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June 8, 2007
a day later » June 9, 2007

Ed "Big Daddy" Roth show in Los Angeles

La Luz de Jesus Gallery in Los Angeles is currently showing work by incredible hot rod cartoonist Ed "Big Daddy" Roth (1932-2001). The ink-on-board artworks were created for t-shirt and decal designs. This is a rare opportunity to see these original large illustrations in person. You can even take one home with you if you've got the scratch--$20k or so. From the online gallery:
 Shows Currentshow Roth Roth13 Ed “Big Daddy” Roth did what he did best. He followed his heart & became a pied piper to loads of weird kids in the 60's that turned into weird adults in the 80's & 90's. Roth created "weirdo" characters for fun. People loved these drawings so Roth painted 'em on t-shirts. He became a grease-monkey Andy Warhol, employing incredible artists like Ed Newton & Robert Williams to do his art for him, which he signed and mass produced. Like Warhol, he fathered an art movement; lowbrow/pop-surrealism, quite similar in many ways to the pop-art movement. In recent years Roth has become the Warhol of a new generation, tuned in by his star pupil, Robert Williams. Roth, no longer in the underground, (though he is sadly located there now) is a rock star in his own right. See these unbelievably rare lowbrow pop art hieroglyphics in person, as you will probably never see the original artwork for these disposable masterpieces ever again.”
Link to La Luz de Jesus online gallery, Link to Juxtapoz photos of the opening

Are these awesome clouds a result of the shuttle launch? - UPDATED

Hobo illustrator and LOLcats historian Ape Lad asks, "I live 55 miles West of Cape Canaveral, and a little over an hour after the launch, these clouds could be seen over Orlando. Could they be related to the launch?"

Previously on BoingBoing:

  • Space Shuttle Atlantis, mission STS-117, lifts off
  • Reader comments: Short answer, yes the clouds are directly related to the shuttle launch. They are also simulacra!

    Jay Schomer sent in this upside-down version of the same photo, and was one of many to point out that it really does kinda looks like a flying angel when you look at it in that direction. Turn it sideways, and you see the face of Jesus in a tortilla.

    Sam Stein was among the many readers who pointed us to this BBC News article, which includes this photo and a caption indicating it was related to the Shuttle launch.

    Robotech_Master says,

    Regarding Ape Lad's clouds, I think this passage from Fallen Angels chapter 21 explains it:
    "Remember the vapor trail, sprawled all over the sky? They used to call that 'frozen lightning,' the Germans did, I mean. It's in Willy Ley's books," Bailey said. "In the thirties they thought their rockets were going wild-—"

    "It's just stratospheric winds blowing the vapor trail around," Mike Glider said, sticking his head into camera view. Umber scowled.

    "Yeah, but it looks like something spun by a spider on LSD. The Green bigshot cop, Moorkith, he saw the frozen lightning and thought the Phoenix must have crashed. He was searching the desert for Phoenix while the whole gang drove away."

    Zan and many others wrote in to say,
    According to Spaceflight Now, the clouds are in fact exhaust from the space shuttle launch. See their dramatic image halfway down the page.
    chris myers says,
    Space shuttle contrails confirmed in this Flickr set: Link.
    Lars Peterson says,
    Here in SoCal we occasionally get crazy cloud formations similar to those noticed by the LOLcats guy down in Florida. The formations (like the one in the linked photo) are the result of rocket launches at Vandenberg AFB, which is up the coast beyond Santa Barbara. So it seems likely those clouds are connected to the Shuttle launch.

    Here is one image, and more Vandenberg launch photos (including "the classic 'Illuminated Sperm Cell' as the rocket flys into direct sunlight") and info here. (I'm not connected to that site; it's just the result of a quick google search).

    Thanks to BB reader Eric Hartwell, too -- he points us to more confirmation, and a related set of images, at NASA: Link.

    Space Shuttle Atlantis, mission STS-117, lifts off


    Link to NASA coverage, here's Space.com's, here's John Schwartz at the New York Times before liftoff, and here's an AP item. When you look up in the sky and think of the STS-117 crew, Just remember what they're wearin' under those suits!

    Web Zen: Wall treatment zen

  • wallpaper from the 70s

  • extratapete

  • wall candy arts

  • wallter

  • wonderful graffiti

  • Web Zen Home and Archives, Store (Thanks Frank!) ( posted from Guatemala / Xeni )

    Skytyping

    Skytyping is a form of skywriting that looks like the work of God's dot-matrix printer. It may not be new, but I've never seen it before and neither had BB reader Eric Eberhardt who noticed an example over LA recently and submitted the link. Eric says, "The neat thing was, you couldn't even see the planes, so it looked like message was writing itself!" From The Skytypers Web site:
    Wondesky The Skytyping process utilizes five airplanes that fly abreast, 250-feet apart and "type" up to 30 character messages in a dot-matrix-like pattern. When Skytyping, the airplanes create messages in the sky that are 5 miles long, as tall as the Empire State Building and can be seen for 15 miles in any direction or nearly 400 square miles.
    Link

    Previously on BB:
    • Secrets of contrails Link
    • Religious skywriter tags Epcot Link

    Scrambler ride as drawing machine

    Artist Rosemarie Fiore converted an amusement park ride called The Scrambler into a giant drawing machine. The specially-outfitted Good-Time Mix Machine produces huge geometric paintings that resemble the output of a Spirograph.
     Artistinfo Big 4 1
    From the project description:
    I connected a gas generator and air compressor to buckets of paint and secured them into the seats of a Scrambler amusement park ride. Once the ride was in motion, paint sprayed out of the benches onto vinyl tarps placed underneath. The result is a series of enormous hypocycloid designs which recorded the hidden patterns created by the ride as it turned.
    Link to project page, Link to video (via Information Aesthetics, thanks Mike Love!)

    My new blog: www.ruletheweb.net

    200706081139 I've launched a new blog to accompany my new book Rule the Web: How To Do Anything and Everything on the Internet -- Better, Faster, Easier.

    Like the book, the blog will be a guide to cool ways to use the Internet to make your life better. It’s not a comprehensive list of every website out there — instead, it shows you how to enhance different areas of your life — your creativity, work, education, travel, health, leisure, and so on.

    My editor and pal, David Moldawer will also contribute to the blog. In the coming weeks, we'll offer a variety of online-based tips that we hope you'll find useful. I'm also doing a weekly live call-in podcast and will soon launch a wiki and run screencasts. Link

    Ugly mailboxes blog

    200706081109 A few years ago, someone knocked my mailbox off its post, and I went around taking photos of fortified mailboxes around my neighborhood (Part 1, Part 2).

    Today, Linda F. alerted me to her new blog, "Your Ugly Mailbox," which sports photos and snarky comments about tacky mailboxes. It's gone on my must-read list. Link

    Turn your TV into a line of colorful art

    Picture 1-60
    Here's a quick video tutorial for turning your TV display into a horizontal stripe of dancing colors. Link (Via Good Experience)

    What The World Eats

     Time Photoessays 2007 Hungry Planet 10
    What does a family of four in North Carolina eat in a week? How about in Cuernavaca? Or Konstancin-Jeziorna? Several years ago, photographer Peter Menzel and journalist Faith D'Alusio--creators of the fantastic Robo sapiens book--traveled the world documenting what 30 families in 24 countries eat in a week. (Seen here, the Ayme family of Tingo, who spend $31.55 on food in a week.) In 2005, Menzel and D'Alusio published Hungry Planet: What The World Eats, but Time has just now put a selection of the photos online. As interesting as how much each family spends on food are the variations in diet. Link to the photo essay, Link to buy Hungry Planet (Thanks, Eric Paulos!)

    Super-easy baggie ice-cream

    Here's a pretty damned simple ice-cream recipe: combine ingredients in a baggie. Fill a bigger baggie with ice, salt and the baggie of ingredients. Shake for five minutes. Ice cream. Who knew?
    1. Fill the large bag half full of ice, and add the rock salt. Seal the bag.
    2. Put milk, vanilla, and sugar into the small bag, and seal it.
    3. Place the small bag inside the large one and seal again carefully.
    4. Shake until mixture is ice cream, about 5 minutes.
    5. Wipe off top of small bag, then open carefully and enjoy!
    Link (via Make)

    Update: Mapletree7 sez, "An even cooler way to make ice cream - especially on a hot day with a passsel of kids - is to put the baggie with the ice cream ingredients inside a small can, and then put that can and the ice and salt in a coffee can. Tape the lid on securely and ask the kids to kick it around the back yard."

    Update 2: Ryan sez, "Here's a soccer-ball-shaped thing: put all the ingredients in, kids kick it around for a 15-20 mins."

    Cooking with Robert Rodriguez


    Director Robert Rodriguez has produced a series of short movies called "Ten-minute cooking school" that explain how to cook using cut-up footage from his movies. This one is for "Sin City Breakfast Tacos" -- which seem delicious indeed. Link (via Waxy)

    Swedish piracy doc wants your footage

    Steal This Film, a great documentary on the Swedish "pro-piracy" movement and The Pirate Bay, is in production for its second sequence, and they want clips of you (and you and you) expressing your feelings about the entertainment industry:

    STEAL THIS FILM II (codename: Dissolving Fortress) is currently in production at a secret bunker location Berlin. We're very excited about its forthcoming release. But we need you to help us complete it. Tbe task is simple: take a few minutes, turn on your webcam and microphone, and record your message to the intellectual property industries.

    Express yourself to the full extent of your capabilities, using costume, mask or avatar, from Second Life or 'real' life, whether you're young or old, drunk or sober — you are a Peer and we want to hear from you. Use a Camcorder, a Webcam or a Microphone — record the statement in the best quality you can. There is no minimum quality but we'd appreciate you getting us the best recordings you can. (If you don't have software for recording video, you can use YouTube's help -- please tag it "STFII" and mail us the link: peers@stealthisfilm.com).

    Link

    See also: Steal This Movie: documentary on Swedish piracy movement

    City fights illegal gig posters with CANCELLED stickers

    The city council of Glasgow is fighting illegal handbills with science: they're paying city workers to go around and stick "cancelled" stickers on all the illegal gig posters put up around town.
    Staff who patrol the city every working day spotting new posters and marking them are now a central part of the council's ÂŁ100,000 a year war on flyposting.

    And other workers have been issued with "cancelled" stickers which make it clear the ad has been banned by the council.

    And they have already had an impact on some rogue promoters who have been inundated with complaints from music fans.

    People who have bought tickets to some of this summers big gigs have complained, thinking that an event, rather than the advert, had been cancelled.
    Link (Thanks, Jono!)

    (Photo thumbnail ganked from a larger pic credited to Jamie Simpson)

    Free crap for shrinks - swag from a psychiatric trade-show

    Wired News has a great gallery of the free crap on offer at the American Psychiatric Association's annual conference in San Diego, including this leather-bound, personally engraved Provigil journal given to doctors who completed short quizzes. Link

    Publisher steals laptops, misundertands copyright

    Richard Charkin, the CEO of Macmillan USA Chief Executive of Macmillan and owner of Nature Publishing Group -- a division of Holtzbrinck, the same company that owns my publisher, Tor -- disgraced himself this week at BookExpo America in NYC. He walked up to Google's booth and stole two of their laptops, then later returned them, saying that he'd done it because there wasn't any sign telling him not to steal them.

    This was intended as trenchant commentary on Google's book-scanning project, a generally laudable effort to scan and index all the books ever published, including huge dark-matter of books that are out-of-print with no clear rightsholders.

    Pat Schroeder and the American Association of Publishers have sued Google over this, saying that Google shouldn't be allowed to index these out-of-print books (the majority of books published) unless they take on the Sisyphean task of figuring out who controls the copyright to all of them and then get permission to make an index.

    Google makes indexes of every page on the Internet without ascertaining who their copyright belongs to, without asking permission. If your page is on the public Internet, Google will index it. The publishers argue that books shouldn't be indexable without explicit permission.

    Larry Lessig has posted a great rebuttal to the idea that stealing laptops is the moral equivalent of indexing books -- a must-read if you want to understand exactly why Charkin's stunt was so mind-numbingly wrong-headed.

    (3) If the computer was not sitting at a market booth, but instead was in a trash dump (like, for example, the publishers out of print book list), or on a field, lost to everyone, then that fits the category of property that Google is dealing with. But again, Google doesn’t take possession of the property in any way that interferes with anyone else taking possession of the property. The publisher, for example, is perfectly free to decide to publish the book again. Instead, in this case, what Google does is more like posting an advertisement — “lost computer, here it is, is it yours?”

    (4) Or again, imagine the computer was left after the conference. No easy way to identify who the owner was. No number to call. In that case, what would the “head honcho’s,” or anyone’s rights be? Well depending upon local law, the basic rule is finders keepers, loser weepers. There might be an obligation to advertise. There might be an obligation to turn the property over to some entity that holds it for some period of time. But after that time, the property would go to the “head honcho” — totally free of any obligation to Google. Compare copyright law: where the property can be lost for almost a century, and no one (according to the publishers at least) has any right to do anything with it. Once an orphan, the law of copyright says, you must be an orphan. No one is permitted to even help advertise your status through a technique like search engine.

    (5) Or again, imagine the computer was a bank account in New York. And imagine, the bank lost track of the owner of the account. After 5 years, the money is forfeited to the state. Compare copyright: in New York state, a sound recording could be 100 years old, but no one has any freedom with respect to that sound recording unless the copyright owner can be discovered.

    Link

    Bloggin' 'bout my generation

    XKCD, the great nerdy comic strip, is in fine form today, with a danceable twist on "Talkin' 'Bout My Generation." Link

    See also:
    Where LOLCats come from
    Geeky comic strip uses Cory as the punchline
    Funny map of online communities in the style of a D&D map
    Nerd humor about Katamari Damacy
    Ironic Internet malapropism grid
    Geeky comic about chess and roller-coasters
    Sarcastic comic about computational linguistics (and emo kids)
    Pi joke

    More classroom porn - this time, authorities aren't being idiots

    A teacher in Virginia accidentally exposed a room full of fourth-graders to explicit pornographic images that appeared on an educational videotape:
    About 20 students saw about 10 seconds of the pornography before a teacher sprinted across the room to turn off the television, said Ryan Edwards, a spokesman for the Bedford County schools, east of Roanoke. "The children and the teacher were completely shocked," Edwards said.

    The offending clip appeared after the credits of a video called Tessellations that was produced in 2003 by Teachers Video Co., said Mark Flemming, communications director for School Specialty Inc., the Greenville, Wis., parent company of Teachers Video. (...) The Bedford schools had the tape for four years and no one had ever played the video past the credits."

    Link. Lucky for the teacher involved, authorities in this case aren't behaving as stupidly as those in the unfortunate case of Julie Amero. Previous BoingBoing posts about that story here. (Thanks, Grayson)

    Reader comment: Michael Kopp says,

    I work for an educational publisher and we had this happen with one of our video titles a few years back. Fortunately we caught it before it shipped. Based on what the (very apologetic) firm responsible told us, I'm surprised it doesn't happen more often. They explained that a lot of their revenue, and the revenue for many video duplication outfits, comes from the porn industry. (They may have been something of a bottom feeder, though, as I doubt this is true industry-wide.) Duplicators reuse tapes to save money, and though they are supposed to erase these tapes instead of just recording over them, that obviously doesn't always happen. Needless to say, we found another company to dupe our videos.

    The switch to DVDs might have taken care of this. A lot of schools still use VHS, though, and given their lack of funding may continue to do so for a long time. So if you're a teacher using VHS, or anyone with cheap VHS tapes, you might fast forward past the credits and see what you can find.

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