Archive | November, 2009

ReBlog: @cooley47 : The Mullet

18 Nov

Chris Cooley is doin it. Bad ass fantasy file.

But thats not what we are talking about. We are talking the mullet. and calf roping. I dont rope calfs. But i do do this celebration everytime I win. A on a test. Get a girls #. Im on it. Read on via ChrisCooley47

The Mullet is a Lifestyle
Thursday, November 12, 2009
Found this little gem on the NFL page and it reminded me of a funny moment in my life. Jared Allen has been a fantastic teammate of mine the last two years in Hawaii and it has been a pleasure spending a couple weeks around such a lifestyle. It’s also probably best for me that he lives 1000 miles away from me, as his mullet bravado is addictive.

Last February I sat with beer in hand around a second rate Hawaii hotel table celebrating a personal feat of nothingness in a NFC victory in the Pro Bowl. (I was the only player without a stat, well, I had 1 drop if that counts.) I couldn’t have been happier as I sat with the motley connection of Jared and my friends and family. We ate, drank and laughed, and while the night continued on, it seemed no one existed around us.

What we began to notice through the debauchery was that there was other people were around us and our party may have been somewhat of a show. Maybe not so much myself, but Jared seemed concerned with the onlookers. Before anyone could say anything a ketchup bottle had left Jared’s hand and was on a direct course to the adjacent table. This wasn’t your average paper plane like lob, the bottle, although a little wobbly, was on a line drive trajectory. Sooner than Jared’s movements caught the eye of anyone at the other table the red bottle drove into the back of the biggest guys head, shocking him forward and then to his feet.

Now in my opinion the struck man’s analysis of the situation was telling him it was best to sit back down as he quickly noticed Jared’s willingness to throw down worn directly on the back of his head. From that moment on I have never questioned the power of the mullet. Now as I watch the wild-man rope tying imaginary cows multiple times every Sunday I couldn’t have more respect for anyone else playing the game. Jared Allen is an awesome football player, one of the coolest guys I’ve hung out with and more importantly, he is a complete badass.

I spy….

17 Nov

…. with my little eye, tha Giant’s work on Facebook. More abt the Girl=Boy Project here

ReBlog: @W&B 18 & on the Run

17 Nov

This kind of stuff is unreal, thought to only exist in movies. People like this take back a bit of the control and the power, at least for a moment in time, from the machine that runs the world. We set laws and rules in order to create social norms. But there will always be outlaws. Outlaw, per dictionary.com is a person who refuses to be governed by the established rules or practices of any group; rebel; nonconformist. At no point in this definition does this say that this person is necessarily a bad person, just a nonconformist looking to live by his own rules.

Make your own rules.

Shouts once again to Max G. at Wine&Bowties for the great story. Look soon for photos up from the Bobby Brackins show in Hollywood this weekend aka the reassembly of the titans.

Stories like this are mindblowing, just because they undermine a lot of what we believe to be true. 18 year-old Colton Harris Moore has been on the run from the law for 18 months, evading the FBI and police with surprising ease. His track record boasts three stolen planes, two speedboats and more than 50 burglaries, and his story has inspired a cult following, prompting t-shirts, Facebook fan pages and even offers from Hollywood studios to produce a bio flick. Decide for yourself what to make of the whole thing, but you can’t help but be impressed. I mean this kid? Full story after the MORE.

From The Independent:

Victims call him a one-man crime wave who ought to be in prison. Fans say he’s a misunderstood folk hero in the grand tradition of Robin Hood, Huckleberry Finn, and Jesse James. To police near Seattle, who are once more on his elusive tail, Colton Harris-Moore can be summed up in two words: most wanted.

The young fugitive is just 18, and has nothing to his name except a resourceful personality and an apparent inability to understand the meaning of fear. But for 18 months, he has led police, the FBI, and several divisions of Canada’s Royal Mounted Police on a merry dance across thousands of miles of the Pacific North-west. During the man hunt, Harris-Moore, who is thought to have committed at least 50 burglaries, has stolen three planes, two speedboats, and countless cars. He’s walked away from crashes that ought to have killed him, inspired a folk song
, got his face on T-shirts, and accumulated almost 4,000 “supporters” on the internet site Facebook.

Now, with Hollywood eager to buy-up his life story, police believe the juvenile delinquent’s odyssey has returned to where it all started: the dense forests that cover Camano Island, a 40sq-mile piece of land in the middle of Puget Sound.

A string of recent break-ins on Camano, where Harris-Moore grew up, and neighbouring Whidbey Island have convinced the forces of law and order that the troubled youth who became known as the “barefoot burglar” on account of his habit of leaving a footprint at the scene of his crimes, has managed to make it back home.

“We’ve had some burglaries on Camano Island, and we’ve had them on Whidbey Island, and we’re investigating them, and that’s what I can say,” Island County Sheriff Mark Brown told reporters this week. “I’m just not going to comment on the on-going investigation, and I think you can probably appreciate why.”

Sheriff Brown is reluctant to add to the layers of mystique surrounding Harris-Moore. Raised by his single mother in a tiny trailer, he began breaking into local properties and businesses at the age of seven, and has been on the run since escaping from a juvenile prison several hundred miles away last April.

Sheriff Brown is also anxious to avoid saying anything that might increase public sympathy for the youth, whose crimes have been, perhaps unfairly, dubbed “victimless” – and who usually tends to to steal blankets, basic foodstuffs, and pieces of survival equipment that allow him to stay a step ahead of the law.

Among his many misdemeanours, Harris-Moore once pinched thermal-imaging goggles from a local fire station, so he could see police coming to arrest him at night. He also taught himself to steal and pilot aeroplanes by using an online flight simulator.

The Scarlet Pimpernel-like nature of his recent escapades is certainly compelling. After a troubled childhood, in which he was abused at home, he spent a portion of his teenage years living in the woods on Camano Island, breaking into local stores and deserted holiday homes in order to get food, petty cash, and occasional shelter.

He was eventually arrested when police noticed that he’d begun phoning for pizzas from his forest hideouts. They decided to dress up as delivery boys in order to capture him. But after serving a few weeks of his sentence, he escaped from Grifffin Home, a juvenile prison in Renton, Washington State.

That was 18 months ago. Since then, Harris-Moore has been more or less untouchable. He spent a summer living on Orcas Island, to which he initially fled using a stolen speedboat. Then, exactly a year ago, he stole a Cessna from a local airfield and flew to the Yakama Indian Reservation
, on the eastern side of the Cascade Mountains where he crash-landed and decided to stay for the winter.

In September this year, he returned to Orcas Island, apparently in another stolen aircraft, carried out a few burglaries, hot-wired another speedboat and drove it to Point Roberts on the Canadian border. He then made his way across British Columbia by foot and stolen car, carrying out a string of break-ins that saw him star in police “wanted” posters.

After pinching another plane, in Idaho, he crash-landed near the town of Granite Falls. “How he walked away from it is anybody’s guess,” Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Mike Fergus told the Los Angeles Times. “The wings were broken, the fuselage had a big crack in it, the nose was broken.” There were 10 to 12 gallons of fuel left in the tank.

Days later, Swat teams were called to woods north of Seattle, when they thought they had Harris-Moore cornered. A shot was allegedly fired by the fugitive. But three dozen agents equipped with search dogs and flashlights were unable to nab the elusive suspect. One officer said it was like he “vapourised”.

All the while, Harris-Moore’s hero status was growing. A range of T-shirts bearing his mugshot and the logo “Momma tried” were launched, and a tribute song released on YouTube. Hollywood producers have offered up to $100,000 for his life story. And his Facebook appreciation site has almost 4,000 members.

“People that are struggling with this huge economic downturn,” says the site’s founder, Zack Sestak, “feel let down by the system. And to see an 18-year-old kid that seems to be taking on the system and winning… it certainly strikes their imagination.”

Now he’s back on home ground, but he’s not coming home. He calls his mother, Pam Kohler, occasionally. “I’ve talked my head off, I’ve tried everything. But he’s the kind of kid who’s going to do what he wants to do,” she told Canada’s Globe and Mail newspaper. “If he taught himself to fly, I’m very proud of him. Next time, I hope he wears a parachute, that’s all.”

2 Days in Paris

16 Nov

2-days-in-paris

It always fascinates me how people go from loving you madly to nothing at all. Nothing. It hurts so much.

Here it is one more, one less. Another wasted love story. I really loved this one.

When I think that it’s over – that I’ll never see him again like this…well yes, I’ll bump into him again – we’ll meet our new boyfriend and girlfriend – act as if we had never been together. Then we’ll slowly think of each other less and less – until we forget each other completely. Almost.

Always the same for me. Break up, breakdown. Drink up, fool around. Meet one guy than another. Fuck around to forget the one and only.

Then after a few months of total emptiness, start again to look for true love. Desperately look everywhere.

And after two years of loneliness, meet a new love and swear it is the one until that one is gone as well.

There’s a moment in life when you can’t recover anymore from another breakup.

And even if this person bugs you sixty percent of the time, well you still can’t live without him.

And even if he wakes you up everyday by sneezing right in your face – well, you love his sneezes, more than anyone else’ kisses.
- Julie Delpy, Ending Monologue ::2 DAYS IN PARIS::

Shouts to Aaron Jennings for the quote… Bruh is going places so i would suggest grabbing his coat tails if you could. Its an amazing thing when you meet a gentleman who understands your perspective. The two of us spun wheels on clothing for a min and things became clear that he understood how i feel abt being a gentleman and looking the part while also looking entirely like yourself.

Find your own HYPE

Paula Patton

16 Nov

paula-cover-l

I am back. Officially. tha Giant back at the liar. Back in the Stomping grounds. Back at in the sco. On my way here, in the airport out in NYC and i peeped Paula Patton on the front of Giant Mag. Lets start with Idlewild. One of my favorite movies. But, I fell in love on the spot.

The article was clean because it told the true story of an interracial couple. Ms Patton being biracial herself, struggled with presenting Thicke to her friends, as she tried to build herself up as a leader of the BSU at her high school, a vein which she continued at Howard. Being a biracial Black girl, she felt as if she would be seen as a sellout being with a white man. This is a unique struggle that I have seen first hand.

As a biracial person, you spend a good deal of your time battling to find you identity. For me that struggle lead me to a Black studies major and a very race concious perspective. As we dig around in the dark looking for ourselves, we look only to find who we are. This search makes one realize the limitations society tries to place on who we should love. With this being said, do I have to be the Obamas to be a model couple? the Thickes potentially provide another example. Im not saying one is better than the other, but we should all be able to make wtv choices we like, Black White Asian Straight Gay wtv.

When I was at the National Student Diversity Leadership Conference in high school, an experience which shaped my life, I was told by a fellow student that beauty is instilled with the image of your own family, your mother and your sisters. If this is true, how does one do just that with a beautiful Jewish mother and an equally beautiful biracial sister?

Virgin America x Google

13 Nov

Screen shot 2009-11-13 at 3.26.19 PM

Google has granted free wifi on Virgin America flights. I do not know if you understand how crazy this is but I am 3o 000 ft in the air, over AZ, on videochat and posting on the bloggy. What a world What a world.

ReBlog: Where All The Angry Young Men Go

11 Nov

beats-22
via Ivy Style

For the Beat Generation, there were only two places to live: New York’s Greenwich Village and San Francisco’s North Beach.

North Beach has been an old stomping ground of mine since my early twenties. I recently paid a visit to the neighborhood after years of exile in Los Angeles.

Broadway is home to San Francisco’s famous strip clubs, such as The Condor Club, where Carol Doda first danced topless in 1964. It’s also where you’ll find famous Beat gathering places like Cafe Vesuvio and City Lights Bookstore.

Read on…

ReBlog: New School Dandy Profile J. Elquist

11 Nov

fine-and-dandy

J.Elquist

Self-explanatory… from Fine and Dandy

Over the past several months we have been introduced to many amazing people in the virtual word of blogs and social networking. With this post we continue a regular series of profiles of New School Dandies. This week we feature blogger/designer JD Elquist.

Where did you grow up? Wherever the Hells Angels took me.

Where do you live now? West Village in Manhattan.

Where did you go to school? The Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising in San Francisco.

What’s your occupation? I run a men’s style blog and design men’s wear. Both can be seen at http://www.jelquist.com/. I am also Editor-in-Chief of SIR Magazine, which is set to debut soon.

When did you establish your personal style? Was there a pivotal moment? How has it changed? Costume consumed my childhood. One day I was Batman, the next day I was Robin. I wore the mask of whatever role I was playing that day. It’s the same today. My look has one thematic thread running through it, but may vary depending on what I have to accomplish that day. My pivotal moment was when I started shopping for timeless pieces rather than adhering to trends. My look is ephemeral, but solid; while trends are fleeting.

How would you describe your style? I wouldn’t, it would describe me.

What are your sources of inspiration? The places I have been and the people I have met.

Who is your style icon? Gianni Agnelli, he wore a wristwatch over his cuff and work boots with a business suit. Mr. Agnelli founded personal style.

What are your preferred dandy reading materials? My favorite is WWD/Men’s.

What is your favorite clothing article or accessory? White pocket square – man’s best friend.

Where is your favorite or dream vacation spot? You know it’s funny, I live in it.

Tell us the best kept secret in your city. The highline park in Meatpacking. Awe inspiring.

At which establishments would you consider yourself a regular? Esperanto Café, it’s my second home.

What would you be doing ten years from now? Coming up with new dreams to actualize.

What is your current obsession? Blogging and ice cold sunsets.

Currently inspired by? My team: Jeremy, Bradley, Nick, and John. I would be nothing without them.

Currently annoyed with? Parades, New Yorkers love their parades.

What else do you want to tell us? It’s just the beginning.

C.H.

Will Smith

11 Nov

Smith

I didnt even wanna post this. Its too big. I want to claim copyright n keep my copy for myself. Prepare to be influenced.

“Man chicks love these headsets, they think I look like one of dem Mens In Black or some shit”
-Ed Wuncler III

Life Magazine

2 Nov

e28c19c609edbfea_large Amherst College Tailgate 1958

I have been thinking more and more that I wish I went to Amherst pre 60′s. The swag in New England was at its peak, so Unabashedly Prep filled with so much Ivy Style. As I mentioned in Amherst Rugby, the swag at Amherst was so wet. There are a few remnants of the timeless New England swagger, there are two kids I can think of off the top of my head. I mean, most ppl own the boat shoes, a couple chinos. They try but they dont put it together like ppl used to. I look at the sports photos in the gym that date back to 1910, golfers in plus fours, tennis teams in blazers and v neck sweaters, and I see what was. I compare this with the chicks going to parties in sweatpants and t shirts and I wonder where we lost it. I ran across this pic from the tailgate at an Amherst football game from ’58 from Life Magazine on Ivy Style. The assembly of pics from New England Colleges and Universities is amazing, so fresh and so prep. If we take that style and put it on someone with a bit of confidence and a bit of edge, the game will change.

And to make us even more progressive, look at the older black couple in the photo. As Jim Jones would say “for the HOOD, we iiiiiiiiiiiin”

Look to the past for insights on the future.

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