A Public Service announcement by Leah Shore.
Song by Gina Volpe of Lunachicks.
Now touch your face.
Genuinely dark skies are a diminishing rarity given the ubiquity of wasteful artificial lighting, much of which serves to block our vision of space above us. To wit:
This light pollution not only wastes energy, but, when reflected by the Earth’s atmosphere back down, creates a nighttime brightness that disrupts wildlife and harms human health, while doing very little to prevent crime. Light pollution is also making a dark night sky a scarcity for new generations. While there is little that can be done in large cities, rural country areas could benefit from lighting that is fully shielded from exposing the night sky where it is not needed. The featured panorama contains 6 adjacent vertical segments taken from different locations across Slovakia — but with the same equipment and at the same time of night, and then subjected to the same digital post-processing. Although no stars are visible on the left-most city sky, the right-most country sky is magnificently dark. You can help protect the wonders of your night sky by favoring, when possible, dark sky friendly lighting.
(Image: Tomas Slovinsky; Text: Matipon Tangmatitham (NARIT))
A timely feature from The School Of Life. To wit:
Emotional maturity isn’t just something we can achieve in the good times. It’s a quality that can accompany us through the deepest crises. A key idea to keep in mind is that it isn’t chiefly what happens to us that affects our lives, it’s how we learn to think about what has happened – and that, fortunately, is very much within our control.
Previously: All Together Now
A ‘coronaversion’ of Mexico’s popular bingo-esque Lotería game by San Antonio-based artist Rafael Gonzales Jr.
‘F-Major’ by pianist and composer Hania Rani, performed (and hypnotically interpreted by three dancers) against the spectacular backdrop of an Icelandic mountain range in a video directed by Parisian filmmaker Neels Castillon.
Rani’s new album ‘Home’ is released in May.
Turn up the volume (or put on headphones) for this noisy series of vignettes by Sander Joon in which things don’t sound quite as you’d expect.
The allure of American quackery through the years.
RELATED: The Meaning Of Trump’s Coronavirus Quackery (new Yorker)
Behold: the 1971 Jensen Interceptor II. 6,400 of these were made between 1966 and 1976 – grand tourers with coachwork designed by Carrozzeria Touring of Italy and a 6.3 litre V8 under the bonnet.
This ‘mild restoration’ model is finished in Estoril Blue over red leather and will, come late October, be entertaining offers.
From the blog Thumbs And Ammo, wherein celluloid shooters are replaced with jaunty thumbs up.