Archive for February, 2010

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Share Your Secular Story

February 22, 2010

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Nonprophet Status is a new  blog dedicated to creating  community within secular activists, and it’s coming out swinging with its first contest, “Share Your Secular Story”. I am one of the judges, and am really excited! You are cordially invited to share an anecdote, journey or example of a time when being a non-believer resulted in a positive experience. Whether it’s rooted in your career, your art, or your home life, the constant bombardment of religious holidays and well-intentioned seasonal tidings means that we non-religious are constantly having to deal with religion. There MUST be some good stories born out of that.

Since becoming acquainted with Humanism and its role in interfaith work, I’ve acknowledged that political peace and common understanding is more possible when it includes an effort to organize non-believers. It wasn’t a completely natural conclusion to make–most non-religious people only take swipes at people of faith, with a default argument that religious institutions have embedded war, discrimination and isolation into our culture. There is ample horrific evidence that you can point to and say, “XX religion caused XX war, or XX deaths;” arguments  I would be not be able to disprove. However, what’s important about Nonprophet’s general point of view and this contest in specific, is that looking at the religious as the enemy does absolutely nothing. It doesn’t help anything to simply identify the negative and try and keep away from it. If anything, isolating ourselves from the reality that the world and the United States are driven by politically powerful varieties of faith is complacent. It’s a resignation to being a voiceless minority, and what progress could that possibly result in? I’ve met so many artists, activists and community organizers through Think Pink Radio and would never expect any of them to be content with being a voiceless minority. The thought of that is laughable, actually. Queer people in particular tend to be without faith and also have powerful stories of communication and triumph.

“Share Your Secular Story” is a contest that I believe will add to political progress. Whether we want it or not, non-believers have a lot in common, and it doesn’t all have to revolve around how much we hate religion. There are three categories for stories: youth, for submissions by individuals 25 years of age and under, interfaith, this category is for stories about engaging with religious people in a way that is positive and/or collaborative and finally moral imagination, this category is for stories about how secular values have motivated you toward social justice / civic engagement work, or just about values you hold as secularist. Prizes include signed books, DVD’s and a publication of your work in established online publications. For all the details, see the contest page, and spread the word through your facebook!

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HIV/AIDS Prevention Bilingual Glossary

February 21, 2010

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For those social workers, educators and all people who have spanish speaking family and friends, the Office of Minority Health has an online English/Spanish dictionary for  HIV prevention. From the mailing:

Here you can find Spanish equivalents to English words and vice versa, rate the translation provided and send comments to help us improve the glossary. You’ll also find the glossary’s tag cloud, featuring the terms that are searched for most frequently.

The goal is to see this glossary provide linguistic support to individuals and organizations working with Spanish-speaking populations in the United States. All the terms are commonly used in the areas of public health and HIV/AIDS prevention.

A cursory glance through the rest of the website has some resources for the queer community, including an essay about bullying for queer youth (including a quote from Tania Unzueta) and resources for HIV prevention education. Curiously, nothing popped up when I searched for the term “abortion.”

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Kingdom’s Mindreader EP

February 20, 2010

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I’ve been on the record about dubstep, and in general I don’t think it’s a genre that will last. When it hits, it’s because it’s being taken in with other styles – however my impression of unruffled dubstep is that it will go the way of jungle. A few nostalgic nerds here and there will remember the days when but ultimately it’ll go away. Kingdom has always played around with dubstep, but it comes out as a way to experiment with his true loves–he invariably gravitates towards fierce female raps and divas, the gay dance floor and HI-NRG sap. That type of genre competence is the kitten heel to stiletto step, the difference between a trendy hack and a trailblazer. A few mixtapes and digital singles under his belt, Ezra Rubin has hooked up with the infallible Acephale Records for his first vinyl release: a 10″ hot-plate with “Mindreader” on the A side and “You” on the flip. The digital EP version has remixes by Todd Edwards, L-Vis, and Bok Bok, so broke DJ’s will get big bang for their little buck, but the two track vinyl is where the real story is. Acephale’s small but braggable catalogue has the first Salem EP, CFCF, Midnight Juggernauts, Air France and Memory Tapes, all limited, most of them already sold out. Get on it, this is limited to 500 copies with no repress, matte finish sleeve with silver foil embossing. YUSSS.

Kingdom – Mindreader (L-Vis Remix 1990)

Kingdom – Mindreader (CFCF Remix)

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Stinky’s At Stardust Tonight!!

February 18, 2010

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Diamond Rings Likes Tights, Make Up, Cute Songs

February 17, 2010

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*Photograph by David Waldman

Is it just me or is there a role-softening taking shape in the larger indie scene? A relaxation of gender in lead singers has a small contingent but the people doing it are getting some success. Sorry, Stephin Merritt, I know you think queers should hide in order to get noticed, but methinks you are just from a different time. Of Montreal’s last record Skeletal Lamping was an entire conceptualized with gender-ambiguous sex on the forefront. Deerhunter’s Bradford Cox is taking part too–he is afterall, a gay indie-rock darling and has never shied away from wearing dresses and broadway-ing around a stage or two. Jona from Yacht had a recent EP cover where it looked like he was trying, and succeeding, to see how well he could pass as female. Lissy Trullie’s a HOT HOT lady in super high heels, but her femme is more drag than anything. Now we have Diamond Rings, a band from Toronto whose singer John O has dropped two videos where he’s wearing make up, tights and upping the camp choreography to Leslie Hall heights. The best part (of all of these bands) is that their songs are interesting, and make the case for just being out about whatever the hell you are. Diamond Rings have a laid back, whiny sound but they got the hooks styled just right, and the vids of the live shows show a stripped-down approach, telling me there’s a good balance with glam and work. The top video is for “All Yr Songs” which has the tweeny heartache I can’t get enough of. The 2nd is for “Wait & See”: and while it isn’t as good, it has better (campier) choreography.

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Why Do We Care About Fashion?

February 11, 2010

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Literally, I had just joined Gilt Groupe (thanks Harrison Cheairs) and not a few minutes later I get an email saying Alexander McQueen killed himself. Bryant Park is happening RIGHT NOW, and Mcqueen was about to unveil his newest collection in Paris. Full disclosure: I’m not a label whore, I normally wear the same pants every day and probably only have a few concert T’s in rotation in any given month. However, I do watch Project Runway and will critique someone’s look at a party, if indeed someone is trying to rock a look. But why? Why do I, and a lot of other people fucking care about fashion?

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The Onion A.V. Club had a great interview with Parker Posey the other week, and they asked her about fashion. She said, “…fashion is very popular now. Really overly popular. It’s like New Age music in the ’80s, or art. And then independent film. Now everyone’s a fashion designer. It’s had a big effect in New York, in our culture. I was just doing an interview with a girl who’s 25, and she says that everyone she knows is a fashion designer. She’s like, “Where do you get your clothes?” Why do they ask that? Everyone’s asking that. You go to these things and people always want to know what you’re wearing, instead of what you’re reading, or what you’re thinking.” I couldn’t agree more with Posey — it’s a trend, most ”designers” are talentless and her experience is the result of vapid people having nothing to talk about. The fashion industry is one of the major sources of low self-esteem, the only reason sweat shops exist, and probably the biggest cause of general preoccupation with aesthetics over larger world issues–I love that jacket but what about Haiti?

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This is a time when you can totally throw a cliché on the table and avoid silent grumbles: “Fashion is art.” Or rather, it can be. I don’t see art at the stores I shop at or at the bars I go to – functional cloth is indispensible and most people just try to be comfortable. But when you dig a little into all the fuss, the moments of heightened expression that are rare in all forms of art can be found in fashion. Chances are, when you find that moment on a runway, you are looking at something designed by Alexander McQueen. His fashions aren’t clothes. They are glimpses into dreams — they can terrify or comfort and succeed in transporting you to another time and place without being a costume. BUT it wouldn’t be you dressed as someone else or teleporting to another era or planet. No, trying to do that with a McQueen design would be like throwing a dour smirk and thinking “I’m the Mona Lisa.” His collections embody the mood of an artist, and each one was a gallery opening. Alexander McQueen’s work is why we care about fashion because it’s not about what we’re wearing, it’s about what we’re feeling. His death has not yet been absorbed, by the industry or history.

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Hipster Puppies

February 10, 2010

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I’m still a grump-a-lump and suddenly wishing I didn’t have to type in order to blog. Enjoy hipsterpuppies.tumblr.com for a bit while  I get my shit together.

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Dragulated

February 9, 2010

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Hey guys, sorry I’ve been sick and got the winter blues. I’ve been passing the time with the new season of Rupaul’s Drag Race, and have been dragulating all of my friends. Try it!

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