1. Saw Sixto Rodriguez play to a packed house tonight at the Masonic Temple in Detroit. He’s a funny guy: “I just want to be treated like an ordinary legend.” Also, he said because he’s 70 he can give advice now: “Hate is too strong an emotion to waste on people you don’t like.” Also talked about ending violence against women, how free love is expensive, how Detroit is a city of victims, and he also has amazing arms for a 70-year-old man. Great show! #Rodriguez

  2. And like this

  3. I can’t sleep, even though I need to be up at 5 tomorrow. I’m going through old notes on my phone; most of them are like this.

  4. Laurie Penny’s Saudade

    There are more of us than you think, kicking off our high-heeled shoes to run and being told not so fast

    The best minds of my generation consumed by craving, furious half naked starving-

    Who ripped tights and dripping make up smoked alone in bedsits bare mattresses waiting for transfiguration.

    Who ran half dressed out of department stores yelling that we didn’t want to be good and beautiful

    Who glowing high and hopeful were the last to leave the gig our skin crackling with lust and sweat and pure music

    Who wrote poetry on each other’s arms and cared more about fucking than being fuckable

    Who worked until our backs stiffened and our limbs sang with the memory of misbehaviour that was what it was to be a woman

    Who dared to dance until dawn and were drugged and raped by men in clean T-shirts and woke up scared and sore to be told it was our fault

    Who swallowed bosses’ patronizing side-eyes stole away from violent broken boys in the middle of the night and vowed never again to try to fix the world one man at a time

    Who slammed down the tray of drinks and tore off our aprons and aching smiles and went scowling out into the streets looking for change

    Who stripped in dark rooms for strangers’ anodyne dollars because we wanted education and were told we were traitors

    Who sat faces upturned to the glow of the network searching searching for strangers who would call us pretty

    Who bared our breasts to hidden cameras and fought and fought and fought to be human

    Who waited in grim hallways with synth-pop crackling over the speaker system for the doctor to call us clutching fistfuls of pamphlets calling us sluts whores murderers

    Who crossed continents alone with knapsacks full of books bare limbs clear-eyed vision running running from the homes that held our mothers down

    Who filled notebooks with gibberish philosophy and scraps of stories and cameras to prove we were there keeping our novels and the name of out children close to our hearts

    Who were told all our lives that we were too loud too tisky too fat too ugly too scruffy too selfish too much too and refused to take up less space refused to be still refused refused refused to be tame

    Who would never be still. Who would never shut up. Who were punished for it and spat and snarled and they shook the bars of our cages until they snapped and they called us wild and crazy and we laughed with mouths open hearts open hands open and would never not ever be tame.

    Sara, I’m with you in hospital, in the narroe rooms where you have put off your veil to count your ribs through your T-shirt, short hair and secrets and quiet defiance crying together that we don’t know how to be perfect-

    Lara, I’m with you in mandatory art therapy, where we draw pictures of weeping cocks and are told we are not making progress-

    Lila, I’m with you in a north London bathdroom, watchhing unreal maggots crawl in the cuts in your arms and listening to your girlfriend drunk and raging through the wall-

    Andy, I’m with you in Bethnal Green where you love ambitious angry women with heart brain pen fingers tongue and you have a line from Nietzche tattooed over your cunt-

    Adele, I’m with you in the student occupation, with your lipstick and cloche hat and teenage lisp drawling that there’s not enough fucking in this revolution and we must take action-

    Kay, I’m with you on the night bus, half drunk and high dragging bright-eyed boys home to our bed, where we watch them worn out sleeping and whisper that we will never be married-

    Katie, I’m with you in Zuccotti Park, where a broken heart is less important than a broken laptop is less important than a broken future and we watch the cops beating kids bloody on the pavement for daring to ask for more-

    Tara, I’m with you in Islington where you have thrown all your pretty dresses out of the window and flushed your medication so you can write and write-

    Alex, I’m with you and a bottle of Scotch at two in the morning when you tell me that no man will make us live for ever and we must seduce the city the country the world-

    We are always hungry.

    There are more of us than you think.

    Laurie Penny’s Saudade, from Fifty Shades of Feminism (via mollycrabapple)
  5. thefrogman:

    Infinite Nap by Claire Jarvis [website | tumblr | twitter]

    GPOY every day

    (via we-are-the-wounds)

  6. We’re relieved in each other’s absence as much as each other’s presence. Holding you inside of me feels just as important as not knowing when I’ll see you again.

  7. It’s time!!! #startrek

  8. I feel a lot better about life now. #startrek

  9. wilwheaton:

jenniferdeguzman:

He said Star Trek is too “philosophical”? Screw that noise.
mechcanuck:

I don’t know when this interview happened but I AM SAD AND ANGRY NOW 
The philosophies in Star Trek are kinda part of the actual setting. If you don’t get that, why are you allowed to make Star Trek movies.


Sigh. The whole point of Star Trek is that it’s philosophical. If you don’t want philosophical Science Fiction, there’s plenty of that for you to enjoy, but Star Trek is philosophical. Philosophy is part of Star Trek’s DNA, and if you’re given the captain’s chair, you’d better damn well respect that.

Yesterday I started watching all of TNG in order from the beginning (which I’ve never done before *gasp*) and I also had a conversation with Matt about J.J. Abrams and his “style” and Star Wars for about an hour. And my point is just…what Wil said.
    wilwheaton:

jenniferdeguzman:

He said Star Trek is too “philosophical”? Screw that noise.
mechcanuck:

I don’t know when this interview happened but I AM SAD AND ANGRY NOW 
The philosophies in Star Trek are kinda part of the actual setting. If you don’t get that, why are you allowed to make Star Trek movies.


Sigh. The whole point of Star Trek is that it’s philosophical. If you don’t want philosophical Science Fiction, there’s plenty of that for you to enjoy, but Star Trek is philosophical. Philosophy is part of Star Trek’s DNA, and if you’re given the captain’s chair, you’d better damn well respect that.

Yesterday I started watching all of TNG in order from the beginning (which I’ve never done before *gasp*) and I also had a conversation with Matt about J.J. Abrams and his “style” and Star Wars for about an hour. And my point is just…what Wil said.
    wilwheaton:

jenniferdeguzman:

He said Star Trek is too “philosophical”? Screw that noise.
mechcanuck:

I don’t know when this interview happened but I AM SAD AND ANGRY NOW 
The philosophies in Star Trek are kinda part of the actual setting. If you don’t get that, why are you allowed to make Star Trek movies.


Sigh. The whole point of Star Trek is that it’s philosophical. If you don’t want philosophical Science Fiction, there’s plenty of that for you to enjoy, but Star Trek is philosophical. Philosophy is part of Star Trek’s DNA, and if you’re given the captain’s chair, you’d better damn well respect that.

Yesterday I started watching all of TNG in order from the beginning (which I’ve never done before *gasp*) and I also had a conversation with Matt about J.J. Abrams and his “style” and Star Wars for about an hour. And my point is just…what Wil said.
    wilwheaton:

jenniferdeguzman:

He said Star Trek is too “philosophical”? Screw that noise.
mechcanuck:

I don’t know when this interview happened but I AM SAD AND ANGRY NOW 
The philosophies in Star Trek are kinda part of the actual setting. If you don’t get that, why are you allowed to make Star Trek movies.


Sigh. The whole point of Star Trek is that it’s philosophical. If you don’t want philosophical Science Fiction, there’s plenty of that for you to enjoy, but Star Trek is philosophical. Philosophy is part of Star Trek’s DNA, and if you’re given the captain’s chair, you’d better damn well respect that.

Yesterday I started watching all of TNG in order from the beginning (which I’ve never done before *gasp*) and I also had a conversation with Matt about J.J. Abrams and his “style” and Star Wars for about an hour. And my point is just…what Wil said.
    wilwheaton:

jenniferdeguzman:

He said Star Trek is too “philosophical”? Screw that noise.
mechcanuck:

I don’t know when this interview happened but I AM SAD AND ANGRY NOW 
The philosophies in Star Trek are kinda part of the actual setting. If you don’t get that, why are you allowed to make Star Trek movies.


Sigh. The whole point of Star Trek is that it’s philosophical. If you don’t want philosophical Science Fiction, there’s plenty of that for you to enjoy, but Star Trek is philosophical. Philosophy is part of Star Trek’s DNA, and if you’re given the captain’s chair, you’d better damn well respect that.

Yesterday I started watching all of TNG in order from the beginning (which I’ve never done before *gasp*) and I also had a conversation with Matt about J.J. Abrams and his “style” and Star Wars for about an hour. And my point is just…what Wil said.
    wilwheaton:

jenniferdeguzman:

He said Star Trek is too “philosophical”? Screw that noise.
mechcanuck:

I don’t know when this interview happened but I AM SAD AND ANGRY NOW 
The philosophies in Star Trek are kinda part of the actual setting. If you don’t get that, why are you allowed to make Star Trek movies.


Sigh. The whole point of Star Trek is that it’s philosophical. If you don’t want philosophical Science Fiction, there’s plenty of that for you to enjoy, but Star Trek is philosophical. Philosophy is part of Star Trek’s DNA, and if you’re given the captain’s chair, you’d better damn well respect that.

Yesterday I started watching all of TNG in order from the beginning (which I’ve never done before *gasp*) and I also had a conversation with Matt about J.J. Abrams and his “style” and Star Wars for about an hour. And my point is just…what Wil said.
    wilwheaton:

jenniferdeguzman:

He said Star Trek is too “philosophical”? Screw that noise.
mechcanuck:

I don’t know when this interview happened but I AM SAD AND ANGRY NOW 
The philosophies in Star Trek are kinda part of the actual setting. If you don’t get that, why are you allowed to make Star Trek movies.


Sigh. The whole point of Star Trek is that it’s philosophical. If you don’t want philosophical Science Fiction, there’s plenty of that for you to enjoy, but Star Trek is philosophical. Philosophy is part of Star Trek’s DNA, and if you’re given the captain’s chair, you’d better damn well respect that.

Yesterday I started watching all of TNG in order from the beginning (which I’ve never done before *gasp*) and I also had a conversation with Matt about J.J. Abrams and his “style” and Star Wars for about an hour. And my point is just…what Wil said.
    wilwheaton:

jenniferdeguzman:

He said Star Trek is too “philosophical”? Screw that noise.
mechcanuck:

I don’t know when this interview happened but I AM SAD AND ANGRY NOW 
The philosophies in Star Trek are kinda part of the actual setting. If you don’t get that, why are you allowed to make Star Trek movies.


Sigh. The whole point of Star Trek is that it’s philosophical. If you don’t want philosophical Science Fiction, there’s plenty of that for you to enjoy, but Star Trek is philosophical. Philosophy is part of Star Trek’s DNA, and if you’re given the captain’s chair, you’d better damn well respect that.

Yesterday I started watching all of TNG in order from the beginning (which I’ve never done before *gasp*) and I also had a conversation with Matt about J.J. Abrams and his “style” and Star Wars for about an hour. And my point is just…what Wil said.

    wilwheaton:

    jenniferdeguzman:

    He said Star Trek is too “philosophical”? Screw that noise.

    mechcanuck:

    I don’t know when this interview happened but I AM SAD AND ANGRY NOW 

    The philosophies in Star Trek are kinda part of the actual setting. If you don’t get that, why are you allowed to make Star Trek movies.

    Sigh. The whole point of Star Trek is that it’s philosophical. If you don’t want philosophical Science Fiction, there’s plenty of that for you to enjoy, but Star Trek is philosophical. Philosophy is part of Star Trek’s DNA, and if you’re given the captain’s chair, you’d better damn well respect that.

    Yesterday I started watching all of TNG in order from the beginning (which I’ve never done before *gasp*) and I also had a conversation with Matt about J.J. Abrams and his “style” and Star Wars for about an hour. And my point is just…what Wil said.

  10. strangelycompelling:

    “Floating” © R James Frith. Model: Katie West

    SC | FB

    Well now. This is from a very long time ago.

    (via alldolledupandnowheretogo)