Neil Young 1972 Photo by Joel Berstein Via fuckyeahneilyoung
In her January 2020 Shape cover interview, Oscar-nominated actress Felicity Jones discusses self-care, her fitness routine, and her love for skin care.
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They are some of music’s most unique lyrics: “A present from you Strawberry letter 22 The music plays I sit in for a few…” Time to remember The Brothers Johnson, and share t…
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From 1974-1978, the English kids’ humor comic Whoopee! ran a wonderfully bonkers series of whimsical horror panels called “World Wide Weirdies,” by Ken Reid, an illustrator from Manchester. They were usually on the back covers and featured grotesque, Basil Wolverton-esque monsters in bizarre situations, adorned with punning captions. According to the British Comics Wiki, they were based on readers’ ideas and winning submissions would win their authors an easy two pounds. While the central images are great on their own, Reid’s marginalia is quite fun, too. There are tons of these, at generous resolution, at this Flickr page. Previously on Dangerous Minds The amazing old Paramount Records ads that inspired R. Crumb
Six of the best colour films ever? certainly 6 of my favourites ... I have written plenty on here on the above favourites of mine, as per labels, but here is a toast to some great photography: BLACK NARCISSUS and PANDORA AND THE FLYING DUTCHMAN by Jack Cardiff, PLEIN SOLEIL by Henri Decae, THE LEOPARD by Guiseppe Rotunno, MODESTY BLAISE by Jack Hildyard, BLOW-UP by Carlo Di Palma - all 40 or 50 years ago!
Photo by Regina Relang – 1974
[Tim Burton • 1988]
Italy has been through so much history that anything you say about the land and its people is doomed to repeat what has been said...