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Bicycle Wheel Building

2011.09.07 04:38 yamancool63 Bicycle Wheel Building

/wheelbuild is participating in the reddit blackout from June 12-14. No users will be approved. Read more here: https://www.theverge.com/2023/6/10/23756476/reddit-protest-api-changes-apollo-third-party-apps
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2024.05.20 13:46 Vinylwarrior Lenny Kravitz - Blue Electric Light (hmv Exclusive) includes signed art print

https://hmv.com/store/music/vinyl/blue-electric-light-(hmv-exclusive))
12'' TBC
submitted by Vinylwarrior to VinylCDnewreleases [link] [comments]


2024.05.18 21:15 SanderSo47 Directors at the Box Office: Clint Eastwood (Part 1)

Directors at the Box Office: Clint Eastwood (Part 1)
https://preview.redd.it/m07tmkxgi81d1.jpg?width=2048&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=a069dd209bca819edad29814e0bbd2b76eaa50db

As Reddit doesn't allow posts to exceed 40,000 characters, Eastwood's edition had to be split into two parts because his whole career cannot be ignored. The second part will be posted tomorrow.

Here's a new edition of "Directors at the Box Office", which seeks to explore the directors' trajectory at the box office and analyze their hits and bombs. I already talked about a few, and as I promised, it's Clint Eastwood's turn.
Eastwood was a troublemaker at school, and he had a bunch of odd jobs such as lifeguard, paper carrier, grocery clerk, forest firefighter, and golf caddy. In 1951, he was drafted into the United States Army during the Korean War and was discharged two years later. Through this, he got into contact with a Hollywood representative, who got him into acting classes and started his acting career. He got his start by starring in the hit show Rawhide, but he said he was exhausted by the experience. This caught the attention of some film producers and he decided to act in films directed by the then-unknown Sergio Leone. His career was on the rise, and then he got the chance to make his directorial debut.
From a box office perspective, how reliable was he to deliver a box office hit?
That's the point of this post. To analyze his career.

It should be noted that as he started his career in the 1970s, some of the domestic grosses here will be adjusted by inflation. The table with his highest grossing films, however, will be left in its unadjusted form, as the worldwide grosses are more difficult to adjust.

Play Misty for Me (1971)

"The scream you hear may be your own!"
His directorial debut. It stars Eastwood, Jessica Walter and Donna Mills, and follows a radio disc jockey being stalked by an obsessed female fan.
Before his colleague Irving Leonard died, he and Eastwood had discussed the idea of producing a film that was to give Eastwood the artistic control he desired, and his debut as a director. Eastwood said he was ready, "I stored away all the mistakes I made and saved up all the good things I learned, and now I know enough to control my own projects and get what I want out of actors."
The film was a huge success for Eastwood, and it also received positive reviews. So far, his directorial career was off to a great start.
  • Budget: $950,000.
  • Domestic gross: $10,600,000. ($81.7 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $10,600,000.

High Plains Drifter (1973)

"They'd never forget the day he drifted into town."
His second film. The film stars Eastwood, Verna Bloom and Mariana Hill, and follows a mysterious stranger who metes out justice in a corrupt frontier mining town.
Eastwood reportedly liked the offbeat quality of the film's original nine-page proposal and approached Universal with the idea of directing it, which would make it his first directed Western. The screenplay was inspired by the real-life murder of Kitty Genovese in Queens in 1964, which eyewitnesses reportedly stood by and watched. Holes in the plot were filled in with black humor and allegory, influenced by Sergio Leone.
It was well received, and the film even surpassed Play Misty for Me at the box office. Eastwood was just going up.
  • Budget: $5,500,000.
  • Domestic gross: $15,700,000. ($110.4 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $15,700,000.

Breezy (1973)

"Her name is Breezy."
His third film. It stars William Holden and Kay Lenz, and follows the relationship between a middle-aged real estate agent and a young hitchhiker.
This was his first directed film without starring on it. And his lack of presence certainly hurt the film; it received mixed reviews and flopped at the box office.
  • Budget: $750,000.
  • Domestic gross: $200,000. ($1.4 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $217,753.

The Eiger Sanction (1975)

"His lifeline, held by the assassin he hunted."
His fourth film. Based on the novel by Trevanian, the film stars Eastwood, George Kennedy, Vonetta McGee, and Jack Cassidy. It follows Jonathan Hemlock, an art history professor, mountain climber, and former assassin once employed by a secret government agency, who is blackmailed into returning to his deadly profession for one last mission.
The film received mixed reactions for its writing, and it wasn't a box office success either.
  • Budget: $9,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $14,200,000. ($82.4 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $14,200,000.

The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976)

"An army of one."
His fifth film. Based on the novel Gone to Texas by Forrest Carter, it stars Eastwood, Chief Dan George, Sondra Locke, Bill McKinney and John Vernon. The film tells the story of Josey Wales, a Missouri farmer whose family is murdered by Union militia during the Civil War. Driven to revenge, Wales joins a Confederate guerrilla band and makes a name for himself as a feared gunfighter. After the war, all the fighters in Wales' group except for him surrender to Union soldiers, but the Confederates end up being massacred. Wales becomes an outlaw and is pursued by bounty hunters and Union soldiers as he tries to make a new life for himself.
Eastwood was fascinated by the novel and he bought the film rights, hoping to star on the film. He got Philip Kaufman involved as screenwriter and possible director, but left after disagreeing with Eastwood in the material adapted to the screen. Kaufman insisted on filming with a meticulous attention to detail, which caused disagreements with Eastwood, not to mention the attraction the two shared towards Locke and apparent jealousy on Kaufman's part in regard to their emerging relationship. This caused Eastwood to take over as the director. Kaufman's firing angered the DGA, as he did most of the pre-production, and sanctioning a $60,000 fine. This resulted in the Director's Guild passing a new rule, known as "the Eastwood Rule", which prohibits an actor or producer from firing the director and then personally taking on the director's role.
The film received critical acclaim, and in subsequent years, is ranked among Eastwood's greatest films. It was also a huge success at the box office, doubling his previous highest grossing film. It was also one of the few Western films to receive critical and commercial success in the 1970s at a time when the Western was thought to be dying as a major genre in Hollywood.
  • Budget: $3,700,000.
  • Domestic gross: $31,800,000. ($174.5 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $31,800,000.

The Gauntlet (1977)

"The man in the middle of..."
His sixth film. It stars Eastwood, Sondra Locke, Pat Hingle, William Prince, Bill McKinney, and Mara Corday. It follows a down-and-out cop who falls in love with a prostitute, to whom he is assigned to escort from Las Vegas to Phoenix for her to testify against the mob.
While it received mixed reviews, it became another box office success for Eastwood, becoming his now highest grossing film.
  • Budget: $5,500,000.
  • Domestic gross: $35,400,000. ($182.4 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $35,400,000.

Bronco Billy (1980)

"The most outrageous of 'em all."
His seventh film. The film stars Eastwood and Sondra Locke, and focuses on the financially-struggling owner of a traditional Wild West show and his new assistant.
It became another critical and commercial success for Eastwood, who referred to the film as one of his most affable shoots of his career.
  • Budget: $6,500,000.
  • Domestic gross: $24,265,659. ($91.9 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $24,265,659.

Firefox (1982)

"The most devastating killing machine ever built... his job... steal it!"
His eighth film. Based on the novel by Craig Thomas, it stars Eastwood, Freddie Jones and David Huffman. The Soviets have developed a revolutionary new jet fighter, called "Firefox". Naturally, the British are worried that the jet will be used as a first-strike weapon, as rumors say that the jet is undetectable on radar. They send ex-Vietnam War pilot Mitchell Gant on a covert mission into the Soviet Union to steal the Firefox.
The film received mixed reviews, but it earned almost $47 million, becoming Eastwood's highest grossing title as director.
  • Budget: $21,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $46,708,276. ($151.1 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $46,708,276.

Honkytonk Man (1982)

"The boy is on his way to becoming a man. The man is on his way to becoming a legend."
His ninth film. It's based on the novel by Clancy Carlile, and it stars Eastwood and his son Kyle. It follows Red Stovall, a country music singer and composer. With his nephew Whit by his side, he travels to Nashville to perform at the Grand Ole Opry in the backdrop of the Great Depression.
While the film received acclaim, it earned just $4.4 million, becoming his second worst performer.
  • Budget: $2,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $4,484,991. ($14.5 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $4,484,991.

Sudden Impact (1983)

"Dirty Harry is at it again."
His tenth film. The fourth installment in the Dirty Harry series, directed, it stars Eastwood and Sondra Locke. The film tells the story of a gang rape victim who decides to seek revenge on her rapists 10 years after the attack by killing them one by one. Inspector Harry Callahan, famous for his unconventional and often brutal crime-fighting tactics, is tasked with tracking down the serial killer.
The film received mixed reviews from critics, but it earned over $150 million worldwide, Eastwood's first film to pass that milestone. It's also very popular for including the iconic catchphrase, "Go ahead, make my day."
  • Budget: $22,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $67,642,693. ($212.1 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $150,642,693.

Pale Rider (1985)

"...And Hell followed with him."
His 11th film. It stars Eastwood, Michael Moriarty and Carrie Snodgress. A couple and their daughter, along with a few others, are driven out of Lahood, California, by goons working for a mining baron. However, a stranger enters their life to assist them in their fight.
There was no stopping Eastwood: another critical and commercial success.
  • Budget: $6,900,000.
  • Domestic gross: $41,410,568. ($120.2 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $41,410,568.

Heartbreak Ridge (1986)

"The scars run deep."
His 12th film. It stars Eastwood, Marsha Mason, Everett McGill, and Mario Van Peebles. The story centers on a U.S. Marine nearing retirement who gets a platoon of undisciplined Marines into shape and leads them during the American invasion of Grenada in 1983.
The film was inspired by an account of American paratroopers of the 82nd Airborne Division using a pay telephone and a credit card to call in fire support during the invasion of Grenada, and fashioned a script of a Korean War veteran career Army non-commissioned officer passing on his values to a new generation of soldiers. Eastwood was interested in the script and asked his producer, Fritz Manes, to contact the US Army with a view of filming the movie at Fort Bragg. However, the Army read the script and refused to participate, due to Highway being portrayed as a hard drinker, divorced from his wife, and using unapproved motivational methods to his troops, an image the Army did not want.
It received mixed reviews, with some deeming the film as "imperialist propaganda". But it was still another box office success.
  • Budget: $15,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $42,724,017. ($121.7 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $121,700,000.

Bird (1988)

"There are no second acts in American lives."
His 13th film. The film stars Forest Whitaker and Diane Venora. It is constructed as a montage of scenes from saxophonist Charlie Parker's life, from his childhood in Kansas City, through his early death at the age of 34.
Eastwood, a lifelong fan of jazz, had been fascinated by Parker ever since seeing him perform live in Oakland in 1946. He approached Chan Parker, Bird's common-law wife on whose memoirs the script was based, for input, and she lent Eastwood and arranger Lennie Niehaus a collection of recordings from her private collection Before Eastwood was involved, Richard Pryor was originally cast as Parker.
Despitive positive reviews, it performed poorly, earning just $2.2 million in North America.
  • Budget: $14,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $2,181,286. ($5.7 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $2,181,286.

White Hunter Black Heart (1990)

"An adventure in obsession."
His 14th film. Based on the novel by Peter Viertel, it stars Eastwood, Jeff Fahey, George Dzundza, Alun Armstrong and Marisa Berenson. It follows a famous movie director, John Wilson, who goes to Africa to make his next movie. He is an obstinate, contrary director who'd rather hunt elephants than take care of his crew or movie. He has become obsessed with one particular elephant and cares for nothing else.
Despite positive reviews, it made just $2.3 million domestically, not even 10% of the budget.
  • Budget: $24,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $2,319,124. ($5.5 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $2,319,124.

The Rookie (1990)

His 15th film. The film stars Eastwood, Charlie Sheen, Raul Julia, Sônia Braga, Lara Flynn Boyle, and Tom Skerritt. It follows a veteran police officer teamed up with a younger detective, whose intent is to take down a German crime lord in downtown Los Angeles, following months of investigation into an exotic car theft ring.
It received negative reviews for its acting and story, and it became another flop for Eastwood. That's three bombs in a row. Ouch.
  • Budget: $30,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $21,633,874. ($51.6 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $21,633,874.

Unforgiven (1992)

"Some legends will never be forgotten. Some wrongs can never be forgiven."
His 16th film. It stars Eastwood, Gene Hackman, Richard Harris and Morgan Freeman. It follows William Munny, a widower with two young kids, who was once a very vicious gunfighter who gave up everything after marriage. Now, a man named Schofield Kid brings him an offer that he cannot refuse, forcing him to come out of retirement for one last job.
David Webb Peoples wrote the script all the way back to 1976, and it was optioned by Francis Ford Coppola, but he lacked the funds needed to helm it. By Eastwood's own recollection, he was given the script in the "early 80s" although he did not immediately pursue it, because, according to him, "I thought I should do some other things first". Eastwood has long asserted that the film would be his last traditional Western, concerned that any future projects would simply rehash previous plotlines or imitate someone else's work. He dedicated the film to his close friends and mentors Sergio Leone and Don Siegel. Hackman initially refused to participate as his daughters were upset that he was starring in too many violent films, but he became fascinated by the script that he agreed.
It opened with $15 million and it legged all the way to $100 million after playing for almost one year, closing with $159 million worldwide, his now highest grossing film. The film received Eastwood's best reviews of his career, with many considering the film as his magnum opus as director. It received 9 Oscar nominations, and won four: Best Picture and Best Director for Eastwood, Best Supporting Actor for Hackman, and Best Film Editing. So Eastwood, on top of being a reliable box office draw, was now a 2-time Oscar winner.
  • Budget: $14,400,000.
  • Domestic gross: $101,167,799. ($225.2 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $159,167,799.

A Perfect World (1993)

His 17th film. Kevin Costner, Eastwood and Laura Dern, and follows an escaped convict who takes a young boy hostage and attempts to escape on the road with the child, while being pursued by a Texas Ranger.
The film received critical acclaim, and has appeared as one of Eastwood's best films. The film disappointed in North America, but it earned up to $100 million overseas (Eastwood's first film to gross that much) and ended with $135 million worldwide.
  • Budget: $30,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $31,130,999. ($67.2 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $135,130,999.

The Bridges of Madison County (1995)

"The human heart has a way of making itself large again even after it's been broken into a million pieces."
His 18th film. Based on the novel by Robert James Waller, it stars Eastwood and Meryl Streep. The film is set in 1965, following a war bride, Francesca Johnson, who lives with her husband and two children on their Iowa farm. That year she meets National Geographic photojournalist, Robert Kincaid, who comes to Madison County, Iowa to photograph its historic covered bridges. With Francesca's family away for a short trip, the couple have an intense, four-day love affair.
It received more critical acclaim, and made over $180 million worldwide, becoming his highest grossing film. For her performance, Streep was nominated for an Oscar for Best Actress.
  • Budget: $22,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $71,516,617. ($146.5 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $182,016,617.

Absolute Power (1997)

His 19th film. Based on the novel by David Baldacci, it stars Eastwood, Gene Hackman, Ed Harris, Laura Linney, Judy Davis, Scott Glenn, Dennis Haysbert, and Richard Jenkins. It follows a master jewel thief who witnesses the killing of a woman by Secret Service agents.
It received mixed reviews, and disappointed at the box office.
  • Budget: $50,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $50,068,310. ($97.4 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $92,768,310.

Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil (1997)

"Welcome to Savannah, Georgia. A Ccty of hot nights and cold blooded murder."
His 20th film. Based on the book by John Berendt, it stars John Cusack and Kevin Spacey. It follows the story of antiques dealer Jim Williams, on trial for the killing of a male prostitute who was his lover. The multiple trials depicted in Berendt's book are combined into one trial for the film.
It received mediocre reviews, and flopped at the box office.
  • Budget: $30,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $25,105,255. ($48.8 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $25,105,255.

True Crime (1999)

His 21st film. Based on the novel by Andrew Klavan, it stars Eastwood, Isaiah Washington, Denis Leary, LisaGay Hamilton and James Woods. It follows a journalist covering the execution of a death row inmate, only to discover that the convict may actually be innocent.
This was another project that received mediocre reviews and flopped at the box office.
  • Budget: $55,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $16,649,768. ($31.2 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $16,649,768.

Space Cowboys (2000)

"Boys will be boys."
His 22nd film. It stars Eastwood, Tommy Lee Jones, Donald Sutherland, and James Garner as four aging former test pilots who are sent into space to repair an old Soviet satellite.
It received very positive reviews, and earned over $128 million worldwide.
  • Budget: $60,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $90,464,773. ($164 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $128,884,132.

Blood Work (2002)

"He's a heartbeat away from catching the killer."
His 23rd film. Based on the novel by Michael Connelly, it stars Eastwood, Jeff Daniels, Wanda De Jesús, and Anjelica Huston. It follows a retired FBI agent who recently had a heart transplant but still takes up the job to nab a killer.
It was another film with mediocre reviews and flop status.
  • Budget: $50,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $26,235,081. ($45.5 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $31,794,718.

Mystic River (2003)

"We bury our sins, we wash them clean."
His 24th film. Based on the novel by Dennis Lehane, it stars Sean Penn, Tim Robbins, Kevin Bacon, Laurence Fishburne, Marcia Gay Harden, and Laura Linney. It follows three childhood friends who are reunited 25 years later when one of them suffers a family tragedy.
Michael Keaton was originally cast in the role of Det. Sean Devine, and did several script readings with the cast, as well as his own research into the practices of the Massachusetts Police Department. However, creative differences between Keaton and Eastwood led to Keaton leaving the production. He was replaced by Kevin Bacon. This was the first film in which Eastwood would be credited as composer.
The film had a slow roll-out, but it was aided by strong word of mouth, closing with a wonderful $156 million worldwide. It also received acclaim, and was named as one of Eastwood's greatest films. Sean Penn received universal acclaim for his performance, with some naming it among the best acting of the century, particularly for one scene (if you watched it, you definitely know which scene). It received 6 Oscar nominations, including Best Picture and Best Director for Eastwood. It won two: Best Actor for Penn and Best Supporting Actor for Robbins.
  • Budget: $25,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $90,135,191. ($153 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $156,595,191.

Come back tomorrow for Part 2

Don't suggest directors for the next edition here. Save it for tomorrow.

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2024.05.18 01:19 Satanic_Doge Looking for books on NJ pre-European and colonial history

For a project I'm working on. I know the broad strokes of the Lenni Lenape/Algonquin and colonial periods, but I need some more depth.
TIA!
submitted by Satanic_Doge to newjersey [link] [comments]


2024.05.15 23:36 Low-Entropy From "Frontal Sickness" to "(Maria) I Like It Loud" - Marc Acardipane, the 'Forgotten Man' of Techno

There is an essay by "raver anthropologist" Simon Reynolds that has become a kind of cult thing amongst Hardcore Techno aficionados. It got published in The Wire in 1998; it turned into a cult object not only because it was one of the rare cases where Hardcore music was mentioned in a bigger zine during the late 90s (as opposed to the many badly xeroxed Hardcore-fanzines, with a run of ~50 copies, of which most were destined to end up on soaked squat party toilet room floors), but because it also focused on a very specific person: Marc Acardipane, his releases, and his label family. [1]
In it, he called Marc "the forgotten man of Techno", and followed up with the reasons for that: even though he was right there at the proper beginning of "Techno", was hugely influential, and good friends with many people that are now considered to be true pioneers and legends by vox populi, he fell out of favor when Hardcore itself fell out of favor amongst the Techno folk; because he stayed true to his "core roots" and didn't disown them, like so many other producers did on their way up to the place amongst the stars (and on their way down to the sewers again).
But let's move on from Simon, The Wire, and the year 1998. What happened after that date? First, Marc itself was pulled out from the "shadow zones"; because at least the Hardcore and Gabber scene finally remembered its Techno roots, and kept worshiping those roots again; although under different monikers, such as "oldschool", "oldstyle", "early rave", and so on - I guess "the names have been changed to protect the innocent". This meant that "Technoid Hardcore" could be enjoyed at Hardcore parties and festivals once more (often on separate floors), which led to a lot of gigs and exposure for Marc and his Planet Core Productions sound. [Note: PCP aka Planet Core Productions was a label family run by Marc Acardipane and Thorsten Lambart in the 90s.] It also influenced the Hardcore scene as a whole. A succession of genres such as "newstyle", "millennium" and "mainstyle" came into existence; genres that to 98% were built upon PCP and PCP-adjacent tracks: "Stereo Murder" (produced by Acardipane), "Atmos-Fear" (produced by Acardipane), "Poltergeist" (released on his label), "Flesh is the Fever" (released on Things To Come Records, a label with personal ties to PCP and that was inspired by PCP), plus various others.
This was already a good thing. But then, slowly but steadily, the Techno folk re-gained their interest in Hardcore and harder sounds, too; and now that the "millennial dominance" of the Techno scene, together with their favoring of minimalist and dandy-esque sounds, is slowly fading away, a younger generation is taking over the scene, and that new generation is very, very hardcore.
This led to a renewed interest in the works of Marc Acardipane, his crew, and his output again, coming straight from the heart of the Techno world. Marc himself acknowledged this development in some of his interviews, and added that the Techno people are sometimes even more zealous and knowledgeable about this music than the die-hard old-school gabbers!
A very fine evolution indeed; and we hope Marc gets into the spotlight again because of this, and that he finally reaps the respect that he deserves!
But why is the Techno folk favoring him and his sound specifically - in fact, more than a lot of other "Hardcore" players? I think this is because - and now we cycle back to 1998's "The Wire" essay - his sound is *indeed* heavily connected to Techno. It's not just some ultra-aggressive, ultra-noisy Gabber outing. It's real, true, bona fide Techno music. More than that, it represents a "road not taken" in the history of Techno music. Because, when you go back to the advent of Techno, to Detroit, Chicago, Berlin, London, Frankfurt, there was always a Hardcore contingent. Hardcore was always part of the Techno spirit, it helped to shape and mold the Techno sound. Alas, as mentioned above, it got disowned, and it became almost "forbidden" to speak of this type of music within Techno circles.
A liminal space that always lingered next to the scene as time moved on; a place that people did not dare to enter.
All this is changing now again. And while "every boy and his dog" (i.e. zines, webcasts, music academies) had their own Marc Acardipane feature by now, focusing on his more Hardcore and Gabber output, we decided to do the very opposite here, and showcase the Techno tracks from the past days of the PCP oeuvre, released using a cornucopia of aliases.
Bon appetit!
Oh, and by the way: we very dearly love "I like it loud", too!
(This list is in no particular order)
1. The Mover - Over Land and Sea how can one not love this track? great techno beats, rhythms, groove... and then this cosmic, celestial arrangement in the middle... the beats come back in, and the dancefloor erupts into madness. the flip side ("underwater operations") is also very well worth a listen.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VuYMsR1Cae8
2. Cyborg Unknown - The Year 2001 (Deep in Detroit mix) this is going deep into the history of detroit techno indeed. it's not enough to be friends of the jaguar here, this track channels cybotron just as much as it does metroplex. funky!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c2q4v8_YxbE
3. Trip Commando - Cross The White Line a techno behemoth of the most epic proportions. has probably one of the most elongated build ups in dance history, until the epic cinematic breakdown unfolds. highly recommended!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tGWv1e2hBZk
4. Turbulence - Whurlstorm this was on the second release by Industrial Strength Records - a label that shaped Hardcore history, too. it starts as a nice little nasty techno track, until everything breaks apart in the mid-riff, and turns into a hurricane of bass frequncies.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sngue8baqPs
5. The Mover - Nightflight (Nonstop 2 Kaos) and this was on Industrial Strengh Records number one! As Lenny Dee licensed "We Have Arrived" (a fantastic hardcore track, to say the least) for his label, and put that number on the back side. a cold groove, percussion that almost feels like a breakbeat... lots of bass, cyber-synth.... this is just dancefloor heaven.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=snnHspK1QYI
6. Countdown Part V - Untitled (A1) Countdown FFM is another sub-label to go for if one is looking for some technoid gems. stellar electronic intro, then we get into dance grooves, and things become more deviant as acid sounds sneak in.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bfIL6OCtN3o
7. Alien Christ - Of Suns and Moons (Phase II) inspired by "Suburban Knights - The Art of Stalking" (a true classic, originally released on Transmat). Marc made this influence his own, and delivered a very detroit-ish underground rave anthem.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xGmmDrQTyyY
8. The Mover & Lunatic Asylum – Frequency Surfers Lunatic Asylum aka "Dr. Macabre" is another person that was entwined with electronic music history while turning into a global player in the hardcore sector at a later date. this is a joint-venture of these two titans of techno, and the result is a very trippy, very twisted and surreal track.
(Cannot be found on youtube, but here are audio previews: https://www.toolboxrecords.com/en/product/17643/techno-hardtechno/dance-ecstasy-2025/ )
9. The Mover - Astral Demons (Original Mix) you should have realized by now: the mover is a synonym for high quality productions. this is one of my favorite pics from the legendary "frontal sickness" releases; and indeed adds a very demonic vibe to the whole dance thing.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lSMT2KdQt5Q
10. Rave Creator - A New Mind (Thai Acid Mix) "Thai" was a pcp sub that focused specifically on techno, acid, even a bit of trance-ish tracks. despite the alias, this was put out on DE 2001 instead. It's a remix of the famous "A New Mind" track.
starting with pure bass drones. it builds up very slowly, until thunderous, reverberated bass drums come in, and then it goes into full-on acid feeding. similar to "cross the white line", this track could be given the title "cinematic techno soundtrack".
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yGpuMbLicZU
Honorable Mentions:
T-Bone Castro - Return 2 Planet E Reincarnated Regulator - Italian Stallion Craig Tayaffo - Reduction (Back For Acid-The Expanded 0,25 Hrs Mix) Barracuda - Braineaters Two Tonys - Organ Bitch Nasty Django - Ey Loco Cold Rush Records Frontal Sickness 1+2 Reincarnated Regulator - Mindeater Climax - Relax Nasty Django - 3 P Rules! SexDrive Entertainment - No.2 T-Bone Castro / Ace The Space - Ace In The Hole Project Æ - Whales Alive Ultra Spaceman - Ultra-Style
Footnotes: 1: The original Wire essay - http://reynoldsretro.blogspot.com/2015/03/marc-acardipane-mover-pcp-dance-ecstasy.html
submitted by Low-Entropy to ravetechno [link] [comments]


2024.05.15 21:11 HartStoppaUK Sir Lenny Henry rocking up at Buckingham Palace today he shook hands & chatted with Queen Camilla and clearly enjoyed the event for culture, art, heritage, film, TV, radio and fashion garden party Do save this for when Lenny next attacks British institutions or plays "The Card"

Sir Lenny Henry rocking up at Buckingham Palace today he shook hands & chatted with Queen Camilla and clearly enjoyed the event for culture, art, heritage, film, TV, radio and fashion garden party Do save this for when Lenny next attacks British institutions or plays submitted by HartStoppaUK to LuvCommando [link] [comments]


2024.05.13 23:18 smallback Day 33 of the Best Colour for Each Species Poll Series! Last time Halloween Lutari came in first, kinda thought it would go Maraquan but not quite. Today is Meerca!

Day 33 of the Best Colour for Each Species Poll Series! Last time Halloween Lutari came in first, kinda thought it would go Maraquan but not quite. Today is Meerca!
I sort of thought Maraquan would take it, the Axolotl design was just so unique but Halloween Lutari won with 21.6% of the votes! Maraquan was a close second with 18%, and Desert a distant third with 7.2% of the votes. The rest of the votes are pretty spread out though!
Vote for Lutari if you haven't here, or check out the results here!
If you'd like to see the results for the polls so far, you can check out the tracking sheet here.

Click here for the Best Colour of Each Species Poll Series - Meerca!

thicc Halloween meerca named Lydia by PoodleSpy on DeviantArt
Click here if you've already voted and just want the results!
Okay Meerca is in the same boat as Lenny in that they really put a lot of thought and concept into quite a few of its colours. Burlap looks great, solid midpoint between creepy and cute. Candy's adorable with it's rainbow stripe tail, Maraquan is an obvious winner, the puffer fish concept is inspired. They did a great job with Marble here, I don't love the colours myself but it is just objectively beautiful. Mutant looks fun, maybe not the most interesting but an iconic design anyway. The Royals look GREAT. Super ornamental, really grandiose, and it all looks especially hilarious stacked on their goofy little bodies. Cute concept for Strawberry, lovely use of natural colourations for Striped, Toy is another one that's super creative and conceptual, and honestly Transparent looks great here just because you do look at a Meerca and wonder what the hell is going on in there. I also had a Woodland Meerca for a bit, loved the ginger root idea!
Any noteworthy colours I missed? Any strong thoughts on thicc Meerca? Spare an upvote for the community?
submitted by smallback to neopets [link] [comments]


2024.05.11 13:55 Low-Entropy From "Frontal Sickness" to "(Maria) I Like It Loud" - Marc Acardipane, the 'Forgotten Man' of Techno

There is an essay by "raver anthropologist" Simon Reynolds that has become a kind of cult thing amongst Hardcore Techno aficionados. It got published in The Wire in 1998; it turned into a cult object not only because it was one of the rare cases where Hardcore music was mentioned in a bigger zine during the late 90s (as opposed to the many badly xeroxed Hardcore-fanzines, with a run of ~50 copies, of which most were destined to end up on soaked squat party toilet room floors), but because it also focused on a very specific person: Marc Acardipane, his releases, and his label family. [1]
In it, he called Marc "the forgotten man of Techno", and followed up with the reasons for that: even though he was right there at the proper beginning of "Techno", was hugely influential, and good friends with many people that are now considered to be true pioneers and legends by vox populi, he fell out of favor when Hardcore itself fell out of favor amongst the Techno folk; because he stayed true to his "core roots" and didn't disown them, like so many other producers did on their way up to the place amongst the stars (and on their way down to the sewers again).
But let's move on from Simon, The Wire, and the year 1998. What happened after that date? First, Marc itself was pulled out from the "shadow zones"; because at least the Hardcore and Gabber scene finally remembered its Techno roots, and kept worshiping those roots again; although under different monikers, such as "oldschool", "oldstyle", "early rave", and so on - I guess "the names have been changed to protect the innocent". This meant that "Technoid Hardcore" could be enjoyed at Hardcore parties and festivals once more (often on separate floors), which led to a lot of gigs and exposure for Marc and his Planet Core Productions sound. [Note: PCP aka Planet Core Productions was a label family run by Marc Acardipane and Thorsten Lambart in the 90s.] It also influenced the Hardcore scene as a whole. A succession of genres such as "newstyle", "millennium" and "mainstyle" came into existence; genres that to 98% were built upon PCP and PCP-adjacent tracks: "Stereo Murder" (produced by Acardipane), "Atmos-Fear" (produced by Acardipane), "Poltergeist" (released on his label), "Flesh is the Fever" (released on Things To Come Records, a label with personal ties to PCP and that was inspired by PCP), plus various others.
This was already a good thing. But then, slowly but steadily, the Techno folk re-gained their interest in Hardcore and harder sounds, too; and now that the "millennial dominance" of the Techno scene, together with their favoring of minimalist and dandy-esque sounds, is slowly fading away, a younger generation is taking over the scene, and that new generation is very, very hardcore.
This led to a renewed interest in the works of Marc Acardipane, his crew, and his output again, coming straight from the heart of the Techno world. Marc himself acknowledged this development in some of his interviews, and added that the Techno people are sometimes even more zealous and knowledgeable about this music than the die-hard old-school gabbers!
A very fine evolution indeed; and we hope Marc gets into the spotlight again because of this, and that he finally reaps the respect that he deserves!
But why is the Techno folk favoring him and his sound specifically - in fact, more than a lot of other "Hardcore" players? I think this is because - and now we cycle back to 1998's "The Wire" essay - his sound is *indeed* heavily connected to Techno. It's not just some ultra-aggressive, ultra-noisy Gabber outing. It's real, true, bona fide Techno music. More than that, it represents a "road not taken" in the history of Techno music. Because, when you go back to the advent of Techno, to Detroit, Chicago, Berlin, London, Frankfurt, there was always a Hardcore contingent. Hardcore was always part of the Techno spirit, it helped to shape and mold the Techno sound. Alas, as mentioned above, it got disowned, and it became almost "forbidden" to speak of this type of music within Techno circles.
A liminal space that always lingered next to the scene as time moved on; a place that people did not dare to enter.
All this is changing now again. And while "every boy and his dog" (i.e. zines, webcasts, music academies) had their own Marc Acardipane feature by now, focusing on his more Hardcore and Gabber output, we decided to do the very opposite here, and showcase the Techno tracks from the past days of the PCP oeuvre, released using a cornucopia of aliases.
Bon appetit!
Oh, and by the way: we very dearly love "I like it loud", too!
(This list is in no particular order)
1. The Mover - Over Land and Sea how can one not love this track? great techno beats, rhythms, groove... and then this cosmic, celestial arrangement in the middle... the beats come back in, and the dancefloor erupts into madness. the flip side ("underwater operations") is also very well worth a listen.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VuYMsR1Cae8
2. Cyborg Unknown - The Year 2001 (Deep in Detroit mix) this is going deep into the history of detroit techno indeed. it's not enough to be friends of the jaguar here, this track channels cybotron just as much as it does metroplex. funky!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c2q4v8_YxbE
3. Trip Commando - Cross The White Line a techno behemoth of the most epic proportions. has probably one of the most elongated build ups in dance history, until the epic cinematic breakdown unfolds. highly recommended!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tGWv1e2hBZk
4. Turbulence - Whurlstorm this was on the second release by Industrial Strength Records - a label that shaped Hardcore history, too. it starts as a nice little nasty techno track, until everything breaks apart in the mid-riff, and turns into a hurricane of bass frequncies.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sngue8baqPs
5. The Mover - Nightflight (Nonstop 2 Kaos) and this was on Industrial Strengh Records number one! As Lenny Dee licensed "We Have Arrived" (a fantastic hardcore track, to say the least) for his label, and put that number on the back side. a cold groove, percussion that almost feels like a breakbeat... lots of bass, cyber-synth.... this is just dancefloor heaven.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=snnHspK1QYI
6. Countdown Part V - Untitled (A1) Countdown FFM is another sub-label to go for if one is looking for some technoid gems. stellar electronic intro, then we get into dance grooves, and things become more deviant as acid sounds sneak in.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bfIL6OCtN3o
7. Alien Christ - Of Suns and Moons (Phase II) inspired by "Suburban Knights - The Art of Stalking" (a true classic, originally released on Transmat). Marc made this influence his own, and delivered a very detroit-ish underground rave anthem.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xGmmDrQTyyY
8. The Mover & Lunatic Asylum – Frequency Surfers Lunatic Asylum aka "Dr. Macabre" is another person that was entwined with electronic music history while turning into a global player in the hardcore sector at a later date. this is a joint-venture of these two titans of techno, and the result is a very trippy, very twisted and surreal track.
(Cannot be found on youtube, but here are audio previews: https://www.toolboxrecords.com/en/product/17643/techno-hardtechno/dance-ecstasy-2025/ )
9. The Mover - Astral Demons (Original Mix) you should have realized by now: the mover is a synonym for high quality productions. this is one of my favorite pics from the legendary "frontal sickness" releases; and indeed adds a very demonic vibe to the whole dance thing.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lSMT2KdQt5Q
10. Rave Creator - A New Mind (Thai Acid Mix) "Thai" was a pcp sub that focused specifically on techno, acid, even a bit of trance-ish tracks. despite the alias, this was put out on DE 2001 instead. It's a remix of the famous "A New Mind" track.
starting with pure bass drones. it builds up very slowly, until thunderous, reverberated bass drums come in, and then it goes into full-on acid feeding. similar to "cross the white line", this track could be given the title "cinematic techno soundtrack".
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yGpuMbLicZU
Honorable Mentions:
T-Bone Castro - Return 2 Planet E Reincarnated Regulator - Italian Stallion Craig Tayaffo - Reduction (Back For Acid-The Expanded 0,25 Hrs Mix) Barracuda - Braineaters Two Tonys - Organ Bitch Nasty Django - Ey Loco Cold Rush Records Frontal Sickness 1+2 Reincarnated Regulator - Mindeater Climax - Relax Nasty Django - 3 P Rules! SexDrive Entertainment - No.2 T-Bone Castro / Ace The Space - Ace In The Hole Project Æ - Whales Alive Ultra Spaceman - Ultra-Style
Footnotes: 1: The original Wire essay - http://reynoldsretro.blogspot.com/2015/03/marc-acardipane-mover-pcp-dance-ecstasy.html
submitted by Low-Entropy to TheHcTechnoOverDogs [link] [comments]


2024.05.10 00:44 Low-Entropy From "Frontal Sickness" to "(Maria) I Like It Loud" - Marc Acardipane, the 'Forgotten Man' of Techno

There is an essay by "raver anthropologist" Simon Reynolds that has become a kind of cult thing amongst Hardcore Techno aficionados. It got published in The Wire in 1998; it turned into a cult object not only because it was one of the rare cases where Hardcore music was mentioned in a bigger zine during the late 90s (as opposed to the many badly xeroxed Hardcore-fanzines, with a run of ~50 copies, of which most were destined to end up on soaked squat party toilet room floors), but because it also focused on a very specific person: Marc Acardipane, his releases, and his label family. [1]
In it, he called Marc "the forgotten man of Techno", and followed up with the reasons for that: even though he was right there at the proper beginning of "Techno", was hugely influential, and good friends with many people that are now considered to be true pioneers and legends by vox populi, he fell out of favor when Hardcore itself fell out of favor amongst the Techno folk; because he stayed true to his "core roots" and didn't disown them, like so many other producers did on their way up to the place amongst the stars (and on their way down to the sewers again).
But let's move on from Simon, The Wire, and the year 1998. What happened after that date? First, Marc itself was pulled out from the "shadow zones"; because at least the Hardcore and Gabber scene finally remembered its Techno roots, and kept worshiping those roots again; although under different monikers, such as "oldschool", "oldstyle", "early rave", and so on - I guess "the names have been changed to protect the innocent". This meant that "Technoid Hardcore" could be enjoyed at Hardcore parties and festivals once more (often on separate floors), which led to a lot of gigs and exposure for Marc and his Planet Core Productions sound. [Note: PCP aka Planet Core Productions was a label family run by Marc Acardipane and Thorsten Lambart in the 90s.] It also influenced the Hardcore scene as a whole. A succession of genres such as "newstyle", "millennium" and "mainstyle" came into existence; genres that to 98% were built upon PCP and PCP-adjacent tracks: "Stereo Murder" (produced by Acardipane), "Atmos-Fear" (produced by Acardipane), "Poltergeist" (released on his label), "Flesh is the Fever" (released on Things To Come Records, a label with personal ties to PCP and that was inspired by PCP), plus various others.
This was already a good thing. But then, slowly but steadily, the Techno folk re-gained their interest in Hardcore and harder sounds, too; and now that the "millennial dominance" of the Techno scene, together with their favoring of minimalist and dandy-esque sounds, is slowly fading away, a younger generation is taking over the scene, and that new generation is very, very hardcore.
This led to a renewed interest in the works of Marc Acardipane, his crew, and his output again, coming straight from the heart of the Techno world. Marc himself acknowledged this development in some of his interviews, and added that the Techno people are sometimes even more zealous and knowledgeable about this music than the die-hard old-school gabbers!
A very fine evolution indeed; and we hope Marc gets into the spotlight again because of this, and that he finally reaps the respect that he deserves!
But why is the Techno folk favoring him and his sound specifically - in fact, more than a lot of other "Hardcore" players? I think this is because - and now we cycle back to 1998's "The Wire" essay - his sound is *indeed* heavily connected to Techno. It's not just some ultra-aggressive, ultra-noisy Gabber outing. It's real, true, bona fide Techno music. More than that, it represents a "road not taken" in the history of Techno music. Because, when you go back to the advent of Techno, to Detroit, Chicago, Berlin, London, Frankfurt, there was always a Hardcore contingent. Hardcore was always part of the Techno spirit, it helped to shape and mold the Techno sound. Alas, as mentioned above, it got disowned, and it became almost "forbidden" to speak of this type of music within Techno circles.
A liminal space that always lingered next to the scene as time moved on; a place that people did not dare to enter.
All this is changing now again. And while "every boy and his dog" (i.e. zines, webcasts, music academies) had their own Marc Acardipane feature by now, focusing on his more Hardcore and Gabber output, we decided to do the very opposite here, and showcase the Techno tracks from the past days of the PCP oeuvre, released using a cornucopia of aliases.
Bon appetit!
Oh, and by the way: we very dearly love "I like it loud", too!
(This list is in no particular order)
1. The Mover - Over Land and Sea how can one not love this track? great techno beats, rhythms, groove... and then this cosmic, celestial arrangement in the middle... the beats come back in, and the dancefloor erupts into madness. the flip side ("underwater operations") is also very well worth a listen.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VuYMsR1Cae8
2. Cyborg Unknown - The Year 2001 (Deep in Detroit mix) this is going deep into the history of detroit techno indeed. it's not enough to be friends of the jaguar here, this track channels cybotron just as much as it does metroplex. funky!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c2q4v8_YxbE
3. Trip Commando - Cross The White Line a techno behemoth of the most epic proportions. has probably one of the most elongated build ups in dance history, until the epic cinematic breakdown unfolds. highly recommended!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tGWv1e2hBZk
4. Turbulence - Whurlstorm this was on the second release by Industrial Strength Records - a label that shaped Hardcore history, too. it starts as a nice little nasty techno track, until everything breaks apart in the mid-riff, and turns into a hurricane of bass frequncies.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sngue8baqPs
5. The Mover - Nightflight (Nonstop 2 Kaos) and this was on Industrial Strengh Records number one! As Lenny Dee licensed "We Have Arrived" (a fantastic hardcore track, to say the least) for his label, and put that number on the back side. a cold groove, percussion that almost feels like a breakbeat... lots of bass, cyber-synth.... this is just dancefloor heaven.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=snnHspK1QYI
6. Countdown Part V - Untitled (A1) Countdown FFM is another sub-label to go for if one is looking for some technoid gems. stellar electronic intro, then we get into dance grooves, and things become more deviant as acid sounds sneak in.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bfIL6OCtN3o
7. Alien Christ - Of Suns and Moons (Phase II) inspired by "Suburban Knights - The Art of Stalking" (a true classic, originally released on Transmat). Marc made this influence his own, and delivered a very detroit-ish underground rave anthem.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xGmmDrQTyyY
8. The Mover & Lunatic Asylum – Frequency Surfers Lunatic Asylum aka "Dr. Macabre" is another person that was entwined with electronic music history while turning into a global player in the hardcore sector at a later date. this is a joint-venture of these two titans of techno, and the result is a very trippy, very twisted and surreal track.
(Cannot be found on youtube, but here are audio previews: https://www.toolboxrecords.com/en/product/17643/techno-hardtechno/dance-ecstasy-2025/ )
9. The Mover - Astral Demons (Original Mix) you should have realized by now: the mover is a synonym for high quality productions. this is one of my favorite pics from the legendary "frontal sickness" releases; and indeed adds a very demonic vibe to the whole dance thing.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lSMT2KdQt5Q
10. Rave Creator - A New Mind (Thai Acid Mix) "Thai" was a pcp sub that focused specifically on techno, acid, even a bit of trance-ish tracks. despite the alias, this was put out on DE 2001 instead. It's a remix of the famous "A New Mind" track.
starting with pure bass drones. it builds up very slowly, until thunderous, reverberated bass drums come in, and then it goes into full-on acid feeding. similar to "cross the white line", this track could be given the title "cinematic techno soundtrack".
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yGpuMbLicZU
Honorable Mentions:
T-Bone Castro - Return 2 Planet E Reincarnated Regulator - Italian Stallion Craig Tayaffo - Reduction (Back For Acid-The Expanded 0,25 Hrs Mix) Barracuda - Braineaters Two Tonys - Organ Bitch Nasty Django - Ey Loco Cold Rush Records Frontal Sickness 1+2 Reincarnated Regulator - Mindeater Climax - Relax Nasty Django - 3 P Rules! SexDrive Entertainment - No.2 T-Bone Castro / Ace The Space - Ace In The Hole Project Æ - Whales Alive Ultra Spaceman - Ultra-Style
Footnotes: 1: The original Wire essay - http://reynoldsretro.blogspot.com/2015/03/marc-acardipane-mover-pcp-dance-ecstasy.html
submitted by Low-Entropy to hardstyle [link] [comments]


2024.05.10 00:44 Low-Entropy From "Frontal Sickness" to "(Maria) I Like It Loud" - Marc Acardipane, the 'Forgotten Man' of Techno

There is an essay by "raver anthropologist" Simon Reynolds that has become a kind of cult thing amongst Hardcore Techno aficionados. It got published in The Wire in 1998; it turned into a cult object not only because it was one of the rare cases where Hardcore music was mentioned in a bigger zine during the late 90s (as opposed to the many badly xeroxed Hardcore-fanzines, with a run of ~50 copies, of which most were destined to end up on soaked squat party toilet room floors), but because it also focused on a very specific person: Marc Acardipane, his releases, and his label family. [1]
In it, he called Marc "the forgotten man of Techno", and followed up with the reasons for that: even though he was right there at the proper beginning of "Techno", was hugely influential, and good friends with many people that are now considered to be true pioneers and legends by vox populi, he fell out of favor when Hardcore itself fell out of favor amongst the Techno folk; because he stayed true to his "core roots" and didn't disown them, like so many other producers did on their way up to the place amongst the stars (and on their way down to the sewers again).
But let's move on from Simon, The Wire, and the year 1998. What happened after that date? First, Marc itself was pulled out from the "shadow zones"; because at least the Hardcore and Gabber scene finally remembered its Techno roots, and kept worshiping those roots again; although under different monikers, such as "oldschool", "oldstyle", "early rave", and so on - I guess "the names have been changed to protect the innocent". This meant that "Technoid Hardcore" could be enjoyed at Hardcore parties and festivals once more (often on separate floors), which led to a lot of gigs and exposure for Marc and his Planet Core Productions sound. [Note: PCP aka Planet Core Productions was a label family run by Marc Acardipane and Thorsten Lambart in the 90s.] It also influenced the Hardcore scene as a whole. A succession of genres such as "newstyle", "millennium" and "mainstyle" came into existence; genres that to 98% were built upon PCP and PCP-adjacent tracks: "Stereo Murder" (produced by Acardipane), "Atmos-Fear" (produced by Acardipane), "Poltergeist" (released on his label), "Flesh is the Fever" (released on Things To Come Records, a label with personal ties to PCP and that was inspired by PCP), plus various others.
This was already a good thing. But then, slowly but steadily, the Techno folk re-gained their interest in Hardcore and harder sounds, too; and now that the "millennial dominance" of the Techno scene, together with their favoring of minimalist and dandy-esque sounds, is slowly fading away, a younger generation is taking over the scene, and that new generation is very, very hardcore.
This led to a renewed interest in the works of Marc Acardipane, his crew, and his output again, coming straight from the heart of the Techno world. Marc himself acknowledged this development in some of his interviews, and added that the Techno people are sometimes even more zealous and knowledgeable about this music than the die-hard old-school gabbers!
A very fine evolution indeed; and we hope Marc gets into the spotlight again because of this, and that he finally reaps the respect that he deserves!
But why is the Techno folk favoring him and his sound specifically - in fact, more than a lot of other "Hardcore" players? I think this is because - and now we cycle back to 1998's "The Wire" essay - his sound is *indeed* heavily connected to Techno. It's not just some ultra-aggressive, ultra-noisy Gabber outing. It's real, true, bona fide Techno music. More than that, it represents a "road not taken" in the history of Techno music. Because, when you go back to the advent of Techno, to Detroit, Chicago, Berlin, London, Frankfurt, there was always a Hardcore contingent. Hardcore was always part of the Techno spirit, it helped to shape and mold the Techno sound. Alas, as mentioned above, it got disowned, and it became almost "forbidden" to speak of this type of music within Techno circles.
A liminal space that always lingered next to the scene as time moved on; a place that people did not dare to enter.
All this is changing now again. And while "every boy and his dog" (i.e. zines, webcasts, music academies) had their own Marc Acardipane feature by now, focusing on his more Hardcore and Gabber output, we decided to do the very opposite here, and showcase the Techno tracks from the past days of the PCP oeuvre, released using a cornucopia of aliases.
Bon appetit!
Oh, and by the way: we very dearly love "I like it loud", too!
(This list is in no particular order)
1. The Mover - Over Land and Sea how can one not love this track? great techno beats, rhythms, groove... and then this cosmic, celestial arrangement in the middle... the beats come back in, and the dancefloor erupts into madness. the flip side ("underwater operations") is also very well worth a listen.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VuYMsR1Cae8
2. Cyborg Unknown - The Year 2001 (Deep in Detroit mix) this is going deep into the history of detroit techno indeed. it's not enough to be friends of the jaguar here, this track channels cybotron just as much as it does metroplex. funky!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c2q4v8_YxbE
3. Trip Commando - Cross The White Line a techno behemoth of the most epic proportions. has probably one of the most elongated build ups in dance history, until the epic cinematic breakdown unfolds. highly recommended!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tGWv1e2hBZk
4. Turbulence - Whurlstorm this was on the second release by Industrial Strength Records - a label that shaped Hardcore history, too. it starts as a nice little nasty techno track, until everything breaks apart in the mid-riff, and turns into a hurricane of bass frequncies.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sngue8baqPs
5. The Mover - Nightflight (Nonstop 2 Kaos) and this was on Industrial Strengh Records number one! As Lenny Dee licensed "We Have Arrived" (a fantastic hardcore track, to say the least) for his label, and put that number on the back side. a cold groove, percussion that almost feels like a breakbeat... lots of bass, cyber-synth.... this is just dancefloor heaven.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=snnHspK1QYI
6. Countdown Part V - Untitled (A1) Countdown FFM is another sub-label to go for if one is looking for some technoid gems. stellar electronic intro, then we get into dance grooves, and things become more deviant as acid sounds sneak in.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bfIL6OCtN3o
7. Alien Christ - Of Suns and Moons (Phase II) inspired by "Suburban Knights - The Art of Stalking" (a true classic, originally released on Transmat). Marc made this influence his own, and delivered a very detroit-ish underground rave anthem.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xGmmDrQTyyY
8. The Mover & Lunatic Asylum – Frequency Surfers Lunatic Asylum aka "Dr. Macabre" is another person that was entwined with electronic music history while turning into a global player in the hardcore sector at a later date. this is a joint-venture of these two titans of techno, and the result is a very trippy, very twisted and surreal track.
(Cannot be found on youtube, but here are audio previews: https://www.toolboxrecords.com/en/product/17643/techno-hardtechno/dance-ecstasy-2025/ )
9. The Mover - Astral Demons (Original Mix) you should have realized by now: the mover is a synonym for high quality productions. this is one of my favorite pics from the legendary "frontal sickness" releases; and indeed adds a very demonic vibe to the whole dance thing.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lSMT2KdQt5Q
10. Rave Creator - A New Mind (Thai Acid Mix) "Thai" was a pcp sub that focused specifically on techno, acid, even a bit of trance-ish tracks. despite the alias, this was put out on DE 2001 instead. It's a remix of the famous "A New Mind" track.
starting with pure bass drones. it builds up very slowly, until thunderous, reverberated bass drums come in, and then it goes into full-on acid feeding. similar to "cross the white line", this track could be given the title "cinematic techno soundtrack".
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yGpuMbLicZU
Honorable Mentions:
T-Bone Castro - Return 2 Planet E Reincarnated Regulator - Italian Stallion Craig Tayaffo - Reduction (Back For Acid-The Expanded 0,25 Hrs Mix) Barracuda - Braineaters Two Tonys - Organ Bitch Nasty Django - Ey Loco Cold Rush Records Frontal Sickness 1+2 Reincarnated Regulator - Mindeater Climax - Relax Nasty Django - 3 P Rules! SexDrive Entertainment - No.2 T-Bone Castro / Ace The Space - Ace In The Hole Project Æ - Whales Alive Ultra Spaceman - Ultra-Style
Footnotes: 1: The original Wire essay - http://reynoldsretro.blogspot.com/2015/03/marc-acardipane-mover-pcp-dance-ecstasy.html
submitted by Low-Entropy to gabber [link] [comments]


2024.05.10 00:44 Low-Entropy From "Frontal Sickness" to "(Maria) I Like It Loud" - Marc Acardipane, the 'Forgotten Man' of Techno

There is an essay by "raver anthropologist" Simon Reynolds that has become a kind of cult thing amongst Hardcore Techno aficionados. It got published in The Wire in 1998; it turned into a cult object not only because it was one of the rare cases where Hardcore music was mentioned in a bigger zine during the late 90s (as opposed to the many badly xeroxed Hardcore-fanzines, with a run of ~50 copies, of which most were destined to end up on soaked squat party toilet room floors), but because it also focused on a very specific person: Marc Acardipane, his releases, and his label family. [1]
In it, he called Marc "the forgotten man of Techno", and followed up with the reasons for that: even though he was right there at the proper beginning of "Techno", was hugely influential, and good friends with many people that are now considered to be true pioneers and legends by vox populi, he fell out of favor when Hardcore itself fell out of favor amongst the Techno folk; because he stayed true to his "core roots" and didn't disown them, like so many other producers did on their way up to the place amongst the stars (and on their way down to the sewers again).
But let's move on from Simon, The Wire, and the year 1998. What happened after that date? First, Marc itself was pulled out from the "shadow zones"; because at least the Hardcore and Gabber scene finally remembered its Techno roots, and kept worshiping those roots again; although under different monikers, such as "oldschool", "oldstyle", "early rave", and so on - I guess "the names have been changed to protect the innocent". This meant that "Technoid Hardcore" could be enjoyed at Hardcore parties and festivals once more (often on separate floors), which led to a lot of gigs and exposure for Marc and his Planet Core Productions sound. [Note: PCP aka Planet Core Productions was a label family run by Marc Acardipane and Thorsten Lambart in the 90s.] It also influenced the Hardcore scene as a whole. A succession of genres such as "newstyle", "millennium" and "mainstyle" came into existence; genres that to 98% were built upon PCP and PCP-adjacent tracks: "Stereo Murder" (produced by Acardipane), "Atmos-Fear" (produced by Acardipane), "Poltergeist" (released on his label), "Flesh is the Fever" (released on Things To Come Records, a label with personal ties to PCP and that was inspired by PCP), plus various others.
This was already a good thing. But then, slowly but steadily, the Techno folk re-gained their interest in Hardcore and harder sounds, too; and now that the "millennial dominance" of the Techno scene, together with their favoring of minimalist and dandy-esque sounds, is slowly fading away, a younger generation is taking over the scene, and that new generation is very, very hardcore.
This led to a renewed interest in the works of Marc Acardipane, his crew, and his output again, coming straight from the heart of the Techno world. Marc himself acknowledged this development in some of his interviews, and added that the Techno people are sometimes even more zealous and knowledgeable about this music than the die-hard old-school gabbers!
A very fine evolution indeed; and we hope Marc gets into the spotlight again because of this, and that he finally reaps the respect that he deserves!
But why is the Techno folk favoring him and his sound specifically - in fact, more than a lot of other "Hardcore" players? I think this is because - and now we cycle back to 1998's "The Wire" essay - his sound is *indeed* heavily connected to Techno. It's not just some ultra-aggressive, ultra-noisy Gabber outing. It's real, true, bona fide Techno music. More than that, it represents a "road not taken" in the history of Techno music. Because, when you go back to the advent of Techno, to Detroit, Chicago, Berlin, London, Frankfurt, there was always a Hardcore contingent. Hardcore was always part of the Techno spirit, it helped to shape and mold the Techno sound. Alas, as mentioned above, it got disowned, and it became almost "forbidden" to speak of this type of music within Techno circles.
A liminal space that always lingered next to the scene as time moved on; a place that people did not dare to enter.
All this is changing now again. And while "every boy and his dog" (i.e. zines, webcasts, music academies) had their own Marc Acardipane feature by now, focusing on his more Hardcore and Gabber output, we decided to do the very opposite here, and showcase the Techno tracks from the past days of the PCP oeuvre, released using a cornucopia of aliases.
Bon appetit!
Oh, and by the way: we very dearly love "I like it loud", too!
(This list is in no particular order)
1. The Mover - Over Land and Sea how can one not love this track? great techno beats, rhythms, groove... and then this cosmic, celestial arrangement in the middle... the beats come back in, and the dancefloor erupts into madness. the flip side ("underwater operations") is also very well worth a listen.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VuYMsR1Cae8
2. Cyborg Unknown - The Year 2001 (Deep in Detroit mix) this is going deep into the history of detroit techno indeed. it's not enough to be friends of the jaguar here, this track channels cybotron just as much as it does metroplex. funky!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c2q4v8_YxbE
3. Trip Commando - Cross The White Line a techno behemoth of the most epic proportions. has probably one of the most elongated build ups in dance history, until the epic cinematic breakdown unfolds. highly recommended!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tGWv1e2hBZk
4. Turbulence - Whurlstorm this was on the second release by Industrial Strength Records - a label that shaped Hardcore history, too. it starts as a nice little nasty techno track, until everything breaks apart in the mid-riff, and turns into a hurricane of bass frequncies.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sngue8baqPs
5. The Mover - Nightflight (Nonstop 2 Kaos) and this was on Industrial Strengh Records number one! As Lenny Dee licensed "We Have Arrived" (a fantastic hardcore track, to say the least) for his label, and put that number on the back side. a cold groove, percussion that almost feels like a breakbeat... lots of bass, cyber-synth.... this is just dancefloor heaven.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=snnHspK1QYI
6. Countdown Part V - Untitled (A1) Countdown FFM is another sub-label to go for if one is looking for some technoid gems. stellar electronic intro, then we get into dance grooves, and things become more deviant as acid sounds sneak in.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bfIL6OCtN3o
7. Alien Christ - Of Suns and Moons (Phase II) inspired by "Suburban Knights - The Art of Stalking" (a true classic, originally released on Transmat). Marc made this influence his own, and delivered a very detroit-ish underground rave anthem.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xGmmDrQTyyY
8. The Mover & Lunatic Asylum – Frequency Surfers Lunatic Asylum aka "Dr. Macabre" is another person that was entwined with electronic music history while turning into a global player in the hardcore sector at a later date. this is a joint-venture of these two titans of techno, and the result is a very trippy, very twisted and surreal track.
(Cannot be found on youtube, but here are audio previews: https://www.toolboxrecords.com/en/product/17643/techno-hardtechno/dance-ecstasy-2025/ )
9. The Mover - Astral Demons (Original Mix) you should have realized by now: the mover is a synonym for high quality productions. this is one of my favorite pics from the legendary "frontal sickness" releases; and indeed adds a very demonic vibe to the whole dance thing.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lSMT2KdQt5Q
10. Rave Creator - A New Mind (Thai Acid Mix) "Thai" was a pcp sub that focused specifically on techno, acid, even a bit of trance-ish tracks. despite the alias, this was put out on DE 2001 instead. It's a remix of the famous "A New Mind" track.
starting with pure bass drones. it builds up very slowly, until thunderous, reverberated bass drums come in, and then it goes into full-on acid feeding. similar to "cross the white line", this track could be given the title "cinematic techno soundtrack".
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yGpuMbLicZU
Honorable Mentions:
T-Bone Castro - Return 2 Planet E Reincarnated Regulator - Italian Stallion Craig Tayaffo - Reduction (Back For Acid-The Expanded 0,25 Hrs Mix) Barracuda - Braineaters Two Tonys - Organ Bitch Nasty Django - Ey Loco Cold Rush Records Frontal Sickness 1+2 Reincarnated Regulator - Mindeater Climax - Relax Nasty Django - 3 P Rules! SexDrive Entertainment - No.2 T-Bone Castro / Ace The Space - Ace In The Hole Project Æ - Whales Alive Ultra Spaceman - Ultra-Style
Footnotes: 1: The original Wire essay - http://reynoldsretro.blogspot.com/2015/03/marc-acardipane-mover-pcp-dance-ecstasy.html
submitted by Low-Entropy to EDM [link] [comments]


2024.05.09 20:49 Low-Entropy From "Frontal Sickness" to "(Maria) I Like It Loud" - Marc Acardipane, the 'Forgotten Man' of Techno

There is an essay by "raver anthropologist" Simon Reynolds that has become a kind of cult thing amongst Hardcore Techno aficionados. It got published in The Wire in 1998; it turned into a cult object not only because it was one of the rare cases where Hardcore music was mentioned in a bigger zine during the late 90s (as opposed to the many badly xeroxed Hardcore-fanzines, with a run of ~50 copies, of which most were destined to end up on soaked squat party toilet room floors), but because it also focused on a very specific person: Marc Acardipane, his releases, and his label family. [1]
In it, he called Marc "the forgotten man of Techno", and followed up with the reasons for that: even though he was right there at the proper beginning of "Techno", was hugely influential, and good friends with many people that are now considered to be true pioneers and legends by vox populi, he fell out of favor when Hardcore itself fell out of favor amongst the Techno folk; because he stayed true to his "core roots" and didn't disown them, like so many other producers did on their way up to the place amongst the stars (and on their way down to the sewers again).
But let's move on from Simon, The Wire, and the year 1998. What happened after that date? First, Marc itself was pulled out from the "shadow zones"; because at least the Hardcore and Gabber scene finally remembered its Techno roots, and kept worshiping those roots again; although under different monikers, such as "oldschool", "oldstyle", "early rave", and so on - I guess "the names have been changed to protect the innocent". This meant that "Technoid Hardcore" could be enjoyed at Hardcore parties and festivals once more (often on separate floors), which led to a lot of gigs and exposure for Marc and his Planet Core Productions sound. [Note: PCP aka Planet Core Productions was a label family run by Marc Acardipane and Thorsten Lambart in the 90s.] It also influenced the Hardcore scene as a whole. A succession of genres such as "newstyle", "millennium" and "mainstyle" came into existence; genres that to 98% were built upon PCP and PCP-adjacent tracks: "Stereo Murder" (produced by Acardipane), "Atmos-Fear" (produced by Acardipane), "Poltergeist" (released on his label), "Flesh is the Fever" (released on Things To Come Records, a label with personal ties to PCP and that was inspired by PCP), plus various others.
This was already a good thing. But then, slowly but steadily, the Techno folk re-gained their interest in Hardcore and harder sounds, too; and now that the "millennial dominance" of the Techno scene, together with their favoring of minimalist and dandy-esque sounds, is slowly fading away, a younger generation is taking over the scene, and that new generation is very, very hardcore.
This led to a renewed interest in the works of Marc Acardipane, his crew, and his output again, coming straight from the heart of the Techno world. Marc himself acknowledged this development in some of his interviews, and added that the Techno people are sometimes even more zealous and knowledgeable about this music than the die-hard old-school gabbers!
A very fine evolution indeed; and we hope Marc gets into the spotlight again because of this, and that he finally reaps the respect that he deserves!
But why is the Techno folk favoring him and his sound specifically - in fact, more than a lot of other "Hardcore" players? I think this is because - and now we cycle back to 1998's "The Wire" essay - his sound is *indeed* heavily connected to Techno. It's not just some ultra-aggressive, ultra-noisy Gabber outing. It's real, true, bona fide Techno music. More than that, it represents a "road not taken" in the history of Techno music. Because, when you go back to the advent of Techno, to Detroit, Chicago, Berlin, London, Frankfurt, there was always a Hardcore contingent. Hardcore was always part of the Techno spirit, it helped to shape and mold the Techno sound. Alas, as mentioned above, it got disowned, and it became almost "forbidden" to speak of this type of music within Techno circles.
A liminal space that always lingered next to the scene as time moved on; a place that people did not dare to enter.
All this is changing now again. And while "every boy and his dog" (i.e. zines, webcasts, music academies) had their own Marc Acardipane feature by now, focusing on his more Hardcore and Gabber output, we decided to do the very opposite here, and showcase the Techno tracks from the past days of the PCP oeuvre, released using a cornucopia of aliases.
Bon appetit!
Oh, and by the way: we very dearly love "I like it loud", too!
(This list is in no particular order)
1. The Mover - Over Land and Sea how can one not love this track? great techno beats, rhythms, groove... and then this cosmic, celestial arrangement in the middle... the beats come back in, and the dancefloor erupts into madness. the flip side ("underwater operations") is also very well worth a listen.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VuYMsR1Cae8
2. Cyborg Unknown - The Year 2001 (Deep in Detroit mix) this is going deep into the history of detroit techno indeed. it's not enough to be friends of the jaguar here, this track channels cybotron just as much as it does metroplex. funky!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c2q4v8_YxbE
3. Trip Commando - Cross The White Line a techno behemoth of the most epic proportions. has probably one of the most elongated build ups in dance history, until the epic cinematic breakdown unfolds. highly recommended!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tGWv1e2hBZk
4. Turbulence - Whurlstorm this was on the second release by Industrial Strength Records - a label that shaped Hardcore history, too. it starts as a nice little nasty techno track, until everything breaks apart in the mid-riff, and turns into a hurricane of bass frequncies.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sngue8baqPs
5. The Mover - Nightflight (Nonstop 2 Kaos) and this was on Industrial Strengh Records number one! As Lenny Dee licensed "We Have Arrived" (a fantastic hardcore track, to say the least) for his label, and put that number on the back side. a cold groove, percussion that almost feels like a breakbeat... lots of bass, cyber-synth.... this is just dancefloor heaven.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=snnHspK1QYI
6. Countdown Part V - Untitled (A1) Countdown FFM is another sub-label to go for if one is looking for some technoid gems. stellar electronic intro, then we get into dance grooves, and things become more deviant as acid sounds sneak in.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bfIL6OCtN3o
7. Alien Christ - Of Suns and Moons (Phase II) inspired by "Suburban Knights - The Art of Stalking" (a true classic, originally released on Transmat). Marc made this influence his own, and delivered a very detroit-ish underground rave anthem.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xGmmDrQTyyY
8. The Mover & Lunatic Asylum – Frequency Surfers Lunatic Asylum aka "Dr. Macabre" is another person that was entwined with electronic music history while turning into a global player in the hardcore sector at a later date. this is a joint-venture of these two titans of techno, and the result is a very trippy, very twisted and surreal track.
(Cannot be found on youtube, but here are audio previews: https://www.toolboxrecords.com/en/product/17643/techno-hardtechno/dance-ecstasy-2025/ )
9. The Mover - Astral Demons (Original Mix) you should have realized by now: the mover is a synonym for high quality productions. this is one of my favorite pics from the legendary "frontal sickness" releases; and indeed adds a very demonic vibe to the whole dance thing.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lSMT2KdQt5Q
10. Rave Creator - A New Mind (Thai Acid Mix) "Thai" was a pcp sub that focused specifically on techno, acid, even a bit of trance-ish tracks. despite the alias, this was put out on DE 2001 instead. It's a remix of the famous "A New Mind" track.
starting with pure bass drones. it builds up very slowly, until thunderous, reverberated bass drums come in, and then it goes into full-on acid feeding. similar to "cross the white line", this track could be given the title "cinematic techno soundtrack".
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yGpuMbLicZU
Honorable Mentions:
T-Bone Castro - Return 2 Planet E Reincarnated Regulator - Italian Stallion Craig Tayaffo - Reduction (Back For Acid-The Expanded 0,25 Hrs Mix) Barracuda - Braineaters Two Tonys - Organ Bitch Nasty Django - Ey Loco Cold Rush Records Frontal Sickness 1+2 Reincarnated Regulator - Mindeater Climax - Relax Nasty Django - 3 P Rules! SexDrive Entertainment - No.2 T-Bone Castro / Ace The Space - Ace In The Hole Project Æ - Whales Alive Ultra Spaceman - Ultra-Style
Footnotes: 1: The original Wire essay - http://reynoldsretro.blogspot.com/2015/03/marc-acardipane-mover-pcp-dance-ecstasy.html
submitted by Low-Entropy to Techno [link] [comments]


2024.05.08 02:40 smallback Day 31 of the Best Colour for Each Species Poll Series! Faerie Lenny won last time and I mean, just look at it, it's gorgeous how could it not. Today is Lupe!

Day 31 of the Best Colour for Each Species Poll Series! Faerie Lenny won last time and I mean, just look at it, it's gorgeous how could it not. Today is Lupe!
So of course Faerie took first, it really is so unique, so beautiful, I totally get it. First place with 27%! Mutant came second with 24.7%, some of you were VERY passionate about that. Pink took third with 10.1%, so the top 3 are all just regular birds I guess!
Vote for Lenny if you haven't here, or check out the results here!
If you'd like to see the results for the polls so far, you can check out the tracking sheet here.

Click here for the Best Colour of Each Species Poll Series - Lupe

Daddy Lupe by GoldPaladinSevlow on DeviantArt, I'm honestly shocked there's not way more furry art of him tbh, he's literally a fursuit of a pet.
Check out the results for Lupe here!
Lupe is a fan fav, right? I feel like people loooove Lupe. One of the popular girls for sure. I still want to see yearly statistics on which pets are getting made/transformed, etc. who are the 3! Baby Lupe is incredible, a few really adorable babies in a row (not you Kyrii)! Desert's cool just because of it's iconic Anubis design. Love the Elderly Lupes because they answer how dogs would wear pants. Halloween is THE Halloween pet, I mean it's UC is unbeatable but is it unbeatable enough? Obsessed with Maraquan Lupe, sealion is such a good choice! Relic's fun, kind of freaks me out a bit. Spotted of course is the winner, I think. Or it'll at least hit top 3. I really like Toy just like I really liked Kougra, but I get that is not everyone's style. Also aw Valentine Lupe heart eyes!
What're your favs? Do you wish there was a Daddy Paint Brush? Will that get you to upvote these polls so other people can see and participate? I'll ask TNT.
Don't forget polls are open for a week, right now you can still vote for Kougra, Kyrii, and Lenny!
submitted by smallback to neopets [link] [comments]


2024.05.07 16:49 SpaceManTrades $INKW and $TLIF Big news concerning both Companies. Greene Concepts and Tocca Life Holdings Join Forces Within $4.5 Trillion U.S. Healthcare Industry to Increase Vitality Nationwide

Marion, North Carolina--(Newsfile Corp. - May 7, 2024) - Greene Concepts Inc. (OTC PINK: INKW) and Tocca Life Holdings, Inc. (OTC PINK: TLIF) ("Tocca Life") to include Tocca Life Holding's subsidiaries, Be Climbing Inc. and Aiguille Rock Climbing Center, are pleased to announce a partnership to increase opportunities for health and wellness along with mental and physical clarity within the $4.5 trillion U.S. healthcare industry. This harmonious and symbiotic relationship promotes consumer marketing and branding within both companies with the U.S. being one of the world's fastest growing and highest revenue generating fitness markets in the industry.
Both companies focus on improved well-being for their customers. For Tocca Life, the focus on rock climbing and fitness holds numerous advantages. This includes cardiorespiratory fitness, strength building, brain power, mental health, and confidence according to a February 16, 2023 Time Magazine article. For Greene Concepts, its BE WATER™ brand provides a convenient, values-oriented solution to encourage water consumption and benefits for the body to include joint lubrication, oxygen delivery throughout the body, and mineral/nutrient accessibility.
Stephen Carnes, President and CEO of Tocca Life Holdings, highlights, "Be Climbing will become a centerpiece attraction in the greatest vacation destination in the world, Orlando, Florida. As we prepare to open our new state of the art 30,000 square foot indoor climbing center covering a 7-acre landscape (the largest in the state of Florida), we currently operate a 10,000 square foot facility, the Aiguille Rock Climbing Center, Orlando's only full-service indoor climbing facility. We experience and project incredible company growth and our status is justified by the current number of climbing gyms in the U.S. (622) which has grown by 76% since 2014 with the U.S. climbing market experiencing tremendous revenue generation. The indoor rock climbing industry is exploding with growth after the sport made its first debut in the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games, which took place in 2021 due to the pandemic. Rock Climbing has now been officially added as an Olympic sport and will be part of the program in both the upcoming Paris 2024 and Los Angeles 2028 Olympic Games. The Olympic presence along with increased national and international participation and spending for the sport are expected to surge industry revenues for years to come."
Mr. Carnes continues, "Greene Concepts' BE WATER artesian spring water brand is the new sponsor for Aiguille's monthly newsletter and will be prominently featured in our May issue as a premier hydration solution for Aiguille and Be Climbing. This connection builds a larger platform for both Greene Concepts and Tocca Life Holdings. BE WATER is also the new official beverage of Be Climbing. My plan is to expand our number of climbing gyms nationally, making rock climbing accessible and enjoyable for everyone. While Be Climbing grows because of increased interest in rock climbing both nationally and internationally, BE WATER will continue to grow with its recent award to sell BE WATER at Walmart's brick and mortar stores. A rise in the tide lifts all boats and both Tocca Life and Greene Concepts will profit from each other's growth and health provisions to our customer base."
Lenny Greene, President and CEO of Greene Concepts, states, "I am incredibly proud to be connected with Tocca Life Holdings and its focus on health and wellness in the Florida area. Being associated with Tocca Life, our BE WATER brand will reach new consumers that prioritize healthier beverage choices along with convenience. The U.S. bottled water market was $44.6 billion in 2023 while remaining the country's most popular beverage. Our water is sourced in the U.S. at our Marion, North Carolina bottling plant and the positive values listed on our label (Be Generous, Be Kind, Be Strong, Be Good, Be Courageous, Be Aware, and Be Patient) invoke vitality, strength, mindfulness, and self-actualization. As we rollout to Walmart, our growth will continue and complement our long-term connection with Be Climbing as a valued and strategic partner."
The global climbing gym market was valued at $2.91 billion in 2023 and anticipated to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 11.4% between 2023 - 2031 and expected to reach $6.9 billion by 2031 according to Transparency Market Research.
The global bottled water market size was estimated at $303.95 billion in 2022 and expected to grow at a CAGR of 5.9% from 2023 - 2030 according to Grand View Research.
FULL PR HERE...
https://www.otcmarkets.com/stock/INKW/news/Greene-Concepts-and-Tocca-Life-Holdings-Join-Forces-Within-45-Trillion-US-Healthcare-Industry-to-Increase-Vitality-Natio?id=439602
submitted by SpaceManTrades to pennystocks [link] [comments]


2024.05.07 16:34 screech691 $INKW and $TLIF joining forces within $4.5 Trillion U.S. Healthcare Industry

Greene Concepts and Tocca Life Holdings Join Forces Within $4.5 Trillion U.S. Healthcare Industry to Increase Vitality Nationwide
Marion, North Carolina--(Newsfile Corp. - May 7, 2024) - Greene Concepts Inc. (OTC PINK: INKW) and Tocca Life Holdings, Inc. (OTC PINK: TLIF) ("Tocca Life") to include Tocca Life Holding's subsidiaries, Be Climbing Inc. and Aiguille Rock Climbing Center, are pleased to announce a partnership to increase opportunities for health and wellness along with mental and physical clarity within the $4.5 trillion U.S. healthcare industry. This harmonious and symbiotic relationship promotes consumer marketing and branding within both companies with the U.S. being one of the world's fastest growing and highest revenue generating fitness markets in the industry.
Both companies focus on improved well-being for their customers. For Tocca Life, the focus on rock climbing and fitness holds numerous advantages. This includes cardiorespiratory fitness, strength building, brain power, mental health, and confidence according to a February 16, 2023 Time Magazine article. For Greene Concepts, its BE WATER™ brand provides a convenient, values-oriented solution to encourage water consumption and benefits for the body to include joint lubrication, oxygen delivery throughout the body, and mineral/nutrient accessibility.
Stephen Carnes, President and CEO of Tocca Life Holdings, highlights, "Be Climbing will become a centerpiece attraction in the greatest vacation destination in the world, Orlando, Florida. As we prepare to open our new state of the art 30,000 square foot indoor climbing center covering a 7-acre landscape (the largest in the state of Florida), we currently operate a 10,000 square foot facility, the Aiguille Rock Climbing Center, Orlando's only full-service indoor climbing facility. We experience and project incredible company growth and our status is justified by the current number of climbing gyms in the U.S. (622) which has grown by 76% since 2014 with the U.S. climbing market experiencing tremendous revenue generation. The indoor rock climbing industry is exploding with growth after the sport made its first debut in the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games, which took place in 2021 due to the pandemic. Rock Climbing has now been officially added as an Olympic sport and will be part of the program in both the upcoming Paris 2024 and Los Angeles 2028 Olympic Games. The Olympic presence along with increased national and international participation and spending for the sport are expected to surge industry revenues for years to come."
Mr. Carnes continues, "Greene Concepts' BE WATER artesian spring water brand is the new sponsor for Aiguille's monthly newsletter and will be prominently featured in our May issue as a premier hydration solution for Aiguille and Be Climbing. This connection builds a larger platform for both Greene Concepts and Tocca Life Holdings. BE WATER is also the new official beverage of Be Climbing. My plan is to expand our number of climbing gyms nationally, making rock climbing accessible and enjoyable for everyone. While Be Climbing grows because of increased interest in rock climbing both nationally and internationally, BE WATER will continue to grow with its recent award to sell BE WATER at Walmart's brick and mortar stores. A rise in the tide lifts all boats and both Tocca Life and Greene Concepts will profit from each other's growth and health provisions to our customer base."
Lenny Greene, President and CEO of Greene Concepts, states, "I am incredibly proud to be connected with Tocca Life Holdings and its focus on health and wellness in the Florida area. Being associated with Tocca Life, our BE WATER brand will reach new consumers that prioritize healthier beverage choices along with convenience. The U.S. bottled water market was $44.6 billion in 2023 while remaining the country's most popular beverage. Our water is sourced in the U.S. at our Marion, North Carolina bottling plant and the positive values listed on our label (Be Generous, Be Kind, Be Strong, Be Good, Be Courageous, Be Aware, and Be Patient) invoke vitality, strength, mindfulness, and self-actualization. As we rollout to Walmart, our growth will continue and complement our long-term connection with Be Climbing as a valued and strategic partner."
The global climbing gym market was valued at $2.91 billion in 2023 and anticipated to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 11.4% between 2023 - 2031 and expected to reach $6.9 billion by 2031 according to Transparency Market Research.
The global bottled water market size was estimated at $303.95 billion in 2022 and expected to grow at a CAGR of 5.9% from 2023 - 2030 according to Grand View Research.
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/greene-concepts-tocca-life-holdings-140800932.html

submitted by screech691 to smallstreetbets [link] [comments]


2024.05.02 08:44 SarahwantsCookie A little Lenny fan art

https://reddit.com/link/1ci8zvw/video/sjv1j66wlyxc1/player
submitted by SarahwantsCookie to MOONMOON_OW [link] [comments]


2024.05.02 00:58 Illustrious-Lead-960 Old Hungarian saying: “You learn PROPER bagpipe from Hell.”

Old Hungarian saying: “You learn PROPER bagpipe from Hell.” submitted by Illustrious-Lead-960 to BrandNewSentence [link] [comments]


2024.05.02 00:02 RepresentativeSure38 How to prioritize work for MVP

Prioritization is a perplexing thing. It's a universally familiar term. However, when people attempt to prioritize anything — it becomes surprisingly hard to do. Even if they don't end up arguing, the typical outcome of a prioritization exercise is a pile of tasks assigned to a particular bucket like P0, P1, P2 or P3 — corresponding to Critical, High, Medium and Low priority. Usually, this will yield enough confidence to feel satisfied and to believe that the job is done and everything is clear. But before long, it'll be clear that nothing is clear at all. Why is that?
https://preview.redd.it/wdkcuemi0wxc1.jpg?width=500&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=843026cc881616ee4fabc4a625e3d5097e0bc086
In this blog post, we're going to dive into case studies of two Canadian startups to explore:
  1. Why is it so hard to agree on priority?
  2. Why using priority buckets for product work is a waste of time when building a Minimum Viable Product (MVP).
  3. Why without a strategy, prioritization turns into randomization.
But let's start with the definition of prioritization.

So what is prioritization?

If you ask the internet or an actual human for a definition of prioritization, you will get an answer that it's the process of arranging tasks in order of importance or urgency.
There is so much to unpack here...
First, the definition of prioritization doesn't prescribe how to do it. In other words, we have to come up with our own function that takes a unit of work along with multiple other parameters and returns a numeric value. But how do we even determine the importance or urgency of a unit of work so that we have a numerical value associated with it?
This is where prioritization becomes more art than science. Unfortunately (for data-driven people), many parameters supplied to a prioritization function are subjective, qualitative and contextual. In other words, it's impossible to be precise with a priority score — as different people would assign different scores to the same facts. It's easier to agree that an issue feels like a High priority than making a strong enough argument that it scores precisely 794 points. A High priority issue usually feels like a High priority, but 794 points don't feel like anything. And this is how we end up with four priority buckets of work.

Prioritization: A snapshot of today's context

When we lay out our work, breaking it down into tasks and deliverables, they seem pretty fixed at the outset. We're basing everything, including prioritization, on the current circumstances and environment — our knowledge, goals, understood customer needs, partnerships, and market trends. Moreover, our roadmap and backlog are also part of this environment and also affect each other.
But as time passes, things change. We learn new stuff, understand our customers better, observe how the market evolves and change our opinions and beliefs. And many of these opinions and beliefs are part of our priority assessment function. So if we take a unit work that in the past scored High, 794 points priority, and try to assess its priority nowadays — it's not guaranteed to get the same score. It may, but it may not. What felt important in the past may look insignificant now. And vice versa — what we thought was minor — is a big deal today. Some things will turn out entirely wrong despite the original vision staying correct! Pretty much like in 1865 Jules Verne thought that you would need a cannon to send Neil Armstrong to the Moon.

Priority buckets

Have you ever experienced that uneasy sensation after ignoring another issue of low importance, sensing that there is a growing pile of medium and low-priority tasks being neglected, which could eventually become overwhelming — like an iceberg tipping over and engulfing everyone beneath it? That's what priority buckets do.
https://preview.redd.it/cfbj38kr0wxc1.jpg?width=500&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=1d4efd9f1bd89b448c9a593744e2b8377d4e929e
Do you know what else prioritization with buckets does? It creates this mindset leading to a "good enough" culture of mediocrity where aiming for greatness takes a back seat. Trying to nail something awesome, or even hit that elusive perfection, means you've got to sweat the small stuff too. Ignoring low-priority issues means settling for less than the best. It's hard to feel proud of your own work when you know about all the imperfections it comes with.
I didn't intend for the previous paragraph to come across as if I were on a high horse, giving a TED talk. Priority buckets are still a valid tactical instrument for triage during crisis management, but they should not be your strategic prioritization tool.

The Eisenhower Matrix

Similarly, the famous Eisenhower Matrix is also a tactical tool. It's so tactical that it's better described as a tool for triage rather than prioritization:
  1. Important and urgent — do now.
  2. Important, not urgent — schedule for later.
  3. Not important, urgent — delegate.
  4. Not important, not urgent — delete.

Strategic prioritization

Strategic prioritization merges strategy and prioritization into a single, unified concept. We've already introduced a definition of prioritization, so let's introduce one for strategy.
What is strategy
Strategy is a framework that consists of three key elements:
  1. Diagnosis — identifying and defining the challenge that stands in the way of achieving our goal. The true challenge lies in the reasons behind the issues, not just in their symptoms.
  2. Guiding Policy — an overall approach for dealing with the challenge identified in the diagnosis. This guiding policy outlines how to address the challenge, essentially setting the direction or approach without detailing the specifics.
  3. Coherent Actions — a set of actions dictating how the Guiding Policy will be carried out. The actions should be coherent, meaning that the use of resources, policies, and steps should be coordinated and support each other (not defy or be independent from one another).
A good strategy has all three elements and leverages the sources of power within the organization against opportunities or challenges.
Bad Strategy
Bad strategy is almost a literary form that uses PowerPoint slides to say: "Here is how we will look as a company in three years." The bad strategy takes two principal forms:
  1. "Dog's dinner objectives" contain every suggestion made at planning meetings and listing, sometimes hundreds of uncoordinated, incoherent actions, objectives and key results (OKR).
  2. "Blue sky objectives" is a restatement, usually full of fluff and inflated words of the desired state of affairs. It skips over the annoying fact that no one has a clue as to how to get there.
To learn more about strategy I highly recommend Richard Rummelt's book Good Strategy Bad Strategy: The Difference and Why It Matters" and his interview at Lenny's Podcast.

So what is strategic prioritization?

You probably already guessed that strategic prioritization is a subset of the third element of strategy — Coherent Actions. Coherent Actions do not exist without a Guiding Policy, which cannot be conceived without a Diagnosis. If we cannot tell what challenge we are trying to overcome and do not have a general approach to overcome that challenge — there is nothing strategic about our actions, and we are totally rogue and random.
https://preview.redd.it/iqlh6plt0wxc1.jpg?width=564&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=94bcbf8ccf333118929d096756a3ce84c179128e
Prioritization: The art of making less random choices
Imagine, we are creating a Minimum Viable Product (MVP) to validate a business idea. It's worth noting that the RICE framework, another tactical prioritization tool for product managers created by Sean McBride at Intercom, is not suitable when developing an MVP. The goal of an MVP is straightforward: to demonstrate with minimal resources and effort that a problem exists, can be addressed with a proposed solution and that customers are willing to pay for it. In this context, factors such as Reach, Impact, and Confidence, central to the RICE framework, are not particularly relevant.

Case studies

To showcase the importance of the Diagnosis and how vastly different Guiding Policies can be depending on the outstanding challenge, let's examine two distinct companies building their MVPs and contrast their challenges and guiding policies against each other.

Looplay

Looplay is a Montreal-based service, designed for sports facilities to increase their revenue, customer loyalty, and social media exposure by offering automated recording of games and highlights. It redefines the market category by offering automated highlight reels to casual players and recreational sports enthusiasts — a perk that was once only for the pros with deep pockets.
Looplay's Diagnosis
Looplay confronts the classical challenge of democratizing a technology. It requires significantly lowering the cost of deployment of such a technology — by orders of magnitude — as well as reducing the associated risk of messing up for the buyers to the levels typically associated with consumer products.
Looplay's Guiding Policy
Looplay's challenge is also Looplay's opportunity. If solved, it becomes their economic moat against the established incumbents who target professional sports organizations.
To meet risk and budget constraints, Looplay needs to focus on supporting cheap, mass-market cameras and other equipment in an agnostic way to eliminate the cost of supporting native protocol variations.
The actual highlights, such as when a player scores an impressive goal or makes a skillful move, carry a disproportionally high value yet take only a short duration of the overall game footage. For Looplay, the risk of missing even one such highlight equates to the potential loss of a customer, making it imperative to prioritize resilience to slow and unreliable network conditions.

FISPAN

FISPAN, a fintech startup from Vancouver, designed to increase transactional and deposit revenues for its partnering banks by integrating banks' treasury services into end-users' ERP and accounting systems. It breaks the industry status quo by converging business banking and accounting, traditionally seen as separate workflows, into a unified, seamless experience — hence, its logo is a stylized hypercube.
FISPAN's Diagnosis
FISPAN's challenge is twofold: Firstly, the amplified risk inherent in financial transactions demands increased attention to compliance, security, and traceability. Secondly, challenging the established norms and processes can be difficult. Convincing individuals to shift from their current methods to new technological solutions and educating them about the advantages is particularly tough.
FISPAN's Guiding Policy
Being between the hammer of a highly regulated financial industry and a hard place of procurement processes that are decades old, FISPAN's challenge is, first and foremost, to showcase that its information security practices earn FISPAN the right to participate in payments and vendors' information exchange between banks and other legal entities.
Any given moment in the life of a piece of information — whether it's a payment instruction, vendor's information or FISPAN's own source code — must be explainable, predictable, traceable and transparent, backed up and ready for disaster recovery.
To drive the adoption of a new solution that modifies the decades-old practices in a very conservative industry, FISPAN should simplify onboarding and minimize the learning required for the users. Instead of "You used to do X here, now you need to do Y" — it should be "You used to do X here, now you don't need to do anything."

Prioritize features for MVP with Guiding Policies

Just reading the guiding policies for both companies gives a good idea of how to prioritize work. For example, Looplay doesn't need to work on supporting the gear used at Madison Square Garden, and FISPAN doesn't need to support credit card payments in MVP and can start with ACH payments because they constitute a significantly larger share of business-to-business transactions compared to credit cards and would not require compliance with even more hardcore PCI (Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard).
In other words, conformity with the guiding policies helps you decide what should and shouldn't be prioritized. However, building an MVP (minimum viable product) is more similar to working on a fixed-scope project (by definition — minimum). Therefore, if you removed a feature from your product but can still demonstrate unlocking value for the customers and meeting their expectations — that feature didn't belong to the MVP. By the way, meeting the baseline industry expectations is an essential requirement for an MVP. That's why we can't cut compliance work or make ugly user interfaces.

MVP prioritization

Hence, prioritizing work for MVP is not assigning it to priority buckets, it's deciding in binary without gradients: What should and shouldn't be in your MVP. It's relentless but tasteful cutting and trimming to save time and money for finding customers and letting them validate the MVP. However, ensure your challenge is well defined and properly diagnosed.
submitted by RepresentativeSure38 to ProductManagement [link] [comments]


2024.04.30 20:58 AQuietBorderline Why You Should Always Bring Buckets and Super Soakers to a Wedding...

I think the dust has long since settled and it's now safe to tell the story of how we got back at the monster-in-law. And, my dear petty queen of potatoes...this is for you.
All names have been changed to protect the innocent.
Years ago, my friend, Kelly, got engaged to the love of her life, Franky. Franky is a sweet, well mannered guy who treats Kelly like she's the only woman in the world. Everyone was happy...except for Franky's mom, Christine.
Christine was a boymom before boymoms became a meme on the web. Clingy, overprotective, cringey, the works. No girl would ever be good enough for her Franky. She made a girl in his kindergarten class cry because the girl had given him an innocent peck on the cheek. The last straw for Franky was when Christine decided to go to Franky's senior prom...as his date. Yes. You read that right, dear reader. She got the corsage, an appointment for her haimakeup and a dress that wasn't appropriate for a middle aged mom that was losing her looks. Franky enlisted in the Marines and cut off all ties for two years. A few years before he met Kelly, Franky and Christine decided to rebuild their relationship after his grandpa (Christine's father) died and she actually respected the boundaries Franky put in place.
But I guess Christine wanted to marry Franky or something, I don't know. She'd use backhanded compliments in regards with meals Kelly cooked, how she dressed, how she talked, etc. Fortunately, thanks to his time in the Marines, Franky has a shiny spine and Kelly has an even shinier one. They both told Christine off and she'd back down.
When Franky and Kelly told Christine that they were getting married, she immediately told them she was going to gift them the wedding reception (venue, food, drink, DJ, the works). She had been saving up for years, apparently. Franky and Kelly tried to politely decline as they both had a strange feeling this would come with strings attached. However, Christine kept insisting.
We spent the whole wedding planning period waiting for her hijinks...but things went well. Other than a couple of objections due to an aunt's allergies or something like that, Christine let them have free reign. Things were going so well that Kelly even invited Christine to go dress shopping.
But then the cloud covered the sun. A few days before the wedding, we all checked into the hotel we were staying at. One of our friends (Grace) was the makeup/hair artist and she visited each of the members in the wedding party to talk makeup and logistics. One of the people she visited was Christine at her room. While they were together, Christine made a comment about how the makeup was going to make her feel like a bride. Grace got suspicious and waited until Christine went to use the bathroom to examine the closet.
Yep. You guessed right. Christine had gotten an identical copy of Kelly's wedding dress! She probably insisted on paying for the venue because she figured they wouldn't risk losing the reception.
Grace immediately took a picture and sent it to Franky and Kelly along with a warning. The wedding party, including myself (I was a bridesmaid), Franky and Kelly all got together to talk about what to do. The happy couple was worried that if they confronted Christine directly, she'd do something awful at the reception. Given Franky's past history with her, she was capable of anything.
That's when Meg, the MOH spoke up. Meg had always been a bit of a pistol and ooh boy were we all happy with this idea.
The wedding and reception was being held at this gorgeous historic manor that had been renovated into a venue. The second floor has a wrap around porch that goes all around the building. Meg's idea was simple. Two of us would stand on the second floor with two sets of buckets. One would be filled with fake flower petals. The other set would be filled with something else...I decided to up the ante and purchased two Nerf Super Soakers and as much cheap box burgundy that I could get on sale (with Kelly and Franky's enthusiastic permission of course).
So myself, Meg, and two groomsmen (Mike and Lenny, two of Franky's fellow Marines) stood out front with our weapons as the guests arrived. I'm a theater nut so I came up with a little script. Guests arriving would be asked by Meg and myself (who were on the balcony) to halt and state their purpose. Those who gave satisfactory answers (ie anyone who wasn't Christine) would have the petals scattered over their heads and Mike and Lenny would give a respectful salute and the guests would be granted access.
Most of the guests loved it and even gave us some really funny and awesome answers. Then Christine arrived...and yep. She was wearing the dress. Meg and I looked at each other and we put down our flower petal buckets and picked up the other buckets. Mike and Lenny stood at attention. I asked Christine to halt and state her purpose.
Amazingly, she stopped and said "I am here to attend my son's wedding." Granted, we had a backup plan but we're still surprised it worked.
Meg said "Then we have a gift for you." Then we dumped the contents of the buckets on her head.
We had raided every art supply store in town of all the glitter they had. Now if you don't know anything about glitter...it gets everywhere and is darn nigh impossible to remove...as anyone who has ever done theatedance can attest.
As Christine screamed, Lenny and Mike sprayed her with the Super Soakers filled with cheap box burgundy. Meg told her in a cold voice "Get out of here before we call the cops."
Christine left and Mike texted the happy couple to let them know. Franky and Kelly then proceeded to text her that they knew what she had planned and that they were cutting ties for good. They blocked her and we proceeded to have fun. Granted, we had to help clean up the glitter and spilled wine but it was worth it.
Was it cruel? It was. Was it delicious? You bet.
submitted by AQuietBorderline to CharlotteDobreYouTube [link] [comments]


2024.04.27 06:22 Someoneman The Ubermighty Jesus, Driver of Death

The Ubermighty Jesus, Driver of Death submitted by Someoneman to TextBossfight [link] [comments]


2024.04.26 19:06 gaston-legume My curated listed of things happening in DFW this weekend (April 26th - 28th)

Things to do in Dallas this weekend

Live Music

FRIDAY - 04/26 - Dallas Blues Festival @ Texas Trust CU Theatre @ 8PM Featuring King George, LeBrado, Pokey Bear, Lenny Williams, J-Wonn, West Love, and more!
FRIDAY - 04/26 - Marshmello + Svdden Death @ The Factory in Deep Ellum @ 8PM With YVM3, Vampa, Pyke, & Munk
FRIDAY - 04/26 - Late Night Drive Home @ The Factory in Deep Ellum @ 8PM With Pleasure Pill
FRIDAY - 04/26 - Sematary @ House of Blues @ 8PM
FRIDAY - 04/26 - Zebra @ The Echo Music Hall @ 7PM
FRIDAY - 04/26 - Big Something @ Deep Ellum Art Co @ 8PM With The Ries Brothers
FRIDAY - 04/26 - Cosmic Gate @ Stereo Live @ 10PM
FRIDAY - 04/26 - Leo Kottke @ The Kessler @ 8PM
FRIDAY - 04/26 - DJ Vrywvy @ Trees @ 9PM
FRIDAY - 04/26 - Mason Adams Project @ Sundown at Granada @ 9:30PM
SATURDAY - 04/27 - R&B Only Fest @ Toyota Music Factory @ 3PM
SATURDAY - 04/27 -Forgotten Space + Stu Allen @ Strauss Square @ 7PM The acclaimed Dallas-born Grateful Dead tribute band returns to Strauss Square.
SATURDAY - 04/27 - Chicano Batman @ The Factory in Deep Ellum @ 8PM With Lido Pimienta
SATURDAY - 04/27 - Say Anything @ House of Blues @ 8PM
SATURDAY - 04/27 - K?D @ Stereo Live @ 10PM
SATURDAY - 04/27 - Yellow Days @ Deep Ellum Art Co @ 8PM
SATURDAY - 04/27 - Psychedelic Porn Crumpets @ Granada Theater @ 8PM With Spoon Benders & Smokey Mirror
SATURDAY - 04/27 - Taylor Swift Party @ Sundown at Granada @ 10PM
SATURDAY - 04/27 - Ugly Must-Tard + Slow Roosevelt @ Trees @ 8PM
SUNDAY - 04/28 - Hozier @ Dos Equis Pavilion @ 7:30PM
SUNDAY - 04/28 - Jose Gonzalez @ Majestic Theatre @ 7:30PM
SUNDAY - 04/28 - YTB Fatt @ House of Blues @ 8PM
SUNDAY - 04/28 - Maylene and The Sons of Disaster @ Trees @ 8PM
SUNDAY - 04/28 - Ally Venable @ Granada Theater @ 8PM

Standup Comedy:

FRIDAY & SATURDAY - 04/26 - 04/27 - Sugar Sammy Stand Up @ Dallas Comedy Club
ALL WEEKEND - Maz Jobrani Stand Up @ Addison Improv
ALL WEEKEND - Chris Estrada Stand Up @ Arlington Improv

Sports:

FRIDAY - 04/26 - Rangers vs Reds @ Globe Life Field @ 7PM
FRIDAY - 04/26 - Mavericks vs Clippers @ American Airlines Center @ 7PM
SATURDAY - 04/27 - Rangers vs Reds @ Globe Life Field @ 3PM
SATURDAY - 04/27 - FC Dallas vs Houston Dynamo @ Toyota Stadium @ 7:30PM
SUNDAY - 04/28 - Rangers vs Reds @ Globe Life Field @ 1:35PM Promotion: Ice Cream Sundays
SUNDAY - 04/28 - Mavericks vs Clippers @ American Airlines Center @ 2:30PM

Cultural and Theater:

FRIDAY - 04/26 - Bianca Del Rio Drag Show @ Majestic Theatre @ 8PM
FRIDAY & SATURDAY - 04/26 - 04/27 - ‘Umrao Jaan’ Musical @ Music Hall at Fair Park This musical play is set to captivate audiences with a blend of talent, poetry and enchanting music, providing a dynamic and rich cultural experience.
SATURDAY - 04/27 - ‘Swan Lake’ Ballet @ Majestic Theatre @ 7PM Live through the enchanting romance of Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky’s ballet classic ‘Swan Lake’ presented by the World Ballet Series.
SATURDAY - 04/27 - ‘God Bless America’ Concert @ Meyerson Symphony Center @ 5PM / 8PM Powerful voices of hundreds of youth and adult singers combine with an elegant symphony orchestra in tribute to the spirit of American freedom and pride.
SATURDAY - 04/27 - Harry Potter Soundtracks in Concert @ Bass Performance Hall @ 11AM A full orchestra performs favorite songs and melodies from the Harry Potter franchise in a concert sure to delight fans of all ages.
SATURDAY - 04/27 - ‘Command Performance’ Dance Show @ Winspear Opera House @ 6PM Command Performance is a mix of classical and modern dance - compiling the most exciting, innovative and beautiful works from world-renowned dancers.
SATURDAY & SUNDAY - 04/27 - 04/28 - ‘Sonata’ Ballet @ Moody Performance Hall Prepare to be moved by a multitude of styles as this sonata-inspired ballet program includes captivating classic and contemporary dances from world-class choreographers.
ALL WEEKEND - Dallas International Film Festival DIFF is an annual city-wide film event that features premiere screenings, eye-opening documentaries, intriguing short films, filmmaker panels, and many other events for film buffs!
ALL WEEKEND - ‘Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back’ in Concert @ Bass Performance Hall See the film on a big screen while Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra performs the score live to picture for the most thrilling experience.
ALL WEEKEND - ‘Guys and Dolls’ Musical @ Sanders Theater Set in the 1950s New York City, this musical is considered by many to be the ‘perfect’ American musical and it’ll have guests tapping their feet and singing along to the catchy tunes.
ALL WEEKEND - ‘Dial M for Murder’ Play @ Wyly Theatre LAST CHANCE - Don’t miss a new version of this gripping and stylish thriller about murder and revenge that inspired Alfred Hitchcock’s film masterpiece!
ALL WEEKEND - ‘The Seagull’ Play @ Theater Three LAST CHANCE - Known famously as one of Chekhov’s greatest plays, ‘The Seagull’ reveals the truth in devastation of living somewhere between the person you are and the life you dreamed for yourself.

Experiences / Family:

FRIDAY - 04/26 - ‘DC League of Super-Pets’ Screening @ Fair Park @ 7:15PM
SATURDAY - 04/27 - Dallas Jazz Stroll @ Flora Street D’JAM commemorates its 11th year of celebrating North Texas jazz where Flora Street transforms into a Jazz Alley in different participating venues.
SATURDAY - 04/27 - Hot Import Nights Lifestyle Festival @ Panther Island Pavilion @ 5PM Enjoy a display of hundreds of customized cars, live music, a sneaker pop-up, food and beverage vendors, entertainment zones, and more fun!
SATURDAY - 04/27 - Dog Bowl @ Cotton Bowl Stadium @ 12PM Dallas’ historic football field will transform into a super-sized dog park for canines of all sizes to romp and run unleashed!
SATURDAY - 04/27 - Festival of Joy @ Klyde Warren Park @ 11AM Experience the Bhakti traditions of Ancient India through live music and dance performances, vegetarian street food, and a concert in the evening with Gaura Vani.
SUNDAY - 04/28 - Market Ciro Fest @ Fair Park @ 3PM This lively celebration of community and culture features live music, performances, 70+ local vendors, free kids' activities, and more!
SUNDAY - 04/28 - The Boho Market @ Klyde Warren Park @ 11AM Visit one of the largest artisan markets in Texas and shop one-of-a-kind goods from local small businesses.
DAILY - Funbox - World’s Biggest Bounce Park @ Stonebriar Centre Mall & Hurst North East Mall FUNBOX is a unique entertainment and amusement experience consisting of 25,000 square feet of inflatable fun for kids and adults! Visit its two locations in DFW!
DAILY - ‘Destination: Dinosaurs’ @ Dallas Zoo Uncover the secrets of the dinosaurs as you wander among the shadows of over 100 life-sized colossal giants in one of the largest immersive dinosaur exhibits in the country.

Museum and Arts:

SUNDAY - 04/28 -Drawing from the Masters @ Meadows Museum @ 1:30PM Enjoy afternoons of informal drawing classes inspired by the museum collection.
DAILY - ‘From Munch to Kirchner: The Heins Collection’ Exhibition @ DMA The exhibition celebrates the legacy and art collection of Marie “Elinor” Heins through the recent gift of 30 paintings, sculptures, and works on paper by artists like Renoir, Signac, Toulouse-Lautrec, and Munch
DAILY - ‘The Impressionist Revolution: From Monet to Matisse’ Exhibition @ DMA The exhibition explores the fascinating story of Impressionism from its birth in 1874 to its legacy in the early 20th century and the revolutionary course it charted for modern art.
DAILY - ‘He Said/She Said: Contemporary Women Artists Interject’ Exhibition @ DMA Join contemporary women artists in questioning the myth of the sole male genius in an exhibition where contributions from male artists are strategically appropriated in order to create space for new, more inclusive narratives.
DAILY- ‘Tiffany Chung: Rise Into The Atmosphere’ Installation @ DMA Contending with current sociopolitical issues in relation to history and cultural memory, Chung’s practice documents and discusses the hidden histories of personal memory and experience.
DAILY - ‘Surrealism and Us: Caribbean and African Diasporic Artists Since 1940’ Exhibition @ The Modern Centered on the intersection of Caribbean aesthetics, Afrosurrealism, and Afrofuturism, ‘Surrealism and Us’ explores how Caribbean and Black artists interpreted a modernist movement.
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Many of you all have asked me to setup an email list, you can sign up here. I'll start sending this as an email in the next few weeks, thanks for your patience while I get things figured out.
submitted by gaston-legume to Dallas [link] [comments]


2024.04.26 17:19 jettasarebadmkay April 26th, 2024 - /r/GhostsCBS: GASP!

/GhostsCBS
10600 Woodstone Mansion inhabitants waiting to get sucked off for 3 years
(Author’s note: this article contains spoilers for the current season of Ghosts and contains discussion about sensitive topics.)
What do a Gen X stockbroker, a 1920s lounge singer, a Revolutionary War soldier, a hippie, a Viking, a boomer Girl Scout master, a Lenape storyteller, and a Victorian noblewoman have in common? They’re all ghosts that, uh, live in the aforementioned manor on the CBS sitcom Ghosts. Based on the BBC series of the same name, the American incarnation is now in its third season, and was recently renewed for a fourth. Rose McIver and Utkarsh Ambudkar lead an ensemble cast as millennial couple Samantha and Jay Arondekar, who inherit Sam’s great aunt’s mansion in the Hudson Valley in New York and move there to try to convert it to a bed & breakfast, and after a near-death experience in the first episode Sam is able to see the numerous ghosts that inhabit the mansion. /GhostsCBS is Reddit’s, uh, haunt for what’s going on on the show. I’m a fairly new fan of the show, having been introduced to it by my wife just after the third season premiere earlier this year, but I’ve since caught up with every episode to date. It’s a solidly written sitcom, with a good mix of comedy stylings, with double entendres abound (particularly about the situation of a ghost getting “sucked off”, or leaving earth), and well-flowing storylines, including the cliffhanger that started at the end of season 2 where Sam sees a ghost get sucked off. The story continues into season 3, where it’s assumed the ghost was the hippie Flower, and the group bids her farewell, though a few episodes in it’s revealed that she simply fell down a well chasing a butterfly. (Offscreen, Flower’s actress, Sheila Carrasco, was on maternity leave and the character returned in the eighth episode of season 3, where it’s revealed that the ghost that got sucked off is revealed to be someone else.) The show also has its poignant moments. All but one of the ghosts’ deaths have been shown at the time this article was published, with the most recent being Hetty Woodstone, Sam’s ancestor, who is shown to have committed suicide by hanging herself with a telephone cord after previously telling the other ghosts she’d accidentally overdosed on morphine. A few of the characters comfort her after she admits the truth. The sub talks about theories on the numerous story arcs, a list of the “ghost rules”, favorite ghosts, and so much more.
I interviewed moderator u/PopCultureNerd about the sub. Warning: more spoilers ahead.
What’s moderating the sub like? Does it grow more quickly when there’s a new season, or is it more gradual?
u/PopCultureNerd: Moderating this group is a blast. It is always fun to see what people are discussing or posting about the show. Also, while I do believe the group grows more when new episodes are airing, I’ve noticed that there is some growth in the months between seasons. I think this is because the show is getting new fans as people find it through re-runs or if they are in a country that gets shows later than American audiences.
How popular do new episode discussion threads tend to be?
u/PopCultureNerd: They tend to be quite active. For this season (season 3) I’ve noticed that episode discussion posts easily get over a hundred comments within 12 hours of the new episode airing. And, currently, I don’t archive older episode discussions. So, I’ve noticed fans – both new and old – adding to those posts to share new insights into older episodes.
Who are the most popular ghosts with members of the sub?
u/PopCultureNerd: An aspect of the show I enjoy is that each of the main ghosts has a sizeable portion of the fanbase. I’ve also seen a multitude of fan art and cosplaying shared in the group dedicated to each of the main ghosts. So, I don’t think there is a clear favorite. With all that said, the best one is Thorfinn.
What’s your favorite post on the sub?
u/PopCultureNerd: My favorite post will either happen just before this interview gets published or a little after. This will be the post celebrating that we have 10k members. It will celebrate 10k people who enjoy a great TV show together.
What’s the general reaction to Carol (Pete’s widow) becoming a ghost?
u/PopCultureNerd: The majority of the fanbase doesn’t like her, but that is because the writers did a great job of making her unlikeable. However, I do think the character could be redeemed if she sincerely apologizes to Pete and helps him grow.
What do you hope to see in the rest of season 3, and for season 4?
u/PopCultureNerd: I am looking forward to the return of Flower for season 3. For season 4, I hope to see the series experiment a bit. For instance, myself and others would love to see a musical episode. Given CBS has already released a musical song for the show - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LWLM5fnmftk – we know that the cast has musical talents. I would also love to see an episode from the point-of-view of a reality show ghost hunter. With that said, I just hope the show continues to make me laugh after a long day.
Anything else you want people to know?
u/PopCultureNerd: Not only is “Ghosts” (CBS) a great show, but our sub-Reddit is awesome and welcoming to new people. So feel free to join us.
My sentiments exactly. Check out /GhostsCBS.
u/jettasarebadmkay is apparently the US sitcom person of the group now.
submitted by jettasarebadmkay to subredditoftheday [link] [comments]


2024.04.26 03:28 autobuzzfeedbot 13 Child Stars Who Opened Up About Being The Breadwinner Of Their Families At Such A Young Age

  1. When Zendaya decided she wanted to be an actor, her mom stayed in Oakland and worked two jobs to support the family, while her dad quit his job and moved to LA with her. However, as Zendaya grew more successful, she became the family breadwinner. In 2024, she told British Vogue, "I'm almost going through my angsty teenager phase now because I didn't really have the time to do it before. I felt like I was thrust into a very adult position: I was becoming the breadwinner of my family very early, and there was a lot of role-reversal happening, and just kind of becoming grown, really."
  2. In her memoir Sorry Not Sorry, Naya Rivera said that, growing up, her family often faced financial issues because of her dad's spending habits. After losing his IT job in 2001, he couldn't find work for three years. She wrote, "As Dad's stint of unemployment dragged on, I became the only one in the family who had any money...I didn't have millions — more like tens of thousands — in my Coogan account, but these were dire times. There was literally no money coming in at all, so over the next few years, my mom and I made two court visits to request a withdrawal from my account. I'd miss the first few hours of class, and we'd go to court and stand in front of a judge to petition for permission."
  3. On Call Her Daddy in 2024, JoJo Siwa said, "My parents thought when I turned 18, I was gonna get my Coogan account money, take all of my money, and have it all be mine...I was like, 'I can give you so much reassurance, but I will never do that.' That's always been a fear of theirs, always has been. Just because the opportunity of me leaving them high and dry was right there. People have done it before. Child stars have done it before, but I would never do that to my family."
  4. When Sydney Sweeney was about 11 or 12, her family moved to LA so she could pursue acting. However, they ended up losing a lot, filing bankruptcy, and even losing their family home back in Washington. So, to help make ends meet, she worked as a Universal Studios tour guide, cleaned bathrooms restaurants, and babysat. In 2023, she told Women's Health, "It was hard because they were supporting my dream, and I couldn’t imagine doing anything else. I didn’t want to fail them."
  5. After winning the talent show New Faces as a teenager, The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power actor Lenny Henry became "the family breadwinner" overnight. In 2012, he told Yorkshire Live, "Which you don't really want to be when you're just 17, but I took it on because I love my family."
  6. By first grade, Jodie Foster — the youngest in her family — was the main breadwinner for her mom and three siblings. In 2024, she told the Atlantic, "I was it. There was no other income besides me."
  7. In her 2023 Hulu documentary Pretty Baby: Brooke Shields, Brooke Shields said that, growing up, her mom/manager would tell her things like, "If we get this job, we don't have to live in our little apartment anymore" and, "If we get this job, we can go buy a new car."
  8. In 2017, Bella Thorne told the Happy Sad Confused podcast, "I didn't want to audition for Shake It Up! I literally said in my audition, 'I don't sing. I don't dance. I'm basically tone-deaf, and I'm not funny. So I don't know why I'm here.' And everybody just started laughing. They all thought it was a joke...[But] we were about to live physically on the street if I didn't have that role."
  9. In 2022, Keke Palmer told the LA Times, "Ultimately, what happened is that it just hit a point where my dad could no longer do a job because if he did a job, then there would be nobody to take care of my older sister and my younger siblings because my mom was always with me. So it was like, all of our roles were switched. I became the financial breadwinner because my career was bringing in the most money, and my parents wanted to support me, but they couldn't have their own jobs because their own jobs would not even allow them to really be able to sustain a stable household."
  10. In a since-deleted Tumblr audio clip from a few years ago, Cole Sprouse reportedly said, "My brother [Dylan] and I were put into acting when we were 8 months old by our mother because we needed money. I never made the decision to join the arts or acting specifically. And so it was never really my passion."
  11. When Jena Malone was 14, she sought emancipation from her mom and sued her on accusations that she'd wasted more than $1 million of Jena's earnings. In 2003, Jena told Index Magazine, "Financially I had come to a sink or swim situation. I ran into some strange tax problems, and the only way out of them was to get to my trust fund."
  12. In a 2019 blog post reflecting on fifth grade, Wil Wheaton said, "I know that, by this time in my life, I had been telling my mother that I didn't want to go on auditions or be an actor. I remember telling her, almost every day, 'I just want to be a kid,' and I remember her dismissing that. She constantly gaslighted me about how I really did want to be an actor. She was so manipulative about it. She would tell me how selfish I was because she'd sacrificed her own career to support mine."
  13. And finally, on a 2021 episode of their podcast 4D with Demi Lovato featuring Drew Barrymore, Demi Lovato said, "I noticed that when I came into the spotlight at a young age and then was the breadwinner, like you said, there wasn't a dossier, there wasn't a manual for my parents to read, and it [would] say, 'Here's what to do to raise a child star.' They didn't get that. So when they would try to ground me at 17, I would say, 'I pay the bills!' And I cringe now when I think about that attitude, but...when the world is putting you on a pedestal, you kind of think that you can do no wrong."
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