5 restaurants

'At Dinner in the Sky in Brussels, diners are strapped into chairs, raised to half the height of Big Ben and served meals like ham salad and sauteed prawns that are cooked in a small oven in the center of the structure. From the minimum cost of about 8700 Euros – not including catering, you can eat dinner in an open air restaurant with 21 of your friends hanging from a crane 160 feet above the ground for 8 hours.' -- The Daily Mail
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'If using restaurant staff as punching bags sounds like a good anger management tactic to you, check out the Rising Sun Anger Release Bar and Restaurant in Nanjing City, China where customers pay a fee to beat up staff, scream and break glasses. The staff, which dons protective gear, will dress up to resemble the person you’d really like to physically assault. The bar is said to be especially popular with Chinese women who work in the service industry.' -- Sydney Morning Herald
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'In the Vampire Café in the Ginza section of Tokyo, the interior is almost entirely blood red. Guests are ushered down a long hallway with red blood cells superimposed on the floor. Inside, the décor includes heavy velvet drapes, black coffins dripping with red candle wax, skulls and crosses. Many of the meals are vampire-themed, and diners drink red cocktails from martini glasses.' -- Marianne Mancusi
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'The bustling New Lucky Restaurant in Ahmadabad, India is famous for its milky tea, its buttery rolls and the graves between the tables. Krishan Kutti Nair has helped run the restaurant built over a centuries-old Muslim cemetery for close to four decades, but he doesn't know who is buried in the cafe floor. The restaurant dates to the 1950s — before honking traffic and tall buildings surrounded the site — when K.H. Mohammed opened a tea stall outside the cemetery, said Nair, who helped run the place and became Mohammed's partner. Business was good, and the stall kept expanding until its tin walls encircled the graves.' -- The Seattle Times
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'At Buns & Guns in Beirut, Lebanon, everything is military themed – from the décor and names of the menu items to the helicopter sounds that play constantly in the background. Manager Yussef Ibrahim says that the theme reflects the mood of the city during Lebanon’s 2006 war with Israel. You can order an M16 Carbine meat sandwich, a Mortar burger or a Terrorist meal (which happens to be vegetarian).' -- WebUrbanist
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Elegy for No One
Ron Padgett
Time passes slowly when you’re lost in paradise,
then gradually slows down to a disappearance
but only for a moment, as if inside a footstep
that pauses on the stair to wait for its shadow
to catch up, for it had not yet vanished as
the other had, and you have the idea you
wanted to have had when
the candlelight took away the distance,
leaving only a residue of dimness and fading
falling to one side and off. Time goes past or you
go past time, the outcome is the same if you think
of it that way, but if you don’t think at all
the footstep will have existed on the stair
without you, as it always has, and perfectly so.
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Drew Droege is Chloë Sevigny
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'Them', layout, portraits & texts
from Spank Magazine







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Gin
'It sounds like a spoof: A giant mist, full of gin, pumped into a room, which gets you drunk. It looks like a spoof: Bompas and Parr, two Old Etonians dressed in white coats and bow ties, are greeting the public and leading them down into the murky depths of their mad invention.
'The quirky side-street shop, set up by the inventors, both 25, is simply labelled ‘GIN’. Bravely, we don the special suits designed to keep our clothes gin-free inside the UK's first walk-in cocktail.
'All the ghostbusters are led into an Eighties-themed bar and are left to wander down into the gin-mist room. It’s sparsely decorated (there is a giant lime and a big straw on the wall) and incredibly weird. You can’t see much, due to the mist, but you can make out the shapes of your boiler-suited friends against the lime-green light. Most people have gin and tonics in their hands to supplement the six litres of alcohol that is being pumped through the ‘mistifier’.
'The mist tastes sweet and tangy – like an excellent gin and tonic – and is actually very satisfying to breathe in. None of us are quite sure if we feel drunk. Spending 40 minutes in the room is supposed to be the equivalent of a single cocktail but presumably heavy breathers (athletes and brass players?) will inhale the most.
'Bompas and Parr have used a team of doctors to calculate the ‘mixology’. An ambulance is on standby and a chemical explosives expert has been consulted to ensure the heady fumes of booze don’t just explode.' -- timesonline.co.uk
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Bargain Hunt
Ron Padgett
Suppose you found a bargain so incredible
you stood there stunned for a moment
unable to believe that this thing could be
for sale at such a low price: that is what happens
when you are born, and as the years go by
the price goes up and up until, near the end
of your life, it is so high that you lie there
stunned forever.
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James Hoff's Top Ten
(Design by Jeremy Mickel)
No Input Books, 2008
Edition of 200
from Ubuweb
'In almost every issue since December 1997, the contemporary art monthly Artforum has asked a member of the art world to compile a list of his or her top ten favorite recent exhibitions (as well as concerts, television programs, books, and events) in a list that displays the writer's taste as well as his or her wit. With this hefty artist's book, James Hoff has reprinted the text of every column alongside the abstract designs of blacked-out photographs that once depicted the writers' picks.
'David Adjaye, Vince Aletti, Pawel Althamer, Rae Armantrout, Art Club 2000, Jan Avgikos, Fia Bakström, Jack Bankowsky, Clive Bell, Daniel Birnbuam, Ian Birnie, Claire Bishop, Nayland Blake, Francesco Bonami, David Bordwell, Lizzi Bougatsos, Andrea Bowers, AA Bronson, Delia Brown, Louisa Buck, Richard Buckley, Kate Bush, David Byrne, Dan Cameron, Laura Cantrell, Jake and Dinos Chapman, Monsieur Chat, Lynne Cooke, Dennis Cooper, Christopher Cox, Arthur C. Danto, Diedrich Diederichsen, Trisha Donnelly, Sam Durant, Marcel Dzama, Dave Eggers, Okwui Enwezor, Roe Ethridge, Matias Faldbakken, Johanna Fateman, Wendy Fonarow, Forcefield, Iain Forsyth, Brendan Fowler, Thomas Frank, Anna Gaskell, Alison M. Gingeras, Thelma Golden, Ann Goldstein, Loren Goodman, Isabelle Graw, Rachel Greene, Boris Groys, Bruce Hainley, Peter Halley, Howard Hampton, Richard Hawkins, Martin Herbert, Dave Hickey, Matthew Higgs, J. Hoberman, Tom Holert, A.M. Homes, Julia House, Andrew Hultkrans, Susie Ibarra, Chrissie Iles, Gary Indiana, Jim Isermann, Darius James, Kent Jones, Ronald Jones, Isaac Julien, Miranda July, Charlie Kaufman, Matt Keegan, Mike Kelley, Christina Kelly, John Kelsey, Rita Kersting, Karen Kilimnik, Alison Knowles, Kode9, Wayne Koestenbaum, Barbara Kruger, Christina Kubisch, Friedrich Kunath, Marta Kuzma, Steve Lafreniere, Alix Lambert, Inez van Lamsweerde, Thomas Lawson, Pamela M. Lee, Lisa Liebmann, Arto Lindsay, Barbara London, Charles Long, Chip Lord, Guy Maddin, Christian Marclay, Matmos, Nick Mauss, Lucy McKenzie, Josephine Meckseper, James Meyer, Jason Middlebrook, Aleksandra Mir, Katy Moran, Jessica Morgan, Dave Muller, Christopher Münch, Marissa Nadler, Rosalind Nashashibi, Kori Newkirk, Bob Nickas, Philip Nobel, Linda Nochlin, Geoffrey O'Brien, Glenn O'Brien, Ken Okiishi, Paulina Olowska, Elizabeth Peyton, Richard Phillips, Paola Pivi, Peter Plagens, Olivia Plender, Jane Pollard, Stephen Prina, Rob Pruitt, James Quandt, Eileen Quinlan, Raqs Media Collective Ben Ratliff, Simon Reynolds, Daivd Rimanelli, David Rimanelli, David Rimanelli, David Robbins, Jonathan Romney, Kay Rosen, Robert Rosenblun, Marina Rosenfeld, Daniela Rossell, Neather Rowe, Ralph Rugoff, Mayer Rus, Lisa Ruyter, Tomas Saraceno, Elizabeth Schambelan, Paul Schimmel, Jim Shaw, Richard Shone, Choire Sicha, Katy Siegel, Amy Sillman, Laurie Simmons, Debra Singer, Guy Richards Smit, Susan Sontag, Carol Squiers, Frances Stark, Georgina Starr, Robert Storr, D. Strauss, Ali Subotnick, Amy Taubin, John Tremblay, Donald Urquhart, Jeffrey Vallance, Tom Vanderbilt, Banks Violette, Stephen Vitiello, Bruce Wagner, Hamza Walker, Kelley Walker, Alex Waterman, John Waters, Toby Webster, Olav Westphalen, T.J. Wilcox, Cathy Wilkes, Stephanie Zacharek. [Some authors with multiple entries.]' -- Ubuweb
See and read it here.
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Superplexus
'This is the three-dimensional spherical labyrinth that challenges the limits of your manual dexterity and spatial understanding as you maneuver a 5/8" wooden marble through its entire course. The Superplexus is a complex network of chicanes, multi-planar hairpin turns, spirals, and staircases--even a vortex. Hand made from 3- and 6-ply Finnish birch that form the track, over 400 hours are involved in its construction. The labyrinth is set inside a 36" diameter acrylic sphere affixed to a Jatoba base using a stainless steel gimbaled mount that allows you to tilt the sphere in any direction to guide the marble. The entire track laid out on a straight line is 31' longer than a football field. In addition to the track, the ball must travel on a 1/16" diameter stainless steel wire pathway at eight points along the journey. A series of directional arrows indicate the course to follow, and successful completion requires a minimum of 425 turns (plane changes) of the sphere--without letting the marble fall off the track. Each Superplexus' difficulty level can be customized. 50" H x 36" Diam. (65 lbs.)' -- Hammacher Schlemmer
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Russian Wax Museum
'The art of wax portraits in Russia dates back to 1698 when Peter the Great returned home from a voyage with a wax head modeled after his own, along with seven busts of the participants of the Great Embassy. He developed a great interest in this art form and began ordering more.
'The first wax museum in St. Petersburg was opened in 1738 with portrayals of contemporary kings or high ministers. Admission was costly and meant to entertain only the elite. However, wax figures became more popular and started being used in shop windows as mannequins, in barbershops to promote new haircuts, and in bookshops to acknowledge renowned Russian writers.
'Soon, wax museums began appearing all over the Russian Empire from Moscow to Odessa. They became favorite attractions for all classes of people, until the fad melted away after the Russian Revolution of 1917. Several decades passed before this art form was reborn by The St. Petersburg Wax Museum in the late 1980s.' -- Hot Russian Wives Blog






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Rinso
Ron Padgett
The slight agitation
of pots and pans
and a few dishes
in sudsy water
into which hands
plunge and fingers
operate like in
a magic act in which
bubbles burst
into flowers presented
to the blonde girl
who rotates on
a wheel that flies
up through the
ceiling and
disappears.
The dishes
are sparkling.
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'The Electronic Literature Collection is an annual publication of current and older electronic literature in a form suitable for individual, public library, and classroom use. The publication will be made available both online, where it will be available for download for free, and as a packaged, cross-platform CD-ROM, in a case appropriate for library processing, marking, and distribution. The contents of the Collection will be offered under a Creative Commons license so that libraries and educational institutions will be allowed to duplicate and install works and individuals will be free to share the disc with others.
'The second collection has just been released. The works include many of the emerging categories of e-lit: mash-ups, geolocative, codework, as well as “traditional” and evolving forms such as hypertext, chatbots, and interactive fiction. The authors list presents readers with both veterans and newcomers to the field. The new collection includes 63 works drawn from (and extending beyond):
Countries: Austria, Australia, Catalonia, Canada, Colombia, France, Germany, Israel, The Netherlands, Portugal, Peru, Spain, UK, US
Languages: Catalan, Dutch, English, French, German, Portuguese, Spanish
Formats: Flash, Processing, Java, JavaScript, Inform, HTML, C++
'Like ELC1, the collection can be browsed by author, title, or keyword.' -- ELO
It's here.
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Little House on the Bowery Road Show, San Francisco *
Photos: Michael Karo
* Lonely Christopher, Kevin Killian, Richard Loranger, Trees, Steven Trull, Math, Michael Karo, Squeaky, Bill, ...












________________
Bluebird
Ron Padgett
You can’t expect
the milk to be delivered
to your house
by a bluebird
from the picture book
you looked at
at the age of four:
he’s much older
now, can’t carry those
bottles ‘neath his wing,
can hardly even carry a tune
with his faded beak
that opens some nights
to leak out a cry
to the horrible god
that created him.
Don’t think I’m
the bluebird, or that
you are. Let him get
old on his own and
die like a real bluebird
that sat on a branch
in a book, turned his head
toward you, and radiated.
____________
5 magicians
----
*
p.s. Hey. ** Jax, Hi, pal. Citizenship seems to be the only option now, and Yury's going to investigate it and go for it, but it's a years-long process, so it's a very unhappy and discouraging solution to be left with. ** Killer Luka, Thanks, and likewise. ** Brendan, Wow, you really did Vegas up, didn't you, ha ha. I always used to stay at the Luxor. They used to have the best buffet in Vegas and a cool water ride through Egyptian history in the lobby, but they both got cut. I'll check it out next time. No, Yury won't be joining me on my next LA trip. His visa was denied. ** Math, Hey, M. Thanks, my friend. I don't think there's much of anything you guys can do on a practical level that would help, but I really appreciate the thought. Love, me. ** Oscar B, Well, yeah. Let's go see something in a bit. I need distraction. ** Alan, Hey. So true. The process is organized in such a secret, heavily defended way that if you're the victim of an injustice or even of just a mistake, the decision is insurmountable. You're not allowed to know the reason, investigate it, or challenge it. You're essentially putting yourself at the mercy of the unmerciful. ** Colin, Thank you a lot, Colin. We're going to look into citizenship because we have to, but I think it'll be at least two years before Yury can even apply, and then the process itself can take a year or more. No, no reason given for the denial. All Yury managed to get out of the guy was that he didn't think Yury had 'established' himself sufficiently in France to deserve the visa. Completely vague. It's not a situation where they say if you do this and this, you'll get the visa. They just make pointedly unclear statements. Yury got the impression that he would need to own a chateau and be a millionaire to meet the 'established' criteria, and, even then, they could just deny him again. They can do whatever they want. ** David Ehrenstein, Thank you, David. Terrific FaBlog. Man, the uprising in Wisconsin is really a joy. Everyone, David E. has an excellent FaBlog entry on the uprising by workers going on in Wisconsin, and I highly recommend it, and it's here. ** Derek McCormack, Hi, Derek! It's lovely to see you, my buddy, and thank you so much for the kind words. You good, I hope, I hope? ** Frank Jaffe, The post ruled and you rule, man. Great job, and I'm thrilled and grateful! ** JoeM, We were pretty shocked too. After what we've gone through, we weren't confident or anything, but since Yury qualified completely for this visa, we did think he had an excellent chance. It's just absolutely illogical. If the interviewer had actually thought for even a few seconds about it, he would have granted the visa. The reason for the denial appears to be 'flight risk'. It doesn't matter that the idea that Yury, who has a good paying job and legal resident status here in France, etc., would disappear while on a little US vacation and become an illegal alien who couldn't get a decent job or have even basic rights and would live 24/7 in fear of being caught and deported is completely absurd. The rest of the world is long over the idea that the US is the land of milk and honey, the dream home of every non-citizen on the planet, but the people standing in front of its doors still act like they're in charge of the pearly gates. French citizenship takes a long time. Unfortunately, Yury is not close to qualifying for it yet. I'm not sure how long he has to wait. We're just about to look into all that. Anyway, I really appreciate your thoughts, Joe, and love to you. ** Kiddiepunk, Yep. Dude, your new photos rocked some worlds around here. I'll give you a call when I'm done. ** Allesfliesst, Thanks, man. We're both really depressed at the moment, but, yeah, we'll see what there is left. ** Pilgarlic, Hey. Buffalo Springfield reunion? Hm, that's kind of grim. Maybe it's a favor for Richie Furey's bank account. I love Richie Furey's voice. And he/Poco did that really amazing Gram Parsons tribute song 'Crazy Eyes'. What a great song. Isn't Jim Messina still alive? I don't know, I think a Byrds reunion is a depressing idea too. I don't like these reunion things, or at least not 40+ years after the fact. I'd rather see a really good tribute band who could capture the original look and essence. ** Steevee, Thanks a lot, Steve. Yeah, I'm no fan of gays adopting heterosexual models when we can invent our own, but the right to marry would take care of Yury's/ my problem in a heartbeat. ** Nick, Hey, Nick. Good to see you, man. ** MANCY, Thank you, my friend. ** Empty Frame, Thanks, man. Like I said, we've been fighting this battle for more than seven years, and we've looked into every way to surmount the problem, talked to lots and lots of lawyers and gotten tons of legal advice, and there's just nothing we can do but try to please the authorities. That's the option. I mean, if I could get the ear and heart of some very important person who has a close relationship with very higher ups in the US government, that would solve it, but I think the nature of my writing would work against us in that situation, and there are thousands of people like me who are in the same situation, all of them wishing for that kind of help too. Yeah, Yury has a completely clean record. Thanks again. ** Chris Goode, Hey, Chris. Yeah, it's fucking insane and way beyond bewildering. I hope the show is going great, man. Lots of love. ** Changeling, Hey! Thanks. Well, yeah, marriage wouldn't be a magic solution, but it would sure help. Oh, yeah, sorry I haven't written to you. I found a matter of fact paragraph that will work, but if you have one you like, sure, send it in. The one I have is workmanlike. And I put in another clip at the bottom to continue the form of the post, and then some links at the very bottom. So, yeah, send me anything you want, and I'll insert it/them, and it can also go ahead as-is too. Fake blood recipe, cool. Everyone, here's Changeling's 'No-Fail Fake Blood Recipe', if you missed it yesterday: 'Cheap Crackin' Chocolate Flavoured Ice Cream Topping - lots -- Poppy Red Paste Colouring - some -- Corn Flour - leave it out if you want that translucent jewel glow to your blood. -- My friend puts a shot of expresso in there but mine is more - I dunno - arterial blood?' Juicy! Love from me to you. ** Sypha, Thanks for the good thoughts, James. ** The Dreadful Flying Glove, Hi, man. I saw emails from you in my box this morning, yeah. Thank you so much! I'll go open them and devour the stuff a little later. Really thoughtful and kind of you, my friend. Awesome on your work breakthrough! Pot of coffee sounds okay to me. Pot of espresso sounds even better. ** Ken Baumann, Hi, Ken. Thanks, pal. No, lawyers and $ don't make a bit of difference. I've done lawyers up the wazoo, and you're just paying through the nose for information and tactics you can figure out yourself or find online. The decision can't be challenged, and one has no legal right to access the reasoning. Basically, the only shot is winding up with an interviewer/ decision maker who thinks for him or herself and uses logic in their decision and has a healthy sense of empathy, and, so far, Yury has never gotten that lucky, and I suspect that anyone with a heart and any individuality doesn't get the embassy job. It's a pretty hopeless situation, man. Anyway, thanks again, and lots of love and respect to you. ** Heliotrope, Hi, Mark. Yeah, fucking hell. There's just no decency in this process. No decency at all. Love's the only thing, man, and I love you too. ** Little foal, Thank you, Darren. All that hugging and loving is heading back your way right this second. ** Dusty rose, Hey, Dusty. Wow, I only have the very vaguest memory of that gay marriage piece. I think it was a long time ago. It was probably pretty naive, ha ha. How are your projects going? ** Nb, Hey. Yep, they do. More importantly, how was that donut? ** Oliver, Hi, Oliver. It's an interesting book. Parts of it are kind of skimmable, but there's some really interesting stuff in there. Yes, totally. I totally get that in your story. It's fascinating and beautiful. I'm really excited by what you're doing in that piece. That's why I'm reading it so slowly and savoring it. It's really a fine piece of work, man, and that thinking you're talking about is really there charging and making the prose really alert and active in this very, very interesting way. ** John, Hi, thank you, and welcome. No, I appreciate the thought, but I don't really think there's anything we here can do about this. To the people making these decision, we are no one, and our numbers, talents, etc., would not impress them in the slightest. They embarrass themselves every day, and I don't think they care, and they perpetuate greater injustices than the one we're facing continually. Anyway, thanks for the support. ** Bill, I appreciate that, Bill. Yury has had four denials. Two while in Russia, and two here. Three tourist visas, one student visa. There are, I think, only two cities in France where one can apply for the visa that Yury was applying for -- a tourist visa for a legal resident but not citizen of France -- and the advice we got was that the Paris US embassy is/was the best shot. I thought maybe having a trigger in your hand might effect the length issue. ** Statictick, Thanks, bud. Well, if you remember those questions, just fire away, obviously. ** Chilly Jay Chill, Hi, Jeff, Thanks. Yeah, it just never ends. And no matter how much progress you make, no progress is made. It's madness, and it's crushing. ** Misanthrope, Thanks, George. No, we're just fucked, man. I'm sure you remember when Yury was so shockingly denied a tourist visa so he could meet my dying mother, despite incredibly heartfelt, pleading letters from my mom, her doctors and nurses, my family members, and despite a letter asking for the visa from my mom's Congresswoman Jane Harman and even words of support from the French ambassador to the US. It took us years to get over that blow and even think about applying again. But, at least in that case, we thought, okay, he was just a student here and wasn't a legal resident, and we believed what we had been told: that if he proved himself legitimate by becoming a legal resident and having a good, well paying job, we would have done everything necessary to deserve a visa. Now, we've done everything required, and we are out of options apart from maybe French citizenship. It's a real and very hard slug to the head and heart, man. ** Andrew, Hey. Hopefully an Iggy circa the Stooges era action figure. With a broken bottle accessory. Yikes, about that cement thing. I haven't even come across that in my slave post hunts. ** Inthemostpeculiarway, Hi. Well, you sound just a little better today, at least. I'm very glad to hear that. Yes, the cover they showed me got a thumbs up, so it's decided, I think. Yury liked 'Black Swan' more than I did, but he didn't like it all that much. I wish I could turn off my analytical side when I watch things, but, unless they're intended to be nothing but expensive/ cheap entertainment, I can't. It sucks sometimes. Your tentative reunion with cigarettes was interesting. It was kind of like that for me when I had bronchitis. Very soft macaroni, ha ha. Actually, that sounds good. Thanks for the Britney video link. I'll go check it out later. My day: This will be the worst day report ever. As I was finishing the blog, Yury called to tell me the decision. We were both very stunned. He came home briefly to change clothes before going to work. While we talked about it, we both went from being stunned to being very depressed. He went to work and tried to distract himself. I just kind of sat around feeling awful. He called from work, and we talked some more, and we decided that he had to start looking into citizenship because we have no choice, and we decided that we need to find a vacation in Europe option to replace the LA trip, and I guess we'll do that. Try to move on, basically. I had coffee with Kiddiepunk and Oscar, and they kindly listened to me talk about it and be depressed in their company. I worked on the blog for a bit. It was decided that we're going to do the 'Them' gigs in Utrecht in March because that was up in the air before. I thought it would be good to play 'Epic Mickey' to distract myself, but I was too depressed to actually do it. The day just turned into evening and so on, and I ate, and Yury came home from work, and we talked about the whole thing, and I eventually got sleepy and went to bed. Bad day, to be expected. I'm going to try to get back to life as it stands today, go see some art or something, and I'll tell you whatever happened. I hope you woke feeling even better this morning, and please tell me if you or didn't and what you did today. ** Slatted Light, HI, D. It's a real cheer-up to see you here, man. Oh, cool, about your review of 'Cunt Ups', and, well, about all these projects you're working on. They sound completely enticing, Yes, I would love very much to read your porn piece. That would be great! It would be an honor! Me? Uh, apart from you-know-what, I'm mostly working on the new theater piece with Gisele -- a prequel to our big upcoming maze-based work -- that will premiere in March. And we're doing a fanzine component for the piece that will constitute another prequel and will be distributed in Europe as part of this big artist-made fanzine project that is being put together by Pierre Huyghe and some other artists. We're working on the first issue. I think there'll be four. As for the novel, the cover just got decided, and I'm waiting to do the copyedit of the mss., and I've made some refinements and little changes that I need to insert. So, that's in-process, I guess. It should be ready for eyes before too long, I think. Thanks a lot, man. It really is a boon to have you here. ** Pascal, Thanks, Pascal. I really appreciate that. How are you? What's going on? ** Tender Prey, Hi, Marc! Thank you for the good thoughts. You're in Amsterdam! Oh, I moved there because I was in love with a Dutch guy, and he had to be there for university, so I just moved there to be with him, basically. I didn't write 'Frisk'. there. I wrote 'Closer' while I was living in Amsterdam, and I wrote 'Frisk' when I moved back to NYC 'in memory'. Yeah, it's a special city. It becomes a very small town when you live there, though, and that aspect was a big factor that ended up driving me away. I hope the show goes well. I'd love to hear more about it and see pix if possible. ** Okay, today I give you a Varioso full of all kinds of stuff. I really hope you enjoy it. Let me know. Take care, and I'll see you tomorrow.
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