The blog of author Dennis Cooper

Doomed

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George Jenne Various (2017)


High School Props Series: Prop Bite Face


Mine Eyes Have Seen the Gory (excerpt)


High School Props Series: Prop Drowned Face

 

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Claudia Alvarez Kids with Guns (2010 – 2012)
‘Deeply affected by the terminally ill children and elderly patients I encountered as a non-emergency ambulance driver, my painted and sculpted figures imbue sculptures of children with adult characteristics and mannerisms.’

 

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Pipilotti Rist (Entlastungen) Pipilottis Fehler ([Absolutions] Pipilotti’s Mistakes) (1988)
‘It is a nightmare; it is torture enacted over and again before the viewer’s eyes. In multiple sequences one observes the video’s female protagonist struggling against physical and psychological impediments; the physical struggles en- acted on screen are accompanied by voice-overs that speak directly to the irreconcilable gap between the woman’s efforts and reality. In one sequence the woman faints repeatedly; in another, she dives into a swimming pool only to have her head forced under water as she breaks the surface; in yet another she attempts to climb over a fence, but falls before she can propel herself over to the other side. Amidst these failures of action/volition, the video itself fails; the reception is distorted, pixilated beyond the point of verisimilitude and full of static. The woman’s trials are thus obscured from complete representation: the viewer never gets the full story, for neither does one see the woman com- plete her action, nor is one able to view these attempts uninhibited due to the treatment of the video medium itself.’

 

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Christopher Reynolds The Pleasures of the Table (2012)
Maple butcher block, mixing bowl, metal, 8 chef’s knives, magnetic knife rack, 8 aprons, metal hooks.

 

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Brody Condon DeRez FX.Kill RamDass (2005)

 

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Aida Makoto Edible Artificial Girls (2001)
‘Thank you for your shopping. Have a nice day. It all started in the year 3000 when mankind was tormonted with hunger caused by worldwide food shortages. The founder, old Aida, a molecular biologist, was distressed at the seriousness of the situation, and devoted himself day and night to his studies. Finally, he achieved a great breakthrough in generating a brandnew creature called “Edible Artificial Girls Mimi” derived from the DNA of colitis germs.

‘Mimi is very savory and rich in nutrition which the name implies. (The character pronounced Mimi is a rhyme of Bimi which denotes deliciousness.) Mimi was served all over the world. People were also touched by Mimis lovely appearance, and innocent nature, her only intention being a devotion to giving herself to fulfilling the apettite of the men. Her pure heart would be worth comparing with the hare in the ancient Indian who is said to throw its body into the fire and to become a star in the night sky.

‘Mimi with no sense of pain, and no fear of death by nature is also regarded as an ideal creature for food from the viewpoint of the humanitarian. After the emergence of Mimi, the bad habit of eating the meat of farm animals died out. Mimi, who can be your good companion or kept in food storage, has taken a firm hold within our life-style in the role of a pet. With the great development of new flavors, we can now count more than five thousand varieties of Mimi. Mimi provides most of food on the earth.’

 

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Tessa Farmer Various (2017 – 2019)
‘In Tessa Farmer’s world a mummified cat can become an entertainment complex for fairies and bugs.’


 

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Blobby Barack Cooch (2017)

 

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Olga Balema Cannibals (2015)
‘The sculptures here have ingested other former sculptures, a literal enactment of cannibalism. The round bellies of some are greedy and full, pregnant from autoerotic absorption. The latex skin of others is concave around the scaffolding of sharp and unnatural growths. Ingestion threatens the crucial fiction that subjects are autonomously contained selves, distinct from their environments, agents of their own interiority. As food moves through bodies, exterior becomes interior and vice versa; object constitutes subject and vice versa.’

 

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Lindsay Seers Swallowing Black Maria (2009)
‘Seers shows a semi-autobiographical, quasi-documentary film about her life, screened in a mock-up shed whose design is a copy of Thomas Edison’s Black Maria, his New Jersey film studio. The story is implausible, troubling, and beautifully told by ventriloquist dummy narrators. As I staggered out, someone muttered “What is she on?”‘

 

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Bagrad Badalian Insanity (2011)

 

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Chris Kerich etk_i-series/cliff (2017)
‘This project, inspired by the YouTube series Car Boys, involved the creation and destruction of kinetic sculptures in the driving game BeamNG.drive (with a few modifications). BeamNG is built to be a vehicle simulator and racing game, allowing its users to customize cars and race and crash them with realistic soft body physics. It also includes an editor, to allow players to create their own levels and scenarios to race in. To create this project, I abused the capabilities of the editor to create car-sculptures that often burst into flame immediately or caused the physics engine to severely glitch as soon as the simulation was started. By exploring conditions in the game that would be considered unlikely for an average user (cars dropped from a great height with 100x gravity, cars existing inside of one another) a space is opened up inside of what is otherwise a relatively standard driving simulator to explore and create new things. These zones of alternative creative production are extremely important in helping to explore and understand systems.’

 

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Jim Shaw Dream Object (2004)
‘I think I was half awake when I thought of this upright piano modelled after the cave monster from ‘It Conquered the World.’ Using an old piano with keys sawed off to make the mouth…’

 

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Antonio Cascos Chamizo To Eat or to be Eaten – A Guide to Cannibalism (2015)
‘Intended to promote eating humans, Antonio Cascos Chamizo’s Guide to Cannibalism provides recipes for cooking meat, and also comes with kitchenware embedded with real hair. Combining graphic and product design to challenge a “food taboo”, Chamizo created a fictional scenario in which cannibalism is socially acceptable.’ These facts are presented in a guide, which includes chopping charts for correctly butchering bodies to get the best cuts, and recipes for ways to cook the meat with other foods.

 

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Hannah Black Aeter (2018)


Aeter (Sam) (excerpt)


Aeter (Jack) (excerpt)

 

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Ofir Dor Various (2017)


Study for Cannibals


Couple on the Carpet


Study of Children playing under a Tree


Man Tied to a Tree

 

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Kristof Kintera I see, I see, I see (2009)
mechanical sculpture

 

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Sarah and Joseph Belknap Skins (2015)
‘The Belknaps might be best known for the “skins” they’ve made in the past few years, deflated silicone spheres that appear to have been shed by some unassuming moon or one of the exoplanets of deep space. A dozen The skins hang on the walls like so many jackets waiting for a chilly day. To make the skins, Joseph says, they brushed silicone onto a textured foam orb, layer by layer, as a scientist in the field might make a mold, and then they turned each one inside out. They didn’t know in advance exactly what result they’d get. That’s typical of their experimentation with materials, natural and synthetic, including graphite powder, mica flakes, and “lunar regolith simulant” – man-made moon dust.’

 

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Odd Nerdrum No Witness (2016)
‘In this horrendous piece, one participant fires a gun at the other. The bullet has left the snub-nosed pistol, but it has not yet reached its target. The entire composition is organized so that its brightest point, a cold muzzle-flash, appears blinding. Hair flying, the gunman twists in a single fluid motion, like some heraldic Hermes, so that his pose combines reaching for the holstered pistol, drawing, aiming, and firing. The victim, already bloody from a prior beating, rocks back, though the bullet has not yet hit him.’

 

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Eric Manigaud Portraits Clinique (2009)
‘Drawings that transcribe existing photographs operate on a tension between fast (the photograph fixing the image) and slow (the laborious transcription of something seen), and that contradiction is a way of probing our experience of the visual image and its claim to truth.’

 

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Zeger Reyers Rotating Kitchen (2013)
‘Artist Zeger Reyers’s latest bit of performance art, “Rotating Kitchen” takes the kitchen mess to a new level. A performer starts preparing a meal for the spectator guests, but takes a brief exit – though perhaps a second too long. The kitchen stage with food half-prepped, mise en place out in the open, and dishwasher running, then begins its ominous rotation. Terrible mashes of food and ingredients plaster the walls, and destruction to short-lived order ensues.’

 

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Jake And Dinos Chapman Adolf Hitler Golf Art (2012)
‘The Jake and Dinos Chapman work is a statue of the Nazi dictator which salutes and screams “Nein!” when a ball passes through it.The Chapman brothers’ art forms part of the Grundy Art Gallery’s Adventureland Golf exhibition, which features art works as holes on a crazy golf course.’

 

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Laurie Simmons The Love Doll (2009 – 2011)
‘To create her latest series, the artist Laurie Simmons ordered a high-end Japanese love doll—a life-sized, anatomically correct synthetic female, designed for use as an inanimate sex partner. Her photographs document an evolving friendship, ending with the arrival of a second, new doll.’


Day 1 / Day 27 (New in Box)


Day 8 (Lying on Bed)


Day 22 (20 Pounds of Jewelry)


Day 24 (Underwater)


Day 23 (Kitchen)


Day 25 (The Jump)


Day 30 (Meeting)

 

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Tony Matelli Lost and sick (1996)
Epoxy resin, plaster and paint

 

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Charlotte Caron Various (2011)

 

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Eddie Lohmeyer Scrolling Landscape in 34 NES Games #2 (2020)
‘A work of experimental glitch video that explores the relationship among nostalgia and our perception of technologically mediated landscapes. The film was created by appropriating footage of speedruns of older 8-bit video games and then editing together their scrolling landscapes into a continuously unfolding vista of gameworlds. This landscape has then been corrupted using glitch techniques to generate psychedelic abstractions that rapidly accelerate through two-dimensional space.’

 

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Johannes Kahrs Various (2004-2015)


Two Men (Kiss) (2008)


Untitled (2010)


Toter (oben) (2004)


Untitled (embrace) (2015)


Back (Sunday Afternoon) (2004)

 

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Kara Güt Intimacy Mod Supercut (2018)
Intimacy’s Mod is a series of mods by Kara Gut created with the aid of the “Immersive Lover’s Comfort” by flexcreator for Skyrim. By using this mod, the artist distorts the games’ original narrative and replaces it with an in-game performance carried out by the Gut herself (via her avatar) and one NPC (Non Player Character). Through the Intimacy Mod, Gut wanted to highlight the “cynicism and brutality (unintended or otherwise) of modding culture as a metaphor for our post-digital society at large, creating arresting situations of forced intimacy within a hyper-real space.”‘

 

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Fábio Magalhães Cut Bodies (2015-2016)
‘For Brazilian artist Fábio Magalhães’ hyperrealist oil paintings, the more grotesque the better. Using gruesome body horror imagery such as hacked up, barely identifiable body parts and suffocated faces in plastic bags, Magalhães’ work is as incisive as it is skillfully rendered. The breaking down of recognizably human appendages and entrails into chopped up, stomach churning chunks is purposefully reminiscent of a real-life counterpart: that of animal cruelty.’

 

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Huang Yong Ping Leviathanation (2011)
‘Huang Yong Ping’s Leviathanation is a life-size train carriage with a gigantic fiberglass fish head mounted on the front, out of which sprout stuffed animals.’

 

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Cornelia Parker Shared Fate (Oliver) (1998)
‘Here is a doll cut in half by the Guillotine that beheaded Marie Antoinette.’

 

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Michaël Borremans Various (2010 – 2018)
‘Much of Michaël Borremans‘ work is composed of people in partial states, often shown as if they were mannequins, all the while still maintaining extremely fleshy and life-like skin tones. Painting primarily with oil paints, his brushstrokes alternate between sketchy fluidity and opaque solidity that contributes to the strange atmosphere of his paintings. Borremans’ style of painting and drawing has been influenced by artists such as Manet, Degas and Velazquez. The figures in the the paintings are devoid of all identity, becoming an archetype.’

 

 

*

p.s. Hey. ** Jack Skelley, Hey, Jacko. I guess you’re back in SoCal. And jet lagged but maybe not but probably. No doubt your tour was a triumph, and I am all twiddling fingers waiting to hear the poop on Sunday. Amsterdam was excellent, and the heat’s gone, and, gosh, the world feels okay if I don’t think too broadly. Up and at ’em, man! xo. ** Dominik, Hi!!! I know, right, about her name? I like how it makes you want to see ‘governor’ (at least when you’re an English speaking type), but it won’t let you. Love the doom merchant with a heart of gold, G. ** _Black_Acrylic, Glad you liked it, pal. I agree. As a futbol looky-loo, when I’ve found myself amidst such celebrations I envy the beautiful joy of loving something so collectively with such extroversion. ** Charalampos, Hey! It was nice, yeah. I stood in that park, although it’s all torn up at the moment for some urban renewal thing, so it’s more I stood on the side of it. GbV always deliver, it’s just a matter of what. Waving at you from Paris where it just this second started pouring welcome rain. ** Adem Berbic, Nice sounding pad. Never been to Monaco, but it does seem to promise oddness of a least a little positivity if you find wealth and scrunched wealthy people curious. Ah, wonderfully relentless Merzbow. If you find a way to skip that queue, you will be famous and possibly rich. Stig Larsson? The dragon tattoo guy? Huh. You would be a highly ambitious translator, I mean, whoa. What is that thing you posted in your second comment? Is that by you? I’ve never read Proust, but it seemed Proustian? Probably not. Cue the incensed Proustians. ** ⋆˚꩜。darbbzz⋆˚꩜。, I’m so happy you tried out her films and liked them. I’m also happy you’re reinvigorated, and I can feel that. Good seeming move to pull out of biology. I would be extremely up for you doing a post about that, of course. Thank you mightily for offering. I really want to see ‘Backrooms’. It opens in France tomorrow, so maybe I’ll go later this week. Your thing with the crush seems to be evolving very dreamily. Fingers as crossed as you need them to be, but it sounds like my fingers are unnecessary. ‘Jefferson Airplane album cover’: wow, that gives excellent mental images. Yeah, we showed our film in Amsterdam the other day. It was good. ** Uday, Hi, Uday! I’ve been so wondering how you’ve been since our across-the-world screen-based meet up. Are you going to be there where you are/were for the summer or most of it? Excellence itself to see you! ** Steve, Haha, yes. God knows Mike knows how to put together a zine, so that’s comforting. I haven’t seen the YouTube channel. I kind to want to see ‘Backrooms’ without that background for some reason. I’m definitely not expecting miracles, but it looks odd enough. Thanks for the BoC input. I am of an open mind. ** jay, Hi. I hope whatever actor delivered the line ‘There’s a very sharp chain in my mouth, and it never comes out’ — that may not be an exact quote — did so with the ideal aplomb. That line is such a dark confessional poem last line a la Sylvia Plath, Anne Sexton, et al. In my imaginary recital starring you, one could hear a pin drop. ** laura w, ‘Paper Mario’ might be my favorite game franchise for some reason. Me too: if a film isn’t mostly art, I can hardly sit through it. That’s not good necessarily, but so it goes. ‘Lancelot du Lac’! Now there’s a film! ** HaRpEr //, I’m glad the introduction stuck. It is interesting that The Future Sound of London hasn’t aged well. They seemed like worlds opening at the time. I interviewed them, and they were impressively super serious about their work. Exuberance in lit is amazing and strangely quite rare tone. Go for it, absolutely. ** Paul Curran, Thank you, Paul! Academic writing, wow. I guess people need it, or a lot of people. I like reading it more than writing it, not that I have a clue how to write it. Liking the sound of the quick, shorter novel thing. And not just as a jonesing fan boy. Film-wise, Zac and I are about to start the hunt for a producer for the next film, which we’ve just finished writing. So no fun and creativity in that stressful part. Otherwise, putting together a selected short fiction book that’s been asked for, so going through old things and nitpicking for the ones that deserve to live longer. I’ll need to write one or two new things for that, so I guess that’s what I’ll be working on. I haven’t been able to come up with an exciting idea for a novel to save my life, but maybe starting short will help. Best day!!!! ** Right. I guess today’s post speaks for itself in some way? See you tomorrow.

12 Comments

  1. jay

    Hey Dennis! Fábio Magalhães is still so good. This brought back some memories of watching people play BeamNG.drive growing up, I never played it myself but I was obsessed with it, in the way a lot of tweenage boys are obsessed with destroying things to see the results, rather than because of anger or malice or something. I always find those artworks of Love Dolls in asexual environments really moving, although I can’t really put my finger on why. The Johannes Kahrs art is sort of nauseating (complimentary), the Texas Chainsaw Massacre artwork of his is pretty amazing.

    Yes, the man who played Dysart in this version of Equus was pretty amazing, he played the role with a complete physical aversion to Strang which was pretty fascinating. The whole thing was a lot, I guess, gayer than most versions of the play, they played the therapist quite explicitly as a repressed gay man, and made the early encounter with a horse-rider pretty rapey. It was actually great, I know basically nil about theatre, but it was great from a layman’s perspective. Much appreciated, re:Chopin. Hope you’re well, adios!

  2. Dominik

    Hi!!

    Thank you so much for today’s collection! Ofir Dor’s paintings are so ominous. I really like them. And Johannes Kahrs’ images. Ah. But I think my favorite is Tony Matelli’s Lost and Sick. Which ones speak to you most?

    Love singing Doomed by Bring Me the Horizon a cappella, Od.

  3. Bill

    Lots of fine pieces today. That piano! The Belknap skins are understated and creepy.

    By the time I made extended visits to Amsterdam, I think there were like 2 boy brothels left in the Spuistraat area. The Warmoestraat area was more my scene though. I’m sure it was also wilder in your day!

    Having a mostly lowkey time in Berlin, enjoying the pleasant weather, and making progress on a piece for a late June gig in SF. But there are lots of good concerts coming up, and I’ll probably go see shows by Anton Corbijn and Marina Abramovic sometime.

    Bill

  4. Jack Skelley

    Dennis — Oh Em Gee re: that “Levianthanation” piece! Yes, I ‘m back but non-functional. Happy to hear about Amsterdamerama & heat reduction (Milan was an inferno)– Zac also told me it went well. The Dutch are cool but also “cool” , but in a good way when you’re good which you and Jac & ROOM TEMP for-sure are. I’m doing a reading here in L.A. with CumPunk magazine thursday… If my brain calendar isn’t fucked-up from traveling…. I”ll try to send the deets tomorrow… However, SUNDAY is etched like a stone tablet … xoxoxo Jack

  5. voskat

    Hi Dennis,
    Just dropping in to say that Laura’s having a pretty bad flare-up right now and she’s not going to be able to write for a couple of days.
    She says hi and will be back as soon as things settle down a bit…

    Take care *

  6. _Black_Acrylic

    I remember the work of Michaël Borremans from a Frieze article many years ago and have always dug it a great deal. Puts me in mind of this print here by my friend Anna Orton, which depicts faceless girls relaxing uncannily together at bathtime. Dunno how visible it is but hopefully you get the idea.

    Been watching the Disappearance of Shannon Matthews and yes it may all be True Crime slop but the tragicomedy resonates. West Yorkshire is my neck of the woods and it’s a truly bizarre case with much to say about the British class system.

  7. Hugo

    Hey Dennis.

    Do tell when you see “Backrooms”, It’s kinda odd seeing something based on a 4chan post get this kinda treatment. I wanna see a film based on that one 4chan thread where a guy revealed he was having a passionate affair with his brother who has Down syndrome.

    Achtung! A new collection! Who’s publishing it? I’ll pick it up ASAP. I’ve been digging into Magician by Tracy Lynne Oliver as per your recommendation, so I feel like I can read anything today.

    Wish you the best dude, and also the best for Laura as well (may she get better!)

  8. politekid

    i keep meaning to drop back into the comments and find out how you’re doing, and then totally spacing on it. (which is, to be fair, my track record with messages and emails in general.) so this is a v quick comment to say 1) hello! how are you? what’s the news? ; 2) v v exciting to hear about the possible Leeds screening. i have friends near there who i may be able to crash with, so fingers crossed i can make a pilgrimage ; 3) this is a beautiful post. so many greats, though i think the Kara Güt and the Kristof Kintera are my absolute favourites. i wish there was more online of the Lindsay Seers piece though. i saw that Cornelia Parker when she had her big retrospective at Tate Britain a few years ago — i always wondered the extent to which her stories about her artworks are “true”. some of them seem so outlandish… like, what difference would it make if she was lying to us and had just cut Oliver in half with her own pair of scissors? (this adds to my appreciation of her work btw, lest you think i’m criticising here.)

  9. laura w

    oo big fan of this post today! i really liked both michaël borremans’ and charlotte caron’s paintings, but i think my favorite is the sex doll set. it reminds me of a documentary i watched back when i was in college about men who fall in love with sex dolls, one of those not particularly artsy but 2 am watches. i find them artistically interesting regardless, and on a human level desperately sad. i took a class on arthurian legends at the same time and wrote a short story for the final about tristian and isolde but isolde was a sex doll. college!!

    my renewed vague interest in arthur was actually what led me to lancelot du lac and now it’s probably the ultimate arthurian retelling for me. i’m told that film that came out a few years ago, the green knight, was inspired by lancelot du lac but it looks too high production for me.

    i did start thousand year door and am liking it a lot so far! i am also very curious about your thoughts on backrooms. this is the year of the youtuber movie, apparently.

    see you around figuratively!

  10. HaRpEr //

    Johannes Kahrs is really sticking out to me. Definitely Richterish but drawn towards a different pull.

    Do you think it’s possible to go too far? I had this professor who always said that about me, that I was too much and needed to dial it back a bit. I suppose that worry has stuck with me. It was pretty disheartening at the time because he was insinuating that I was being self-indulgent and making things that only I could get something out of, but now I really don’t know what he was getting at. I am sure that I did write my fair share of stinkers, but I also know that I might have been derailed a bit by advice that was only partly true. Anyway, I’m happy with how I’m writing now so it’s not a big deal. What I meant to say is that even when I try consciously not to be, my writing always ends up extravagant.

    I think The Future Sound of London were so focused on making very cinematic, cohesive albums with a scope that hadn’t really been done in electronic music at the time, that they might seem gimmicky in retrospect, to an extent where it’s difficult to make the music stand on its own merit. But I still think that even today ‘Lifeforms’ is very impressive. It’s so immersive. Sometimes things put you in a lull and then you just get this intense shock.
    Did you get around to listening to the new Iceage? Did you like it? I actually like it even more the more I listen to it, but there are some songs I’m lukewarm about.

  11. Steve

    I’ve been experiencing pain in my legs lately. I saw my doctor, and he says I have a buildup of fluid there. He did some bloodwork and referred me to a cardiologist. (I’m not sure exactly why, but I’ll be seeing him later in the month.)

    One of my cousins joined a rock band made of senior citizens! (They’re not even called the Rolling Stones.)

  12. Uday

    Yes very sad to have to take a break right then but it was a super busy time and everybody was acting insane. Very glad I’m out of it. With my parents for a bit right now, before I start wandering for the summer and eventually settle in my first-ever independent (non-college-provided) dwelling near my grad school. Weirdly more pumped for the apartment than for any other aspect of all that. Was a mistake to read today’s post right before I fell asleep last night. My dreams are easily influenced.
    Excellent formulation: ‘GbV always deliver, it’s just a matter of what.’ Haven’t listened to Crawlspace of the Pantheon yet but really excited from the singles.

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