i tried to read raoul vaneigem's "revolution of everyday life". it's supposed to be the easier read of the situationist books but i found it incomprehensible and put it away after 100 pages. i guess i'm too thick for this kindof stuff. Here's a little bit I did like.
Edmund sentenced for pub affray
This article is more than 1years old
Staff and agencies
Wed 2 Oct 2024 13.21 CEST
Edmund, better known as the flamboyant 1980s poet and internet sensation Woops, was placed under supervision for a year today for threatening drinkers in a pub with an imitation...
yeh everybody loves woops! but then he suddenly left us and now every few months he storms into our little virtual pub and screams he wants to kill us all
if you want to be on the run so badly why don't you rob a bank or steal a diamond necklace from a millionaire or something. you don't necessarily have to kill someone! in fact, you can also just go on the run without any specific reason.
every time i read something about him i feel like it's all completely fabricated, it's such an extreme cartoonesque figure and story, it's so much of a james bond villain.
the horror stuff is probably one of the reasons why the evangelicals always had a bus outside the gabber parties where they'd invite people inside and try to save them from the hands of satan
this sounds very relatable. the thing of not having seen something but being scared of it because your brother or your nephew or just older kids were watching it. all of the gabber and rave music from that time were also heavily sampling these horror/sci-fi movies so that the whole thing became...
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