Earliest Maysles Documentary on Russian Psychiatry

Albert Maysles first documentary Psychiatry in Russia completed in 1955. Although he is best known for his work in direct cinema, Albert did not begin his career as a filmmaker; he got a Master of Arts degree from Boston University where he taught psychology for three years before making the switch to film. He took a trip to Russia to photograph a mental hospital, and returned the next year with a camera gifted to him from CBS to film his first documentary, Psychiatry in Russia.

Freaky Deaky

According to this article at Smithsonian Magazine’s website,

Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt, the heir to Vanderbilt everythingness, cancelled his ticket on the Titanic at the last minute. Now what makes this interesting is that he died three years later on the Lusitania. Was this guy meant to die at sea or what?? That’s crazy. 

Read more:

“>http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/seven-famous-people-who-missed-the-titanic-101902418/#qOJUplff5GoFqHO7.99

What do these people think an AMA is exactly?

Woody Harrelson’s AMA earned legend status when he wouldn’t answer any questions about anything other than the current movie he was promoting, and another snafu in the AMA world just happened again recently with the lead investigator for the Jon-Benet Ramsey case. This got me thinking….do these people know that Reddit’s AMA stands for Ask Me Anything? Do they understand what the word “anything” means? Are they not familiar with the internet? Are they not familiar with trolls? Do they not understand that everything on the internet is imminently public? The Ramsey incident was an issue because he thought he was speaking to a small group of people and didn’t know it would be posted on the newspaper of the internet, which is, frankly, ridiculous. Google “Reddit” for five seconds before you agree to do an AMA! Literally five seconds. I wonder what Woody Harrelson thinks of the fact that he’s gone down in history as one of the worst AMA’s ever. Does he still not get it? Does he think he is just misunderstood? Does he even understand what happened? It surprises me how absolutely out of touch people can be.

Jerks!

Something I was really looking forward to Congress doing has failed and I’m peeved. The passing of H.R. 2003 (113th): Gluten in Medicine Disclosure Act of 2013 in Congress  should have been a given, though I’m sure big pharma lobbied hard to keep a cheap filler like gluten off the chopping block. Here’s info about it if your curious. Someone’s going to pass this eventually, right?!! It’s not as if they have to stop using gluten, but they should have to tell people that they are using gluten, and should be required to label products with ingredients!!! God damn that seems so obvious.

What does classic art look like without the gluten?

What does classic art look like without the gluten?

http://www.bbc.com/news/blogs-trending-32348847

  • 20 April 2015
d’après Grant Wood
“American Gothic” without the crucial wheat-gathering tool

Inside the online Gluten Free Museum are images of classic works of art with all of the wheat-containing products deftly airbrushed.

Studies suggest that in Britain as much as 1% of the population has coeliac disease – a disorder triggered by gluten that can cause serious problems. Others have conditions such as gluten intolerance. But wheatless diets have also caught on among others, including celebrities – sales of gluten-free products rose 15% last year. Because of this some have, controversially, questioned whether “wheat free” is just a fad.

That’s where the Gluten Free Museum, a Tumblr blog, comes in. When the museum first started gathering attention earlier this month, some interpreted it as a poke at the popularity of gluten-free diets. “Someone finally found the perfect way to make fun of the gluten-free movement,” read the Washington Post’s headline. Others – more than slightly tongue-in-cheek – praised the curator for making history safe for those shunning bread. “It’s art, minus the gluten. Finally,”said the Huffington Post.

But the French blogger who created the museum says he had no grand dietary message. “It is a joke,” Arthur Coulet told BBC Trending. Coulet is a 26-year-old graphic artist who lives in Paris where he teaches photo manipulation. Here he describes some of his favourite wheat-free creations.

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‘Le Petit Parisien’

D'après Willy Ronis

“This image by Willy Ronis was suggested by my friend Celine,” Coulet says. “He is a great photographer and I wanted to give him importance in my museum.”

Coulet says he had no intention of remaining anonymous; he simply decided not to put his name on the blog, which he describes as a “détournement“. French for “rerouting” or “hijacking”, it’s a type of artwork manipulation that grew out of the French radical Situationist movement. Coulet says he keeps things simple and only posts the images and the name of the artist “because less is more!”

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Chardin still life

D'après Jean Siméon Chardin

“Jean Siméon Chardin reminds me of the years when I worked as a guard in the Louvre to earn money for my studies,” he says.

The idea of a Gluten Free Museum first came after he saw gluten-free advertisements. “Our civilization is based on wheat. There is a link between culture and agriculture,” he says.

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‘The Milkmaid’

D'après Johannes Vermeer

“Everyone has seen Vermeer’s ‘Milkmaid’, but who really looks at the bread on the table? This is a new way to look at well-known artworks and discover others.”

Coulet, who does eat bread, says his approach is meant to sidestep the science. “This is a serious matter, that’s why I’ve decided to bring lightness and pleasure with art,” he says.

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Guinness advert

D'après Guinness

“The Guinness poster is a tribute to my friend Lolo, who made me discover the better pubs in Paris,” Coulet says. “I have people in my entourage who can’t eat gluten for health reasons. I’ve showed them the blog and they laughed.” In addition to wheat, gluten is found in related grains such as barley, which puts most beers on the forbidden list for gluten allergy sufferers.

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Disney’s Lady and the Tramp

D'après Walt Disney

“This was a movie that I loved when I was a child,” Coulet says. “This scene with the Italian restaurant is magical.” The Gluten Free Museum has been shared thousands of times on Facebook and Twitter. “Trends can be a way to see great art,” Coulet says.

Blog by Gabriela Torres

The Adventures of Pete & Pete’s Band Reunites!

Why a Fake Band From a 1990s Kids’ Show Decided to Tour This Year

FOR A SONGWRITER, Mark Mulcahy can have a tough time expressing himself. Like, for starters, why exactly it took his band Polaris 15 years to finally treat fans to a live performance. Despite the group’s slow climb up the totem pole of indie rock respectability, Mulcahy says, there just wasn’t much of an urge to take the band on the road.

“It’s weird. I don’t know why, we could have been playing all these years,” he says over a fuzzy phone line from his home in New Haven, Connecticut. “It’s the strange world of Polaris.”

But it’s not actually all that strange: Polaris was a television show’s house band. A novelty act. Depending on the extent of your 1990’s knowledge, they’re either the band that sang “Hey Sandy,” the theme song to Nickelodeon’s The Adventures of Pete & Pete, or the band that released the ensuing albumMusic from The Adventures of Pete & Pete, which became something of a cult classic. Either way, Polaris is tied directly to the bizarre kids’ show that centered on two brothers’ attempts to navigate their suburban surroundings. Polaris was created for Pete & Pete, and they existed, until recently, only as an extension of the show—another relic from a long-ago age of intelligent, challenging children’s television.

But starting tomorrow, Polaris embarks on their first tour, performing material that was released back when Bill Clinton was still president. Their tour is split between traditional billings—like the show they’re headlining in Philadelphia—and Nickelodeon-themed nostalgia stops, including one at Chicago’s iconic Lincoln Hall, where the band will share the bill with a live taping of The Adventures of Danny and Mike, a podcast hosted by Pete & Pete’s two now-adult stars. There’s even a date at Brooklyn’s Knitting Factory—and it’s sold out.

polarisSo is it a fake band being taken seriously by a few fans, or a real band that others haven’t been taking seriously? Polaris (that’s Mulcahy on vocals and guitar, Scott Boutier on drums, and Dave McCaffrey on bass) is about to find out—or at least find out if their fans are passionate enough to shell out $20 for a ticket. Even Mulcahy seems to have no idea: “I really hope people come,” he says with a laugh, “but I have no idea.”

All You Need Is a Miracle (Legion)

Mulcahy is no stranger to the music scene. From 1983 to 1996 he fronted Miracle Legion, a college-rock outfit whose comparisons to R.E.M. can be either good or bad, depending on how you feel about R.E.M. He’s also had a viable career as a solo musician, with 2013’s Dear Mark J. Mulcahy, I Love You peaking at #37 on Billboard’s Heatseekers chart.

In 1993, towards the end of Miracle Legion’s run, Pete & Pete creators Will McRobb and Chris Viscardi approached Mulcahy about creating a theme song for the show. What they wound up with was fan favorite “Hey Sandy,” a song that lives on in part because of its indecipherable third line, which to this day remains a mystery. (If the lyric really is, as many fans have speculated, “Can you settle to shoot me?” then Nickelodeon was in a dark, dark place.)

“‘Hey Sandy’ was the main order, where they were like, ‘we need to have a theme song,’” says Mulcahy. “And then they asked for the other songs in kind of a descriptive way.” Three more songs were required for the show’s inaugural season—including “Summerbaby,” which the band played live on the first season’s finale. Once again, the process was interpretive: Viscardi and McRobb would communicate a particular emotion, and Mulcahy would create a song. “We were kind of in sync. That was [a] lucky combination of people,” Mulcahy says. “Will [McRobb] is just a great music fan. The show is a mix tape for him.”

That process continued on for the next three years: four new songs each year. By the time the show was cancelled in 1996, Polaris had produced 12 songs—just enough for a respectable rock LP.

But no album was forthcoming. “There you are with 12 songs that are all done and mixed, and all go really well together. What’s the problem?” Mulcahy asks. He never found out the answer to that question. Perhaps Viacom, Nickelodeon’s parent company, didn’t see much use in releasing an album by a fictitious band; maybe labels didn’t see much of a potential market inPete & Pete fans. Whatever the case, the album seemed like a lost cause, doomed to collect dust next to bins of green slime and Good Burger hats.

“Nickelodeon was like, ‘What do you mean put a record out? Who cares?’” says Mulcahy. “But they said, ‘If you want to put it out, you can.’ I was lucky that they let me put it out.”

With Nickelodeon’s indifferent blessing, Mulcahy used his own label to release these 12 songs. Music from The Adventures of Pete & Pete came out in 1999, and in the years after the band—like the show—faded into anonymity.

As time passed, Mulcahy’s solo career gained steam; his band mates nabbed a gig backing up Pixies legend Frank Black. Polaris was for the most part a thing of the past, save for Mulcahy’s sporadic impulse to include one of the band’s songs in his set list.

An Unexpectedly Fun Thing I Thought I’d Never Do Again

In 2012, Mulcahy got a call about a Pete & Pete reunion. Cinefamily, an independent theater in Los Angeles, was hosting a live panel with the show’s cast and wanted Polaris to perform live. All parties agreed, and for the first time in over a decade the three band members started rehearsing the material again.

Going in to the gig, Mulcahy had the level of hope for success you’d expect from the lead singer of the house band for a long-since-cancelled children’s show. But the response was astounding: People actually sang along. “That was a couple thousand people—they really know the music,” he says. Even if that crowd largely consisted of Pete & Pete obsessives, fans are fans.

Polaris_300dpiClick to Open Overlay Gallery
…and Polaris now. Polaris

Now, as Polaris prepares for its first ever tour, Mulcahy is curious to find out how many more fans are out there. “Playing will be some kind of way to realize what’s happening,” he says.

The band will even be unveiling some new songs, including one with the very Pete & Pete-esque name “Happy Green Moon Face.” Writing new material “is a total mistake, but I think it’s the only choice you have,” Mulcahy says with a laugh.

Maybe Mulcahy is so nonchalant about the whole thing because the whole thing is—to quote “Hey Sandy”—so smiling strange: TV house band records album’s worth of songs, album is released to little press, album gains cult following among people who like to be cult followers, band goes on tour 15 years later, hoping that time has worked in their favor.

Actually, the whole thing reads like an episode of Pete & Pete.

The Polaris tour starts tomorrow in Providence, RI. For dates and tickets, go to their Facebook page.

 

http://www.wired.com/2014/10/polaris-pete-and-pete-band/