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LEGO Volkswagen Van

This LEGO 1962 T1 Camper model will be available in October.

The characteristic flat-four air-cooled Volkswagen boxer engine is also squeezed in above the rear axle, exactly as in the original. Inside, care has been taken to reproduce an interior that is as close to the original as possible. There’s a sink unit, a bench that folds down into a bed, a folding dinette table and an opening cupboard with a mirror.

The model also embraces the counterculture with a hippie-inspired interior colour scheme, a lava lamp and a T-shirt in the window that says ‘Make LEGO models, not war’.

If I was a dad of a young kid, I'd buy this ostensibly for him or her, but in actuality it would be for me.

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Teun Hocks

Teun Hocks applies an interesting technique in his series of works where he plays the role of a "middle-aged man caught in variously absurd circumstances."

First, he constructs scenes in his studio and takes a black and white photograph. He then hand colors the photographs with transparent oil paint, taking precise care in the coloring in order to create specific emotions and atmosphere. The accumulation of these elements makes the environments seem like surreal portals. His films and drawings additionally reveal and delve into these worlds and also give greater insight to his storytelling and creative process.

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The Greatest Goal Never Scored

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-UzRsvCsC4c&feature=player_embedded] I've never seen this singular beautiful play by Pele before, which Giles Harvey illustrates wonderfully.

Pelé, charging to meet a bespoke through ball from Tostão, outfoxes the approaching Uruguayan keeper by doing nothing at all. Pelé simply allows the pass to run on—to the goalie’s left—as he swerves the other way and then circles back to collect the ball. Of course, he ends up missing—it’s the greatest goal never scored—but that hardly matters. If anything, the fact that he misses seems to intensify the aesthetic quality of the move.

[Via]

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Tennis Planking

The New York Times caption says "Djokovic received medical treatment for a strained muscle in his back before the start of the fourth set." But we all know what this US Open champ and jokester was doing: planking.

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Essay on Zooey's Mix CD

zooey110919_1_560 So Jada Yuan, writer behind Zooey's profile (full disclosure: I like Zooey's films) in my latest copy of New York Magazine, detailed an old school mix CD the actress gave to her.

Side bar: I was astonished the Generation Now writer had nothing to say about the fact it was a mix CD. She was given a CD in 2011, when rounded up is 2012, which is practically The Future. Remember when at one time in our history "old school" would have referred to an old school mix tape? To those of you who have no idea what I'm referencing when I say "mix tape," let me just say that it is a serious mind fuck to those of us who do remember that you don't know what we're talking about because it stabs the heart of what everyone from the pauper to the King contemplate and struggle with the older they get: the seeming escalating velocity of time until our inevitable death.

On that note, back to the topic of the hipster's Diana, Jackie, and Marilyn all rolled into one saccharine pair of million dollar…eyes. To sum, (because Generation Now is also Generation ADD), Zooey makes a mix CD for the writer which is a very personal task. Think back to your angsty infatuation seeped youth (an age range that is expanding to the 30-something year olds): When did you ever painstakingly compile an assembly of various singles culled from a wide collection into a coherent THING that was meant to come together like Voltron and convey a singular emotion for an acquaintance or your mailman? Never. And while sometimes society thinks stars occupy a completely different universe we sometimes forget that like the laws of physics, there are certain rules that also apply to stars and celebrities (Prince, Michael Jordan with his continuing stubborn stylistic attachment to his Hitler moustache*, and Ahnold Schwarnzgejager are possible exceptions to this rule) and one of them is that they too or rather, should understand the inherent personalness of a mix CD. As I am not a star, this is a tricky assertion and statement, however let's accept this inference, okay (mainly because I've already written a lot that's predicated on this constant).

So the writer itemized the songs on Zooey's mix CD (13 songs total all produced between 1962 and 1979) of which she says she recognized five of the artists. I don't know if this previous sentence is relevant, but I just felt like it was "significant" and "important" to highlight this fact because the author thought it noteworthy enough to share with New York Magazine's readers. Reading this list was a viscerally meta experience for a variety of reasons: a film and soon-to-be TV star - with a reputation and image for "keeping it real" (profile tells us she's in a folk-rock duo that earned the love of indie music's Judge Dredd: Pitchfork.com) and is married to Ben Gibbard, the lead singer of mainstream indie (ignore the oxymoron) band, Death Cab for Cutie (full disclosure: I like this band) - undertakes the personal business of making a mix CD. Yet, Zooey knows she's making it for a writer who is working on a profile piece about her, and on some level promoting her upcoming new TV series, and aware that the writer will most likely share with the magazine's thousands of readers the contents of that mix CD. The writer then accepts the CD and as predicted writes about the mix given to her by Zooey who knows she is writing a piece on her and is mindful that the contents of that mix CD will appear in the article. And what does this great insight reveal? For the answer to this, let's go back to the first sentence of this paragraph: it's filled with the musical obscure which correlates to Zooey's image as a star who "keeps it real." It's like getting the answers before a Scantron test. All personalness has been scrubbed, which is antithetical to a mix CD's mission.

And to further perpetuate the self-referential meta-ness of this, I'm here blogging about Zooey's mix CD (Full disclosure: I liked it) and you're reading it.

If a reporter or writer was doing a profile on me and I gave them a mix CD (well, I'd give them a mix mp3 playlist loaded on a hip KAWS designed flash drive) knowing it may be shared in that article, I would submit the following compilation:

1. Amy Millan - I Will Follow You Into the Dark (Cover) 2. Athlete - Casio 3. Esbjörn Svensson Trio - Believe, Beleft, Below 4. Bright Eyes - Triple Spiral 5. Broken Social Scene - All To All 6. Iron & Wine - Always On My Mind (Cover) 7. Lauryn Hill - Lost Ones 8. Mobb Deep - Put Them In Their Place 9. Eels - From Which I Came 10. A Tribe Called Quest - Bonita Applebum 11. Coleman Hawkins - And So To Sleep Again 12. Billy Bragg & Wilco - Way Over Yonder In The Minor Key 13. Aphex Twin - Avril 14th

I like these songs and I'd want the writer to have them as well, but my unintentionally subversive intent is to communicate to the public vis-a-vis the writer that I have a "slightly eclectic yet contemporary taste in music that is also grounded in the influences of the formative period of the 1990s, as well as his father's love of jazz." An actually personal mix CD would contain a lot more Country, Club Hip-Hop, K-Pop, and Billy Joel. Sure, it might be the world's worst mix CD, but it'd also be the most personal.

*No single person has irrevocably ruined what is an aesthetically balanced moustache if you think about it than Hitler did to the little upper lip reverse soul patch.

So, to make a long blog short (Ha! Too late!), here is Zooey's playlist (listen online here):

1. “Rudy, a Message to You,” by Dandy Livingstone (the original 1967 ska version, long before the Specials made it a hit) 2. “Let’s Dance,” by Chris Montez, 1962 3. “Magnet,” by NRBQ, 1972 4. “Funny Funny,” by Sweet, 1971 5. “She’d Rather Be With Me,” by the Turtles, 1967 6. “Pushover,” by Etta James, 1963 7. “Be True to Your School,” by the Beach Boys, 1963 (Their early period, but, says Gibbard, “she’s really into late-era Beach Boys. For all I knew, the Beach Boys stopped making records after Pet Sounds. I’m a musician. I should know better than that. She was like, ‘You’ve never heard ‘Sunflower’? And she was, like, mad about it.”) 8. “Georgy Girl,” by the Seekers, 1966 9. “Yes We Can,” by Lee Dorsey, 1970 (a hit for the Pointer Sisters, it was remixed in 2008 for Obama supporters) 10. “Wonderful! Wonderful!,” by the Tymes, 1963 11. “Darlin’,” by the Paper Dolls, 1968 (a Beach Boys cover) 12. “Love Comes to Everyone,” by George Harrison, 1979 13. “After Hours,” by the Velvet Underground, featuring Maureen Tucker, 1969 (the song Lou Reed reportedly said was too innocent and pure for him to butcher)

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Global Inflation

Starting September 15, stop by West 25th Street underneath the High Line to view this 48-by-20 foot inflatable globe installation by David Byrne (Yes, the Talking Head head) courtesy of the Pace Gallery. He explains:

I wanted to go for the graceful vision, the world I knew from childhood—I used to have globes in my house that looked just like this. It’s a little lighter and a little more fun. But there is a bit of an ominous message as well.

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Dress to Impress

Kay Falls, 7, showed up for the first day of second grade at New York City's Spruce Street School in a tuxedo.

“It’s a very, very special day,” he explained, “A tuxedo is very good clothes.” He said his classmates keep pointing at him. “I don’t know what they’re talking about me, but I think they’re saying I’m very fancy.”

Your future Sartorialist.

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She Was the One

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QgGQAr5hmRI] The most perplexing thing that I've never been able to get my head around with regards to 9/11 is the randomness of life that selected based on some mysterious rationale the nearly 3,000 people who would die that day and who would survive. It just seems so...fucking asshole-y. Inexplicable violence in general is difficult to understand, but the scale of what happened that day and its legacy which has resulted in even more deaths just magnified this question for me.

Karen Juday who worked as an assistant at Cantor Fitzgerald and was killed in the North Tower is memorialized in this eye watering video narrated by her fiance as part of StoryCorps's mission to document and "to provide Americans of all backgrounds and beliefs with the opportunity to record, share, and preserve the stories of our lives." The last line in the story is so full of hope, but also just incredibly heartbreaking.

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Colorful

tumblr_lr9v9fgMqO1qzcq51o1_1280 It's Fashion Week which means the hotness quotient has multiplied here in New York City thanks to people such as this sharply colorful woman photographed by Jamie Beck near Milk Studios. Bravo Ms. Hot Lady. Bravo.

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Record Setting Dog

Harbor, a coonhound from Colorado, was certified recently by the by the Guinness Book of World Records for the longest ears on a living dog with his 13.5-inch right ear and a 12.25-inch left ear.

Sigh. Anytime I see a cute dog like this I always think of my dog Rudy. RIP old pal.

[Via]

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