‘Music video project at the NY Film Academy, featuring Sinead Mullaney and directed by Kareem Henein’
Cool visual update of Counting Crows’ Colorblind.
Legendary graphic designer Milton Glaser has been a foodie for years.
His original Underground Gourmet column for New York magazine – collected in book form here – looked at NY ethnic cooking before the rest of the food world jumped in.
And his mother’s very Jewish spaghetti recipe takes things to a whole other place.
Recipe here.
And Glaser can be seen explaining how it came together – which in this version includes the extra step of baking before frying – in Wendy Keys’ documentary Milton Glaser: To Inform and Delight (2008).
Photo found via Slumber Dept
Kyle Baker’s brilliant Why I Hate Saturn could have been Seinfeld. But the television powers that be passed on it.
Even though it was optioned, the network at the time didn’t feel that the American Public would be interested in watching a show about neurotic New Yorkers.
A time capsule from 1990, Why I Hate Saturn is a fable for anyone who is still trying to find themselves. And for anyone who has a freaky sibling.
No answers, just (mostly) relatable life. With a pretty scary bad guy named Murphy (or Warner).
The Jazzual Suspects’ This Beat. Feat. Johnny Depp as Jack Kerouac (from The Source).
‘The first usage in print of highbrow was recorded in 1884. The term was popularized in 1902 by Will Irvin, a reporter for The Sun who adhered to the phrenological notion of more intelligent people having high foreheads.’
Russell Lynes famously satirized the concept of ‘Highbrow, Lowbrow and Middlebrow’ in an article published in Harper’s Magazine in 1949.
That same year, Life magazine published the chart (above) to sort out the particulars. Works as a nice supplement to my own Taste chart.
Click the above image to view larger.
Found via Holly Hadley Agundes
Passed along books are great.
That’s how we ended up with dog-eared copies of Jules Feiffer’s first books, collections of his beat era comic strips for The Village Voice.
Feiffer did his weekly loose, sketchy strip for 42 years – eventually canceling it when he felt the audience just wasn’t there anymore. [Read more →]
‘Woody, the pen-and-ink protagonist, was angst-ridden, flawed, fearful, insecure, inadequate, pessimistic, urban, single, lustful, rejected by women’
My first ever exposure to Woody Allen came from a comic strip. One that floated around the daily paper.
The very neurotic Inside Woody Allen was drawn by cartoonist Stuart Hample – and ran in newspapers from 1976-84.
The author explains what it was and how it happened here.
Retrospective book available here.
Hample passed away in 2010. Career overview here.
Part 1
Half hour Woody Allen stand up special. Recorded for Granada Television, Manchester, 1965.
Part 2
Part 3
‘The Many Faces of Woody Allen’ by Brandon Schaefer. Prints available here.
Click to view larger/jump to source.