22 nov. 2022


 

The Secret Dinners Where Marijuana Is in Every Dish


Adventurous chefs are hosting semi-clandestine dinners that incorporate cannabis. Does it impart a unique flavor? Or is it there for the buzz?

- NY Times

12 nov. 2022


 

What 'Interracial' Cuckold Porn Reveals About White Male Insecurity


The genre, in which a Black man has sex with a white man's wife, represents the ultimate threat to white manhood and racial purity. And it's loaded with racist undertones that have real-world implications.

- Vice

6 nov. 2022


 

Why the Ethics of ‘Would You Kill Baby Hitler?’ Are More Important Than You Probably Think


The 2002 Twilight Zone episode "Cradle of Darkness" toys with a simple question: can an evil act (murder) be justified if its consequences are sufficiently positive?

hough it was well before my time, I always loved watching the original Twilight Zone series. (In fact, I can still recite my favorite episodes, which include “The Shelter,” “The Hitchhiker,” “Living Doll,” and “A Game of Pool.”)

Later reboots of The Twilight Zone never impressed me as much, but the 2002 episode “Cradle of Darkness” is an exception. Directed by Jean de Segonzac and written by Kamran Pasha, it stars Katherine Heigl as a young woman sent back in time to Austria in 1889 to rewrite history by killing Adolf Hitler when he’s just a baby, preventing (hopefully) the Holocaust and World War II.

- FEE Stories


 

Cars Of New York City: Snapshots From The 1970s And Early 1980s


Let’s go back to where it all began: Andy grew up in Milford, Connecticut, and his dad commuted by train down to Manhattan every day, where he worked in the brand new World Trade Center. On days off from high school Andy would often join him, always carrying his Kodak Pocket 40 Instamatic to capture some of the sights of a Lower Manhattan significantly different than the one which exists now.

- Design you Trust

19 oct. 2022


 

Female rage: The brutal new icons of film and TV


This year, films and TV shows like Pearl and Bad Sisters are channelling female rage and questioning gendered stereotypes with their violent anti-heroines.

When, in 2017, the directorial duo Scott McGehee and David Siegel announced their plans to create a female version of Lord of the Flies, they were roundly mocked on social media. William Golding's 1954 novel famously features a group of boys who descend into barbarism after being stranded on an island. Critics of McGehee and Siegel's project argued that girls would never exhibit the same savagery in such a situation. One sneered, "What are they going to do? Collaborate to death?"

- BBC

23 sept. 2022


 

Found Photos: The Internet K-Hole


We love Found Photos, anonymous snapshots found in flea markets, skips, attics and auctions. Bronwyn, of the Internet K Hole, collects found photos from the 1970s, ’80s and early ’90s.”

They are baldy focused and skew-whiff, seemingly taken by people most probably drunk, laughing or both. They are exactly the kind of pictures we love.

- Flashbak

TavíTavik Frantisek Šimon

Why Casanova Continues to Seduce Us


In 1763, the young James Boswell finished his “London Journal,” one of the frankest accounts of high and low life in the eighteenth century. The following year, he embarked on a Grand Tour. In a Berlin tavern, he encountered a certain Neuhaus. This voluble personage of thirty-nine, unusually tall, with a dark complexion and affected manners, was an Italian who “wanted to shine as a great philosopher,” Boswell wrote, “and accordingly doubted of his own existence and everything else. I thought him a blockhead.”

The “blockhead” had also been travelling around Europe, although not on a patrician’s leisurely inspection of art and ruins. Giacomo Casanova, whose surname means “new house,” practiced many trades—violinist, gambler, spy, Kabbalist, soldier, man of letters—but his main line of work, he later admitted, was deceiving fools. 

- The New Yorker


 

Love drugs are coming – but are we ready?


Are you racked with an overwhelming feeling of visceral repulsion at the mere sight of your partner, but cannot bear the thought of re-downloading Hinge just to end up in ‘talking stage’ purgatory for six months? Good news: a new drug that could help failing relationships could be made available in the next “three to five years”, according to an Oxford University academic.

- DAZED

22 sept. 2022


 

Le langage des fesses


Que nous disent les fesses magnifiées dans l’art, depuis la sculpture antique jusqu’aux clips des stars d’aujourd’hui ?

Entre fascination érotique selon le regard masculin, féminité idéale, revendication anti-maigreur, promotion commerciale, ou même message théologique, les fesses, qu’elles soient féminines ou masculines, ont servi de support à bien des messages à travers les siècles.

- The Conversation

8 sept. 2022

Anita Pallenberg
 

'Flesh of the Gods': The Trippy History of Magic Mushrooms


With magic mushrooms seemingly being used more widely than ever, it's high time we look at the ancient history of psychotropic fungi.

All roads lead to magic mushrooms in Huautla de Jiménez, a remote town in the mountains of northern Oaxaca, Mexico. Its cabs feature images of hallucinogenic fungi and they bring travellers through an official municipal arch decorated with mushrooms, to a taxi rank named after María Sabina, former resident and world famous Mazatec shaman, rumoured to have been visited by the likes of Bob Dylan and John Lennon.

- Vice

23 août 2022


 

The high life: Doing drugs with ancient Greeks and Romans


Long before tobacco arrived from the Americas, ancient civilizations in the Old World were getting high off hemp smoke and opium.  

Substances are central to many New World cultures, but their role in the Old World is poorly understood. Archaeological research suggests that ancient civilizations, like the Greeks and Romans, consumed hemp and opium. Though drug dependency is a modern concept, sources describe Marcus Aurelius as an opium addict.

- Big Think

20 août 2022

 


Control for Surrender: Henry Miller’s Stunning Letter to Anaïs Nin About the Value of and the Antidote to Despair


The paradox is that much of what we think is work at life — all the ways in which we try to bend reality to our will, all the ways in which we clutch at control (which only ever means the illusion of control) as an organizing principle — is in fact an escape from the true work, which is the work of letting go: letting go of the illusion, of the systems of belief and magical thinking by which we fancy ourselves in control.

The subtlety — sometimes devastating, sometimes deeply rewarding — lies in learning the difference between the false work and the true work of life: that elusive art of active surrender.

This is what Henry Miller (December 26, 1891–June 7, 1980) explores with uncommon self-awareness and sensitivity in one of the many miniature masterpieces of insight into human nature collected in A Literate Passion: Letters of Anaïs Nin & Henry Miller.

- The Marginalian

18 août 2022


 

«Un été comme ça», au-delà de la sexualité


En l’espace de 26 jours, trois femmes, Geisha, Léonie et Eugénie, sont invitées en maison de repos pour explorer leur relation problématique ou conflictuelle avec la sexualité. Sous la supervision d’une thérapeute et d’un travailleur social eux aussi pétris de contradictions, elles tenteront d’apprivoiser leurs démons, de jeter un regard nouveau sur elles-mêmes et de considérer l’avenir.

Le film donne donc à voir les pensées, les souvenirs, les élans, les fantasmes de trois femmes à la fois fragiles et pleinement assumées, brisées et vivantes ; trois femmes extirpées de leur quotidien pour s’en inventer un nouveau, teinté d’introspection et de lâcher-prise.

- Le Devoir

17 août 2022


 

Jules and Jim: The relationship that's still taboo


On the 60th anniversary of the French classic Jules and Jim, Gregory Wakeman looks at how the ménage à trois has been portrayed on screen.

- BBC

4 août 2022


 

Heh-Heh. Huh-Huh. Mike Judge Brings Back ‘Beavis and Butt-Head.’


Judge, the creator and voice of the malevolent metalheads, explains why he’s reviving his emblematic 1990s cartoon series in 2022.There are certain sounds that will forever evoke the 1990s in our collective sense memory. The opening guitar riff of Nirvana’s “Smells Like Teen Spirit.” The chimes of a dial-up modem. The persistent, grating laughter of Beavis and Butt-Head.

- NY Times

25 juil. 2022


 

South East Asia's extraordinary freedivers


Scattered through Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines, the Bajau are a semi-nomadic tribe of fishers with extraordinary freediving skills. Research has shown that their anatomy has evolved to help them remain underwater for a longer time. The Bajau’s traditional respect for their environment sets them as an example for ocean conservation.

- BBC

13 juil. 2022


 

Plays Well with Others: The Surprising Science Behind Why Everything You Know About Relationships Is (Mostly) Wrong


Eric Barker is a writer and blogger whose work has appeared in the New York Times, The Atlantic, and The Financial Times. His first book, Barking Up the Wrong Tree, was a Wall Street Journal bestseller. His latest, Plays Well with Others, was praised by our curator Daniel Pink as “humorous and profound.”

Below, Eric shares 5 key insights from his new book, Plays Well with Others: The Surprising Science Behind Why Everything You Know About Relationships Is (Mostly) Wrong.

- Next Big Idea Club

2 juil. 2022


 

The Kids in the Hall Have Gotten Old. Their Comedy Hasn’t.


A new documentary explains the undersung Canadian troupe’s brilliance, and a new season of its sketch show confirms it.

The Kids in the Hall were very nearly not the Kids in the Hall. As Mark McKinney recalls in the two-part documentary “The Kids in the Hall: Comedy Punks,” he pushed for the Audience, the name of the group that he had performed in previously with Bruce McCulloch. “Thank God I didn’t win that fight,” he says.

- NY Times


 

Someone made A Putin Mosaic Out Of Penises


This image of the President of Russia is actually a bunch of dicks.

- boingboing

30 juin 2022

 




Quand le libertinage change une vie


Cela fait seulement trois ans. Trois petites années que son couple, vieux de 30 ans, est officiellement libertin. Et Roxane n’est plus du tout la même depuis. Récit d’une « renaissance ».

C’est le mot qu’elle emploie pour parler de ce changement de vie : « Je me suis sentie renaître. » Tout un revirement, quand on connaît son cheminement. Un parcours qu’elle ne se fait pas prier pour raconter, avec plusieurs allers-retours entre son passé « refoulé », comme elle dit, et son présent teinté d’ouverture, et surtout de liberté.

- La Presse

29 juin 2022


 

«Le petit frère»: tragiquement beau


Après s’être littéralement dévêtu pour les deux premiers tomes de sa série érotico-autobiographique Extases, voilà que l’auteur Jean-Louis Tripp nous offre un morceau de son âme dans Le petit frère, un récit poignant dans lequel il raconte la mort tragique de Gilles, son jeune frère de 11 ans, en 1976. Tragique comme dans être fauché par un chauffard qui prend la fuite en laissant pour presque mort un enfant en plein milieu de la route, en pleine campagne. Aussi bien dire en plein milieu de nulle part.

- Le Devoir