SemiPhore

Month

March 2012

20 posts

Who is @DadBoner? → mlive.com

THIS IS SO GOOD, you guys.

Mar 30, 20122 notes
#DadBoner #Karl Welzein #Grand Blanc #Michigan #Flint #Detroit #Chili's #Buffalo Wild Wings #Bold Flavors #Bold Journalism
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Mar 29, 2012
#Broadcast
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Take up permanent residence in my office.

Roto. CC. Render. Forever. Render. Repeat.

Mar 29, 20121 note
Mar 29, 2012190 notes
Mar 29, 2012769 notes
5 All-time Great Articles → jaredbkeller.com

tetw:

As chosen by Jared B. Keller

Jared B. Keller is an associate editor at The Atlantic, and one of the keepers of The Atlantic’s Tumblr. We asked him to choose the 5 articles he finds himself recommending over and over again, and here they are:

Have You Ever Tried to Sell a Diamond by Edward Jay Epstein (The Atlantic, 1982) - ”An unruly market may undo the work of a giant cartel and of an inspired, decades-long ad campaign.”  This is one of my favorite Atlantic articles of all time. Edward Jay Epstein traces the myth of the rare diamond through the history of De Beers and one of the greatest marketing campaigns ever.

The Behavioral Sink by Will Wiles (Cabinet, 2011) - ”How do you design a utopia?” Will Wiles details John B. Calhoun’s 1972 development of his Mortality-Inhibiting Environment for Mice: a practical utopia built in the laboratory. In the experiment that would inspire “The Rats of NIHM,” Calhoun followed the grisly, Malthusain rise and fall of the Heaven he built for mice.

Happiness is a Worn Gun by Dan Baum (Harper’s, August 2010) - Many knee-jerk opponents of gun rights have never handled a gun before, so what happens when one liberal wears a concealed weapon? This Harper’s article is is a classic read about Baum’s psychological transformation as a concealed gun owner.

A Matter of Optics by Warren Breckman (Lapham’s Quarterly, “The City,” Fall 2010) - Cities, like schools, prisons, or barracks, are institutions of power and representation. “Rulers of cities have always had an interest in visibility, both in representing their power and in controlling people by seeing them”

As We May Think by Vannevar Bush (The Atlantic, 1945) - “In this classic paper by Dr. Bush calls for a new relationship between thinking man and the sum of our knowledge. He urges that men of science should then turn to the massive task of making more accessible our bewildering store of knowledge.”

For more from the man himself head over to his Tumblr, or get involved with his Twitter feed.

Mar 27, 2012199 notes
“I apologize to anyone offended by what one prominent black conservative called my ‘very practical and potentially life-saving campaign urging black and Hispanic parents not to let their children go around wearing hoodies’” —Geraldo Rivera, giving the worst apology ever. (via theatlantic)
Mar 27, 2012711 notes
“I sat cringing before M-G-M’s Technicolor production of The Wizard of Oz, which displays no trace of imagination, good taste, or ingenuity… I don’t like the Singer Midgets under any circumstances, but I found them especially bothersome in Technicolor… I say it’s a stinkeroo.” —

Russell Maloney, reviewing The Wizard Of Oz after its 1939 release. Find out what other great movies the critics got wrong.

(via Flavorpill)

Mar 23, 201243 notes
Mar 23, 201219 notes
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Mar 20, 201223,158 notes
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#Belgian
Mar 19, 2012403 notes
Mar 16, 2012194 notes
#Apollo
Mar 16, 201218 notes
Mar 13, 201219 notes
Mar 12, 201289 notes
#Dick Proenneke
Mar 8, 20128 notes
#Hamtramck
Mar 8, 20121,294 notes
Mar 6, 2012793 notes
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