My old pal Pint Champion was brave enough to head over to the Furries versus Klingons bowling competition in Atlanta to get some photos. Posted below are a couple of pics, but there should be more on the way considering that he was able to take "over two hundred pics and a couple of videos of the furries dancing." Thanks, Champ! You rock.
Busy week. Lots of cool stuff going on (some of it top secret!) but no time to write anything. Oh well. At ontoTravel, I wrapped up my New Jersey photo series (for the time being) and started on a new series of photos from a recent trip to Milan. And of course, there are plenty of London Daily Photos to ogle at ontoLondon. Beyond that, dig around - I'm sure you'll find something else to your liking, such as this poem by Thomas Edison.
Have a great weekend, Tiki Chris Below is a list of recent posts from four blogs that I administer: ontoLondon, ontoTravel, Rapa Nui News, and Tiki Chris. Each Friday, I hope to provide a weekly review of what I've posted. If a particular blog interests you, keep in mind that I’ve been blogging since well before this past week. You may want to take a look through the archives of any blog that interests you. Thanks. ontoLondon http://ontolondon.blogspot.com/
A Bowery angel smoking a palm tree stubbed his toe on a comet, and pimples came out on his toe nail as big as mountains. He swore so much that God made eight new planets out of the conversation & peopled and fauna'd and flora'd them eccentrically. The almighty has a vein of humor. He made these planets & peopled them to give amusements to beings on the rest of the celestial plantation. The men were 800 miles long & 1/4 inch thick. They slept on telegraph poles, and animals with bodies as big as a pea with 900 eyes each as big as a saucer lived on these long men by catching them by the feet and sucking them in like macaroni.
Click here for reading and discussion on NPR's Talk of the Nation.
Click here for reading and discussion on BBC Radio 4's Today.
Click here for the Thomas A. Edison Papers website.
It's true. I've been a bad boy not producing much fresh content and simply relying on the likes of YouTube, the BBC etc for posting material. Hey, what can I say? It was a fun summer (if not a warm one here in London). Now that autumn's here, I've got all sorts of goofy ideas (especially for October). As for this past week, I finally managed to write a new post for my I ♥ T-Shirts series - this one about a Tee I got while at the Hukilau in Ft Lauderdale. I also ...
Have a great weekend, Tiki Chris Below is a list of recent posts from four blogs that I administer: ontoLondon, ontoTravel, Rapa Nui News, and Tiki Chris. Each Friday, I hope to provide a weekly review of what I've posted. If a particular blog interests you, keep in mind that I’ve been blogging since well before this past week. You may want to take a look through the archives of any blog that interests you. Thanks. ontoLondon http://ontolondon.blogspot.com/
Comfortable, practical, and these days the only accessory you need to make a statement, it's hard to imagine a world without the ubiquitous T-shirt. I ♥ T-Shirts takes a subjective approach to this modern fashion phenomenon with each post dealing with a favorite shirt. In this post, I take a look back a fun Tee I picked up at this year's Hukilau in Ft Lauderdale.
Shirt: Hukilau 2007 Designer: Kevin Kidney Price: $20 Purchased: June 2007 at the Hukilau in Ft Lauderdale, Florida Status: Still has that "new car" smell
Back in June, I had the good fortune of attending the 2007 Hukilau, "a celebration of midcentury Polynesian Pop splendor at the historic Mai-Kai in Ft Lauderdale, Florida" (click here for more Hukilau posts). Needless to say I had a fantastic time. While there, I also did a little shopping, picking up an official Hukilau T-shirt along with the rest of my plunder.
According to its accompanying tag, this "vintage soft" brown shirt made by Alternative Apparel, is "printed with water based inks to become more uniquely yours after each wash." It features Hukilau logo artist Kevin Kidney's phenomenal artwork. Kidney is perhaps best known for his work with Jody Daily designing more than 200 items to mark the 50th Anniversary of Disneyland. Kidney's Hukilau design is especially neato with its contemporary yet "could have been made decades ago" feel.
The 2007 Hukilau T-shirt is a cool little souvenir that quickly became a prominent standby when I needed something comfortable to wear these past few months, adding some much needed Florida sunshine to a more dreary than usual English summer.
Interested in contributing a review of a favourite T-shirt or perhaps sending along a sample T to be reviewed? Click here to access my email address. Then, send an email with a brief description of your idea/product along with any relevant online links.
Not a lot to report this week. I pretty much just geeked out on YouTube but did manage to get out and take some nice photos at the opening of James Jessop's "Night of the Demon" exhibition and to post this London Daily Photo of man's best friend. I also started (and haven't yet finished) a series of photos from a recent trip to New Jersey.
Have a great weekend, Tiki Chris Below is a list of recent posts from four blogs that I administer: ontoLondon, ontoTravel, Rapa Nui News, and Tiki Chris. Each Friday, I hope to provide a weekly review of what I've posted. If a particular blog interests you, keep in mind that I’ve been blogging since well before this past week. You may want to take a look through the archives of any blog that interests you. Thanks. ontoLondon http://ontolondon.blogspot.com/
Whenever I get asked what kind of music I listen to, I always come up with an "I dunno. Everything," which is true. Anyway, Double Nickels on the Dime is a damn fine album, especially with the song "This Ain't No Picnic" as one of the tracks.
Hey everybody. This has been a pretty cool week in Tiki Chris Land. Here's this week's wrap up.
I posted some pics from my adventures in that hotbed of culture known as South Pittsburgh, Tennessee. I also posted a link to a Juxtapoz photo essay of a recent Brooklyn outing with street artist extraordinaire Dan Witz. Thanks to Dan for showing me around and letting me hang while you pulled some brilliant pranks!
Over at ontoTravel, my old buddy Jon Dowda provided a stellar instalment of Expat Perspective, in which he recounts a bus ride from Durango to Ciudad Juárez. It's a really good read and is accompanied by some fascinating photos that Jon took during the trip.
And ... I finally got around to updating Rapa Nui News. Hopefully, I'll be able to work on it a bit more this weekend.
Thanks to everybody who left comments this week! It's nice to know you're enjoying the blogs.
While I was offline during the last couple of weeks in August, I managed to squeeze a trip to Brooklyn into my schedule for a day out with one of my favorite artists, Dan Witz. Make sure to check out the complete Juxtapoz post!
Dan Witz in Williamsburg by Chris Osburn Juxtapoz Tuesday, 04 September 2007
The first graffiti that Dan Witz remembers being aware of as a child are those World War Two era "Kilroy Was Here" drawings. Still amazed by the idea that simply drawing a horizontal line can "magically create space and become the top of a wall," Dan has adapted the "Kilroy" design to suit his own urban prankster needs. By updating the basic "Kilroy" concept, Dan creates provocative, and often hilarious, street art.
Click here for complete story and plenty of photos.
One of the most visually stunning places for me as a child was the small town of South Pittsburgh, Tennessee. Located off Interstate 24 about 20 miles west of Chattanooga en route to Nashville, the town is perhaps best known for its garish and massive Tennessee Alabama Fireworks World mega-shop, a just-off-the-exit pitstop for refueling, refreshments, beer, bottle rockets and pretty much any kind of firework imaginable. At night especially, TAFW and its competitors beckon weary travelers with the faux neon glow of thousands upon thousands of tiny light bulbs arranged into letters advertising their wares. Local folks call South Pittsburgh the "Las Vegas of the South". TAFW also sells souvenirs, stuff like "Life's a Gas: The Ultimate Fart Book", and other stupid non-essentials such as "hillbilly" cookbooks and, sadly, rows of racially insensitive trinkets.
As a kid, I would get so excited when I knew we were to drive by this monstrosity and beg my parents to stop. Usually, Dad worked it out so that a stop would serve as some sort of reward (or bribe) for good behaviour. Of course, he loved shopping for fireworks as much as I did and probably enjoyed shooting them even more so.
On a recent visit to Tennessee, I made a brief trip to South Pittsburgh with my camera. Unfortunately, I could only manage to get there during the day, thus, no pics of the spectacle of lights. However, I was able to stray from the roadside attractions and roam around a bit downtown, the official home of the National Cornbread Festival. The downtown, a few miles from the I-24 exit, might as well be a world away. Snuggled up to the side of a mountain, it's a sleepy, and rather attractive, little town hearkening back to a supposedly simpler time. Still, evidence of a citywide fascination for all things explosive (wrestling, firearms) was easily spotted.
Click here for photos from the opening of SUPER FLUO, a collaborative exhibition at London's Lazarides Gallery of artwork by Italy's "modern day street insurrectionists" Ericailcane and Blu.