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July 8, 2010

Drugs Music: In Search of Jazz (1956 French)

Drugs Music: In Search of Jazz (1956 French)
whatgetsmehot.posterous.com Psychatrie Dr. Katz describes the effects of different drugs youtube.com on the musician and music practice and concludes by saying, "drugs do not create genius but participate in its destruction." Practice music and drugs In search of jazz Drugs Music: In Search of Jazz (1956 French) youtube.com Pratique de la musique et drogue music and drugs In search of jazz Pratique de la musique et drogue Psychatrie Dr. Katz describes the effects of different drugs (opium, majrijuana) on the musician and the music practice and concludes by saying, "drugs do not create the genius but is participating in its destruction Salvador Dali on Astrology, Paganini, Crayfish post.ly whatgetsmehot.posterous.com whatgetsmehot.posterous.com http dailymotion.com dailymotion.com dailymotion.com psychiatrist Psychatrie Dr. Katz drugs drogues musique music 1956 French effect drug opium majrijuana youtube.com limbsandthings1 posterous pot weed opum joint stoned high musician bu drunk senses deranged jazz bebop jaz dj jazzy cool miles parker coltrane hot paris hip hop hep france junkie heroin addict mrjyn yt:quality=high limbsandthings youweirdtube

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The French are OBSSESED avec TITS: Venus de Milo has the boobs...which is WHY 'I Coeur the French' - 20minutes.fr

The Venus de Milo has the boobs

Created on 08.07.10 at 4:51 - Updated 08.07.10 at 4:51

We know almost nothing about her. Neither his name ( or Venus Amphitrite ?) , nor his age nor his " father " . It is however the most famous statue in the world. After six months of restaur ...

We know almost nothing about her. Neither his name ( or Venus Amphitrite ? ) , nor his age nor his "father " . It is however the most famous statue in the world . After six months of restoration, the Venus de Milo was found yesterday morning the halls of Greek art from the Louvre Museum , whose organization has been completely revised . The Conservatives took the opportunity to try to learn a little more about him through radiography (including gamma rays , of course ). They then " décrassée " and abducted plaster , dating from the nineteenth century that had aged poorly .

Fake nose and " fat ass "for the Queen of the fragment
It was discovered in a fissure in the right breast of the Venus filled with plaster, a little word of love that a conservator had slipped there in 1936. " The most controversial restorations dating from 1821 , says Jean- Luc Martinez , director of the Department of Greek and Roman antiquities . The decision, in extremis at the time, not to carve himself a new arm has launched the fashion of the "fragment "and the success of the Venus de Milo . But the sculptor Lange had already made " occasions " in size . For example , the nose of plaster. When it was removed , we discovered a terrible artificial fracture . So we decided to give him her fake nose in 1821 . "
For too touchy and molded over the years , the statue was both filthy . This spring cleaning makes him a white probably fairly close to the original. The latest innovation to avoid congestion , the statue is now seen only in a large room and was elevated 20 cm . It is presented on a pedestal of a meter high . This change of perspective emphasizes her hips, very wide . " It makes a big ass, " noted a professor of fine arts American .
Benjamin Chapon

...
via Youhou! Coeur de Pirate nue (et puis jolie tiens)...

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Facebook Obsessed Americans? Check

Wake up, check Facebook: Americans increasingly obsessed

(AFP) – 1 day ago

WASHINGTON — Americans are increasingly obsessed with Facebook and many young women check their page even before using the bathroom in the morning, according to a poll released on Wednesday.

Thirty-four percent of the women aged 18 to 34 surveyed by Lightspeed Research for Oxygen Media said checking Facebook was the first thing they did in the morning, even before washing their face or brushing their teeth.

Twenty-percent admitted they sneak a peek at Facebook during the night while 26 percent said they get up in the middle of the night to read text messages.

Thirty-nine percent of the 1,605 social media users aged 18 to 54 surveyed for Oxygen Media, a service of entertainment giant NBC Universal, in May and June described themselves as "Facebook addicts."

Fifty-seven percent of the women aged 18 to 34 said they talk to people online more than face-to-face and 31 percent said they feel more confident about their online persona than their real life one.

Sixty-three percent of the young women said they use Facebook as a career networking tool, but 42 percent said they did not think there was anything wrong with posting photos of themselves visibly intoxicated.

Forty-eight percent of the young women said they find out about news through Facebook while 41 percent said they use Twitter to keep up to date.

Fifty percent of single women aged 18 to 34 said it's okay to meet and date other singles they meet through Facebook compared with 65 percent of single men.

Six percent of the young single women use it as a way to "hook up" as opposed to 20 percent of men.

Men aged 18 to 34 are also more likely than female counterparts to break up using Facebook -- 24 percent for men compared with nine percent for women, the survey found.

InsideFacebook.com, a site dedicated to the social network, said meanwhile that Facebook's growth slowed in the United States in June as it picked up only 320,800 new monthly active users last month compared with 7.8 million in May.

Inside Facebook said the slowdown in growth could "simply be a blip."

"But in the years we've been tracking the demographic data, we've rarely seen a dip like this, so we would tend to favor the idea of a root cause," it said.

"One possibility is that we're finally seeing the backlash from heavy media attention to Facebook privacy issues -- some of which were real, some the result of confusion and sensationalism," it added.

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Where Vuvuzelas are Born

 

Alert Name: mandella eastwood

Vuvuzela: South African symbol made in China
07/05/10 11:42 AM, EDT
China's football team never made it to the World Cup, but that does not mean the country's presence has not been felt: The Asian giant has cornered the market on perhaps the most unforgettable off-field aspect of the World Cup -- the vuvuzela.


Ningbo, China (CNN) -- China's football team did not make it to the World Cup this year, but that does not mean the country's presence has not been felt: The Asian giant has cornered the market on perhaps the most unforgettable off-field aspect of the World Cup -- the vuvuzela.

Ninety percent of the vuvuzelas, the plastic South African trumpet whose loud rasp has become synonymous with the 2010 World Cup, are made in China, according to the China Daily.

The Chinese did it the same way they have done for so many other products: low costs and quick production at factories like the one run by Wu Yuye just outside the southern Chinese city of Ningbo. With a few dozen staff, they make more than 20,000 bugles a day. So far this year, they have churned out more than 1 million of them.

"I'm very proud that our vuvuzelas made it to World Cup in South Africa, especially since we have such a small family factory," Wu said.

And she is not alone. A recent poll in the state media found that more than 60 percent of respondents were proud the "made in China" vuvuzelas were so popular in South Africa.

Making the trumpets is simple: plastic is melted into a mold and then it sets. A small group of women take off the sharp edges to finish off the process.

Wu said it costs about US$0.40 to make each vuvuzela. But outside the stadiums in Johannesburg, the vuvuzelas can sell for up to $8. Despite the markup, not much is coming back to the Chinese manufacturers. Wu said she makes just a few cents on each one.

"Although we don't make a lot of money, I'm sure we'll have a good future making these," she said.

That's because Wu and all the vuvuzela makers in China are looking beyond the World Cup. Domestic orders are starting to come in, including for the Asian Games in Guangzhou later this year. Wu is hoping that the vuvuzela will be the next must have accessory for all sports fans -- maybe the next giant foam finger -- at events like baseball, basketball or rugby.

While a lot of debate has centered on the loud and droning noise of the vuvuzela, Wu has the tact of a business person who knows where the sales are.

"The vuvuzela is a tradition in South Africa, it makes a happy sound," she said.



 

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