Boardwalk Empire // HBO // # // Monday, November 28, 2011 // 6 notes

Boardwalk Empire // HBO // Kelly Macdonald // # // Monday, November 21, 2011 // 9 notes

Jason Schwartzman // Ted Danson // Zach Galifianakis // Bored To Death // HBO // # // Wednesday, November 16, 2011 // 6 notes

Chicago // Lake Michigan // # // Friday, November 11, 2011 // 10 notes

Real Estate // Music // # // Saturday November 05, 2011 // 3 notes

[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

“Like the stirring scenes of suburban Texas in Terrence Malick’s The Tree of Life, these songs find meaning in daily mundanities— in houses and gardens, phone lines and street lights, names carved in trees and leaves pressed by footsteps.” Marc Masters

How To Make It In America // Lake Bell // # // Monday, October 31, 2011 // 21 notes

synchronicity // buddism // quote // Tuesday, October 25, 2011 // 16 notes

“I believe that the universe always provides us with clues, helpers, prompts, kicks in the butts, hints at solutions to problems—whatever we need to accomplish what we need to accomplish, or to learn something, or to move forward in some way, and so on. All we need to do is be open to hearing/seeing/receiving those messages. Every day, subtle (and not so subtle) things happen, things that we ignore, pass by, or perhaps don’t even notice. We need to learn to listen to the moment—to increase our awareness of, and be receptive to, those little prompts, clues, signals, and messages that come up for every one of us.” Kathryn Britt

Polaroid // photography // # // Tuesday, October 18, 2011 //

LCD Soundsystem // Music // # // Thursday October 13, 2011 //

[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]


Feist // Music // # // Tuesday October 11, 2011 // 3 notes

[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

Metals displays a shift in Feist’s perspective as a songwriter; after The Reminder she’s said she’s now less interested in writing songs that could be read as intimate and personal but instead crafting lyrics that read almost like sparse proverbs. (She’s likened some of the lines on Metals to ‘adages and morals that you find embroidered in junk shops.’) The resulting tracks feel universal, and not unlike Bill Callahan’s Apocalypse, in their attempts to … contrast the elegance of the things around us with the weird, erratic ways of human beings.”Lindsay Zoladz.

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