I was an easily scared child. When I was really young, like the 4 to 6 range, my family used to go to drive-in movies on the weekends. To keep families happy, each screen usually had a double-feature, with a family friendly early movie and a less family friendly late movie for when the kids went to sleep. But even the family friendly movies scared me. I remember being frightened by The Incredible Shrinking Woman starring Lily Tomlin. E.T., Howard the Duck, Ghostbusters. Ghostbusters scared the shit out of me. Since normal movies scared me so much, I was definitely not allowed to watch horror movies for most of my childhood, nor did I want to watch them. My only exposure to scary movies was to walk through the horror aisles of video stores to catch glimpses of old, trashy VHS covers, but never picking the boxes up.
Read MoreBlue Line 4: Space Night
Mix of mostly instrumental, electronic, ambient music and other sounds. Constructed for use over headphones during public transit, but available for the setting of your choice. Blast off!
Kobresia, Biosphere
Boring Angel, Oneohtrix Point Never
Benevolent Incubator, Icarus
City Sleep, Talkdemonic
Amo Bishop Roden, Boards of Canada
Seeds of Sleep, Pantha du Prince
Rivers of Sand, Fennesz
Replicant City, Noir Deco
Kanada's Death, Pt. 2 (Adagio In D Minor), John Murphy
Tears in Rain, Vangelis
Blue Line 3: Evening Redness
Mix of mostly instrumental, electronic, ambient music and other sounds. Constructed for use over headphones during public transit, but available for the setting of your choice. Blue Line heads out west this episode.
Quickening, Friends of Dean Martinez
Ethchlorvynol, Friends of Dean Martinez
Mi Mujer, Nicolas Jaar
Your Kicks and What?, Heroin and Your Veins
Martha's Dream, Nick Cave and Warren Ellis
N.L.T., Sunn O))) & Boris
Akuma No Kuma, Sunn O))) & Boris
Little Vapors, The Fun Years
Wir Koennen Ja Freunde Bleiben, Sankt Otten
Minas De Cobre (For Better Metal), Calexico
Strong Wind Blowing and Howling in the Middle of the Desert of Atacama in Moon Valley Chile, Felix Blume
Brick on a String: review of The Shining Girls by Lauren Beukes
Originally published in Souciant on August 15, 2013. | Lauren Beukes transcends genre mashup with a gut punch portrayal of violence against women. Serial killer fiction and time travel fiction are two troubling genres. At its worst, the serial killer story offers the cheap thrill of watching a charming genius killing at will. And time travel can be an irritating, messy plot device that hogs the spotlight and drains a story of its reality. But South African writer Lauren Beukes’ third novel The Shining Girls avoids these pitfalls. Sure, it could have been an obscenely high-concept slashfest. But don’t worry, it’s not.
Beukes, instead, has written a story of sepia tones and sad laughter, in which both the serial killer and time travel elements take a decidedly background role to the emotional reality of violence, in particular against women. And somehow, for a book that deals in such pitch-black subject matter, it remains lively, with alternating moments of gee-whiz historical facts and truly frightening suspense.
Read MoreBill McKibben's 350.org Organizes Protest and Mass Arrest at MA Power Plant
Originally published in Open Media Boston. by Tate Williams (Staff), Jul-24-13
Cambridge, Mass. - The climate movement is a unique one, longtime activist Bill McKibben told an audience in Cambridge Sunday night, because it doesn’t gain its strength from a few powerful advocacy groups or high-profile leaders.
“What we are getting are thousands of nodes of people all around the world, groups in the community, fighting particular things—particular power plants, or fighting for wind on Cape Cod, fighting on all those fronts, but also realizing that they are connected and part of something much larger,” he said to the crowd at a rally and fundraiser.
And that’s why, McKibben would conclude, he wants you to get arrested in Somerset this weekend.
Read MoreBlue Line 2: Alice
Mix of mostly instrumental, electronic, ambient music and other sounds. Constructed for use over headphones during public transit, but available for the setting of your choice.
Yesterdays, Paul Chambers
I Am a Crooked Man, Worriedaboutsatan
Born to Die (remix), Clams Casino
Open Eye Signal, Jon Hopkins
Girls, Death in Vegas
Debussy - Préludes - Premier livre - 1. Danseuses de Delphes, Pascal Roge
Tiempo Muerto, EUS
Alice, Tom Waits
Blue Line 1: Orange Line to Oak Grove
Mix of mostly instrumental, electronic, ambient music and other sounds. Constructed for use over headphones during public transit, but available for the setting of your choice.
Insist, Morgan Packard
Wouh, Nicolas Jaar
L'horloge a Mimi, Lingouf
Apart, Balam Acab
Hatch the Plan, Andy Stott
Interlude
Interstitial Lullaby, Abominations of Yondo
Alice in Wonderland, Bill Evans
Same-Sex Marriage Supporters Return to Cambridge City Hall to Celebrate Defeat of DOMA
Originally published in Open Media Boston. | It was right here on the steps of Cambridge City Hall, on May 17, 2004, where it all started. To the cheers of a crowd waiting eagerly outside, Cambridge opened its doors at the stroke of midnight on the day Massachusetts became the first state to cross the federal law of the land and allow same sex marriage.
So it was a fitting place for hundreds of supporters, many of whom were married here on that day nine years ago, to reconvene and celebrate the defeat of the Defense of Marriage Act, struck down by Wednesday’s Supreme Court decision.
Read MoreBlue Ant > Tungsten and Rhenium Darts
Rhenium is the last stable element to be discovered, found in 1925, before all of the nuke-y ones. It’s extremely rare, and one of the densest of elements. It’s used in alloy form, primarily in high-tech purposes like combustion chambers, turbine blades, and exhaust nozzles of jet engines.
And darts.
Read MoreFree Software: changing the world while toiling in obscurity
Originally published in Open Media Boston by Tate Williams (Staff), Mar-26-13
Cambridge, Mass. - The free software movement—based on the idea that computer programs should be available for anyone to use or modify—is in some ways at the top of its game, and in others facing its most difficult challenges.
For example, free programs like Firefox and mostly free Android are highly popular. And collaborative software projects are tackling serious, global issues like improving health care in developing countries. But activists are still struggling to gain broad support, and to stay relevant in the face of increasingly proprietary devices.
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