Joseph Bennett and Charles Huettner’s short for Adult Swim’s Toonami in which a pair of explorers become stranded on a distant planet inhabited by a variety of bizarre lifeforms.
Yearly Archives: 2017
Pritthetic
atSPLUTTER!
Jane Maher writes:
Thank god Easons have Pritt Stick for girls, I was afraid my tiny girl hands wouldn’t be able to hold normal glue. it’s pink too…
Get It?
atThis morning.
Dr Antoinette Perry (top) at the launch of the Irish Cancer Society Campaign to highlight the possibility that by 2020 1 in 2 people in ireland will get Cancer
Meanwhile, above, the telly campaign, featuring people wishing that they could “get cancer”.
Like to “get” it.
As opposed to wanting to get it.
That would be silly.
Donate here.
Rollingnews
Phil Lynott, bassist and singer of Thin Lizzy, and the daddy of Irish rock departed this life on this day in 1986.
Streaming above: a session version of Cowboy Song, recorded for the BBC on the 12th of February, 1976.
The most iconic Lizzy tune?
Anyone?
Meanwhile…
This afternoon.
Harry Street, Dublin 2.
Rollingnews
Minister for Health Simon Harris
There has been a significant increase in flu like illnesses. GPs are reporting a 50 per cent increase in flu patients and there has been a 20 per cent increase in people over 75 with flu,…It was easy to predict that this was going to happen after the event. None of the evidence indicated this severe a problem.”
Minister for Health Simon Harris (above) on Newstalk’s Breakfast this morning. The number of people on hospital trolleys remains at over 600 today.
Ken Foxe writes:
….Except the HSE had warned that the winter initiative could be ineffective if there was an outbreak of flu, bad weather and so on in their draft plan
The HSE had been keen to say that targets set in the initiative might not be met depending on circumstances.
In particular, they had warned of “unusually high demand” particularly among older people, the potential for flu, and the possible impact of weather conditions.
And what did the Department of Health do? They asked that this warning be moved prior to publication of the plan so they could emphasise the “positive effects” of the initiative.
Good times.
Patients on trolleys still over 600, latest figures show (Vivienne Clarke, Irish Times)
Rollingnews
David Attenborough
The world’s most famous naturalist and documentarian turns his hand to observing sounds and musical styles in their natural environs in a very special programme broadcast last month on BBC Radio 3.
David Attenborough reveals a side of himself that nobody knows, as a collector of music from all over the world. We hear the stories that surround it, and the music itself.
One of David Attenborough’s first projects was ‘Alan Lomax – Song Hunter’, a television series he produced in 1953-4. The famous collector of the blues and folk music of America gathered traditional musicians from all over Britain and Ireland and, for the first time, they appeared on television.
David loved the music, the people and, inspired by Lomax, he became music collector himself.
From the start there was a connection between wildlife and folk culture broadcasting: BBC natural history staff shared an office, and equipment, with colleagues busy recording traditional songs, tunes and stories.
Soon after ‘Song Hunter’ Attenborough began travelling the world for the series ‘Zoo Quest’. This time the hunt was for animals, captured live for London Zoo.
The series also looked at the culture of local people and if he came across music Attenborough recorded it. In Paraguay he met some amazing harp players and recorded what became the series’ signature tune. This started a craze. Remember Los Trios Paraguayos?
Wherever he went to make programmes David Attenborough recorded musicians. When the lads carrying the crew’s baggage in New Guinea started singing, he taped them. He recorded songs in Borneo longhouses, drumming in Sierra Leone, gamelan music in Java, Aboriginal didgeridoo players and palace music in Tonga.
Attenborough gave the music to the BBC and it has sat, unheard, in the Sound Library ever since. Now he listens again to recordings he made half a century ago. He reveals the memories and stories they evoke, and his delight in the music.
In fairness.
From top: Poet Kevin Higgins: Anthony Cronin
On the passing of Anthony Cronin, poet, writer and Charles Haughey’s cultural attaché.
One Has To Admire His Ability As A Poet
“I was struck by … his courage in speaking out to defend the memory of Charles Haughey”
Vincent Woods, RTÉ website
To defend the memory of Boris Yeltsin’s
vodka bottle. To take money from both the late Benito
Mussolini and, when pragmatism demanded it, those
who spat on him when he was safely
hanging upside down outside an Esso station.
To put in the proper context of realpolitik
as practised in parts of County Wexford
the late Father Fortune’s harem of boys.
To share a Ouija board with President Duvalier
while supping rum from the skull of an infant
who was always going to come to this
because, in the words of W.H.Auden,
‘poetry makes fuck-all difference’.
To share a roast leg with General Amin
and not mind which of his enemies was being eaten.
To recite even his longer poems
to a musical accompaniment of Vladimir Putin
twanging his jock-strap, like a rude balalaika.
To roll around wrapped in the French flag
with Marine Le Pen, whispering
in her cockle shell the words ‘Barbie, Bormann,
Goering’, because that’s the sort of thing
an advocate for the arts must sometimes do.
Kevin Higgins
First published by Poethead (curated by Christine Murray).
Rollingnews
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g0fgErBOhp4&feature=youtu.be
In case you missed it.
Carrickmines, Dublin 18.
Jason Cooper writes:
This was instant karma for road rage bully at the Park, Carrickmines on 2nd January 2017. Time and date stamp on video is incorrect. At two minutes in, he pulls up alongside me in his Saab 9-5 and starts hurling verbal abuse out his window.
Why? I’ve no idea as my driving up to that point shouldn’t have upset anyone.
Then, he got out of his car and attacked me through my open window landing two punches. I managed to get out of my car and land a combination of rights knocking him to the ground….
As I wrestled and landed another right, a good samaritan and a plain clothes Garda came to assist.
*swoon*
Thanks Joe McD
Animated reaction/diffusion patterns by French visual effects artist Maxime Causeret, set to a track from the album Emergence by Max Cooper. To wit:
…simple chemical feedback mechanisms can yield complex flowing bands of colour — these forms of system were originally thought up by Alan Turing, and were part of the early seeds of the field of systems biology, which seeks to simulate life with computers, in order to better understand the systems producing the complexity we see in the living world.
Headphones, full screen and whatever you’re having yourself recommended for full immersion.















