2012年4月28日星期六

Even after bankruptcy, trapped by student debt


   The misfortunes that brought schoolteachers Devin and Sarah Stang and their four young children to bankruptcy — and the loss of their house and a car in the process — were their own unique story.
   They bought the house at just the wrong time. There were heavy medical expenses when, at five months pregnant, she delivered stillborn twins. And their money woes go back further: When Sarah's college softball team pressured her to drop classes she wanted to take, she quit, lost her scholarship and had to make up the difference with loans.
   Devin, too, borrowed to get a master's degree. Then they struggled amid school layoffs near their Sandusky, Ohio, home.
   Now, the Stangs just want a truly clean slate, financially. But even the ordeal of bankruptcy won't give it to them, and the reason is a common one: Much of their debt comes from private student loans.
   Virtually any other kind of debt — including medical bills, mortgage, credit cards and car loans, even gambling losses— can be discharged in bankruptcy, allowing the "honest but unlucky" a chance to restore their footing through an arduous restructuring overseen by a court.
   But under a 2005 law passed by Congress to protect lenders, private student loans fall under the same nearly-impossible-to-clear category as child support payments and criminal fines.
   "It's a huge part of why the younger generations are here now," said the Stangs' bankruptcy lawyer, Matthew Barrett, whose busy office in Amherst, west of Cleveland, belies stories about the improving economy. He estimates half his clients have problems with student debt.
   To advocates for student borrowers, the law is infuriating, counter-productive and — if intended to ensure lenders would be willing to make loans to students— demonstrably unnecessary. They see changing it as among the most effective, and least costly, ways to help those most seriously burdened by student debt, without giving a break to those for whom it's manageable.
   Yet despite a voluble national conversation on student debt, the issue has gotten comparatively little attention.
   At stops in three swing states this week, President Barack Obama is calling on Congress to head off a scheduled doubling in federal Stafford loan rates, from 3.4 percent to 6.8 percent. Changing that law could save more than 7 million new borrowers on average $1,000 a year, according to the White House. But this across-the-board benefit for current college students would do nothing for older borrowers already in trouble.
   Acting without Congress, the Obama administration has implemented a series of protections for those pressed to pay back federal loans, such as income-based repayment and a public-service loan forgiveness program — steps lauded by advocates for borrowers.
    However, the president appears never to have directly addressed a proposal by Sen. Richard Durbin, D-Illinois, to overturn the 2005 law on private loans. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner recently told Durbin the dischargeability proposal had "some merit" and that the administration wanted to work with him to expand the protections it has implemented for federal student loans into the private market. Regardless, the bill has little chance of passing the divided Congress in an election year.
   "There's a special circle of bankruptcy hell for these kinds of debts," said Rich Williams, higher education advocate with the group US PIRG, which lobbies on student loan issues. "It's not that students are asking for extra protections. We're asking for the same protections entitled to every other form of consumer debt."
   The Federal Reserve Bank of New York estimates 37 million Americans have student loan debt, totaling $870 billion. The average balance is around $23,000 (though that partly reflects a relatively small number of very large balances; the median is $12,800). Only 39 percent are paying down balances. An estimated 5.4 million borrowers have at least one student loan account past due.
   Roughly 85 percent of outstanding student loan debt is owed to the federal government. The remaining 15 percent that's counted as private student debt is owed to various non-federal lenders, ranging from banks to loan companies like Sallie Mae Corp. to non-profits and state-affiliated agencies (under the Durbin bill, loans from any government-funded entity still wouldn't be dischargeable, only those from truly private lenders).
    Generally, it's these private loans that bring borrowers to the door of bankruptcy lawyers like Barrett. Private student loans often lack the protections of federal ones, and have rates that typically start higher and can shoot up. A recent survey of bankruptcy attorneys found 81 percent reporting more clients with student debt in recent years, and roughly half reporting a significant increase.
   Barrett says he's seeing more recent college graduates who couldn't get a job after graduation or who, if they did, faced garnishment of entry-level wages.Before the 2005 law passed, lenders would "try to work with (borrowers) on a payment plan," Barrett says. "They had the threat, if we don't make it so this person can afford to live and eat and get to work and dress for work, then they're going to file for a bankruptcy plan and we're going to get hit.
   "Now, they'll hit you with a garnishment — and if you can't make ends meet, tough."Private lenders haven't always enjoyed a spot at the front of the line of bankruptcy creditors.
    Until 1976, all education loans were dischargeable in bankruptcy. That year Congress began requiring borrowers to wait at least five years before they could discharge federal student loans. Since 1998, borrowers have been unable ever to discharge federal student loans, and in 2005 the then-Republican-controlled Congress made private loans almost impossible to discharge. Essentially, borrowers must prove they can't repay and will never be able to, but the standard is vague. And litigating in bankruptcy court may be impossible financially for someone in those circumstances.
   With federal loans, the concern was that making it too easy to walk away from debts would put taxpayer dollars at risk.
   With private loans, the lender protections were justified by fears that otherwise lenders wouldn't extend students the capital they needed to cover tuition bills. Student loans offer no security or collateral. Lenders are betting on a borrower's education to produce future earnings. Put differently, a bank can repossess your car but not your brain.
   Changing the law "would force our members to raise borrower rates or elevate their already strict underwriting standards and essentially make it harder to make the loans," said a spokeswoman for the Education Finance Council, which represents nonprofit and state-based providers of non-federal loans, in a statement issued on behalf of president Vince Sampson. A Moody's report also suggested younger student borrowers might be especially tempted by an easier bankruptcy filing, not appreciating the long-term credit damage.
   But such arguments swim upstream against a lot of historical data. Before 1976, when student loans were dischargeable in bankruptcy, there's little evidence borrowers abused the practice. A federal study from that time estimated less than 1 percent of all matured student loans were discharged in bankruptcy. Experts like Deanne Loonin of the National Consumer Law Center say bankruptcy is demoralizing, humiliating and difficult, and nobody undertakes it lightly."I wasn't raised to say, 'I'll go file bankruptcy,'" said Devin Stang, who is 41. The family's student debt totals $25,000 in federal loans and about $37,000 in private ones, much of it from taking required continuing education credits to keep up their teaching licenses and job prospects at a time of widespread layoffs.
   Surrendering one of their two cars in bankruptcy will limit the Stangs' work options, Nike Dunk Mid, Barrett says. And digging out will be even harder because, even after their other debts are clear, the private student lenders could garnishee up to 25 percent of wages.
   If they could discharge their private loans in the same manner as credit card debts, "away we'd go on our lives," Stang said.
   There's also little evidence that changing the law would affect the availability of private student loans. In fact, private student lending was expanding rapidly before 2005, when the loans were dischargeable. Then Congress awarded lenders stronger collection powers — but private student lending fell by two-thirds in just a few years, coinciding with the broader credit crunch.
   A leading financial aid expert, Mark Kantrowitz of the website Finaid.org, doesn't buy the lenders' argument. He says changing the law might slightly increase fees, but lenders make their decisions based on credit scores and macro-economic factors.
   Al Lord, the CEO of Sallie Mae., the largest private lender, which originated $2.7 billion in education loans last year, has predicted changing the law would affect the availability of credit for young people. But he said in a 2010 earnings call that the financial impact on Sallie Mae would be "small" and "not particular troublesome," in part because almost all its new loans — 85 percent at the time — have co-borrowers.
   In a statement, Sallie Mae said the company would support reforms allowing students who have made a "good-faith effort" for five to seven years to discharge student loans in bankruptcy, but specified it would want the reform to apply to both federal and private loans (there's no proposal on the table to make federal loans dischargeable).
   Even if changing the law did make private loans disappear, some advocates think that wouldn't be so bad.
   In fact, new lending has already fallen sharply recently, and it hasn't kept people out of college; enrollment is way up. Students who might have gotten private loans five years ago, but can't now, Nike Dunk Mid for Cheap, are apparently choosing less expensive schools or borrowing more of what they need from the federal government, which accounts for more than 90 percent of new loan volume now.
   A study by the Project on Student Debt, a foundation-supported research group, found that half of students who took out private loans in 2007-2008 failed to borrow their maximum eligibility in federal Stafford loans. Those students could have — and almost certainly should have — borrowed more from Washington first (undergraduates can cumulatively borrow up to $31,000 in federal Stafford loans, and in some cases, as much as $57,500). Now, they're doing so.
   Finally, if the spigot of private loans cut off, Nike Dunk Mid for sale, it might temper college cost increases. Colleges would find it harder to get away with charging more than what students can borrow from the government.
   "These private loans are toxic," said Williams, of the student advocacy group. If students still can't afford a college without one, he said, they should probably consider another college.










Can world's 'most threatened' tribe be saved?

   The Awá live in the Brazilian state of Maranh?o on lands set aside for their hunter-gatherer lifestyle. But according to the tribal advocacy group Survival International, which is leading the new campaign, the tribe is increasingly under threat by illegal settlement and logging on their lands. One reserve set aside for the tribe, adidas adizero rose 2.5 all star, the Awá Territory, is one-third deforested, its trees stripped by illegal logging operations, some with sawmills operating only miles from Awá land.

   "When the forest is destroyed, they either flee or they simply die," said Survival's field director Fiona Watson, who has worked with and interviewed many of the 360 surviving Awá who are in contact with society. On her last visit, she told LiveScience, "They were saying to me, 'We're suffering from hunger now.'" [Photos: One-of-a-Kind Places on Earth]Tribal life under threatThe issue of indigenous people's land rights is an international one. 
   Survival International estimates more than 150 million tribal people currently live in 60 countries worldwide. The most voiceless of these are uncontacted tribes, people who live without interaction with the outside world.
   Uncontacted tribespeople are often romanticized as "primitive" people who aren't aware of the outside world, which is a myth, according to Survival. In fact, many are purposefully avoiding society after deadly run-ins with civilization in the past. Not only do clashes between native peoples and settlers sometimes result in violence, uncontacted people lack immunity to common diseases and can be felled by a simple flu virus. [Photos of Awá daily life]
    Survival estimates that there are about 100 uncontacted Awá in addition to the 360 or so who have semi-settled in villages on their legally protected land. After first contact with the Awá in 1973, the Brazilian government has opened up the region where the tribe has long roamed. After iron ore was discovered in the area, the European Community and the World Bank even helped fund a railway and other developments in the region. "This acts like a magnet for settlers to pour in, and ranchers, so Awá land started to be invaded," Watson said.

Land rights battle
   The Awá's right to their land was formally recognized in 2005, making mining and other activities by outsiders illegal; but satellite photos of the forest reveal that these rights are not being honored. Illegal logging has left the scar of deforestation on the land. This is especially devastating to the Awá, who depend on the forest for their survival, Watson said.
   "When you talk to the Awá, it's just so clear how much the forest means to them," she said. "They just get everything from it."That includes food — baba?u nuts and a?aí berries as well as fresh meat — and medicines and supplies, such as the resin of the ma?aranduba tree, which is used to make torches. [See Video of Awá Life]
    As the forest vanishes, the Awá are trapped in a legal battle to save it. In 2009, a federal judge ruled that illegal settlers had to leave the Awá territories within 180 days. A legal appeal by one of the largest cattle ranchers in the region delayed the ruling. In December 2011, adidas adizero rose 2.5 all star for sale, a second federal judge ruled that colonists and ranchers had to leave the land by December 2012. Survival fears that continued legal wrangling will delay these departures, too. If the case continues in the legal system, it could take 20 or 30 years for the Brazilian Supreme Court to decide it. By that time, it will be too
late for the Awá.
    "Time is not on their side," Watson said.Violence and protection
   In addition, reports from Awá tribe members and from the Brazilian Indian affairs office FUNAI suggest that this land controversy can all-too-easily turn deadly. In 1988, for example, townspeople in west Bahia, Brazil, met a lone native man who turned out to be of the Awá tribe. The man, Karapiru, had been living alone in the forest since 1975, when ranchers killed his daughter and wounded him and his son. The ranchers had taken his son, leaving Karapiru to believe him dead.
   "It's a violent part of the Amazon," Watson said. "You have bows and arrows against guns."Other tribes have also been haunted by violent clashes. In August 2011, adidas adizero rose 2.5 all star forcheap, FUNAI officials were alarmed to find evidence of a fight between drug traffickers and uncontacted native people, who went missing after the violence.
   Watson and her colleagues are hoping that their new campaign will put pressure on Brazil to honor the Awá's legal right to their land and provide the funding needed to enforce the protected areas' borders."It's a very simple, direct message to the Minister of Justice," Watson said. "The land belongs to the Awá."





Sarah Michelle Gellar’s Successful Decade-Long Marriage

Gellar and Prinze in NYC (Splash News)
   Sarah Michelle Gellar and Freddie Prinze Jr. will be receiving something extra special for their 10th wedding anniversary later this year: another baby! The under-the-radar couple is expecting their second child, reports Us Weekly. Their daughter, Charlotte Grace, is 2.
   Gellar, 35, and Prinze, 36, seem to have unlocked the secret to a lasting Hollywood relationship. After meeting on the set of 1997's "I Know What You Did Last Summer," things took a romantic turn when they were going to dinner with a mutual friend and the person canceled. "We decided to have dinner anyway and never looked back," Gellar, who has called Prinze her "first love," told People. They tied the knot in Mexico in September 2002, but it wasn't without a little excitement — a 4.6 earthquake hit the site of where their nuptials took place. "All of those bigger-than-life natural events can only bode well for the marriage," their talent manager said at the time.
   The late '90s megastars — she was best known for "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" while he won over the ladies in movie roles including "She's All That" — waited until they were in their 30s to start a family. "When we got married I was still just 26; I met Freddie when I was 23 years old," Gellar told People after the 2009 birth of Charlotte. "That is really young. The solid base that we have now, you don't have that when you have been with someone for two years. We have already weathered all these storms. We know this is it; we are a team."

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   Just last year she shared the secret to their marriage. "We communicate," she told Health. "That's my secret. It's not a secret, but it's how I handle all my good relationships, whether they're male-female or not. If you bottle things up, it explodes on you."
   She also revealed the meaningful fifth anniversary gift she gave her husband. "I had no idea what to get him," she later told BULLETT. "I'd been meaning to change my last name to Prinze, but I just hadn't gotten off my lazy a** to get it changed." On their anniversary, she presented him with her driver's license that said Sarah Prinze. Of the name change she said, "It helps with what I do, specifically, because it does give you the feeling of being separate, of having this other life — and you can go to work and have this stage name, and then go home and be someone else."
   Gellar just concluded season one of "Ringer" — funny enough, the mom-to-be's character Siobhan gave birth to twins in one of the final episodes — and she's waiting to see if it gets picked up for season two. Prinze, levis messenger bags for Cheap, who appeared on TV's "Boston Legal" and "24," is now a producer and director with the WWE — and is playing Mr. Mom to Charlotte when his wife works.

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   "He loves it," Gellar told Us Weekly of her stay-at-home husband. We fight over who gets to stay home. You'd think it would be the opposite, that the parents would be like, 'No, I'll go to work!' but he's like, 'You stayed home for two years! It's my turn!' He and Charlotte have too much fun. I'm jealous!"

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2012年4月27日星期五

Mom-to-Be Snooki Talks Italian Ice Cravings, Bizarre Pregnancy Dreams, and How She’s

Not Going to Be Like Jessica Simpson

    Now that America has had time to process the fact that Nicole "Snooki" Polizzi is indeed pregnant, Nike Dunk Low, here's another bombshell -- the "Jersey Shore" party girl is a surprisingly normal pregnant person … well, one that plans to dress her baby "all crazy blinged out."
    Five months along, the pint-sized reality TV star, who is expecting her first child with fiancé Jionni LaValle, is still wearing regular clothing. "Oh, I don't wear maternity clothes," Polizzi told Yahoo! TV Thursday at a press event in New York City for her upcoming MTV spin-off show "Snooki & JWOWW." She proclaims: "I'm so tiny that I can wear larges or extra larges. I just went to a medium." As for her still-petite stature, "Everyone's different," Polizzi shrugged. "I could pop in like a week."
    When a reporter suggests that, when she does "pop," she could look like mom-to-be Jessica Simpson, whose seemingly endless pregnancy has caused a lot of chatter, Polizzi replied: "I hope not. I don't want to be her size. She says she's eating everything. Me, I'm actually eating healthy." So what are her pregnancy cravings? "Fruits, jelly, Italian ices," she listed. "Nothing fattening at all." How about pickle juice? "I really don't like pickles as much as everybody thinks I do," she confided.
    Although her appetite is in check, she's had many a restless night due to vivid pregnancy dreams -- make that nightmares. "Yeah, I've had a lot of stabbing dreams, like people are stabbing me in the elbow," she said. "I'm just standing there and people are to my elbows." Is it anyone she knows? "No, random. I don't know where it comes from."
    Something she does know? How she's going to dress her baby after he or she debuts this summer. "If it's a girl, it will be animal print and, ya know -- all crazy blinged out. If it's a boy, I'm going to dress him like Pauly, nike dunk low women." she said, motioning to her pal and "Jersey Shore" castmate Paul 'DJ Pauly D' DelVecchio, who was seated next to her wearing a blue-and- white checked button-down shirt and white high- tops with some blinding jeweled accessories on either wrist.
    And rest assured all those who are worried, the baby won't be tanning -- bottle, spray, or booth -- any time soon. "Yeah, I wouldn't do that to my baby," Polizzi, who has her own line of tanning products, said. "I mean, nike dunk low women,
my baby is going to be naturally tan. Look at me -- and Jionni is very dark," she says of her child's dad. "So my baby is going to have no problem being tan."
    Polizzi's pregnancy will be a main plot in her reality spin-off with BFF Jenni 'JWOWW' Farley, which premieres June 21 on MTV. "You see my first trimester of pregnancy, so a lot of me annoying Jenni and just being a bitch," she teased. Though Farley herself didn't see it that way, adding: "To be honest, she thinks she thought she was, but I'd take this over 'hungover Nicole' any day. This was like smooth sailing."






Mariah Carey and Nick Cannon Celebrate Fourth Anniversary in Paris With Vow Renewal

Carey and Cannon on Friday in Paris. (Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images)
   What better place to renew your vows than in Paris? That's exactly what Mariah Carey and hubby Nick Cannon did to celebrate their fourth year as husband and wife on Friday, Adidas Adizero Rose 2.0, three days before their actual anniversary, April 30 -- which also happens to be the first birthday of their twins Monroe and Moroccan. With the Eiffel Tower as their backdrop, Carey -- in a white satin mermaid-style gown with a black bow -- beamed as a white suit-clad Cannon got down on one knee, took her hand, and looked into her eyes during the intimate ceremony at La Maison Blanche hotel.Before they jetted off to the French capital, the "America's Got Talent" host hinted that he and his superstar wife were planning something "special and unique" -- and it looks like they achieved their goal with the lavish celebration.
   Just hours before they said "I do" for the fourth time, the lovebirds did some shopping for "Dem Babies" (the twins' nicknames) at -- where else -- Baby Dior. When they weren't perusing the chic clothing, they stopped for smooches for the cameras. A year ago, the two were not only celebrating the birth of their son and daughter, but also their third anniversary, adidas adizero rose 2.0 review, which they marked with a vow renewal right there in Carey's hospital room.
   The "We Belong Together" singer is so convinced she and Cannon will be together forever, she has even named her new perfume "Forever" in their honor. So what's their secret? "Nobody can predict the future," said Cannon to promote his wife's new fragrance. "You just have to give your all to the relationship you're in and do your best to take care of your partner, adidas adizero rose 2 for sale, communicate and give them every last drop of love you have. I think one of the most important things in a relationship is caring for your significant other through good times and bad."

Kyrgyzstan gas company extinguishes ‘Eternal Flame’ due to unpaid bill

Kyrgyzstan extinguishes 'Eternal Flame' over unpaid gas bill (AP/Dmitry Lovetsky)
   It is unwise to test the patience of Bishkek's gas-supply services. A power company in Kyrgyzstan recently extinguished the former Soviet nation's "Eternal Flame" because of an unpaid gas bill.
   That might sound downright unpatriotic, but in fairness to the gas company, it was a pretty big bill; the government owed around $9,400. The debt, according to the company, is more than three years old.
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   The flame, located in the capital city of Bishkek, levis jeans for ladies, honors the soldiers who fought in World War II. There seems to be some confusion over who was actually supposed to pay the bill. According to a buzzy piece from Time, authorities hoped to have the flame relit by May 9, "the day most former Soviet republics celebrate their victory over the Nazis." An unconfirmed report claims the flame was relit after just five hours.
   Each year on May 9, the country holds a military parade, during which dignitaries and government officials "stand before the Eternal Flame while soldiers lay wreaths around it."
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2012年4月26日星期四

All I Can See is the Management, Gasworks


   I thought this exhibition would make me feel very left out. I’ve never worked for any substantial period in an office environment. I have no boss to hate, no co-workers to dislike, Nike Dunk High, no staff to share a slightly crap christmas party with… I prefer to inhabit the free spirited world of the perpetually panic stricken ‘freelancer’ and I become acutely aware of this during the festive season.
    So, no better time to visit a show called ‘All I Can See is the Management’ because I all too often can’t. But that doesn’t mean it isn’t there, hiding. How naïve of me to think myself exempt. The management is everywhere, creeping into all aspects of existence as this cleverly curated exhibition presents. It’s presence is felt at school, in social situations even in the home…
    Which is where the exhibition opens and the setting of the video from which the title is borrowed: a satirical spin on typical domestic TV dramas, Distinct (1979) by Stuart Marshall. In it a couple self consciously role-play the various gender politics of the home, assessing their effectiveness throughout, alternately taking charge of the situation. At one point the home is compared to an unproductive factory and this becomes a running theme throughout All I Can See is the Management. In Allan Sekula’s series of neat diagrams School is a Factory, (1978-80) the education establishment is analogous to a governmental department turning out ‘products’ to fit demand. Sitting appropriately alongside Sekula but with an altogether more obtuse message is Amy Feneck’s video Governmental Workers (2010) where calm scenes of children behaving appropriately within their setting is, according to the press release, a comment on the top-down regulation of student behaviour. Architectural choreography is surely appropriate within a school, as is hierarchy. The comment, if there is one, is lost.
    Certainly not the case with the Co-Operative Explanatory Capabilities in Organisational Design and Personnel Management (2010). The nebulous idea of productivity once again is paramount and explored with acerbic wit in Pil & Galia Kollectiv’s entertainingly alarmist video featuring a fictive narrative of a sham office established purely to monitor the unwitting employees productivity levels. It backfires. They turn feral.
   Conversely, in real life the workers fear of productive failings is altogether more repressed and troublingly portrayed in Filipa Cesar’s video Rapport (2007) of a Neuro-Linguistic Programming workshop. Fly on the wall documentary style, such as this piece, with no overt interference by the artist features heavily as an honesty reassurance device (see also Darcy Lange’s Work Studies in Schools (1976-77)). A technique exposing the hidden manipulations of the subject serving to highlight a prevailingly veiled form of sly subjugation. In Rapport we see tears and tortured souls confessing their worst views of themselves, nike dunk high heels, all too often a fear of not being creative enough or lacking ideas… Not a fate that befell Victorian maid Hannah Cullwick whose extraordinary photographic series displays her in various ‘class drag’ guises from aristocratic gentleman to black slave. The photos are re-enacted by artists Pauline Boudry & Renate Lorenz’s Normal Work (2007) video and serves as an effective counterpoint; the roles we adopt are role-play and by no means fixed.
    But, back to the case in hand, teasing out emotional breakdowns is just a part of modern day management moulding, nothing to worry about, nike dunk high heels, dear. The company can shape your mind, body and soul. Management becomes life, life becomes management and the jargon becomes unstoppably normalised. Now as our once-upon-a-time neatly compartmentalised existences melt ever more together whilst simultaneously falling apart to the tinny ping of a smartphone and exemplified no better than in an email, from an investment fund manager to a romantic interest, that recently went viral. In it he outlines her ‘serious relationship potential’ and shared interests equating to time efficiency. She never returned his calls. This case illustrates one of the key points of AICSITM, the unhealthy leakage of personal, social and work life endemic of our generation. It’s timely, to call up for questioning corporate cultural subjects from the late 70s, another era on the brink of recession. We can appreciate the prophetic trajectory bourne of the era, the ignored warnings. An affecting show and a disconcerting message, indeed.
   Disclaimer: I realise several artists are omitted from this review. This should not be taken as a report on their failings or relevance. In all honesty I ran out of viewing time. I’ll endeavour towards better efficiency. Perhaps I need a manager…

Hairy, Dirty, Angry Old Apes, Richard Grayson at Matt’s Gallery


   Everyone knows pop stars have nothing to say. Fortunately, Roy Harper doesn’t class himself as one… which is for the best as the ‘legendary singer-songwriter’ talks for eighty minutes solid in Richard Grayson’s most recent video offering shown on a single screen with headphones in the cavernous Matt’s Gallery.
   Not that Roy Harper wouldn’t have loved to be a pop star, Adidas Adizero Rose 1.5, he would have loved the fans, the women fans, the orgies with loads of women fans… he would have written pop songs all day and employed Max Clifford on PR but, alas, no matter how hard he tried Harper couldn’t write those pop songs….
   This is the man in his own words, a folk/rock musician who has sung with Kate Bush and Pink Floyd and Jimmy Page,  well remembered by the swingers of the 60s but never quite becoming so popularised as the aforementioned. Those comments are taken from just one of a series of sprawling and tenuously interlinked monologues with subjects ranging from the sublime to the ridiculous and back again. Expressions of love for Beatnik poetry and French cigarettes, Adidas Adizero Rose 1.5, of hatred for Tony Blair (who apparently is a popstar… and a pisstaker) and turning repeatedly to the great subjects of God, politics, culture and religion.
   Religion is a sticking point, something he has sung about many times and in the most softly spoken lilting voice comes venom; Harper is vehemently anti-religion describing it as ‘at best tribalism, at worst racism’ condemning our current and ‘ particularly annoying pope’. There are snatches of sardonic brilliance, in which he claims that‘religion beggars belief’but we also see how Harper meanders his way towards these nuggets of wry wisdom. He is willingly, happily exposed.
   Grayson’s own practise as both artist and curator revolves around belief systems and the construction of alternate and personalised realities, (see curated projects A Secret Service: Art, Compulsion, Concealment 2006/7, Hayward Gallery Touring, Sydney Biennale 2002 (The World May be) Fantastic). The appeal of his subject matter, of Harper is clear. Harper is a gentle visionary slipping smoothly from individualised statements on why and how we live to the seemingly anecdotal; collecting birds eggs as a child, Adidas Adizero Rose 1.5 for sale, the decline of sparrows and the proliferation of magpies. The analogous potential abounds and the glimmer in Harper’s clear blue eyes never fades, there is no nostalgia when thinking on the past and an obtuse humour infects many of his more memorable turns of phrase. We are listening to a man’s inner monologue as he reflects upon life, his own and that in general.
   Culture is the subject most reflected on (with an intriguing tangent into bioculture). Based on interpretation, culture is viewed by Harper as the evolution of interpretation in immeasurable forms; penicillin from mould, engines from iron ore, songs from sorrow.
   But, that all art, all culture is essentially dedicated to the effort of figuring out exactly who we are. Grayson, with little interference, allows a man to completely open himself to this process and this very interpretation, a modest musical stalwart himself becomes an object of the culture he describes… and without it we are merely what the title of this review suggests.

Joy in People, Jeremy Deller at the Hayward


   Bestiality Impresses Rubber Ducks, British Indecision Reaps Distress, Levis Belts, Being Is Ridiculously Drab… If nothing else, Deller’s retrospective imparts the knowledge that the standard of toilet wall graffiti in the 90s was pretty high.  Foucault is referenced, as is Sartre and Pascal and doing something indescribable to Germaine Greer.
   Transcribed from the original men’s facilities of the British Library, a place where Deller spent considerable time conducting a special kind of research that culminated in an artist’s book Pensées; a collection of the more memorable turns of phrase, some of which are displayed again here in a gallery reconstruction of his own loo.
   The loo is the threshold from which the main body of the exhibition springs forth and toilet intellectualism sets the tone for the retrospective and indeed, Deller’s early career. Marrying high art with low culture his influences include The Simpsons, Peter Stringfellow (in whose club he organised the exhibition Butterfly Ball) and pop music.
   Deller has commissioned brass bands to play acid jazz, parades commemorating Manchester’s closed entertainment venues, tributes to the Manic Street Preachers and staged situational slapstick comedy sequences in seaside towns. And, they’re just his minor works…
   Deller is also the Turner Prize winning coordinator of scenarios, rarely referring to himself as an artist, he organises interventions and staged events often reliant on the participation of groups of powerless people with powerful emotions. He is best known for The Battle of Orgreave, 2001, a ‘battle reenactment’ of an infamous miners riot involving many of the original rioters and to which a room within the exhibition is dedicated.
   A difficult artist to ‘retrospect’ Deller doesn’t actually make things (but hell, who does these days?), so the show is experiential, levis belts men, a retrospective with all the embarrassing bits left in. You enter head on into puberty, into a recreation of Deller’s childhood bedroom; his unsuccessful attempts at getting girlfriends, collections of beer mats and band shirts his single bed, silly notes and angsty scribblings emerging to a great big black wall pronouncing a potential teenage mantra and deliberate inversion of the show’s title ‘I heart Melancholy’. It soon gives way to a jumble of relics from previous projects and a video introducing the others that left little trace, trademark co-optive playfulness and free cups of tea in a 90s workers cafe.
   But, then visitors are ambushed with a sudden coming of age, Orgreave closely followed by It is What It is 2009 a bombed out car from Baghdad that Deller towed around America.
   A slow starter, Deller has grown up and grown serious fast, the final work in the exhibition being a reflective video of bats in flight, levis belts women,  creatures Deller regards as more highly evolved than the human race.
  Appearing anomalous at first, the video permits itself an unravelling. These communal creatures tells us more about the attributes that appeal to Deller within human nature; the chaotic coming together to sudden seemingly choreographed moments of unison. Sinister and celebratory in turn, the toilet humour has long been left behind.











2012年4月25日星期三

8 Weirdest and Wackiest Prom Dresses EVER


   8 Weirdest and Wackiest prom dressesProm is right around the corner. While some gals (and guys) will be looking to the fashion magazines like Vogue, nike dunk heels for sale, or to stylish celebrities like Jennifer Lawrence, or to the newest hot trends for their style inspiration, others will be inspired by something completely different like candy wrappers, nike dunk heels cheap, duct tape, or Twilight.
   Over the years, nike dunk heels, teenagers have challenged the regular standard-issue prom gown idea. They have created homespun creations that are truly one-of-a-kind. Some are wacky, others are weird, and some are, well, wonderful.




Kim Kardashian Spotted Wearing “KW” Earrings

Kim Kardashian
 
   After much speculation (and silent prayer) it appears that Kim Kardashian and Kanye West are, in fact, adidas adizero ghost review, dating. We're not sure if this is a union of the most obnoxious egomanics of all time or merely a publicity stunt, but Kimye (as bloggers have already taken to calling the couple) are playing out their budding romance in the most calculated of ways.
   As a quick refresher, Kanye professed his love for Kim in his new song, "Way Too Cold" (previously called "Theraflu" and also used the lyrical opportunity to trash her soon-to-be-ex-husband Kris Humphries. Within what seemed like minutes, Kim had arrived in New York City for whirlwind courtship including watching "The Hunger Games" at one of Manhattan's busiest movie theaters, shutting down F.A.O. Shwarz for a playdate, and posing for countless paparazzi photos amidst mobs of screaming fans while wearing matching smug grins.
   This weekend Kim flew in to New York again for ice cream, shopping, and sidewalk photo ops with Kanye. When she arrived home on Sunday at LAX airport, Kim ditched her signature cascading hairstyle of a confusing high ponytail. We knew something was awry. Sure enough, Kim was showing off some new jewelry: gold stud "K" and "W" initial earrings, most likely a parting gift from Kanye.
   Kim Kardashian is not the first celebrity to wear her heart on her sleeve. (Or in this case, her ears). Paris Hilton wore a blinged-out "BM" ring back when she dated Benji Madden of Good Charlotte. Their romance was short-lived, but at least Paris could remove the ring easier than a tattoo. Miley Cyrus recently Tweeted a photo of her manicure and purposely displayed a massive rock on her ring finger. Then she got fake-annoyed when tabloids speculated that she was engaged, saying the big clear stone was a topaz ring she bought for herself. Evan Rachel Wood and her on-and-off boyfriend Jamie Bell were both spotted wearing rings recently (hers a diamond, his a gold wedding band style), adidas adizero ghost, but the actress insists she's wearing her late-aunt's ring. Jennifer Aniston and Justin Theroux both wore rings with their names on them in the early days of their courtship, adidas adizero ghost shoes, perhaps to add momentum to their romance. And let's not forget Angelina Jolie's ring citing. One look at those giant diamonds and we all knew her and Brad Pitt were finally engaged, and they quickly set the record straight. Thus far the info on her new jewelry has nearly eclipsed the news of their impending nuptials.
   Do you think celebrities wear diamonds and initial jewelry to get attention and spark relationship rumors? And what do you think of Kim Kardashian's new earring and her relationship with Kanye West? Are they going about their lives as usual, or do you think their PDA is calculated? Let us know, and check out Khloe Kardashian's take on their romance in the video below.

Levi’s Made & Crafted Women’s SS12 Collection

 levis


  The women's Spring/Summer 2012 Levi’s Made & Crafted collection hit the stores a couple of weeks ago. The collection is inspired by late 60′s Levis catalogues from the Levis San Francisco Archive. The look during that time was clean, Levis 503 Jeans, colourful west coast preppy cool, in the spirit of Steve McQueen & Jacqueline Bisset (their film, Bullitt, was shot in San Francisco in 1968.)
  This colourful, levis 503 jeans men, late 60′s influence is overlaid onto Levi’s Made & Crafted’s usual blend of beautifully made, tailored workwear with crafted details. It’s the refined, levi 503 jeans for men, modern expression of Levi’s heritage. You can see the 3 key looks in the gallery below. What do you think of the new collection?