October 16th is

National Dictionary Day *
National Ether Day *
National Feral Cat Day *
National Liqueur Day
World Food Day *
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National Dictionary Day *
National Ether Day *
National Feral Cat Day *
National Liqueur Day
World Food Day *
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By ann summers
Comparisons were always the way art historians developed arguments for analyzing by comparing formal qualities but also useful cultural resemblances that could make identifying the authenticity of a legitimate (collectible) artwork. Comparing films in the same way can be dicey if only because authorship might not be reducible to the vision of the auteur or even the will of the audience, but to the product’s distribution and that elusive accounting category, the box-office.
With respect to these contradictions in characterizations, it’s important to remember that in The Great Dictator, Charlie Chaplin plays both leading roles: a ruthless fascist dictator and a persecuted Jewish barber. Something to remind oneself when considering the biography of Agent Orange and his Art of the Deal.
So Woody Allen and Ai Weiwei comment on the human condition, in one case the alienation of the individual artist and in the other, the global refugee crisis, Ultimately the cinematic / media apparatus and its distributional mechanisms determine the artistic success rather than a calculus of demand and supply.

On Saturday, Woody Allen’s already buzzed about new movie “Wonder Wheel” will have its world premiere as the closing night selection of the 55th New York Film Festival…
While I used to like Woody Allen films, I also recognized how they were historically indulgent and often stylized versions of other genre films. This occurred particularly with those cinematic works that began to be reflective of his personal history (Zelig could be viewed as a critique of Warren Beatty’s Reds and perhaps the loss of Diane Keaton), even as he denied in interviews the connection between his life and his scripts.
40. Anything Else (2003)In August 2009, Anything Else was cited by Quentin Tarantino as one of his favorite 20 films since 1992, when his career as a filmmaker began.[3]The kids-killing-kids classic Battle Royale was number-one on the list, but it’s the number-two film Tarantino revealed that’s the real shocker.
That’d be the Woody Allen film Anything Else, or, as Tarantino helpfully puts it, “the Jason Biggs one.”
Allen has yet to submit a film entitled “Will This Do?”, but Anything Else comes closest, both in its title and for recycling old tropes about thwarted creativity and being stuck with a pesky, permanently difficult long-term girlfriend (Christina Ricci) who wants to move her mother in. Jason Biggs’s character is meant to be an aspiring comedy writer, but Allen’s script gives him not one funny line. All of these go to his aging intellectual mentor, a veritable fount of park-bench philosophical witticisms, played by guess who. Go on, have a guess.
I promised students of my class I’m gonna take them to the Caravaggio exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum. You know, I try to give them a little culture now and then so they don’t beat each other to death with bicycle chains all the time.
Aside from Annie Hall and Manhattan, this film below is my Allen favorite even as so many dislike it… especially with the inserting of The Lovin’ Spoonful. Then again I actually like his short story The Whore of Mensa.
On paper, it’s a hoot: a Japanese spy movie called International Secret Police: Key of Keys (1965), which Allen overdubbed in English to feel something like an Austin Powers spoof. Weird moments connect: “That’s Shepard Wong’s gambling ship!” remarks one female character. “Oh, I hate him so very much. He’s one of the seven worst people in the world.” But there’s something smirky, superior and naggingly problematic about the movie, like a giggling class joker making fun of the Asian kids.
Allen himself disowned it as “stupid and juvenile” after producers wrested it away and inserted concert performances by The Lovin’ Spoonful.

Jeff Koons also used traditional craftsmen to create the sculptures in glass and marble, such as the iconic Bourgeois Bust, which appeared in his 1991 exhibition Made in Heaven. (Jeff Koons and Ilona Staller (also known as the adult films star La Cicciolina and for a while Koons’s wife),
Artists have that combination of the need to reaffirm what some would call an undeveloped ego especially as it relates to creative capital: the objects themselves and intangible assets like the creator’s reputation.
The same elements remain… the need to establish patronage and/or an audience, and then there’s all that careerism and its codependent parasite, celebrity. The artworld, for all its political involvements still are about its institutional asymmetries of race, class, and gender.

I Love Lucy Day *
National Grouch Day *
World Maths Day *
World Students Day *
International Day of Rural Women *
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MORE! Virgil, Helen Hunt Jackson and Nelson Mandela, click

Be Bald and Free Day
National Dessert Day

Peace Corps Day *
International Top Spinning Day *
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Navy Day *
National M&M Day
Yorkshire Pudding Day

U.N. International Day for Disaster Reduction *
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by NONA BLYTH CLOUD
The pages of our calendars are flying off like autumn leaves. To the delight of children, we are nearing that annual candy-scavenge in America: Halloween.
Our celebrations of the eerie and macabre are pretty bland compared to the holiday’s origins, but as long as people gather in the dark to scare each other with spooky stories, we won’t have entirely lost the awe and mystery of Samhain / Samhuin (SAH-win or SOW-in – rhymes with cow)
This was the first day of the new year in the ancient Celtic calendar, the beginning of the “darker half” of the year. ‘Samhain’ is Irish Gaelic. ‘Samhuin’ is Scottish Gaelic. Special bonfires were lit, for protection and cleansing. It was believed to be a time when the veils between worlds thinned, so faerie folk came amongst humans, and the spirits of the dead could visit their kin.
Tales of the supernatural have always held a fascination for humankind, be they about ghosts, witches, fairies, the dead – or the undead – or ‘things that go bump in the night.’ Here’s an assortment of unsettling poems from poets, some of them world-famous, and some you may not already know.
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Hughes Mearns (1875–1965) wrote this poem in 1899 for his play, The Psyco-ed. It was inspired by reports of a man’s ghost haunting the stairs of a house in Antigonish, Nova Scotia. Later, it became the lyrics for a song called I Met a Man Who Wasn’t There.
Yesterday, upon the stair,
I met a man who wasn’t there
He wasn’t there again today
I wish, I wish he’d go away…
When I came home last night at three
The man was waiting there for me
But when I looked around the hall
I couldn’t see him there at all!
Go away, go away,
don’t you come back any more!
Go away, go away,
and please don’t slam the door… (slam!)
Last night I saw upon the stair
A little man who wasn’t there
He wasn’t there again today
Oh, how I wish he’d go away…
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ER Nurses Day *
World Arthritis Day *
World Vision Day *
Old Farmer’s Day *
Gumbo Day
Free Thought Day *
National Fossil Day *
UN Spanish Language Day *
National Savings Day * – new!

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International Day of the Girl Child *
General Pulaski Memorial Day *
National Coming Out Day *
National Food Truck Day *
Sausage Pizza Day

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World Homeless Day *
Ada Lovelace Day *
Angel Food Cake Day
Naval Academy Day *
Shift10 Day *
World Mental Health Day *
International Stage Manager’s Day *
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