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Archive for August, 2011|Monthly archive page

Temp Hiatus.

In Uncategorized on August 21, 2011 at 10:43 pm

This is long, long overdue.  But I am rushing to finish up a CD.  Album.  LP.  Whatever we’re calling music these days.  My life will be getting busy this Winter, so I’m trying to finish it sooner rather than later.  It takes up a ton of my time because, well… I want to make a quality product.  I want the thing to be solid front to back.  I’ll settle for nothing less.  It’s going well though.  Today I spent most of my time looping an old Billie Holiday song called “Gloomy Sunday”.  Yep, it was actually a coincidence, not planned at all, that I made this beat on a Sunday.  But it wasn’t gloomy, not at all.  Not with my girl and cat hanging in the same room while I did it.

I’ll be back (and on a regular schedule) sometime next month.  Thanks to any single person that has or does read this blog.  Be safe.

-Sonny

MIA Shop; Ancient Tapes.

In Sonny's Journal on August 9, 2011 at 10:17 am

Apologies.  I’ve been hard at work recording my next album.  The basement’s a mess right now.  A quarter stack is sitting between the love-seat and the coffee table.  The coffee table which I’ve converted into my little workstation.  So I want to work hard and get through this.  It’s coming along very well though.

-  Jackie Onassis apparently believed that Lyndon Johnson conspired to kill her husband all those years ago in Dallas, TX.  This is to be revealed in a set of secret tapes she recorded back in the 60′s, which will be released by ABC.  She had asked, in the tapes, for them not to be released until 50 years after her death, for fear of reprisals on her family.  Daughter of Jackie O/JFK, Caroline Kennedy, has decided to release the tapes.  Will we ever know what happened that day?  For real?

-  The WeLoveFine Shop! now has Star Wars apparel and most of it is awesome.

Topless Robot has a list of “6 Ancient Things That Were Probably Built By Aliens“.  Among them are the Trilithon at Baalbek, Pumapunka in Bolivia, and the Great Pyramids of Giza.  But none are more strange or convincing than the flat mountain of Nazca. No debris or signs of natural erosion on this scale have been found around the site, and it looks as if the mountain has been sheered off.  There’s also straight lines carved into the rock, the same kind found just miles away in the same region (some stretch for 15 miles and stay perfectly straight).  There’s also large rocks and boulders piled around the mountain, not at random; the patterns represent Phoenician writing (which began in 1050 BC, across the Atlantic in the Middle-East).  Here’s the photo:

-Sonny

Statistics Are “Politically Correct” Now?

In Books on August 3, 2011 at 12:01 pm

There’s a series of comic books Marvel produces week in/week out that are totally separate from their normal books: the “Ultimate” line of comics.  The Ultimate books exist as an entirely separate Universe from the regular Marvel U.  The idea, originally, was to re-create these iconic characters for a post 20th-century audience.  To create a place where writers are free to tell the stories they want to tell regardless of previously established Marvel comics continuity (many, many years of it).  Where new and experimental concepts/ideas could live and thrive, like making Cable the future version of Wolverine, for one.  So it was shocking to hear many fans’ reactions to the newest Ultimate Marvel reveal this past weekend.

The Ultimate version of Spiderman is dead.  For weeks, Marvel has been releasing teasers of the new Spiderman; a subtly different costumed hero soaring through New York City on webs looking as Spiderman-esque as ever.  Speculation began, and I couldn’t care less.  Some people were writing about how possibly it could be a female, or a friend of Peter Paker’s, or a family member, or an already established character of the series.  Then, yesterday, this picture was released:

The new Ultimate Spiderman is none other than one “Miles Morales”, a half-Black, half-Hispanic teenager I’m assuming from New York City.  Not bad right?  Don’t care much?  Neither do I.

It was disgusting to read/see/hear the comments of many comic book readers in reaction to the reveal throughout the day, but perhaps not surprising, as racism exists and it exists everywhere.  The comments don’t deserve repeating, nor the commentators named.  Needless to say, ugly, hateful, and vile words/phrases were tossed around the interwebs.  The reaction’s reaction today has been an interesting one: with comic scholars and writers and lovers all degrading the reaction.  Just a couple are Rich Johnston’s “Fear Of A Black Spiderman” and Robot6′s “How Donald Glover Finally Secured The Role Of Spiderman“.

The more intelligent among the commentators would have you believe that they’re simply taking a stand against the “political correctness” of the move, or how Peter Parker is the one and only Spiderman and he’s white, or how this is simply a PR stunt by Marvel to reverse slumping sales.

Trust me, I am someone who does not really personally get offended (I’ll get offended for other people).  I don’t censor myself often and I’ll make fun of anyone.  Whatever falls under the umbrella of “politically correct”.  Whatever that is, how it applies to our society, how it moves, does not apply to me.  In fact, I’m not really sure what it means anymore (which I find to be the case with lots of terms and labels which have been around for at least a decade now).  I do not find this to be “politically correct”.  I see it as revolutionary in some ways: this is the first mixed-race, non-white superhero.  A breakthrough like that can not be, by definition, “politically correct” as I know the phrase.  It isn’t adhering to any previously established cultural standards or rules, how can it be “politically correct”?  Perhaps, like I said, I just don’t know what that term means anymore.

Besides, if roughly a fourth of the United States population is Black or Latino, wouldn’t it makes sense if one out of four superheroes is one, the other, or both?  Just based on percentages alone?  Right now the mainstream superhero market is probably hovering closer to one out of every 30 or so.  Why, when the numbers are that far off and one is introduced, this reaction occurs is beyond me.  If it isn’t passive racism (i.e. you don’t realize you’re being racist), then I guess I don’t know what that term means anymore either.

-Sonny

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