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That’s where, a lot of times, he would get a bad rap, but he just wanted the best thing, and expected everyone else to want that same thing. He had trouble understanding people who didn’t want that same thing and wondered why they’d be working for him if that was the case. I think Steve…
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brucesterling: Piccolo Manuale di Autodifesa Digitale
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The audience I developed in my mind’s eye was an audience of black children, as though I was talking to my own children. Something about writing for children imposed an absolute truth in my effort. I thought that was the best way for me to put the truth out there without any compromise. Cuthbert Ormond…
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I wonder where and when one receives training in the covert arts of mark-dō or mark-jitsu, the name I’m giving to this ludo-martial form of body-on-body blocks. These are meant to look like humans are clumsily entangled in each other. These humans who are possessed of preternatural proprioception. In naming this discipline – and it…
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natgeofound: A young girl plays in a replica of a lunar-module in Toronto, Canada, August 1975.Photograph by Robert Madden, National Geographic Creative
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For some reason, we think that poetry is this thing you do on the side, once you get your math done or your science done. Same thing with writing or any of the things we call “the arts” – there’s this idea that they’re just an elective, they’re just decoration, and they have nothing to…
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raptorific: Shakespeare would seriously laugh so hard if he found out how seriously people take his works. Like, he would probably cry from laughing so hard if you told him that his plays were considered high-brow literature. “It’s all dick jokes and sword fights,” he’d say, “do they seriously tell my dick jokes to schoolchildren?…
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Stu guides a new printer in the fine art of squeegee.
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Stu making ready
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Stu Alden demonstrating the silk screening process for kids (at Ink Lounge screen printing)
