Abortion Clinic Escort Blog

Posted on 7/24/2009 01:44:00 PM, under , ,


"Often the best blogs give you access into a world you otherwise would never see, or even think about. This blog is written by somebody who escorts women into an abortion clinic, through a gauntlet of tens or hundreds of protesters. This photo shows how they surround the women to protect them."
"We do this because clients of the clinic are often met at their cars by protesters. Between 2 and 5 protesters will follow/chase a client from their car parked in the public lot across the street to the private property line; talking at them, handing out literature, attempting to steer clients into the fake clinic down the block, shouting misinformation, slowing their pace, blocking the door and impeding clients any way they can. "

Everysaturday Morning's Blog

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Facade Projection

Posted on 7/24/2009 01:29:00 PM, under

The conception of this project consistently derives from its underlying architecture - the theoretic conception and visual pattern of the Hamburg Kunsthalle. The Basic idea of narration was to dissolve and break through the strict architecture of O. M. Ungers "Galerie der Gegenwart". Resultant permeabilty of the solid facade uncovers different interpretations of conception, geometry and aesthetics expressed through graphics and movement. A situation of reflexivity evolves - describing the constitution and spacious perception of this location by means of the building itself.


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Wedding Entrance Dance

Posted on 7/24/2009 01:24:00 PM, under


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Jul and Mat "On the Motorway"

Posted on 7/24/2009 09:50:00 AM, under ,

An unofficial video for Metronomy’s “On the Motorway,” by Jul and Mat. Jackson Pollock meets Guitar Hero.

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Alice In Wonderland Trailer #1

Posted on 7/24/2009 09:42:00 AM, under ,


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One Trillion Dollars

Posted on 7/22/2009 12:19:00 AM, under


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We Choose the Moon

Posted on 7/16/2009 08:46:00 AM, under , ,



Almost 40 years ago, on July 16, 1969, a Saturn V rocket carrying Mission Commander Neil Alden Armstrong, Command Module Pilot Michael Collins, and Lunar Module Pilot Edwin Eugene 'Buzz' Aldrin, Jr. launched from Cape Canaveral. Only four days later—40 years next Tuesday— Armstrong and Aldrin set camp on the Sea of Tranquility, the first humans ever to walk on the surface of the Moon.

It's probably the most amazing and technologically challenging adventure ever accomplished, and a sweet victory not only for the United States, but for all of us. Standing on the shoulders of giants and thousands of years of civilization—with all its misery and mayhem, but also with the genius, love, and creativity of millions of people—humans made the impossible possible once again.

Many people fail to comprehend the breathtaking nature of this endeavour. Many of us weren't even born in 1969, when the world was on the brink of destruction. That's why this is my favorite site this week: We Choose the Moon, created by the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum. There you will be able to follow the first trip to the Moon in real time, starting right now.


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Water Fights

Posted on 7/14/2009 01:34:00 PM, under ,



Karl Marx argued that the underlying cause of all wars was competition for resources. Oil may have been the impetus of many Western forays into the Middle East, but could water become our next casus belli? It’s unlikely that water will be the direct cause of any armed conflict in the near future—negotiating water rights has historically been found to bring countries together rather than tearing them apart—but that might not always be the case. Here are seven regions where growing demand for water could result in problems.

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The Eternal Moonwalk

Posted on 7/13/2009 01:45:00 PM, under



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Hog Wild

Posted on 7/10/2009 03:04:00 PM, under

Each summer they gather from around the state (and one team from the hated Chicago). Teams of three who enter a ring of mud to conquer the pig. The goal is to wrestle the pig into a barrel before a thirty second time limit.


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Wait For Me

Posted on 7/10/2009 02:49:00 PM, under


“Wait for Me” uses one interview and mostly home video to weave a deeply moving narrative. For most of the piece, we know only that a mother is waiting for her son to come home. From where? Or perhaps more importantly, from what? There is great suspense, but nothing distracts from the mother’s voice, through which we connect to her hope, fear, sadness and love. The producer trusts the audience to take the journey and reveals the story slowly: tight opening shots eventually widen, the unseen mother finally appears on camera more than a minute in. The significance of the title is disclosed in the final scene. The music and the editing of the home footage blend seamlessly with the tone — the balmly wistulness of memory. It’s often said that opening and closing images are of utmost importance in storytelling. “Wait for Me” proves that point. (K.B.)

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Cardboard Tube Fighting Leauge

Posted on 7/10/2009 01:12:00 PM, under , ,



Humans have been battling each other with swords, sticks, lightsabers, and other long staff-like things for pretty much as long as they've been around, but we rarely get a chance to practice this ancient art in the modern age of computers, cars, and strip clubs. Which is why the Cardboard Tube Fighting League is so great. The rules are simple: grab your tube, engage your foe, and the first one to break their tube loses. It's a great way to have fun while honoring your primal urges, and with upcoming eventsin cities across the country, there's no reason not to go forth and do battle.

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The Running Of The Bulls 2009

Posted on 7/10/2009 12:15:00 PM, under


Here is a great photoblog of this years running of the bulls in Pmplona, Spain.

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Last Words

Posted on 7/08/2009 03:09:00 PM, under ,













I’ve always found the practice of giving a death-sentenced person the opportunity to utter a series of “last words” to be profoundly (and bizarrely) fascinating. Perhaps not surprisingly, clicking through Tru TV’s collection of final statements by criminals awaiting execution is a bit of a harrowing experience. [via.]


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George W. Bush Librarium

Posted on 7/08/2009 02:35:00 PM, under

Completion of the George W. Bush Presidential Library at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas may be stalled indefinitely, due to an apparent lack of funding, public support, and basic legality. Make no mistake, the public's desire to endlessly relive Bush's greatest achievements may go unanswered for years to come—and his legacy remain (like America) in limbo.

All hope is not lost. We at Origen & Golan Architects are proud to unveil the plans for the George W. Bush Presidential Librarium! Themed attractions provide more entertainment than a library, and more accurately represent Bush's remarkable legacy—start by exploring The Stax, Supreme Food Court, Book BBQ, and the ever-popular Golden Parachutes. We ask for your support in promoting the Librarium among your colleagues. We cannot blink. [via.]


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Statue Of Liberty Photos

Posted on 7/03/2009 12:27:00 AM, under ,

July 2, 2009--Photographed from a rare vantage point, several of the Statue of Liberty's 25 observation windows look out over New York Harbor in an undated picture. Visitor access to the Statue of Liberty's crown reopens on the Fourth of July for the first time since 9/11. (Full story: "Statue of Liberty Facts: July 4th Reopening and More.")

Above the windows are three of the seven skyscraping rays said by some to represent the seven seas and continents of the world.






The Statue of Liberty underwent a major renovation for its 1986 centennial, with the most obvious change being the replacement of the torch.

The old flame (left), shown in 1984, featured amber-colored windows and was lighted from within. The openings of the old torch, now in an adjoining museum, allowed rain in and led to corrosion of the arm's support structure, Park Service spokesperson Mindi Rambo said.

The new torch (right), pictured under construction in 1984, has a flame with an unbroken copper skin covered in 24-karat gold leaf and entirely lighted from the outside.



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11 Yearbook Photos of Musicians

Posted on 7/03/2009 12:19:00 AM, under ,

It is great seeing the changes that these musicians have undergone since their high school days. I love this Lil Jon and Ryan Seacrest. Check them all out here.







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Ceiling Porn

Posted on 7/03/2009 12:07:00 AM, under ,

Here are some really gorgeous images of ceilings around the world.










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Baseball Bat Tricks

Posted on 7/02/2009 10:51:00 PM, under ,


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Celebrities Upside Down

Posted on 7/02/2009 03:26:00 PM, under ,
















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Picasso: Drawing With Light

Posted on 6/26/2009 01:48:00 PM, under ,

LIFE photographer Gjon Mili visited Picasso in 1949. Mili showed the artist some of his photographs of ice skaters with tiny lights affixed to their skates jumping in the dark—and Picasso's mind began to race. The series of photographs that follows—Picasso’s light drawings—were made with a small flashlight in a dark room; the images vanished almost as soon as they were created.














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Summer Solstice at Stonehenge

Posted on 6/26/2009 01:44:00 PM, under

STONEHENGE, England (AP) -- Pagans and partygoers drummed, danced or gyrated in hula hoops to stay awake through the night, as more than 35,000 people greeted thesummer solstice Sunday at the ancient stone circle of Stonehenge. Despite fears of trouble because of the record-sized crowd, police said the annual party at the mysterious monument was mostly peaceful. Stonehenge, which sits on Salisbury Plain about 80 miles southwest of London, is one of Britain's most popular tourist attractions, visited by more than 750,000 people a year. It was built in three phases between 3,000 B.C. and 1,600 B.C. Mystery surrounds the monument's original purpose. The solstice is one of the few times during the year that visitors can get close enough to touch the rocks. (25 images)

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Swiss adventurer Bertrand Piccard has unveiled a prototype of the solar-powered plane he hopes eventually to fly around the world.

The vehicle, spanning 61m but weighing just 1,500kg, will undergo trials to prove it can fly through the night.

Dr Piccard, who made history in 1999 by circling the globe non-stop in a balloon, says he wants to demonstrate the potential of renewable energies.

The final version of the plane will try first to cross the Atlantic in 2012.


Link here for the rest of the article and a video of the unveiling.


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Goodbye MJ

Posted on 6/25/2009 04:57:00 PM, under


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SAMPARKOUR

Posted on 6/25/2009 04:53:00 PM, under ,

Samparkour is a short that reveals the city of São Paulo (Brazil) under the look of Parkour. Where people see obstacles, Zico Corrêa visualize new possibilities.


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The Cove

Posted on 6/25/2009 04:44:00 PM, under ,

Sorry for all the trailers lately but there are some great fils coming out.
The Cove, made by our friends over at Participant, tells the story of Ric O’Barry and his attempts to reveal a secret and, it seems, geniunely sinister dolphin hunting/smuggling operation in Taiji, Japan. Rolling Stonedescribes it as “a cross between Flipper and The Bourne Identity” and that’s not hard to believe given the trailer.


It also won the Audience Award at Sundance. The website’s here.

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Flow Chart Of Same Sex Marriage Debate

Posted on 6/23/2009 11:57:00 PM, under , ,

Granted, this seems a bit biased, it still makes some sense, and is still ridiculous that we cannot come up with a solution that fits everyone's needs and wants.

















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Buzz Aldrin's New Hip Hop Album Looks Amazing

Posted on 6/23/2009 11:48:00 PM, under ,


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Amazing Surfing Trick

Posted on 6/23/2009 12:56:00 PM, under ,

Jordy Smith is a 21-year-old pro surfer from South Africa. He's in his second year on the Association of Surfing Professionals tour. And off the coast of Indonesia, he just pulled what GrindTV is calling "the most high-performance maneuver ever executed on a wave". It's called a "rodeo flip," and it's pretty insane.

See for yourself as Smith executes a high-flying rotating-flip into a reverse 360.


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Last Airbender (Update now in HD)

Posted on 6/22/2009 11:04:00 PM, under ,


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HBO's 'Band of Brothers' Follow up 'The Pacific'

Posted on 6/22/2009 06:28:00 PM, under ,


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Pixar Grants Girl's Last Wish to See Up

Posted on 6/19/2009 03:13:00 PM, under

Colby Curtin, a 10-year-old girl suffering from terminal vascular cancer, told her mom that she wanted to live to see Pixar's Up. But before she could visit the theater, her condition became too unstable for her to be moved.

Colby's family called Pixar, guessed a name of an employee to break through the automated operator and explained the situation to the first person they reached. A Pixar employee flew out immediately with a DVD, toys and posters in hand. From the OC Register:

Colby couldn't see the screen because the pain kept her eyes closed so her mother gave her a play-by-play of the film.

"Do you think you can hang on?" Colby's mother said.

"I'm ready (to die), but I'm going to wait for the movie," the girl replied.

At the end of the film, the mother asked if her daughter enjoyed the movie and Colby nodded yes, Lisa Curtin said.


Colby died later that evening and hopefully was fulfilled in some way. I also really appreciate Pixar for doing that for her. My thoughts go out to Colby's family.


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The Mp3 Experiment Six

Posted on 6/16/2009 12:21:00 PM, under


Urban Improv of the Day: 2,000 honorary Improv Everywhere agents descended upon Roosevelt Island this past weekend for the Sixth Annual MP3 Experiment — a one-of-a-kind happening in which all participants press play on the same MP3 track simultaneously, and uniformly perform the oddball instructions contained therein.

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John Lennon & Chuck Berry - Johnny B. Goode

Posted on 6/16/2009 12:19:00 PM, under ,


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Yann Arthus-Bertrand’s Home

Posted on 6/16/2009 12:09:00 PM, under ,



What’s essentially a pulled-back overview of the planet—in all its breathtaking beauty and harrowing fragility—Home looks utterly captivating. The Earth, of course, is quite resilient, but we do run the risk of making the place inhospitable. Here’s the artist’s statement:

We are living in exceptional times. Scientists tell us that we have 10 years to change the way we live, avert the depletion of natural resources and the catastrophic evolution of the Earth’s climate. The stakes are high for us and our children. Everyone should take part in the effort, and HOME has been conceived to take a message of mobilization out to every human being. For this purpose, HOME needs to be free. A patron, the PPR Group, made this possible. EuropaCorp, the distributor, also pledged not to make any profit because Home is a non-profit film. HOME has been made for you : share it! And act for the planet.

Watch the Entire Movie For Free Here.

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Lebron James 3pt. Buzzer Beater in HD

Posted on 5/23/2009 10:55:00 AM, under ,


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Posted on 5/23/2009 10:41:00 AM, under










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The Beauty in Recyclables

Posted on 5/22/2009 07:55:00 PM, under , , ,

Last month, Philly outfitted ten of its recycling trucks with stunning, full-body paint jobs. The project was a collaboration of the city of Philadelphia, its Mural Arts Program, and The Design Center. The designs themselves were based off of 19th and 20th century textiles and the timing was coordinated with the launch of the city’s “single stream” recycling program.

There are more photos at wejetset.


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Conservative Radio Host Gets Waterboarded

Posted on 5/22/2009 06:56:00 PM, under , ,

"I wanted to prove it wasn't torture," Mancow said. "They cut off our heads, we put water on their face...I got voted to do this but I really thought 'I'm going to laugh this off.' "

The upshot? "It is way worse than I thought it would be, and that's no joke," Mancow told listeners. "It is such an odd feeling to have water poured down your nose with your head back...It was instantaneous...and I don't want to say this: absolutely torture."

Read the full article and check out the video here.


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World Burping Champion

Posted on 5/20/2009 04:48:00 PM, under


Sorry, I just had to post this.

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New Google Office in Zurich

Posted on 5/20/2009 04:39:00 PM, under ,


Some really amazing thing in this office, I would love to work and play there. Click the photo for the link.











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Johnny Cash and Shel Silverstein

Posted on 5/20/2009 04:19:00 PM, under


Johnny Cash and Shel Silverstein perform “A Boy Named Sue” (which Uncle Shelby wrote for Cash) on The Johnny Cash Show in 1970.

Bonus: Silverstein sings “Daddy What If” — a Grammy-nominated chart topper made famous by country music singer Bobby Bare and his son Bobby Bare, Jr.

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Julia Dales Amazing Beat Boxing

Posted on 5/19/2009 04:34:00 PM, under ,


"My name is Julia Dales and I want to win the Beatbox Battle Wildcard." And guess what. She did. More on the Beatbox Battle World Championship in this NPR post.

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Where Are All The Fish?

Posted on 5/19/2009 04:10:00 PM, under ,


People eat a lot of fish. In fact, per capita fish consumption has nearly doubled in the last 50 years. The problem is that there may not be any more fish if we keep catching and consuming them at this rate. The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations measures how many of each species of each fish were caught each year. Using these numbers, we can see how some fish catches have peaked, meaning that there are simply not enough fish left to catch. Other fish’s catch numbers are still rising, meaning that demand for that fish is increasing: if we keep fishing the way we are, those populations will also start to drop and potentially die out. Our latest Transparency is a look at catch numbers of some of the most popular fish in the world.

Via GOOD.

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The Business Logic of Sustainability

Posted on 5/19/2009 03:59:00 PM, under ,


At his carpet company, Ray Anderson has increased sales and doubled profits while turning the traditional "take / make / waste" industrial system on its head. In a gentle, understated way, he shares a powerful vision for sustainable commerce.

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Sleeping Baby Pigs

Posted on 5/17/2009 06:44:00 PM, under


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Wolfram Alpha

Posted on 5/17/2009 06:40:00 PM, under

Today's Wolfram|Alpha is the first step in an ambitious, long-term project to make all systematic knowledge immediately computable by anyone. You enter your question or calculation, and Wolfram|Alpha uses its built-in algorithms and growing collection of data to compute the answer. Its a pretty neat idea, but still needs some work before I use it regularly.

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Interactive Recession Map

Posted on 5/17/2009 06:20:00 PM, under

See how badly the recession has hit your area with this handy interactive map.

TEXT FROM THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

(AP) Through the voices of its people, the map shouts.

From Atlanta, Ga., listen to Marian Chamberlain, 65, jobless, and no longer eligible for unemployment: "I will never be able to retire."

From Shakopee, Minn., listen to Bruce Paul, 56, a vintage car mechanic laid off in January and unemployed for the first time since Richard Nixon was president. Today he and his wife spend their days in the public library to reduce energy costs at home. "You go out and they say, you know, you need a resume. And I say, `A resume? What's that?'"

From Broomfield, Colo., listen to U.S. Marine and construction worker Simon Todt, 27, a combat-arms specialist who returned from three tours in Iraq only to be laid off from his construction job in December. He smiles wanly as he sums up his situation: "There's not a big calling in the civilian world for explosives."

The republic is brimming with Americans like these. And the Associated Press Economic Stress Map helps us find their voices and tell their stories.

For generations, maps have told tales that words and numbers alone cannot. Maps guided us to the New World, helped us navigate from its edges into its interior. Vague, undefined maps showed Lewis & Clark where to go next _ and in turn gave us fresher, more accurate maps that fueled further explorations. Maps outlined the frontier for settlement and showed us where to find the silver, the gold and the coal that made us prosperous. Computer mapping helps businesses expand, prosper and find new customers.

The interactive Stress Map offers insight into the American recession, translating it into misery and geography using an equation, the Stress Index, that shows us _ state by state, county by county _ just how uncertain and battered around we actually are. It takes the numbers, the pronouncements, the big plans for recovery and illustrates what they mean on Main Street USA, or what passes for it in 21st-century American communities.

The Stress Index synthesizes three complex sets of ever-evolving data. By factoring in monthly numbers for foreclosure, bankruptcy and _ most painfully _ unemployment, the AP has assembled a numeral that reflects the comparative pain each American county is feeling during these dark economic days.

Here are some fleeting examples of what the Stress Index tells us:

_The current recession spread like an epidemic from isolation to ubiquity, marching from sequestered pockets of foreclosure to a nationwide explosion of misery as unemployment overtook foreclosures as the dominant misfortune of this recession.

_Places with technology-based economies were recession-proof for a while but aren't now.

_Places with large numbers of government jobs _ state capitals, university towns, communities with concentrations of hospitals _ remain fairly recession-proof. These are places like Columbia, Mo.; Madison, Wis.; the Raleigh, N.C., area; and Athens, Ga.

_State government is not hurting that much _ at least, not yet.

_The regions we look to for our traditional sources of energy, for our coal and oil _ Wyoming, West Virginia and the like _ have generally not been hit as hard.

_While bankruptcy declarations are happening everywhere, they tend to be higher in the South because of such things as low wages, state laws that give power to creditors and a culture that's more familiar with the bankruptcy option.

_Among counties with 25,000-plus residents, no place has been hit harder than Elkhart County, Ind., and that 15 of the 20 American counties hit hardest by the recession in the past year are in six states _ Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, North Carolina, South Carolina and Tennessee.

The Stress Index is not merely a map of misery, though. When recovery comes, it can be a map of optimism as well, a welcome harbinger of better days approaching. Going forward, it can track the recovery we hunger for _ show us where it is poking its head up, where it is spreading and who it is leaving behind.

The map, and the numbers behind it, cannot tell us everything. No single number can track Americans' net worth, no monthly barometer indicates the pain factor of people who lost retirement funds, whose stocks vanished out from under them, who dutifully set aside nest eggs that now amount to little or nothing.

But it can help compare and contrast places, then find the people who breathe life into the numbers that characterize their regions and their hometowns. It can illustrate emerging trends _ why are certain areas starting to recover while others are lagging behind? _ and offer early hints to where the tightness of economic stress might be starting to loosen.

Where can we go with this map? It can carry us to Los Gatos, Calif., one of the high-tech regions that seemed to be escaping the worst of the recession but is now clawing to keep pace. It can point us toward Champaign, Ill., an example of the trend that communities with government institutions tend to be more recession-proof than other places.

It can highlight Burlington, N.C., where the manufacturing jobs that disappeared might never be coming back, and Myrtle Beach, S.C., where unemployment and foreclosures have locals wondering when the dividends of the American vacation economy will shine upon them once more.

There was a time, not so long ago, when the problem was that we didn't have enough information. Now, you can argue, we have too much _ dizzyingly so. And instead of being tasked with accumulating enough data to understand our world, now we spend our jumbled days shuffling through the information that's out there, struggling to make sense of it and harness it to improve our lives.

For the immediate future, the AP Economic Stress Map will attempt to do just that for the United States. AP reporters will be fanning out across the land, telling regular stories based on the monthly numbers _ stories of people like Ron Edo, 42, an aircraft maintenance worker from Temecula, Calif., who has sent out more than 1,500 resumes since he lost his job a year ago.

"Luckily I saved when I was young," he says. "My parents used to always tell me to save for a rainy day. And it's pouring."

There are many more like him. The map shouts _ and in doing so, points us to the stories of the most wrenching economic conundrum of our age.

___

EDITOR'S NOTE _ Ted Anthony covers American culture for The Associated Press.


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The Clock Clock

Posted on 5/17/2009 06:14:00 PM, under


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Dark Night Of The Soul

Posted on 5/16/2009 02:38:00 PM, under

The Dark Night Of The Soul project from Danger Mouse, Sparklehorse and David Lynch is quite possibly one of the coolest musical collaborations to come down the creative pike in some time, but the album has been shelved because of an ongoing battle with Danger Mouse’s label EMI.

According to reports, EMI Music blocked the release of the album, due out in July, over a contractual dispute.

The album was to be released as part of a 5,000 limited edition book, which contains photos by Lynch and with the audio disc inside. Well, the book will still get a release, but now with a blank-CD that reads: For legal reasons, enclosed CD-R contains no music. Use it as you will.

Great. Put me down for two.

You have to appreciate the fact that they included a blank disc when leaked tracks are available right now somewhere online for download. Still, it would be a real shame if the music is never officially released. A Danger Mouse spokesperson has said:

“Danger Mouse remains hugely proud of Dark Night Of The Soul and hopes that people lucky enough to hear the music, by whatever means, are as excited by it as he is.”

Dark Night of the Soul features guest spots from the Flaming Lips, the Strokes’ Julian Casablancas, Iggy Pop, the Pixies’ Frank Black, the Shins’ James Mercer and a handful of others.

That’s the kind of musical creativity that should be commercially available!

There is a shimmer of good news. Yes, you can still order the book (without the music!) from the Dark Night Of The Soul website, but luckily you listen to the entire album via NPR Music.

I’m listening to it right now. It’s good, really good.

If you happen to be in Los Angeles, an art installation featuring music and photos from Dark Night Of The Soul will run at the Michael Kohn Gallery from May 30 to July 11.


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Last Day Dream

Posted on 5/16/2009 02:29:00 PM, under

Last Day Dream from torbjon on Vimeo.


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Amazing Trick Shots - Ranch Edition

Posted on 5/16/2009 11:23:00 AM, under


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At the end of April, White House photographer Pete Souza released a huge slideshow featuring 300 of the best behind-the-scenes photos of Obama's young presidency. Now Souza has added over a hundred new pictures. Included in the set are shots of the president doing everything from meeting with Al Sharpton and Newt Gingrich to playing with his dog.

Mouse over the top of the slideshow to see more options, and click on a photo to view its caption. You can also view each photo in a larger format by opening it in a new window. The newest photos appear at the end.

This photo is of Obama trying out chairs for his desk. Here is the full slide show from the Huffington Post.



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