Monday, 29 September 2008

David Copperfield 'Puzzle'

This is seriously cute!

Try it out.





So how does it work?

Took me a sec or two but it's clever!
Dayton Schlosser - 'Atomic Kitten' Unmasked!


Thanks to a fellow blogger, Dayton Sclosser (aka 'Atomic Kitten') has been unmasked as a 32 year old no-nonsense school teacher (English department, Whittier Regional Technical High School, Haverhill, Massachusetts) ... and Abercrombie and Fitch model.


Curiously a guy posted a comment on the site where I found this next Abercrombie and Fitch image of Dayton:

I find this picture mortifying. Look, Abercrombie, I'm not going to buy a pair of boxers because you've shown me some hot guy's plumber butt.

Believe it or not, I reacted quite differently (LOL) - and am now on my way out to my local A & F, where expect I find that commenter ... and battle him for a last pair of shorts on a not-bargain table, each having a firm grip on one leg!


If Garbo laughs (in 'Ninotchka', 1939) then Dayton smiles!


Okay, Mister de Schlosser, I'm ready for my close-up!!!

Sunday, 28 September 2008

Ota - Another Czech 'Blond' Bombshell


Nothing much needs to be said in a blog about Blond Guys - only (perhaps) 'a blond bomb shell is a blond bomb shell is a blond bomb shell', as Gertrude Stein so aptly put it.


















Ota does have power-packed arms and shoulders ... a luscious bod ... an erotically-angelic face - with full beautifully-shaped lips and freckles ... but it's mostly in that hair! And his sweet confident flirtatious manner.

Nice tee-shirt too!
Prince Teo - With Old Faithful About To Blow!


There's something about having ya head in a dark hairy crotch. Muscular legs apart so ya can smell the musky butt. With the hot hard cum-dribbling dick down ya throat. Just when it's about to blow!

Honestly, there must a trillion things I would NOT be rather doing!

Exposition Universelle of 1900, Paris

People Strolling Towards Pont Alexandre III and L'Exposition Universelle, Paris 1900

L'Exposition Universelle, Paris, 1900 - Champs de Mars

Well, here he goes again with all that old film footage stuff! Remember the 'Brighton Beach 1898' post?

So what IS it all about?!

Look, I think it's the window-into-the-past thing, mainly. And when it's everyday life captured, I identify - there's real connection. And I can truly enter into the world of, say, 1900. A distant world where there is only horse drawn traffic. And women are in long dresses and very big hats. With the almost ubiquitous parasol. And things seem more leisurely.

And it's also seeing what's familiar ... but 100 years ago. La Tour Eiffel, Place de l'Opera, Le Palais Garnier, Pont Alexandre III, Le Champ de Mars, and so on.



I particularly love the way people react so excitedly when being recorded by the new fangled contraption - waving, pulling funny faces, doing little quirky dances, walking backwards to keep in view!

What surprised me about this clip is the sophisticated use of the panning technique - for example, following say a carriage, and then picking up on something going in the opposite direction - to give an arresting dynamic rhythm.

Enjoy!

Saturday, 27 September 2008

Shakespeare and Company (1919-1941 and 1951-Present) - Legendary Parisian Bookstore


One day during an extended stay in Paris in 2003, I was sitting outside Shakespeare and Company. On a bench round a tree out front. And dreaming about the earlier days of this legendary bookstore.

When a group of expatriate Americans began to form on the sidewalk. A middle-aged writer put out a chair, a box full of his newly published novel and began autographing front pages. A dancer in her late 30's began talking about her career and immediate plans. And her companion announced he'd just finished shooting his film, and was going into post-production. Which provoked the novelist to stand up and join the conversation. A woman came to the first floor window over the entrance to the store, and began gazing out -
an Iris Murdoch taking a pause in writing. After about half an hour, everyone noisily de-camped to a church nearby for some literary function.

It seemed - incredibly - that some faint trace of the famed character of the bookshop seemed to have lingered on!

In 1915,
Adrienne Monnier opened a bookshop with the first free lending library in the French capital - 'La Maison des Amis des Livres'. At 7 rue de l'Odeon on the Rive Gauche.

Adrienne Monnier (centre)at 'La Maison des Amis des Livres'

The firm was a proto-type for Shakespeare and Company, established by her lover and aspiring bibliophile, Sylvia Beach. The newer bookshop continued the tradition of overflowing bookshelves, and photographs, drawings, antiques and bric-a-brac all piled up.

Adrienne Monnier and Sylvia Beach

This first Shakespeare and Company opened in 1919, settling in larger premises in 1921 at 12 rue de l’Odéon.

Shakespeare and Company at 12 rue de l’Odéon, Sylvia Beach Out Front

The firm, so named as 'my partner Bill ... was well-disposed to my undertaking; and, besides, he was a best seller', soon became a meeting place for artists, and writers, such as William Carlos Williams, Ezra Pound, Ernest Hemingway, Gertrude Stein, James Joyce, F Scott Fitzgerald and TS Eliot ...

Ernest Hemingway Outside Shakespeare and Company, with Sylvia Beach and Adrienne Monnier

James Joyce with Sylvia Beach

James Joyce with Sylvia Beach at Shakespeare and Company


... with Sylvia Beach instigating such projects as the publication of 'Ulysses' in 1921.



Hemingway (in A Movable Feast) wrote tellingly of the atmosphere of the enterprise at this time, and particularly of its proprietor:

'Sylvia had a lively, sharply sculptured face, brown eyes that were as alive as a small animal's and as gay as a young girl's, and wavy brown hair that was brushed back from her fine forehead and cut thick below her ears and at the line of the collar of the brown velvet jacket she wore. She had pretty legs and she was kind, cheerful, and interested, and loved to make jokes and gossip. No one that I ever knew was nicer to me'

After some years of financial difficulties, and rescues by friends and admirers, the company finally closed in 1941.

But Sylvia Beach allowed George Whitman to use the name in 1951 when he re-opened Shakespeare and Company at 37, Rue Bûcherie (http://www.shakespeareco.org), his converted apartment opposite Notre Dame de Paris.


Sylvia Beach Whitman, Bill Clinton and George Whitman

This second institution maintains much of its own quirky original character ...




... even up to someone sleeping in the makeshift bed on the first floor - where I'd ventured up to continue browsing ...


... and, then, make my own 'writing pause' appearance at the window.

And, in my turn, be mistakenly photographed from below!

But the real point is that the tradition of the place continues - with new generations, from the likes of Henry Miller, Anäis Nin, Lawrence Durrell, and Alan Ginsberg up to the present. Encouraged by a regular schedule of events, such poetry readings, literary discussions and so on.


In a world of elites, globalisation and cultural homogonisation, young artists of various persuasions are still supported and nurtured - even to the extent of being given a bed and roof over their heads when needed!

So it's a living tradition and not some horribly preserved holy relic - like Saint Anthony's toe nail, all bound up in a gilded quartz crystal box to be quietly and reverently peered at!

Thursday, 25 September 2008

James Someone-Or-Other from 'Bukbuddies'


An hors d'oeuvre is obviously something to prepare you for the entre and the main course.

James' dick exactly - it would fit so snugly down ya throat as as you blew him that there'd be no gag reflex, and no getting tired keeping ya mouth open too wide for that long!


He's full of arrogance ...




But, curiously, the longer you look (after the first casual 'so what' glance) ....






... the hotter you get.

Or I do, so it's just projection!