The Cautionary Tale of Hunter S. Thompson
Tags/ Posted by Julie AndrijeskiIf you want to discover your mind burn your house to the groundcontinue reading this poem
If they’d just left the poor bastard alone. If he’d just been allowed to shoot off guns, take mescaline while lounging naked in public areas, blow up the occasional jeep with gasoline and dynamite . . . everything would have been fine. To all of those crew-cut wearing cops and their higher-ups in Chicago and New York and Washington D.C. . . . you blew it, man. Never piss off a writer. At least . . . not the wrong writer.
Interview with Chris Hill
Tags/ Posted by Julie AndrijeskiWe all kept grinding our respective pestles into the assigned mortars, despite the lack of intrinsic beauty.continue reading this poem
Chris Hill, a producer at Make Something Real Presents (MSRP) is coming out with a new iPhone application called Pushforward, which was created as a tool for artists and those who follow the arts to find one another and share resources, news, events and information. The Pushforward app is also going to be on Android starting this summer (2010).
Zeitgeist: Addendum
Tags/ Posted by Julie AndrijeskiIf souls must be here they do not watch us even accidentally for a moment—not being subject to the laws of chance. With the kindly detachment of settlement house angels they overlook our lives.continue reading this poem
Peter Joseph is the freelance film editor, composer and producer, who created the movie “Zeit-geist” in 2007. He originally did the film as a personal project, made in the interests of “free public awareness.” The movie itself consists of three parts, entitled: “Religion,” “All the World’s a Stage” and “Don’t Mind the Men Behind the Curtain,” about the origins of Christianity, the events of 9/11 and the global monetary system, respectively.
Journey into The Red Book: Liber Primus
Tags/ Posted by Julie AndrijeskiFollow the weather of longing, fat, pink Rubenesque cloudscontinue reading this poem
Based on my own reflections, “Liber Primus,” and really The Red Book as a whole, is the deconstruction of a mind. The beginnings of this process for Jung, and all of its requisite fear, ranting and expounding, both for and against the project, are documented in detail in “Liber Primus”.
