Sunday, January 27, 2013

Tom Brady’s New Mansion Has A Moat (Photos)

Tom Brady’s New Mansion Has A Moat (Photos):
black sports online tom brady's mansion has a moat
To loosely quote Drake ‘Just bought a crib so big it came with a moat’.
When you’re Tom Brady rich, things like $10,000 fines for unnecessary roughness and such, are kinda like chump change. The Detroit Free Press obtained photos of the $20 million mega-mansion in Southern California. Here’s some brief details of the near mythical in size abode
Among the many features in its 22,000 square feet are a resort-style pool, massive play area for children and a common medieval fortification system.
I think a lot of the Brady ‘dislike’ comes from the fact that Brady doesn’t do things like the common man, the common man doesn’t have the wealthiest super model in the world for a wife, wear uggs, have 3 Super Bowl rings and I guess, we can now add ‘have a kick-ass home with a moat’ to the list.
All we can do is tip our caps to Brady, as he will have an ultra-cozy place to rest up during the off season. Yes, that really is a moat…
black sports online brady moat

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

There's So Much More to MLK Than 'I Have a Dream'

There's So Much More to MLK Than 'I Have a Dream':
mlk
Back in 2001, I was trying to get my eleventh grade U.S. history class to focus on a passage from Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s 1967 book, Where Do We Go From Here: Chaos or Community? Unfortunately, I was not surprised when a student protested, "We already know about him. We're tired of hearing about Martin Luther King."
So I asked, "Okay, what do you know about him?"
"He had a dream," another student replied as others laughed.
I insisted that there was infinitely more to King and his ideas than one very famous speech. "Well, that's all they ever show us," someone complained.
"And that's why I'm trying to show you something new about him," I responded, showing—I hope—only a hint of my frustration.
I decided to put together a unit designed to help students penetrate the curtain of clichés and lies the corporate media have erected around Martin Luther King, Jr. in order to make him "safe" for public consumption. The bland projection of an image promoting moderate reforms and racial harmony obscures King’s legacy of opposition to capitalist exploitation and violence at home and abroad.
My goal was for my students to be able to explicitly identify the ways in which King is portrayed in the mass media, and specifically, which of his ideas are communicated to the public. I also wanted them to read and discuss a range of King's ideas that are almost completely unknown to most of the public today and reflect upon why many of King's ideas introduced in this lesson are almost never referenced in the mass media or in U.S. history textbooks.
For example, like the students in my class, most students have heard about Dr. King's 1963 "I Have a Dream" speech, but they rarely hear about his "Beyond Vietnam," address given four years later on April 4, 1967 at Riverside Church in New York City. At a time when nearly 25 percent of American children live in poverty, King’s words on the extremes of wealth and poverty still resonate today:
"… I am convinced that if we are to get on the right side of the world revolution, we as a nation must undergo a radical revolution of values. We must rapidly begin the shift from a thing-oriented society to a person-oriented society. When machines and computers, profit motives and property rights, are considered more important than people, the giant triplets of racism, extreme materialism, and militarism are incapable of being conquered."
Many students also don't know that corporate outsourcing of jobs overseas was also a problem nearly 46 years ago when Dr. King gave this speech. He went on to note:
"…A true revolution of values will soon look uneasily on the glaring contrast of poverty and wealth. With righteous indignation, it will look across the seas and see individual capitalists of the West investing huge sums of money in Asia, Africa, and South America, only to take the profits out with no concern for the social betterment of the countries, and say: 'This is not just.'"
While many of my students have at least some knowledge of the Vietnam War, most have been surprised to learn that King vehemently opposed the war and called the U.S. government "the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today." Of course, this leads to a discussion of parallels with U.S. militarism in our time.
One student wrote,
"What I didn't know was what he wanted to do for Vietnam. He said the bulldozers destroyed their areas and the precious trees, poison their water and kill a million acres of crops. He said if 'we ignore this sobering reality, we will find ourselves organizing [clergy and laymen concerned] committees for the next generation.' I never heard this whole speech before and I thought it was cool that he wanted to help not just the African Americans but Vietnamese."
Others were equally surprised that King planned to lead a massive direct action Poor People's Campaign. One student explained that she "didn’t know that his plan was to 'mobilize and train thousands of poor and allies to camp out [in front of the White House] with him until they help the poor.' He planned to group the poor together, no matter the color, race. I didn't know he wanted unity, well maybe I did, but I didn’t know he fought for the justice of poor people of all color and race."
This student's closing sentence highlights a key difference between the simplistic racial harmony typically attributed to Dr. King and the militant, multiracial class solidarity he actively organized just before he was murdered.
I have taught a version of this mini-unit every year since developing it, revising it each time based on the previous year’s experience. When I moved to middle school last year I adjusted the pedagogy and content for my eighth graders, who proved to be as receptive to King’s radical vision as my eleventh graders had been. But the administration at my new school objected that "its place in the sequence of the curriculum and its relevance to the content standards is questionable," since California’s eighth grade U.S. History framework formally concludes in 1914.
The administration either hadn't noticed the explicit connections the lesson—taught during Black History Month—made between struggles against slavery and Native American removal. Or maybe they didn't think these connections sufficiently justified two days of instructional time in the weeks preceding the state’s high stakes standardized history test.
I cannot justify taking this material out of my curriculum and denying my students what may be their only chance to encounter Martin Luther King's radical vision that is as relevant now as ever. As one of my students wrote, "We never hear about King’s other ideas because the people in power are afraid that we might try to take up some of King’s ideas and make it a reality."
Photo via Wikimedia Commons
A version of this post originally appeared at Zinn Education Project


Friday, January 18, 2013

Win GREMLINS Art from Bottleneck Gallery's Gizmos and Gadgets Show

Win GREMLINS Art from Bottleneck Gallery's Gizmos and Gadgets Show:
It is a common saying that a man’s best friend....are his Gizmos and Gadgets? Sorry animal lovers but at this show, this new adage rings true. We are constantly reminded by popular culture that in a time of great need, there is nothing better to have at your side than something conjured up by man. Whether the Gizmo or Gadget’s idea came about while on the toilet, was made in the deep recesses of a dark and rodent filled cave, or just simply provides the speed necessary to get you from point A to point B (while eluding your followers), Bottleneck’s newest show focuses on the material items made popular by your favorite movies, television shows and books. Each artist will present a piece depicting a Gizmo or Gadget that has shaped our culture in some way, shape or form. Who said being materialistic was a bad thing?
We've got some amazing geek art from tonight's Bottleneck Gallery's Gizmos and Gadgets Show in NYC, and your chance to win a print. The show starts tonight with an opening reception from 7-10pm, and runs until February 3. Keep reading to check out the images and to enter the giveaway.
 
Thanks to our friends at Bottleneck Gallery, we are able to give one lucky winner the above Gremlin print done by Mark Lones
Enter Below:

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Thursday, January 17, 2013

Cyborg!: New Vibrator Makes Your Fingers The Vibrator

Cyborg!: New Vibrator Makes Your Fingers The Vibrator: vibrating-fingers.jpg

I happen to know finger vibrators have existed for awhile because I remember going to buy vitamins at Target (that's my story and I'm sticking to it) and seeing that Trojan was even selling one. That one wasn't nearly powerful enough for my needs though so I wound up giving it to my roommate to wear as a friendship ring (after it was in my butt -- Sshhhhh!). Enter JimmyJane's $65 HELLO TOUCH, a battery pack powered finger vibrator that makes not one but TWO fingers all vibratey (plus make you look like some sort of pleasure-cyborg from the future) Wear two on one hand and have FOUR vibrating fingers! Wear three on one arm and have all five fingers vibrating and maybe tape the spare you to your peen or a nipple or something. I don't know, get creative! Apparently the thing has 3x the power of regular fingertip vibrators. It's so powerful, in fact, I heard that with just a bucket of water it doubles as a washing machine.

Thanks to Stacy, who I'm pretty sure works for the company. Let me know when my box of dildos is in the mail.

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

A Breakdown of Facebook Traffic

A Breakdown of Facebook Traffic:
Facebook Traffic
Doghouse Diaries takes a look at what makes up typical facebook traffic.

Charting Employment Happiness Over Time

Charting Employment Happiness Over Time:
Employment
Jacob Samuel of The Daily Snooze charts employment happiness over time from unemployed through working.
via Lori Dorn

Funko Announces DOMO + DC Comics Blind Box Vinyl Figures

Funko Announces DOMO + DC Comics Blind Box Vinyl Figures:
Funko proudly announces the exciting new licensing super team of Domo + DC Comics in Blind Box Vinyl Figures.

2.5 ” Vinyl Figures coming in February 2013 with a suggested retail of $5.95.



Wave 1 consists of: Batman (3 versions), Robin (2 versions), Superman (2 versions), Clark Kent, Aquaman, Green Lantern, The Flash, Shazam, The Riddler and Two-Face.
ALSO – Keep an eye out for Domo + DC Comics Pop! Vinyl 4″ figures also coming in February!