Monthly Archives: February 2012
Happy Valentine’s Day!
Filed under News
Some of my best friends are Republican…
Filed under Curiosities
Autochromes by Alfred Stieglitz, 1907-1917
Alfred Stieglitz was a New Jersey-born photographer who espoused a belief in the aesthetic potential of photography in early 20th century America. Autochrome was a photographic transparency film patented by the Lumiére brothers in 1903. The process initially recorded images as standard black and white and then reconfigured them into color using filters. These photos are courtesy of the Yale University Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Frank Eugene c. 1907
Frank Eugene drinking beer c. 1907
Man in red sweater c. 1907
Selma Schubart c. 1907
Unidentified couple playing chess c. 1907
Edward Stieglitz c. 1910
Emmeline O. Stieglitz c. 1910
Katherine Stieglitz c. 1910
Katherine Stieglitz c. 1910 II
Katherine Stieglitz c. 1910 III
Hedwig Stieglitz c. 1910
Oaklawn c. 1910
Katherine Stieglitz c.1911
Alfred and Emmeline O. Stieglitz c. 1915
Dorothy O. Schubart c. 1915
Flora Stieglitz Straus c. 1915
Flora Stieglitz Straus c. 1915 II
Flora Stieglitz Straus c. 1915 III
Hugh Grant Straus c. 1915
Jacobina Staerk Stieffel c. 1915
Joseph Obermeyer c. 1917
Joseph Obermeyer and Katherine Stieglitz c. 1917
Filed under Classics
Sarah Palin Closes CPAC with Ugly Speech
“Candidate Obama, he promised to fundamentally transform America, and that’s one promise he’s kept; he transformed a shining city on a hill into a sinking ship.”
– Sarah Palin berating President Obama
As if the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) isn’t filled with enough distorted facts and race-baiting rhetoric, this year’s clown fest finished with a speech from former half-ass Alaska Governor and 2008 Republican Vice-Presidential candidate Sarah Palin. It doesn’t surprise me staunch conservatives give credence to Palin; after all, they go into orgasmic frenzies every time they mention Ronald Reagan, so their standards aren’t too high. Since Palin can’t seem to find her way back to that trailer park where she lives with her brood, she makes frequent appearances at these events; squawking about what she thinks is wrong with America, but – like Ann Coulter, Cal Thomas and other conservative gas bags – doesn’t offer any valid solutions.
Narco Nihilism – The Days of the Dead
Belgium photojournalist Teun Voeten has been documenting some of the most heinous images across the globe for nearly a quarter century, from extreme poverty in Harlem to the little-publicized civil war in Sierra Leone that took some 50,000 lives. Sometimes he’s barely escaped with his life. His 2010 book Narco Nihilism – The Days of the Dead focuses on México’s bloody drug war. For a year, beginning in 2009, Voeten visited the epicenter of the violence, Ciudad Juarez, as well as other places in México where the conflict has entwined itself into daily life. It’s especially pertinent, considering that México seems to be losing ground to the cartels; in part because of that nation’s notoriously corrupt law enforcement entities, but also because of the strong appetite for drugs in the U.S. While people lament Whitney Houston’s allegedly drug-addled death, for example, she and others like Charlie Sheen, Lindsay Lohan and Darryl Strawberry could sit in the luxury of their own homes (or a hotel) and order up drugs in the same manner most of us would order room service without facing the gritty reality of a dead body. It’s the average citizen in México – and the U.S. – who doesn’t have the money or the power to fight back against the violence that drug trafficking brings who end up suffering the most.
Filed under News
Aftermath
This cartoon – from South Africa’s Peter Lewis – is among those going for the jugular following Whitney Houston’s death.
Filed under News
February 13, 2012 – 311 days Until Baktun 12
Survivalist Tip: Buy several pairs of sturdy work boots – the kind with thick soles that reach up above your ankle and have alloy-enforced toe fronts. You might have to hike long distances across rough terrain after the apocalypse, so you need decent, stable footwear that’s comfortable, yet water and soil-resistant. Forget your designer cowboy boots and running shoes! I don’t care how much money you spent on them. They’re too wimpy compared to good old fashioned construction and military-type work boots. Besides, with that alloy toe, you can easily disable an uncooperative member of your flock with a swift kick to the crotch or the butt. And, the heavy material means none of their nasty body fluids will seep through to your skin. I can vouch for this. I can’t tell you the number of times I had to incapacitate some drunkard who made a pass at me at a bar. Well, I could by counting the police reports, but I don’t have time right now. I have to polish off my boots.
Filed under Mayan Calendar Countdown
Today’s Birthdays
Chuck Yeager, Air Force pilot who broke the sound barrier, is 89.
Actress Kim Novak (Vertigo, The Man with the Golden Arm) is 79.
Actor George Segal (Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?) is 78.
Actor, producer, director Bo Svenson (Delta Force, Heartbreak Ridge) is 71.
Actress Carol Lynley (The Poseidon Adventure, Return to Peyton Place) is 70.
Singer Peter Tork (The Monkees, real name: Peter Halsten Thorkelson) is 70.
Actress Stockard Channing (To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything, Julie Newmar, The Fish that Saved Pittsburgh, Grease, Six Degrees of Separation) is 68.
TV host Jerry Springer is 68.
Singer-songwriter Peter Gabriel (Genesis) is 62.
Filed under Birthdays
On February 13…
1633 – Philosopher, astronomer and mathematician Galileo Galilei arrived in Rome to face charges by the Roman Inquisition of heresy for advocating Copernican theory, which holds that the Earth revolves around the sun.
1635 – The Boston Latin School, the first public school in the United States, was established.
1867 – Johann Strauss’ Blue Danube Waltz was played for the first time at a public concert in Vienna, Austria.
1875 – Mrs. Edna Kanouse of Watertown, WI gave birth to America’s first set of quintuplets. Sadly, all five of the baby boys died within two weeks.
1914 – The American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) was founded in New York City to protect the copyrighted musical compositions of its members.
1920 – The National Negro Baseball League was organized in Kansas City, Missouri.
1920 – The League of Nations (now the United Nations) recognized the perpetual neutrality of Switzerland.
Filed under History
Cartoon of the Day
Keep trying, Mitt! You’ll get there some day. Look at Bob Dole. He was given up for dead in 1996, but after heavy doses of Vitamin B-12 and Viagra, he was good to go!
Filed under News


































