The Player

if i look back, i am lost
Claire Keane

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@deeyaygo
The Player
Pizza Commando
You know something’s wrong when an old song pops in your head with lyrics that completely fit the tone of your mood. “I'm almost where I'll never be This cutting off of fate like string A line that falls to the floor And I'm not me anymore“
I need some cheering up.
WHAT THE FUCK WERE THE WRITERS THINKING
Filipinos: Asian or Pacific Islander?
You know how there’s that whole debate about whether Filipinos are Asians or Pacific Islanders? I just wanted to share my stance:
Both “Asian” and “Pacific Islander” are Western/European classifications and are somewhat meaningless and very misleading. “Geographical Asia is a cultural artefact of European conceptions of the world, beginning with the Ancient Greeks, being imposed onto other cultures, an imprecise concept causing endemic contention about what it means” (from Wikipedia). “Asian” encompasses such a huge diverse group of people and cultures. It puts Filipinos in the same category as Israelis, Persians, Kazakhs, Siberian Natives… and thousands of other unrelated groups. All these cultures are so different from one another, yet are all equally Asian. I don’t like the term for this reason. So really I don’t think the debate makes any sense at all, why are Filipinos fighting over which Colonialist/Western classification to go under?
I think this debate may have arisen because Filipinos don’t like to be lumped together with Japanese, Chinese, and Korean people in some homogenous “Asian” race. Filipinos are very distinct from East Asians and even other Southeast Asians like Thais and Vietnamese. The only other group to associate with would be Pacific Islanders.
If you want to know what other group of people Filipinos are closest to, this is my answer:
Filipinos (which means the 200+ different ethnic groups that reside in the Philippine islands) are ethnically and linguistically most closely related to the ethnic groups of Malaysia and Indonesia (such as Javanese, Balinese, Malay, Dayak etc.), as well as Taiwanese aborigines. Filipinos are more closely related to Polynesians and Micronesians than they are to Chinese or Japanese people, and even mainland Southeast Asians. We are Austronesian, which is the most widespread group of people in the world, composed of Pacific Islanders, island Southeast Asians, Malagasy and Taiwanese aborigines.
Bottom line: the terms “Asian” and “Pacific Islander” are terms invented by Europeans and are a poor attempt at classifying the diverse racial and cultural continuum that exists in the rest of the world outside Europe. So what is the point in even arguing over it?
Why Are SO Many Millennials SO Uncool?
One night a few weeks ago, a group of twenty-somethings came into the bar where I was working and headed for the jukebox. It’s digital, which means it’s not curated, which means I immediately felt the familiar knot of dread form in my stomach that’s always accompanied by seeing young people approach the jukebox. It usually means my ears are about to be violated by a string of cheesy Top 40 songs for the next hour or so. Sure enough, Taylor Swift’s voice invaded the room, and some members of the group started singing along. Proudly. Feeling no sense of shame for doing something that, fifteen or twenty years ago, would have gotten them laughed out of the bar. And this wasn’t the first time I’ve noticed this recently. While grocery shopping a few days ago, a shopper started singing aloud to Adam Levine’s latest tragedy that radio tells us is a song. Where’s the dignity!? How can these people, people who moved to a neighborhood because of its supposed “cool” factor, not know that singing along to whatever is saturating the airwaves is one of the uncoolest things they could do?
Patti Smith sporting an edgy personal sense of style - Cool
Grizzly Bear looking like their mothers still dress them - Not Cool
In all fairness, it’s not entirely their fault. They really just don’t know any better. Their lack of knowledge of anything other than that which is spoon fed them is the byproduct of a global media oligopoly. To quote Robert McChesney in his book “Rich Media, Poor Democracy, "it happened to the oil and automotive industries earlier in the 20th century, now it is happening to the entertainment industry.” Media has been completely overtaken by major corporations and unless people choose to think for themselves, they’re going to believe that what’s put in front of them is the only thing that exists. And the talent show hosting, product endorsing “musicians;” along with the latest string of tame bands major labels tell us are “rock,” are unfortunately the spokespeople for getting us to think the music we’re having shoved down our throats is all there is, and that it is somehow relevant.
Shows like “American Idol” and “The Voice” trick viewers into thinking that having a pitch perfect voice is the only skill necessary to be a musician. Content, a message, is not a priority. Imagine if Neil Young needed Simon Cowell’s approval in order to get the label backing necessary to become a known musician. And can you picture Kurt Cobain nervously standing in front of Adam Levine to find out what he thought of his cover of “Man Who Sold the World?” If relevant rock ‘n’ roll were more accessible, I wouldn’t care what goes on in the talent show circuit. But corporate media has made intelligent music scarce, and what does exist is nearly impossible for the masses to hear.
Kurt Cobain - Cool
Adam Levine making grunge-inspired clothing for K Mart - Not Cool
Every recent decade up to the 90s had a music revolution that inspired a counterculture. One that challenged the status quo. Political and psychedelic rock during the 60s encouraged young people to leave the safety of their parents’ homes, fight in the streets for civil rights, and protest war…while taking acid and smoking lots of dope. The 70s challenged youth to question the establishment with punk rock, which was still alive and well in the 80s; and along with it, bands like Devo sang about the devolution of the human race. The 90s had grunge, which was an outlet for the pain and frustration that accompanies feelings of isolation and disenfranchisement. It discouraged consumption and showed that opulence was uncool. Along with the music bands were playing, was a lifestyle that inspired it. Punk bands like Crass lived on a commune to prove humans can govern themselves. Nirvana rehearsed ten hours a day before recording “Nevermind” because their house was so freezing they tried to stay away from it as much as possible. My point being, popular musicians prior to the 21st century were actual artists, on a path of self discovery. They either never had comforts, or they gave them up to pursue their passions and find themselves, not allowing themselves to be told who they should be. The best art is usually born out of struggle, whether personal or sympathetic. And most of today’s popular musicians’ lifestyles are anything but difficult. Their music is not based on life experiences, hard knocks, or political and social themes. It is self-absorbed, mindless drivel that would make John Lennon blush with shame for the human race. Today’s popular “artists” are a constant stream of sell outs who can’t be content with the mansion that their music affords them. They need a fragrance line, a fashion line, a job hosting a talent show, and commercial endorsements so that they can buy even more stuff they don’t need. And too many of today’s millennials buy into it. They believe that if they keep their noses to the ground, stay out of trouble, never challenge the system, and work to maintain the same sort of lifestyle as their role models, they’re doing the right thing. Oblivious to the fact that they’ve been turned into total nerds.
John Lennon - Cool
Mumford & Sons (we’re supposed to believe they’re a rock band) - Not Cool
So what happened after the 90s? Did musicians just stop caring? Has there been nothing going on in the world that needs to be changed, so therefore no music asking for it? Or could it possibly be the passing of The Telecommunications Act of 1996 that kept inspiring, rule-breaking, boundary-testing music from reaching our ears? Again, from “Rich Media, Poor Democracy,“ "The core premise of the act was to eliminate restrictions on firms moving into other communication areas - for example, phone companies moving into cable television and vice versa, or long distance phone companies moving into local service and vice versa - and then to eliminate as many regulations as possible on these firms’ behavior…And the one media sector most thoroughly overturned by the Telecommunications Act has been radio broadcasting. The Act relaxed ownership restrictions so that a single firm can own up to eight stations in a single market. In the twenty months following enactment of the new law, there has been the equivalent of an Oklahoma land rush as small chains have been acquired by middle-sized chains, and middle-sized chains have been gobbled up by the few massive giants who have come to dominate the national industry. Since 1996, some one-half of the nation’s eleven thousand radio stations changed hands, and there were over one thousand radio firm mergers."
So the 90s was the decade when radio stations got taken over by corporate giants (with corporate, not cultural, interests in mind), and, not coincidentally, when radio went to shit. Joy Elmer Morgan, founder of Future Teachers of America, predicted that "as a result of radio broadcasting, there will probably develop during the twentieth century either chaos or a world-order of civilization. Whether it shall be one or the other will depend largely upon whether broadcasting be used as a tool of education or an instrument of selfish greed. So far, our American radio interests have thrown their major influence on the side of greed….there has never been in the entire history of the United States an example of mismanagement and lack of vision so colossal and far-reaching in its consequences of our turning the radio channels almost exclusively into commercial hands…whoever controls the radio will in the end control the development of the human race.” Scary. Especially when noting that Morgan died in 1986, and in 1983, 50 corporations controlled the majority of news media. Now six corporations control it. One of them is Walt Disney, which would explain why Adam Levine is touted as a “rockstar.”
Grace Slick - Cool
Beyonce endorsing a drink that contributes to obesity and cancer - Not Cool
In 1948, jazz critic Sidney Finkelstein summed up commercialism in music superbly when he said it ultimately leads “to what is really destructive in culture: the taking over of an art by business.” It seems that with the advent of the internet, and the seeming freedom and ease it could provide to get relevant music out there, corporations have gotten even more aggressive to keep people’s thoughts on consumption, rather than cultural and social change. And millennials are the ones most vulnerable because they have no personal connection to a time when music actually mattered. When it was the most accessible medium for getting a message to the world. Now corporations have used the medium artists once used to spread a message of social change, to send the message that they need more and more useless shit instead. Don’t believe the Top 40 hype that pushes singing puppets on us and tries to make us believe that their silly antics and extravagant lifestyles are anything but pathetic. Supporting your local musicians by going out to hear live music is a great way to combat the control media has over us. Checking out music blogs is another way to find out about artists who aren’t corporately endorsed. If you can’t find anything on those, ask around to find out who people’s favorite bands are. Just make sure those you ask are over the age of 30. ;)
Rage Against the Machine - Cool
Arcade Fire - Don’t get me started.
Sources:
“Rich Media, Poor Democracy,” by Robert McChesney
http://www.businessinsider.com/these-6-corporations-control-90-of-the-media-in-america-2012-6 http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com/archives/who-owns-the-media-the-6-monolithic-corporations-that-control-almost-everything-we-watch-hear-and-read
You can view the series on imgur: here
psych2go im really liking the graphics. They add a nice aesthetic to the posts.
Thank you! Glad you are liking the new graphics. Craig from our team made these. You might want to connect with him here: https://m.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100001637439452
I often use loud music to calm myself when walking through the halls at school, since large, loud crowds make me rather nervous and jumpy
Daily Reminder tho///
Me Ajajaja
WHO KEEPS MAKING THESE?¿?¿?
Thanks, Tastefully Offensive! Have a safe and happy Halloween everyone!!
If you put a dot on the Major League Baseball logo, it looks like a bird with arms.
UP Fighting Maroons
Here’s the whole brand identity family for the UP Fighting Maroons. Branding for athletic teams is bit different because there are various applications to think of.
A group of UP Alumni who helps the UP athletic teams approached the studio to work on the new brand identity of the UP Fighting Maroons. We accepted it even if it was a pro bono (free) project because we wanted to support the University. We asked UP to give us a design brief, once we got the brief we started working on it right away. We had about a week and a half to work on this.
Sifting through all the comments and suggestions from students and alumni, the team realized that the raised fist represents the UP Fighting Maroons. It best represents the “palaban” nature of The Fighting Maroons. It’s also a logo that works well within the competitive and assertive nature of the games. Even if the Oblation is not part of the logo, we wanted to include it in the identity system.We incorporated the Oblation in all the varsity team uniforms, so that each member of the team remembers this. It builds internal cohesion and strengthens identity as part of a community.
We will be posting more stuff about this project once everything’s produced and printed.