Binary day.

from here.

Today is 10-10-10!

Mad linkage:

Douglas Adams and the answer to the ultimate question.

Susannah Breslin on This Recording.

John McTiernan is going to jail.

Paul Thomas Anderson’s The Master delayed indefinitely.

Remembering David Bowie’s Station To Station.

Anthony Bourdain is writing a graphic novel “about ultraviolent food nerds.”

Great new albums coming out of the Milwaukee music scene.

David Foster Wallace’s The Pale King gets a release date.

This is some ridiculous bullshit.

John Gabriel’s G.I.F. theory.

from here and here.

More actors added to David Fincher’s version of The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo.

Bob Woodward on President Barack Obama.

Are tests biased against students who don’t give a shit?

Michelle Williams as Marilyn Monroe.

Al Pacino to play Phil Spector.

Shia LeBeowulf wants to play Karl Rove. Suck it, Frankie Muniz!

Doctor Who is coming to America next season (and is going to face Nixon).

Scientists explain the parting of the red sea.

Rob Liefeld is writing a script about the founding of Image comics/the comics boom of the 90s. Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha!!

Yoda’s cousin: Night Eyes.

Over and Over.

Well, since Marco is taking the day off from life and the internet, I’m gonna post one of his favorite songs here:

He turned me onto it a few weeks back and I really dig it. It’s a band called Lookbook and the song is “Over And Over” (with a video directed by Bo Hakala). Their album is called Wild At Heart and can be found here in a pay what you want download. Two more songs to hear/view here: “True To Form” and “The Only Ones.” When you watch their live videos, you notice that they’ve got a pretty interesting set up. Maybe Marco will talk about that more later, but I just like the song.

The angel in the marble.

Two of the things I tend to ramble on about quite a bit here are art and Lost. Like… excessively, right? Well, today is just more of the same, so I hope you love it. :)

I’ve been fortunate to meet a lot of interesting people online since we started here at Counterforce (I know, I know, it’s shocking to hear that people actually read this site), including a few fellow ridiculous Lost fanatics. But recently, one of those wonderful people that I’ve encountered in my online travels, the amazing and lovely Lia, started watching Lost herself. In fact, when she sent me a message the other day asking me whether the Others were scary magical or just another group of survivors who had just plain gone wrong, I had to seriously bite my lip from the hundred million responses I could give to that question. Instead, I think I answered with something trite like, “Keep watching,” I believe. Sorry, Lia, but don’t worry, they’re the good guys.

But her journey through season 1 got me thinking about it myself. That and conversating with another friend of mine about the movie Taken, which he loved because it’s an hour and a half of Liam Neeson going Jason Bourne’s badass daddy all over Europe as he tries to get back his kidnapped daughter, played by Maggie Grace, who played Shannon way back when on Lost. That was easily a hundred million years ago.

Long story short, I got to thinking about those days of the show, and the characters, and I fondling traveled back to the episode “Hearts And Minds,” the only Boone-centric episode, the one in which Locke takes Boone out into the woods and through the aid of a few chemicals (in a very Carlos Castenada hallucinogenic style), helps him to finally let go of his obsession with Shannon and move on…

On to what? Well, on to being the sacrifice that the Island demanded, of course, ha ha!

Intriguing premise, but a bad movie. Watch the original.

But anyway, I was reminded of Boone and Locke there in the jungle, Boone very much the student and Locke not so much in the hunter role that he is suited for, but in the role that he seems to crave the most, the mentor/teacher. And as he went to work, cooking up Boone’s catharsis drugs, listening to Boone’s frustrations about the hatch (at this point, they were desperately trying to figure a way into it, which they were keeping a secret from everyone) Locke told Boone a story…

“Ludovico Buonarrati, Michelangelo’s father. He was a wealthy man. He had no understanding of the divinity in his son, so he beat him. No child of his was going to use his hands for a living. So, Michelangelo learned not to use his hands. Years later a visiting prince came into Michelangelo’s studio and found the master staring at a single 18 foot block of marble. Then he knew that the rumors were true — that Michelangelo had come in everyday for the last four months, stared at the marble, and gone home for his supper. So the prince asked the obvious — what are you doing? And Michelangelo turned around and looked at him, and whispered, sto lavorando, I’m working. Three years later that block of marble was the statue of David.”

The point? None, really. Just a nice little Lost flashback, and one of my favorite moments with Locke. Especially since, it seems like the character is usually so lost (pun intended) as he tries to keep his head above water, bobbing up and down on the waves of destiny, and I just like it when he gets to play the teacher to someone else. As for you and me… we should probably get back to work, whatever that is.

Ancora Imparo.”

-Michelangelo (which translates as “Yet I am learning.”)