Reckon | The Whole World's a Stage

I'm Chris: Poet, lover of academy and porch, sidewalk and turning row. I am looking for everyone discovering her hands and camera trying to overstand the in between.

Reckon

Share a key intuit

howdy@reckon.ws

"Civilization is entirely the product of phonetic literacy. As it dissolves with the electronic revolution, we rediscover a tribal integral awareness that manifests itself in a complete shift in our sensory lives....This new electronic environment itself constitutes an inner trip, collectively, without benefit of drugs. The impulse to use hallucinogens is a kind of empathy with the electronic environment." - Marshall McLuhan
humor:
The badge on my apron. - via There is no unanimous perception ◕‿◕The badge on my apron. - via There is no unanimous perception ◕‿◕
microwalrus:

amandoline:

skysignal:

srsly: okayjokesover: letters to walken.

microwalrus:

amandoline:

skysignal:

srsly: okayjokesover: letters to walken.

George Carlin - Voting

soupsoup:

thisisacoolattitude:dalasverdugo:yum9me:

Hamster On A Piano (Eating Popcorn)

Ok, this just made my year. Good lord, the song just seals it.

twink:

jinakanishi:

BBC制作「モンティ・パイソン」の大ヒットネタ「バカ歩き」(シリーウォーク)の1シーンですね。「バカ歩き省」という省庁まであって、この人はそこのエライ人なんです。英国国民がバカな歩き方をするよう指導していく省で、いいバカ歩きには補助金を出してたりしてます。私は初めてこのスケッチを見た時、ほんとに死ぬほど笑いましたww
(via pya! 頑張ってね!)

twink:

jinakanishi:

BBC制作「モンティ・パイソン」の大ヒットネタ「バカ歩き」(シリーウォーク)の1シーンですね。「バカ歩き省」という省庁まであって、この人はそこのエライ人なんです。英国国民がバカな歩き方をするよう指導していく省で、いいバカ歩きには補助金を出してたりしてます。私は初めてこのスケッチを見た時、ほんとに死ぬほど笑いましたww
(via pya! 頑張ってね!)

twink:

jinakanishi:

BBC制作「モンティ・パイソン」の大ヒットネタ「バカ歩き」(シリーウォーク)の1シーンですね。
「バカ歩き省」という省庁まであって、この人はそこのエライ人なんです。英国国民がバカな歩き方をするよう指導していく省で、いいバカ歩きには補助金を出してたりしてます。
私は初めてこのスケッチを見た時、ほんとに死ぬほど笑いましたww

(via pya! 頑張ってね!)

playground45:

suyhnc:

noppppp:

thesaurus:
Woody Allen signs in on the set of Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Sex (But Were Afraid to Ask) (1972)


playground45:

suyhnc:

noppppp:

thesaurus:
Woody Allen signs in on the set of Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Sex (But Were Afraid to Ask) (1972)

playground45:

suyhnc:

noppppp:

thesaurus:

Woody Allen signs in on the set of Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Sex (But Were Afraid to Ask) (1972)

“It is my intention to work into each of my lectures … one lie” »

robot-heart:

muppetpants:onemoretimewithfeeling:

“This was an insidiously brilliant technique to focus our attention - by offering an open invitation for students to challenge his statements, he transmitted lessons that lasted far beyond the immediate subject matter and taught us to constantly check new statements and claims with what we already accept as fact.”

Absolutely brilliant tactic.

I had a teacher in high school who used to do this.  My history teachers in high school were brilliant—but this woman was either loved or hated.  The people who were able to realize when she was fibbing were the ones who loved her.  I was blessed enough to be one of those people.

I played this game with my high school teachers, too. Only they weren’t intentionally handing out misinformation, and when I called them on it, they usually didn’t realize they were wrong.

cuzisaidso:

pterodactyl:

jessicap:

missbrightside:onemoretimewithfeeling:beenthinking:dontshushme:(via catastrofe)

cuzisaidso:

pterodactyl:

jessicap:

missbrightside:onemoretimewithfeeling:beenthinking:dontshushme:(via catastrofe)

Poetry Bailout Will Restore Confidence of Readers »

Let there be no mistake: the fundamentals of our poetry are sound. The problem is not poetry but poems.

From a statement read at an event marking the release of Best American Poetry 2008, held last night at The New School, in New York City. David Lehman is the series editor of Best American Poetry, and Robert Polito is the director of the writing program at The New School.

Chairman Lehman, Secretary Polito, distinguished poets and readers—I regret having to interrupt the celebrations tonight with an important announcement. As you know, the glut of illiquid, insolvent, and troubled poems is clogging the literary arteries of the West. These debt-ridden poems threaten to infect other areas of the literary sector and ultimately to topple our culture industry.

Cultural leaders have come together to announce a massive poetry buyout: leveraged and unsecured poems, poetry derivatives, delinquent poems, and subprime poems will be removed from circulation in the biggest poetry bailout since the Victorian era. We believe the plan is a comprehensive approach to relieving the stresses on our literary institutions and markets.

Let there be no mistake: the fundamentals of our poetry are sound. The problem is not poetry but poems. The crisis has been precipitated by the escalation of poetry debt—poems that circulate in the market at an economic loss due to their difficulty, incompetence, or irrelevance.

Illiquid poetry assets are choking off the flow of imagination that is so vital to our literature. When the literary system works as it should, poetry and poetry assets flow to and from readers and writers to create a productive part of the cultural field. As toxic poetry assets block the system, the poisoning of literary markets has the potential to damage our cultural institutions irreparably.

As we know, lax composition practices since the advent of modernism led to irresponsible poets and irresponsible readers. Simply put, too many poets composed works they could not justify. We are seeing the impact on poetry, with a massive loss of confidence on the part of readers. What began as a subprime poetry problem on essentially unregulated poetry websites has spread to other, more stable, literary magazines and presses and contributed to excess poetry inventories that have pushed down the value of responsible poems.

The risks poets have taken have been too great; the aesthetic negligence has been profound. The age of decadence must come to an end with the imposition of oversight and regulation on poetry composition and publishing practices.

We are convinced that once we have removed these troubled and distressed poems from circulation, our cultural sector will stabilize and readers will regain confidence in American literature. We estimate that for the buyout to be successful, we will need to remove from circulation all poems written after 1904.

This will be a fresh start, a new dawn of a new day. Without these illiquid poems threatening to overwhelm readers, we will be able to create a literary culture with a solid aesthetic foundation.

I’m Charles Bernstein, and I approved this message.

via Harper’s Magazine