The sun is at a slightly better angle for Manganiello.
And Hemsworth looks weirdly barrel-chested there. The difference between his rib cage and his teeny waist struck me as sort of weird.
Riley ,'Conversations with Dead People'
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
The sun is at a slightly better angle for Manganiello.
And Hemsworth looks weirdly barrel-chested there. The difference between his rib cage and his teeny waist struck me as sort of weird.
The difference between his rib cage and his teeny waist struck me as sort of weird.
This. Other Dude (I have no idea who he is, actually) doesn't look quite so angular.
Isn't this tempting? [link]
Joe Manganiello was on One Tree Hill for a while, and he's on True Blood now, and in Magic Mike. He's a lot beefier than my usual type, but he's lovely.
Do people really consider that Culture now? I don't think so.
The number of scholarly articles about it would be very very long indeed.
But Jazz definitely has the patina of culure now, whereas it was originally whorehouse music.
The number of scholarly articles about it would be very very long indeed.
Really? I had no idea. Cool.
You could probably argue that fanwork is in the middle of that transition.
He says he doesn't like anything with "commercial or superficial intent." Oh fucking really? That's a broad damn brush.
So he grows, harvests, and cooks his own food all the time? Doesn't consume any media whatsoever? Because almost every book, song, play, movie, what have you, had SOME commercial intent behind it.
For that matter, if he doesn't like anything with "commercial intent", wtf is he doing on an internet dating site?
The opera riots back in the day may not have been as bloody as Altamont Speedway, but it could get pretty seedy and "popular" back then.
Here was my response to him:
I think that drawing a bright line between culture and pop culture is pretty bullshit. Is it automatically pop culture if you get paid for it? What's the defining line? Is pop culture what you personally don't like? Do you spurn a band if they become popular? Should artists not get paid for their work, or only paid directly? Is commissioned work permissible or selling one's artistic soul to the devil? "Commercial or superficial" is a pretty vague way to delineate pop culture, IMHO.
A lot of what we now call "culture" was the pop culture of its time; Dickens, Shakespeare, ballet, jazz, etc. Some pop culture goes pretty damn deep - you're talking to someone who has gone to academic conferences on pop culture. NB: my username is two pop culture references.
Still interested?