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Posts Tagged ‘stuff’

Schumpeter: In the black stuff

Tony Hayward is almost as unloved as the boss of Goldman Sachs; he is still the right man to lead BP out of the slick

BARACK OBAMA’S administration has promised to keep its boot firmly applied to BP’s neck. Many people would be happier if the boot were a blade. Fishermen who worry that their livelihoods are in peril; shareholders who have seen the value of BP’s shares plunge; local Democratic politicians who want to make sure they cannot be blamed for reacting too slowly: the list of boot-and-blade wielders is growing longer by the day.

In practice BP’s neck means Tony Hayward’s. Just a few weeks ago Mr Hayward was one of the world’s most celebrated chief executives, responsible for delivering $5.6 billion in profits in the first quarter of this year. Now, after the collapse of a rig leased by BP in the Gulf of Mexico, costing 11 lives and threatening environmental catastrophe (see article), he is in the meat grinder of public opprobrium along with Lloyd Blankfein, chief executive of Goldman Sachs, and Akio Toyoda, president of Toyota. …

How Much Stuff Do You Need To Feel Happy?


He slowly counted the stack of $100 bills out loud and stopped at every thousand to confirm the number as he handed me the bills. It was a silly process but he seemed to find it useful. I wasn’t thinking about the money. I was thinking about the significance of bidding farewell to the last of my cars. He stopped counting. I signed the final paperwork. It was done. My earthly value had finally transitioned from a mass of tangible things to a list of mostly-intangibles. That was three years ago.

A finance guru would refer to my transition as one between fixed and liquid assets. I see the process as a removal of many things that distracted me from the relationships and activities that made me most happy. Sound crazy? Let’s work through it a bit and see what happens. Start with 4 questions:

Why do you have so much stuff?

When it comes to household belongings, I am not the type of person who enjoys organizing things for the sake of the organizational process. I can come up with a place for things and keep them in their place until I have more things than I have places. Once that happens, you’d be correct in referring to me as a “messy person.” I found a solution in reducing the number of things I owned to where I could easily manage them without much effort.

There was no struggle in realizing that if I had less stuff I’d have an easier time of managing it. The hard part emerged as I worked through the reasons why I wasn’t getting rid of all the extra stuff I had. In thinking things through, I came up with some reasons why I kept so much stuff around.

  • To avoid the discomfort of empty space- Just like an empty social calendar is never considered a positive opportunity for increased interaction, the space left in your garage after you sell your collection of golf clubs may feel lonely and unused.
  • To meet the expectations of a social group – I owned a bunch of furniture even though there is just one of me because I felt badly when friends stopped by and didn’t have a place to sit. The bigger house, the boat, even a special set of dinnerware for special occasions can all fall into the group of things you own just because your friends expect you to.
  • Because procurement is enjoyable- Buying new stuff is fun. The smaller objects that clutter up most of our lives are the easiest to stock up on because their price point is low enough to make purchases excusable. “It’s just $20″ you say as you bring home yet another set of beer mugs.

As I learned that the empty space I’d so feared was actually freedom, I started celebrating newfound spaces and gaurding them fiercely. While my previous actions and purchases pointed to the contrary, it turned out that my friends weren’t actually visiting me just to sit on my furniture. They wanted to hang out with me and didn’t really care if that meant sitting on a plush couch or sprawled on a wood floor. Procurement turned out to be my all-in-one answer to a creative urge and was easily replaced by helping others make, fix, and imagine things.

What makes you most happy?

As I figured out why I had so much stuff and focused more of my energy on social interactions, I found myself digging deeper into what it was that made me most happy. We are too easily convinced that happiness is a recipe one needs riches, fame, and power to create. Such things have their uses but I was unable to tie my personal experiences to any sort of happiness. I eventually settled on three notions that seem closest to “happiness ingredients” as I can find in my own life. I am most often happy when I am able to:

  • Be Useful – I am happier when I can help others.
  • Love – I don’t just mean love in the deranged romantic sense that causes one to make poor financial decisions and hazard life and limb. I also mean the sort of abiding interest in ideas and pursuits that keeps one up and night and makes it worth leaping out of bed in the morning.
  • Recognize and Share Beauty – There is beauty in kindness. There is beauty in the unexpected smile of a stranger. There is beauty in the flower growing on the rubble of a war-torn district. Being able to recognize that beauty and share it with others always makes me happier.

Notice that none of those things directly involves tangible things. Money and high-tech gadgets might be extremely helpful in my pursuit of usefulness or sharing. But there’s no direct necessity for most of the stuff I had kicking around my house just a few years ago.

What belongings allow you to pursue that happiness?

Figuring out what I truly needed in order to pursue happiness was much easier once I figured out the things that made me happiest. As I went through my belongings I asked myself a few questions that made simple work of deciding what to keep and what to push away.

  1. When did you last use this?
  2. Can you find another one of these easily?
  3. Could somebody you know use this more than you?
  4. Would any of your relationships suffer if you got rid of this?
  5. Would you run back into a burning building to rescue this?

I enlisted the help of a trusted and mildly sarcastic friend to help me in my stuff-busting adventure. Just like shopping with somebody else’s money is fun, getting rid of another person’s stuff seems like a good time, too. At least she seemed to enjoy it! It was very helpful to have a friend nearby to cut through the fog of the inexplicable emotional attachments I had to some belongings. She also helped scan in a lot of the necessary but bulky paperwork I’d been towing around for years. Now that I had an idea of what made me happy it was easy to get rid of extra stuff. It had all gone from being a part of my life to just being stuff I lived near. I felt free.

What will you do with the rest?

If you don’t have friends willing to snap up your extra belongings, you might consider one of the following options:

  • Craigslist - Sell or give your stuff away to willing locals.
  • eBay - Sell your stuff.
  • Freecycle - Give your stuff away.
  • Yard Sale – Sell, Give, raffle. Up to you!

If you know of another website or have an idea I should add to the list of ways to get rid of extra stuff, drop me a note in a comment and I’ll update with it!

How much stuff do you need to feel happy?

Image: Visual Panic 

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I’m an editor here at Stepcase Lifehack. I know the value of long walks, good books, joyful repartee, and a well-made martini. Say hello in the comments here, find me on my blog or hit me up for a follow on Twitter.

Mornin’ Crunch Crumbs: Woman Attacks Deputy With Breast Milk; Elderly Man Attacked By Otter; Cleveland Cavaliers Set Snuggie World Record

-Kentucky Woman Attacks Deputy With Breast Milk: Toni Tramel squirted breast milk at a sheriff’s deputy while in custody for public intoxication….
-TV Land’s First Love, Second Chance! premieres Wednesday….
-Variety has fired film critic Todd McCarthy after 31 years on the job……
-A 96-year-old Florida man is recovering after being attacked by a rabid otter…..
-Speaking of “Hood [...]

Beyond the black stuff

Big Oil is being forced to rethink its future

ON THE face of it the world’s big and publicly quoted oil companies should be celebrating some pleasing results this week. Royal Dutch Shell unveiled its results on Thursday February 4th, reporting that it had made $9.8 billion in 2009. Two days earlier BP boasted profits of $14 billion for the same year. Yet these billions are a disappointment compared with the bonanza of previous years (Shell, for example, raked in $31.4 billion in 2008 alone) when soaring oil prices pulled profits ever higher.

In the long term, however, the firms’ success depends on sustaining reserves. The big western oil companies are trying to expand through acquisitions and investment, but the opportunities do so are becoming scarcer. The firms are spending where they can. Exxon Mobil, the biggest listed oil company, says that exploration and capital spending hit $27.1 billion in 2009, 4% higher than in 2008. The company expects to spend $25 billion to $30 billion annually to the same end over the next five years. BP intends to spend some $20 billion this year on investment in new projects and drilling, roughly the same level as last year. …

The Mountain Goats: After the Harvest

By: Jarrod Dicker

The Mountain Goats (L-R: Wurster, Darnielle, Hughes)
By: Chrissy Piper

An old Irish saying states that if you put silk on a goat, it is still a goat. But how about when you hand it a pen and paper? That, my friends, is a whole different animal all together.

Durham, North Carolina’s The Mountain Goats have been grazing the folk/indie scene since the early ’90s, producing 17 studio albums and participating in various other musical arrangements throughout their near 20 year history.

Led by singer-songwriter-guitarist John Darnielle, The Mountain Goats are a spontaneous and stimulating animal, rotating members and collaborators frequently, providing a new sense of existence whenever a new album releases. The “core,” however, consists of Darnielle, Peter Hughes (bass) and since 2007 Jon Wurster (drums).

Darnielle, the sire of the herd, had himself a rather eventful 2009. He and the Goats released their 17th studio album, The Life of the World to Come (released last October on 4AD), as well as participating in a collaborative project with solo artist John Vanderslice titled Moon Colony Bloodbath.

Primarily “folk-rock” in nature, Darnielle refuses to adhere to strict genre labeling. “Genre tags are only there for two reasons,” he says, “one, to get people to have something they can feel like they’re a part of, which can be both positive and negative, and two, to make it easier to talk about stuff.”

He’s previously collaborated with artists from all over the musical spectrum (Aesop Rock, Kaki King, Franklin Bruno), and Darnielle holds no prejudice when an opportunity arises to create and produce innovative compositions.

JamBase had the pleasure of speaking with John Darnielle about the reception of The Life of the World to Come, Moon Colony Bloodbath, the Bible, writing lyrical poetry, hip hop and more.

JamBase: The most recent Mountain Goat album has been released for quite some time now. How has the overall fan/critic reaction been towards The Life of the World to Come?

John Darnielle: Really good. I think, before it came out, there was some consternation about what it was going to be like…

JamBase: …in regards to the Bible references and other religious themes?

John Darnielle

John Darnielle: Yes, which I have to admit was a little surprising to me. I’ve been referencing the Bible in my songs since the first tape. I can’t imagine many American writers not at some point really engaging in Bible stories in some way. But once the album came out, actually once it leaked to be technical about it – there aren’t many people who wait ’til release date to find out what an album’s all about – I felt like people got what I was doing.

You pride yourself in the musical role of “storyteller” among, in my opinion, folk artists like Bob Dylan, Woody Guthrie, and Leonard Cohen.

Well, you’re super kind to put me in that company [laughs]. I would say that those guys would whip my ass in a songwriting contest, but it’s nice to hear that somebody feels like I’d be able to hold my own!

Who do you credit with originally inspiring you to create music and lyrical poetry?

My own path into writing songs comes directly through literature. When I was a kid, I wanted to be a capital-A author, and I wrote short stories on an old Royal typewriter all the time. That was how I spent pretty much every summer night when I was 12 and 13 years old, sitting at my desk in front of the typewriter writing stories and then sending them off to science fiction and fantasy magazines; getting rejection slips but feeling like I was getting somewhere.

That seems like an odd transformation, going from writing science fiction and fantasy articles to writing poetry and music.

Well, then in high school I started reading poetry and writing it, and I think that was where the kernel of inspiration was – reading John Berryman, Georg Trakl, Paul Celan, Sylvia Plath, of course. Later this American poet named Norman Dubie became a pretty big inspiration for me in the early days of The Mountain Goats. I felt all the power that’s in poetry, but at the same time, it’s not usually a super-immediate power. I’ve always connected to things you can really experience in their raw state. You know?

Can you elaborate on what you mean in terms of a “super-immediate power” in relation to your poetry and music?

The Mountain Goats by: Piper

Stuff that hits you immediately – not necessarily hits you hard – but stuff that makes this instant connection between the performer/writer and listener. And to me, music is where that happens. This is really how it happened: One day I had a poem and I thought it was good. I had a guitar, and I knew about four chords. I was messing around with the guitar and found a progression that sounded good. I didn’t have any lyrics so I started singing a poem. It sounded good to me; really different from stuff I was listening to. So, I moved all my poetry writing energy over into songs, and a whole bunch of years later here I am.

What were your intentions with producing the side project concept record with John Vanderslice, Moon Colony Bloodbath? Releasing it the same year as the latest Mountain Goats studio album, as well as producing it as a limited vinyl run, what was your philosophy and motive behind making this record?

Well, JV and I had had this idea for a long time to do a side project. We were gonna call it “The Comedians” but then we didn’t. I forget why. I’ve always kinda hated the idea that a person should only release one album a year, or every 14 months. To me, if a guy’s working and he’s got good work in him, then he ought to be making records commemorating that work, letting it out into the world to breathe. At the same time, I guess if you release too much stuff, people start to feel like they can’t keep up. This is where people who are good at thinking about business stuff come in, because I really prefer just to think about writing songs and making records. I figure if you make it a limited edition it’s not like people who want to hear it won’t be able to find it online for free; it’s out there as soon as the first person buys it. But for people like me who enjoy the whole world of getting records and engaging with them, there’s an artifact to get. So, we tried to make it really cool so that people would feel like they’re getting their money’s worth. We hired an awesome artist, Michael Pajon, to do the cover, and had Horse & Buggy Press put it together. We used a super-high-gloss finish on the sleeve, all that kind of stuff. Plus, it gave me a chance to work with Chris Stamey, who recorded it, which was awesome. He’s really something great.

You’ve collaborated with Def Jux “underground hip hop” artist Aesop Rock on his track “Coffee” off the album None Shall Pass. How did this collaboration materialize?

We’re fans of each other’s work. We had a mutual friend who told me, “Aesop Rock loves your stuff.” Then we met after a show at some point, real briefly, but we got in touch over email and started saying hi after shows when I’d go through New York. So, we became friends.

Continue reading for more on John Darnielle and The Mountain Goats…

 


One day I had a poem and I thought it was good. I had a guitar, and I knew about four chords. I was messing around with the guitar and found a progression that sounded good. I didn’t have any lyrics so I started singing a poem. It sounded good to me; really different from stuff I was listening to. So, I moved all my poetry writing energy over into songs, and a whole bunch of years later here I am.

-John Darnielle

 

It just seems like an odd collaboration; you being in the folk/rock scene and him a part of the underground hip hop genre.

Really, I mean, this is gonna sound all blissed out, acid-comedown realization or something, but genre tags are only there for two reasons: one, to get people to have something they can feel like they’re a part of – which can be both positive and negative – and two, to make it easier to talk about stuff. I don’t know any musicians who’re like, “I’m only into music from this one genre.” Sometimes it’s fun to limit your listening to one genre for a period of time; just to get really immersed and see how that feels. But, I don’t think many musicians really think, “I can only work with people who play the kind of stuff I play.” For sure, I prefer to work with people who do stuff that I can’t do, who bring their own stuff to the table. That’s where creativity really happens for me.

Your records involve a variety of artists, often varying lineups for each production. Who else do you plan on partnering with in the near future?

John Darnielle by Eric Zimmermann

Well, there’s a horn quartet I have in mind, but I haven’t asked them if they’re interested yet, so I shouldn’t name them. It’s some people I saw singing and playing Christmas carols on a street corner last month. They’re kind of mind-bendingly good; great syncopated jazz style horn quartet arrangements. And there’s a friend of mine in Boston who’s a real singer of classical music and so on, and he’s got choral friends up there. I want to put together a male chorus for this one song in the next bunch. This morning I was listening to a Jeff Loomis album and thinking, “Wow, I would really like to try writing with this dude,” but that’s more off in dream world. He plays heavy metal [in the band Nevermore] and is an incredible soloist. Whereas me, I actually seriously have as one of my someday-in-the-future lifetime goals “learn to solo on guitar.”

Can you describe why you often separate your music into series such as Alpha, Pure, Orange Ball, etc?

Well, it doesn’t all go into series. The way it starts is that I’ll be writing a song and often I write in character – through a persona – and I’ll notice that something I’m writing sounds like it’s being spoken/written by somebody from another song. Like, “That’s something the guy from ‘In the Cane Fields’ would have said.” And then I’ll think, “Well, let’s let that guy sing this song, too.” From there, a broader, looser story will start to develop, and it really is a way of making any individual song take on greater depth, if it connects to other songs, if it’s already got a history when you start writing. Then, if you’re already writing inside of some loose framework of characters and stories, it can inspire you to be true to the characters and the little lives they have. When the songs connect to each other the core of each one seems to get stronger and more solid.

t5m awarded the recent album #7 on their “Best of” 2009″ chart. What are your sentiments on awards and rankings in music? Do you appreciate them or do you shy away from such achievements?

It’s impossible not to feel stoked when anybody names you best anything, right? Or seventh best anything, or tenth, or whatever. Everybody likes to be praised, I guess. It’s impossible not to pump your fist and go, “Hell yes!” if somebody names you number one at anything. At the same time, I assume for most musicians it’s kind of a joke. How can there be a best song? Fastest guitarist, okay maybe, but songs aren’t like knives; there’s no sharpest one. So, you can’t take a position on a list too much to heart, but still, it’s nice to hear that for somebody somewhere our album made some kind of difference in their year. If we’re #7 on that list, what that means is, for somebody, our music made some kind of connection, probably an emotional connection, that was meaningful enough that they were still thinking about it at the end of the year. That, to me, is cool to know. It’s satisfying, but it’s not like being on a list puts anybody above or below anybody else. It just tells you how somebody felt about your music, which is nice to know.

The albums you write are fictional; however, one, The Sunset Tree, is autobiographical. Would you ever consider going back to a factual context when writing future content for poetry and songs?

John Darnielle

I think The Sunset Tree sort of broke the line between autobiographical and fictional for me. Much of my writing since then has been a blurry bunch of stories that sort of relate to who I am and stuff that’s gone on in my past. I don’t know if I’d ever write a whole group of songs that were mainly trying to tell true stories from my life – that’s not my style. I have to be creating unknown worlds somehow to be really happy. But inside those worlds I try to express stuff that’s real, that’s really coming from somewhere down near the taproot. That’s the challenge for me. There’s this line I’m always quoting [from] Joan Didion: “We tell ourselves stories in order to live.” For me, in some sense, every story you tell has got to be autobiographical. I think I learned that best by touring The Sunset Tree, [and] seeing people take my stories and make them their own.

What should we expect from The Mountain Goats, as well as yourself, throughout 2010?

It’s only January now, so I’m not sure. I’m wood shedding now – writing songs, playing guitar and piano, sometimes playing just for the sake of playing and hopefully getting better at it. I have this idea to take lessons here in town and learn finger style, since I’m a pretty primitive player, but I’m never home long enough to make it happen. Sometime this spring we’re going to get together to start practicing the new songs I have. I’m always writing; I have a good-sized handful of tunes I really want to start working on. Hopefully we’ll be back in the studio before long. The last couple of sessions, The Life of the World to Come ones, were really a pleasure for us. We actually started doing some writing-in-studio at one point, on the song “1 Samuel 15:23,” and that was just incredibly exciting for me. So yeah, shows, writing, playing out when we can. There’s also this film of a solo performance I did back where I grew up that Rian Johnson directed, and we’re hoping to get that seen by more people. And that’s what I got!

<td style='padding:2px 1px 0px 5px;' colspan='2'The Mountain Goats – Psalms 40:2
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What We REALLY Want For Christmas

Stores are busy right now. Maybe people aren’t buying as much as in past years but they’re buying nonetheless. Everyone is in the spirit of giving, but deep down also looking forward to receiving. The common denominator here is “things” and “stuff”. Now, I’m all for making people happy and seeing the smile on their face when they open an exciting gift – that really brings me joy. And, of course, I love receiving a gift from someone special, but life experience has taught me that this “stuff” cannot really bring what most of us want for Christmas .


Adam Lambert: “I Was A 250-Pound Ugly Duckling”

Adam Lambert sexed-up performance at the American Music Awards is still a hot topic of discussion around the watercooler, but the talent show alum says he wasn’t always the envelope-pushing glam-rocker that turned the AMA on its ear.

“I suffered from a little bit of an ugly ducking complex in my early twenties,” the “For Your [...]

Food markets: How to store and sell more stuff

Poor places need more than seeds, fertiliser or even food science

IF FOOD aid is epitomised by a single image, it is that of neat bags of grain, stamped with the Stars and Stripes and labelled a “gift from the American people”, being unloaded in some benighted place. In a long-established practice, USAID buys food from American producers and then gives it to charities who sell the produce on the markets of indigent countries, and in turn use the proceeds to finance their anti-poverty work.

This method has its detractors, who say that sales of American food depress local markets; in theory at least, all sales should be calibrated to avoid that effect. But in a switch which might help to parry those critics, USAID is now putting more emphasis on helping farmers in recipient countries to harvest, store and above all sell their own food. Many of the changes now being encouraged have no relation to food production as such; they have to do with the ways markets are organised, credit is disbursed and laws are enforced. …

Nick Jonas going solo!

Well, like all boy groups before them, the Jonas brothers are taking a break from each other so that they can pursue other ventures.
For Nick Jonas, the youngest Jo Bro, that venture is a solo album!
Nick’s mom, Denise Jonas, spilled the beans saying “Nick is working on a solo act — it’s called Nick Jonas [...]

Rihanna struts her stuff in see-through dress at Paris Fashion Week

Rihanna stunned all at the Paris Fashion Week by sporting the most daring outfit, a get-up straight from Tracy Island.
The 21-year-old R&B singer teamed up a pair of goggles with a pair of thigh-high boots.
She previously grabbed eyeballs when she appeared wearing a see-through dress, reports The Sun.
The event also saw Sir Paul McCartney [...]

The Era of the Unintentional Entrepreneur: An Interview with Kevin Reeth of Outright.com (Part 2)

The Era of the Unintentional Entrepreneur

In Part 1 of this interview, Kevin Reeth (Co-founder and CEO of Outright.com) and I discussed some of the challenges and benefits of entrepreneurship and the emergence of a new breed of “unintentional entrepreneurs” – people who, because of the economic downturn, find themselves exploring the possibility of going freelance, starting their own business, or hiring out as a consultant. In part 2, we discuss some of the technological tools that make entrepreneurship – unintentional or otherwise – a viable option right now.

Kevin Reeth (KR): One of the good things about the timing now is that it has never been cheaper or easier to start a company from the logistics and marketing perspective. The ability to get your name out there, to get a web presence, to get online, to get people to be able to find you, has never been greater. If you just know the basics, you can use technology to better manage your time, better manage your processes, and then get paid and deal with the money. Open Source software, websites like ours [Outright.com], all this new technology has made it a lot easier.

Dustin Wax (DW): What are some of the most effective and promising tools that are out there for entrepreneurs?

KR: We’re big fans of social networks for self-employed people, because what it basically does is kind formalize those informal relationships. And you can get it down without worrying about curstomer relationship software and all that stuff. Of all of them, I think for professionals LinkedIn is the leading candidate.

Definitely get on Google and use Gmail and Google Calendars. It’s free, it’s awesome,  and you can tie it to your own domain name using Google Apps for Your Domain. Phenomenal toolset, and it’s completely free.

And we strongly recommend that people take advantage of free online tools to get a web presence. Get a blog on Wordpress or Typepad or Blogger. If you want something a little more expensive, get a domain. Go to GoDaddy, get a domain, get cheap hosting, and get something very basic website up.

We also recommend Craigslist. It’s a great business tool! If you have to buy anything, do not pay retail. See if it’s on Craigslist first. Companies are started and fail all the time. And they’ve bought the things you need and they’re going to want to sell that stuff. You can find a lot of stuff in great condition. Also, you can use Craigslist to promote your services for free or very little.

And then of course, once you do start making a little bit of money and Uncle Sam wants their piece, then we strongly recommend people take a look at Outright.com.

DW: I think the real interesting thing right now is the way that data is being shared between different applications, like from Freshbooks to Outright. Once that stuff starts being really integrated, when you can put your LinkedIn contacts for instance into your CRM program or whatever, that’s going to be pretty interesting.

KR: I think you hit the nail right on the head, and that’s exactly where we’re trying to take this. You see it with The Small Business Web, a site that was put together with the folks at Freshbooks and Shoeboxed and BatchBook and MailChimp. One of the greatest things that has happened in the last few years with the web is, in addition to open source software, the open movement around data flow. You see this with Facebook and  the number of developers they can get building on top of it, you see it with Twitter. Most of the success of Twitter is all the people who’ve built stuff on top of it to extend it in really new and creative ways. Making the data open and available basically creates the opportunity for the broader population to innovate on it and it creates little micro-industries. It’s a massive development and I think we are at the very beginning stages of this.

In Part 3 of this interview, Kevin and I will discuss the program at Unintentional Entrepreneur and how they’re working to provide knowledge and support to small business owners, solopreneurs, and freelancers. Be sure to check back Monday!


Dustin M. Wax is a freelance writer and project manager at Stepcase Lifehack. He is also the creator of The Writer’s Technology Companion, a site devoted to the tools of the writing trade. When he’s not writing, he teaches anthropology and gender studies in Las Vegas, NV. He is the author of Don’t Be Stupid: A Guide to Learning, Studying, and Succeeding at College.

Follow him on Twitter: @dwax.


Hillary Fields: 90 Salads In 90 Days: How A Committed Carnivore Brainwashed Herself Into Liking Leafy Greens

It wasn’t about the actual recipes I tried so much as it was about the knowledge that I conquered a major stumbling block that was endangering my health and cramping my style.

David O. Stewart: The Wages of Mendacity

Remember James Frey’s “memoir” which turned out to be largely false? This month, the liars are back, and lying continues to be a winning strategy.

Dave Johnson: The Origins Of The Birther Theory

This post originally appeared at Open Left. OK, sit down for this. The root of the “forged Obama birth certificate” idea is that Obama was…

Michael Jackson Ghost Visits Amy Winehouse

Amy Winehouse And The Ghost Of Pop Stars Past….
Amy Winehouse is determined to put her past as a drug-addicted adultress behind her after receiving a visit from the ghost of Michael Jackson.

We don’t make this stuff up, people.

Amy was always a huge MJ fan. She once said: “I could never decide whether I wanted to [...]

Erin Andrews Torrents

By now you’ve certainly heard of the Erin Andrews peephole video. For many obvious reasons the video’s not going to be available through any legitimate or even semi-legitimate outlet leading many to start searching torrents and going to shady file download sites.

Our advice: don’t. In a not at all surprising turn of events spammers and [...]

The search for dark matter: Ethereal yet weighty

Two new ways to detect the elusive stuff of the universe

MOST of reality appears to be missing. Physicists reckon that the missing matter must be there, but that it is dark. Finding the stuff is damned tricky because dark matter, by definition, cannot be seen. So some of those physicists have been busy trying to devise ways of glimpsing it indirectly—and two groups of them now think their methods are ready to test.

One reason to believe dark matter exists is that galaxies rotate at such speeds that they would fly apart without it, or so the argument goes. The fact that galaxies persist suggests they are held together by the gravitational pull of something invisible—in other words, dark matter. This stops stars being shed from their edges. …