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thedailywhat:

Photo of the Day: The Daily Show’s Jon Stewart (then Jon Leibowitz) as a young College of William & Mary student moshing at a Dead Kennedys show at Casablanca in Richmond, VA, c. 1982.

Photo by Irish Willis Peele.

[gawker.]

3,080 notes

Posted at 5:52pm
Reblogged (Photo reblogged from thedailywhat)

 


67 notes

Posted at 11:47am
Reblogged (Photo reblogged from loveandzombies)

 


I love your silences, they are like mine. You are the only being before whom I am not distressed by my own silences. You have a vehement silence, one feels it is charged with essences, it is a strangely alive silence, like a trap open over a well, from which one can hear the secret murmur of the earth itself.
Anaïs Nin, Under a Glass Bell (via heymorticia)
9 notes

Posted at 11:31am
Reblogged (Quote reblogged from loveandzombies)

 


ianbrooks:

Happy Horny Werewolf Day cards by Warren Ellis

Warren Ellis wants to share the joy of Valentine’s Day with you, plus all those nasty bits you forgot about. You can purchase these Truthful Vday cards over at cafepress.

1,761 notes

Posted at 9:12pm
Reblogged (Photoset reblogged from wilwheaton)

 


72 notes

Posted at 7:24am
Reblogged (Photo reblogged from eccentricoddities)

 


The best new “Hey girl” blog!

(Source: rachelmaddowheygirl)

83 notes

Posted at 11:35pm
Reblogged (Photo reblogged from rachelmaddowheygirl)
Tagged Rachel Maddow hey girl

 


ohmija:

Lila Downs is a Mexican singer-songwriter. She performs her own compositions as well as tapping into Mexican traditional and popular music.
She also incorporates indigenous Mexican influences and has recorded songs in indigenous languages .
Lila Downs was born on September 19, 1968 in Tlaxiaco, Mexico, the daughter of Anita Sanchez, a Mixtec cabaret singer and Allen Downs, a British-American professor of art and cinematographer from Minnesota. From an early age Lila showed interest in music; at the age of eight she began singing rancheros and other traditional Mexican songs. She began her musical career singing with mariachis. At fourteen she moved to the United States with her parents.
She studied voice in Los Angeles and learned English, which her father helped her to perfect. When she was 16 her father died and after this event she decided to return to her native Tlaxiaco with her mother.
One day while she was working in a store in the Mixtec mountains a man came in to ask her to translate his son’s death certificate. She read that he had drowned trying to cross the border into the United States. This so deeply affected her that it continued to influence her work throughout her career. She talked about this in an NPR interview Lila Downs: ‘Border.’
Although today Downs is proud of her origins there was a time when she felt shame regarding her Native American roots. “I was embarrassed to have Indian blood. I was embarrassed that my mother spoke her language in public.” This lead her on a path to find herself, which included dropping out of college, dying her hair blonde and following the band, The Grateful Dead. After some time Downs found herself back in Oaxaca working at her mother’s auto parts store where she met her future husband and musical collaborator, Paul Cohen.
Downs studied Anthropology and Voice at the University of Minnesota and attended the Benito Juárez Autonomous University of Oaxaca to complete her studies. - excerpts via Wikipedia
“I learned classical music,” Downs relates. “But I felt so distant from this because the training pushed me away from the direction I felt I had to go-I wasn’t being true to what I was. The reason I dropped out of school was the rigid nature of the classical tradition, not being able to express myself with freedom. Slowly I realized [performing] the music from Oaxaca was what I wanted to do.”  

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Lila Downs’ journey of self-discovery and overcoming her own cultural shame is something that many Latinos (and other people of color) go through in their own lives.

ohmija:

Lila Downs is a Mexican singer-songwriter. She performs her own compositions as well as tapping into Mexican traditional and popular music.

She also incorporates indigenous Mexican influences and has recorded songs in indigenous languages .

Lila Downs was born on September 19, 1968 in Tlaxiaco, Mexico, the daughter of Anita Sanchez, a Mixtec cabaret singer and Allen Downs, a British-American professor of art and cinematographer from Minnesota. From an early age Lila showed interest in music; at the age of eight she began singing rancheros and other traditional Mexican songs. She began her musical career singing with mariachis. At fourteen she moved to the United States with her parents.

She studied voice in Los Angeles and learned English, which her father helped her to perfect. When she was 16 her father died and after this event she decided to return to her native Tlaxiaco with her mother.

One day while she was working in a store in the Mixtec mountains a man came in to ask her to translate his son’s death certificate. She read that he had drowned trying to cross the border into the United States. This so deeply affected her that it continued to influence her work throughout her career. She talked about this in an NPR interview Lila Downs: ‘Border.’

Although today Downs is proud of her origins there was a time when she felt shame regarding her Native American roots. “I was embarrassed to have Indian blood. I was embarrassed that my mother spoke her language in public.” This lead her on a path to find herself, which included dropping out of college, dying her hair blonde and following the band, The Grateful Dead. After some time Downs found herself back in Oaxaca working at her mother’s auto parts store where she met her future husband and musical collaborator, Paul Cohen.

Downs studied Anthropology and Voice at the University of Minnesota and attended the Benito Juárez Autonomous University of Oaxaca to complete her studies. - excerpts via Wikipedia

“I learned classical music,” Downs relates. “But I felt so distant from this because the training pushed me away from the direction I felt I had to go-I wasn’t being true to what I was. The reason I dropped out of school was the rigid nature of the classical tradition, not being able to express myself with freedom. Slowly I realized [performing] the music from Oaxaca was what I wanted to do.”  

Lila Downs

————————————————

Lila Downs’ journey of self-discovery and overcoming her own cultural shame is something that many Latinos (and other people of color) go through in their own lives.

39 notes

Posted at 11:25pm
Reblogged (Photo reblogged from ohmija)

 


ohjulianzerega:

lilatears

ohjulianzerega:

lilatears

15 notes

Posted at 11:24pm
Reblogged (Photo reblogged from ohjulianzerega)

 


amomenttothink:

It begins… first image of Edgar Wright and Simon Pegg working on the final episode of the blood and ice cream trilogy.
[via Bleeding Cool]

YES!!!

amomenttothink:

It begins… first image of Edgar Wright and Simon Pegg working on the final episode of the blood and ice cream trilogy.

[via Bleeding Cool]

YES!!!

4 notes

Posted at 12:41pm
Reblogged (Photo reblogged from amomenttothink)

 


I get misty-eyed just thinking about it…