Google

Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 

Moderators: Chi Chi

Closed Topic Closed
Go
New
Find
Notify
Tools
  Login/Join 
Board Member
Picture of S'tan
Location: Fingernails, NM
Registered: 01-30-02
Posts: 1028
Posted   Hide PostEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
Happy Birthday Daddy!
and-Having-A-Blast-In-San-Francisco
HAPPY BIRTHDAY EMPRESS-MOMMY!
Yay I'm the first to say it
...August 9th.

I think you all beat the odds in such a long-standing double-Leo marriage!!

This message has been edited. Last edited by: S'tan,
Sage
Picture of Michael Madison
Location: NYC
Registered: 07-10-01
Posts: 1015
Posted   Hide PostEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
Thanks everybody! I just splashed on a new coat of Nice & Easy #124 natural blue black to keep those greys at bay. Which segues nicely into: HAPPY BIRFDAY DADDY!!! Hoping to see all of you soon.
Board Member
Picture of S'tan
Location: Fingernails, NM
Registered: 01-30-02
Posts: 1028
Posted   Hide PostEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
Oh Madgely I only said Happy Birfday to you 25 times in the last week. Ole thang.
Sage
Picture of bobby
Location: Problemstown
Registered: 03-18-01
Posts: 2425
Posted   Hide PostEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
Happy Birthday Empress.

I bow at your delicate feet and worship at your temple.

Love and kisses xoxox
BM
Board Member
Picture of seven
Location: New York City
Registered: 08-30-02
Posts: 2335
Posted   Hide PostEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
Happy belated BDAY Daddy. It's your fault I'm late. You got me so drunk at Unisex it took me two days to even out.
Sage
Picture of Anna Nicole
Location: New York,NY
Registered: 12-29-01
Posts: 2873
Posted   Hide PostEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
Happy Birthday Empress ... long may you roar like the Leo that you are!!
Board Member
Picture of mr.joe
Location: New York, NY
Registered: 06-20-02
Posts: 1251
Posted   Hide PostEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
Happy Birthday, Empress! The Lion's Gate Portal has swung wide open, today, my dear. Have a GORGEOUS day!
Board Member
Picture of Nancy Isla
Location: Newton, Mass.
Registered: 03-18-01
Posts: 1364
Posted   Hide PostEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
Happy Brthday Mommy! Larry Purdy! AND Katrin Von Kleef! You all made me the shiny pillar of the lesbian community that I am today. Hope you are having a wonderful trip....
XXOO
Board Member
Picture of Hapi Phace
Location: Aboard The Pequod
Registered: 10-01-06
Posts: 219
Posted   Hide PostEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
Hapi Birthday Empress & Daddy you are my living Leo role models (. . . my dead ones are Herman Melville & Lucille Ball).
xxxooo Tran-ma Hapi
Sage
Picture of Michael Madison
Location: NYC
Registered: 07-10-01
Posts: 1015
Posted   Hide PostEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
Oh ruling Empress, purrrs to you and happy happy birthday! Xx Madgely

Sage
Picture of goblin73
Location: a gypsy that remains
Registered: 05-14-01
Posts: 1250
Posted   Hide PostEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
happy happy birthday to both of you!!
would celebrate with some quality tooth stain and tony if i was there with you.
Board Member
Picture of Glamnerd
Location: NYC
Registered: 03-18-01
Posts: 966
Posted   Hide PostEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
Happy Happy B-day to the 2 of u!!! Wish we could have a cocktail together......

much love.
XRR
Father of the House
Picture of daddy
Location: New York
Registered: 03-12-01
Posts: 9243
Posted   Hide PostEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
Happy Birthday To My Empress!

Board Member
Picture of seven
Location: New York City
Registered: 08-30-02
Posts: 2335
Posted   Hide PostEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
Happy big one to you Empress. May a giant well twisted number get lost in your exhale.
Absolute Empress
Picture of Chi Chi
Location: New York, NY
Registered: 03-12-01
Posts: 3048
Posted   Hide PostEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
Thanks everyone! Since I spent most of my real birthday on an airplane and yesterday recovering from that, I am finally catching up with all the gorgey messages here..I feel REALLY lucky to have lived to such ancient heights with so many ruling friends...

Purring..and well twisted!!!

yinyang weed * yinyang weed *
Moderatrix
Picture of Messy Bonnie Raitt
Location: The Country
Registered: 05-15-01
Posts: 1417
Posted   Hide PostEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
Happy Birthday Honey.

What time does that clock behind you say?
I'm sure it's always 4:20 knowing you.
Board Member
Picture of seven
Location: New York City
Registered: 08-30-02
Posts: 2335
Posted   Hide PostEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
Happy Birthday On The Road

Kerouac's signature scribbles turn 50.

From the NYTimes today:



The best-selling novels of 1957 included “Peyton Place” by Grace Metalious and “On the Road” by Jack Kerouac

Both were cultural touchstones: “Peyton Place” as a precursor of the modern soap opera and “On the Road” as a clarion call for the Beat generation and, later, as an underground bible of the 1960s and ’70s. Today “Peyton Place” is mostly regarded as a historical curiosity, but “On the Road,” celebrating the 50th anniversary of its publication, still has a vibrant life on college English course syllabuses and high school summer reading lists, and in young travelers’ backpacks.

“It’s a book that has aged well,” said Martin Sorensen, floor manager at Kepler’s Books and Magazines in Menlo Park, Calif. A “noticeable” number of copies are sold each year at the store, he said, “certainly more than the average 50-year-old book.”

The autobiographical, stream-of-consciousness “On the Road” follows Sal Paradise (a character based on Kerouac) and Dean Moriarty (based on Kerouac’s friend Neal Cassady) as they ramble back and forth across the country, drinking, listening to jazz and having affairs.

Viking is releasing a 50th-anniversary edition on Thursday (the original came out Sept. 5, 1957), and is also publishing, for the first time in book form, the original version that Kerouac typed on a 120-foot-long scroll and a new analysis by John Leland, a reporter at The New York Times, titled “Why Kerouac Matters: The Lessons of ‘On the Road’ (They’re Not What You Think).” The Library of America will include “On the Road” in a collection of Kerouac’s “road novels” to be published next month. And the New York Public Library will pay homage in November with an exhibition of the original scroll and other materials from the Kerouac archives.

Although much of this will primarily appeal to Beat aficionados, “On the Road” continues to have a wider cultural significance, particularly for the young. Fueled in part by school assignments, it sells about 100,000 copies a year in various paperback editions, according to Viking. And while its era as a counterculture standard-bearer may have passed (it’s hard to remain counterculture while being featured in Gap ads, as Kerouac was in the 1990s), it has far outlasted many other cult classics.

Part of the reason for the novel’s staying power is that popular artists keep referencing it. (A new movie version, directed by Walter Salles, who made “The Motorcycle Diaries,” is scheduled to go into production early next year.) Everyone from Bob Dylan to the Beastie Boys has been inspired by Kerouac. More recently the Hold Steady, an indie rock group, quoted “On the Road” on its album “Boys and Girls in America.”

With his bad-boy image and untethered work ethic, Kerouac “is like the rock ’n’ roll version of a writer,” said Joe Landry, 31, the lead singer for the Antecedents, a Portland, Ore., band. Like many other groups, the Antecedents list him as an influence on their MySpace page.

Erik Barnum, sales floor manager at Northshire Bookstore in Manchester Center, Vt., says he always keeps six copies on hand, a much higher number than for most older books. “It’s a book that a bookstore has to have on the shelf or somebody’s going to say, ‘What do you mean you don’t have Kerouac’s ‘On the Road?’ ” he said.

But keeping it on hand can be difficult: among book-world insiders, “On the Road” is known to be a heavily shoplifted work, said Robert Contant, an owner of St. Mark’s Bookshop in Manhattan. Mr. Contant, who said he had sold 36 copies of the book since March — a number “most contemporary writers would envy” — keeps his copies in a case near the information desk, so they can be monitored by employees. “It has a high street value because of the outlaw image,” he said, “and for young people who come to New York, there’s a romantic notion about the beatnik era.”

Penny Vlagopoulos, a graduate student at Columbia University (Kerouac’s alma mater) who teaches the book there and at New York University, said: “I still think it’s a rite-of-passage novel. The whole idea of the freedom of the open road is still very much alive for young people.”

Michael Heslop, 30, says he first read “On the Road” as a senior in high school and rereads it every other year. In 2004, he opened Kafe Kerouac, a coffee shop, record store, bookstore and performance space in Columbus, Ohio. “I wanted to name it after an American writer I admired,” Mr. Heslop said. “Jack Kerouac felt like the essence of the underground independent coffee shop more than a Hemingway or a Mark Twain.” (He also offers an unlikely Kerouac drink, a hazelnut mint latte. “It’s hard to name plain black coffee after somebody,” Mr. Heslop said.)

In true beat fashion, Kafe Kerouac plays host to poetry readings and open mikes and draws a college crowd. Nina Hernandez, 23, an employee at the cafe, first read “On the Road” a year ago. “I like that he wasn’t about the rules, he just stripped that away and wrote what he was thinking,” she said.

But Ms. Hernandez, an industrial engineering student, also said she hadn’t heard of Kerouac until she began working at the cafe. And, she noted, the book was not without its flaws: “Sometimes I found it a little wordy.”

In the academy, “On the Road” gets a mixed reputation. “I don’t think the book is taken seriously by most scholars and literary critics,” said Bill Savage, a senior lecturer in the English department at Northwestern University, where he has been teaching “On the Road” for two decades.

Still, Mr. Savage said, his students connect with the book quite personally. “Undergraduates can really relate to it because they live in such a mediated world with the Internet, the cellphone and the iPod,” he said. “There are so many ways in which you’re not where you are and Kerouac is about being where you are.”

Some students, though, reject the book as dated. Ann Douglas, a Beat scholar who has been teaching it for more than 25 years at Columbia, acknowledges that students don’t accept it as “gospel.” They criticize it from all different angles, she said — finding it, for example, condescending toward Mexicans or women.

But Ms. Douglas says that her seminar on the Beats regularly has six times as many applicants as there are spaces, and that the novel still resonates strongly, partly because she gives her students an assignment to write an autobiographical essay in the spontaneous style made famous by Kerouac.

“Again and again students do the best writing of their careers,” she said. “It’s a summons to put aside fear of what people will say or what your family expects and to find a voice that is really their own.”

At City Lights Books, the San Francisco literary landmark (it sells 1,000 copies of “On the Road” every year), Lawrence Ferlinghetti, the Beat poet and publisher and co-founder of the store, mused on the continuing success of the book.

Mr. Ferlinghetti, 88, contrasted Kerouac’s work with Thomas Wolfe’s “Look Homeward, Angel,” which he said was “the kind of book that you read when you are 18 and it’s just wonderful but if you read it when you are 35 or 50 you are embarrassed by its over-romantic tone and its flowery exuberance.” But having read “On the Road” when it first came out and he was in his 30s, and just last month, Mr. Ferlinghetti said, “It is really still ‘with it,’ you might say.”
Father of the House
Picture of daddy
Location: New York
Registered: 03-12-01
Posts: 9243
Posted   Hide PostEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
Happy Birthday Anna Nicole!

Sorry I didn't get this up yesterday but we've been working like whores.

Have fun in Jamaica and please don't bring down any governments!

Board Member
Picture of Glamnerd
Location: NYC
Registered: 03-18-01
Posts: 966
Posted   Hide PostEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
Happy Birthday Jamacian Queen!
Moderatrix
Picture of Messy Bonnie Raitt
Location: The Country
Registered: 05-15-01
Posts: 1417
Posted   Hide PostEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
Happy Birthday Anna Nicole.
Let's get together when you get back from the jungle.
I got a roofie with your name on it!
 Previous Topic | Next Topic powered by eve community Page 1 2 3 4 5 6  

Closed Topic Closed


On these NYC Nightclub and Nightlife Forums, everyone is a star. All of our participants own their own words and ideas. Treat them with respect.

NY Nightclub, nightlife, NYC nightclub, alternative, club

MOTHERBOARDS NEWS   MOTHERNYC.COM   QUEENMOTHER.TV   JOIN/SUPPORT   NYC EVENTS