the list like that. She was less surprised. To my credit, I did post some awesome pictures.

8) The workshop? Huh? I worked on this list while thinking about reading and writing poems, i.e. having language experiences. I never thought about "workshops" once. All the workshops I've ever had are before/after/about the language experiences. I would like to have one of these mysterious workshops that drills me into fad, just because I don't have enough t-shirts. Of course, I'm being glib. I know workshops suck. It's not like all of us talking about how much workshops suck all the time instead of talking about poetry or why we like poetry is the reason people don't like to listen to us talk about poetry or anything. Oh no. Can't be.

9) Did I forget anything? Feel like I'm forgetting something. This is the official I FORGOT SOMETHING IMPORTANT SPACE.

10) Sandra Beasley said that Elisa means the list as a "a catalyst for self awareness." I have not asked Elisa if that's what she means the list as, but I like that phrase. Sandra Beasley's whole post re: the list, actually, is awesome.

11) Mary Biddinger wants these moves on a t-shirt. Me too! I like Mary Biddinger's poems. And when capitalism ends, we're gonna need so many fucking t-shirts, yo. When capitalism ends we're going to need black t-shirts for warmth and white t-shirts for cool.

12) For some reason, I just realized that #12 should be a link to Johannes Göransson's brilliant blog as a space for an ongoing deconstruction of the "hipsterism-as-complaint" discussion dynamic so often wedged into poetry's self-pitying anxiety about why no one wants to listen to us talk about ourselves. Again, I'm being glib, and Johannes might be mildly chagrined to find himself rhetorically shoved onto "my side" by that sentence, but he talks honestly about the ways poet-talking gets too comfortable and in love with its own garden, its own cottage, its own authenticity, etc, and he is a stunning poet to boot, so I hope he is not too mad at me.

13) I have always liked the number 13, which might be related to why sometimes I am annoying or exasperating. Part of my project in life is to take my sunglasses off and give you a hug, so I will stop here. In other words, I am probably going to delete this list (not the original list but this "response-to-criticism" list) in, like, twenty minutes, because I hate conflict and I love sunglasses.

Please be awesome. You already are, so it shouldn't be that hard, okay?
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