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"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
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Today's Document

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oozey mess
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@doctorhotcoffee
Philip Seymour Hoffman, New York City, by Dana Lixenberg.
Sony PlayStation 2 Controversial Lara Croft Advertisement (2000)
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For as we know from experiments conducted on American GIs during the Korean War, sleep deprivation is a one-way ticket to temporary psychosis.
TWIN PEAKS ā 2.01 Episode 8 āMay the Giant Be with Youā
Malcolm Liepke - Rocking Horse
Johan Deckmann
The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time 3D (2011)
Leegan Koo.
Outstanding recent works from Bellingham, Washington-based artist Leegan Koo.
Don't miss Leegan's painting, "Trick or Treating" available on Supersonic Art Shop.
Displacement, Owen Gent
Iām-a Tired āVirtual Boy Wario Landā Virtual Boy
Elevator - Miami Beach | 1955 Ā© Robert Frank
The iconic shot shows a young girl, pressing an elevator button, looking up with an unreadable expression and it aroused a particular interest from beat writer Jack Kerouac.
In his introduction to Frank's book of photos The Americans, Kerouac writes, "That little ole lonely elevator girl looking up sighing in an elevator full of blurred demons, what's her name & address?"
Her name is Sharon Collins, growing up in Miami Beach. At fifteen, she got a summer job as an elevator girl at the Sherry Frontenac Hotel. She says the hotel was always full of tourists, and many of them had cameras. Although she wishes she remembers this particular tourist, she doesn't. But she pieced together what happened by looking at Frank's contact sheet.
"Robert Frank took about four photos of me without a flash in the elevator. I didn't know he was taking them. And then when the elevator emptied of its 'blurred demons,'" she says, "he asked me to turn around and smile at the camera. And I flashed a smile, put my hands on my hips. I hammed it up for about eight or ten frames."
But from the single image that was chosen for The Americans, Kerouac guessed she was lonely. Collins thinks he was pretty close. "He saw in me something that most people didn't see. I have a big smile and a big laugh, and I'm usually pretty funny. So people see one thing in me. And I suspect Robert Frank and Jack Kerouac saw something that was deeper. That only people who were really close to me can see. It's not necessarily loneliness, it's ... dreaminess."