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Randy Miller, President of Original New York Seltzer and sponsor of Alphy’s Soda Pop Club.
Jonathan · 08/17/10Saturday, May 15, 2010
5:00pm-7:00pm
Printed Matter
195 Tenth Ave
New York, NY 10011
In Four Over One, the Los Angeles based artist Phil Chang employs the format of an artists book to explore ideas of economy and obsolescence. In collaboration with designer Jonathan Maghen, Four Over One is structured around Chang’s interest in how new outcomes arise from an antagonism between perceived and actual forms of value. The photographs that appear in the book were created using expired photographic materials exposed by an archival book scanner. Through a sparse display of color, black and white, and half-tone photographs, in conjunction with a restrained typographic treatment, Four Over One employs an economy of scale in order to consider the roles of abstraction, methods of art production, and modes of distribution in our contemporary culture.
Published by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Wallis Annenberg Photography Department , in association with Textfield, Inc.
Distributed by RAM Publications
Textfield, Inc. is an independent publisher and distributor of artists books, catalogs, editions, monographs, multiples, and periodicals. We specialize in the distribution of quality publications from publishers in North America and Europe, to libraries, bookshops, galleries, and museums.
The focus of our publishing catalog involves the development of close working relationships with artists, galleries, museums, universities, and institutions to design and publish books and other printed matter.
Publishers: 032c, Capricious, Christoph Keller Editions, C Magazine, Coins, David Kordansky Gallery, Fillip, FormContent, Harsh Patel, Hassla Books, I-20 Gallery, Kunst Halle Sankt Gallen, Laura Bartlett Gallery, Manuel Raeder, Mono.Kultur, Museum Paper, Nieves, OK-RM, onestar press, Paperback, Peres Projects, Seems, Slavs and Tatars, Textfield, True True True, Vier5, Wallspace, Wear.
Textfield · 09/02/09 
Allan Kaprow, How to Make a Happening, Audio CD, 24:43 Minutes
Seth Siegelaub
Introduction to the Agreement made by Siegelaub in Leonardo, vol. 6, 1973.
1. The Agreement
The three-page Agreement on the following pages has been drafted by Bob Projansky, a New York lawyer, after my extensive discussions and correspondence with over 500 artists, dealers, collectors, museum people, critics and others involved in the day-to-day workings of the international art world.
The Agreement has been designed to remedy some generally acknowledged inequities in the art world, particularly artists’ lack of control over the use of their work and participation in its economics after they no longer own it.
The Agreement form has been written with special awareness of the current ordinary practices and economic realities of the art world particularly its private, cash and informal nature, with careful regard for the interests and motives of all concerned.
It is expected to be the standard form for all transfer and sale of all contemporary art and has been made as fair, simple and useful as possible. It can be used either as presented here or slightly altered to fit your specific situation. If you have questions as regards any part of the agreement, you should consult your attorney.
2. Enforcement
First, let us put this question in perspective: most people will honor the Agreement because most people honor agreements. Those few people who will try to cheat you are likely to be the same kinds who will give you a hard time about signing the Agreement in the first place. Later owners will be more likely to try to cheat you than the first owner, with whom you or your dealer have had some face-to-face contact but there are strong reasons why both first and future owners should fulfill the contract’s terms.
What happens if owner No. 2 sells your work to owner No. 3 and does not send you the transfer form? (He is not sending you the money, either.) Nothing happens. (You do not know about it yet.)
Sooner or later you do find out about it because it takes a lot of effort to conceal such sales and the ‘grapevine’ will get the news to you (or your dealer) anyway. To conceal the sale, owner No. 3 has to conceal the work and he is not going to hide a good and valuable work just to save a little money. And if he ever wants to sell it, repair it, appraise it or authenticate it, he MUST come to you (or your dealer). When you do find out about such a transaction-and you will-you sue owner No. 2, who will owe you 15% of the increase based on the price to owner No. 3 or on the value at the time you find out about it, which may be higher. Clearly, a seller (in this case No. 2) would be extremely foolish to take this chance, to risk having to pay a lot of money, just to save a little money.
As to falsifying values reported to the artist, there will be as much pressure from the new owner to put a falsely high value as from the old owner to put in a low value. There are real difficulties inherent in getting two people to lie in unison, especially if it only benefits one of them-the seller. In 95% of the cases the amount of money to be paid to the artist will not be enough to compel the collectors to lie to you.
You will note that in the event you have to sue to enforce any of your rights under the Agreement, article 19 gives you the right to recover reasonable attorney’s fees in addition to whatever else you may be entitled to.
3. Summation
We realize that this Agreement is essentially unprecedented in the art world and that it just may cause a little rumbling and trembling; on the other hand, the ills it remedies are universally acknowledged to exist and no other practical way has ever been devised to cure them.
Whether or not, you, the artist, use it, is of course up to you; what we have given you is a legal tool that you can use yourself to establish ongoing rights when you transfer your work. This is a substitute for what has existed before-nothing.
We have done this for no recompense, for just the pleasure and challenge of the problem, feeling that should there ever be a questions about artists’ rights in reference to their art, the artist is more right than anyone else.
-Seth Siegelaub, 1973.
The Agreements and the corresponding statement appear courtesy of The Siegelaub Collection & Archives at the Stichting Egress Foundation, Amsterdam.
But in the considered opinion of the neurologist Oliver Sacks, Dyson’s friend and fellow English expatriate, this is far from the case. “His mind is still so open and flexible,” Sacks says. Which makes Dyson something far more formidable than just the latest peevish right-wing climate-change denier. Dyson is a scientist whose intelligence is revered by other scientists — William Press, former deputy director of the Los Alamos National Laboratory and now a professor of computer science at the University of Texas, calls him “infinitely smart.” Dyson — a mathematics prodigy who came to this country at 23 and right away contributed seminal work to physics by unifying quantum and electrodynamic theory — not only did path-breaking science of his own; he also witnessed the development of modern physics, thinking alongside most of the luminous figures of the age, including Einstein, Richard Feynman, Niels Bohr, Enrico Fermi, Hans Bethe, Edward Teller, J. Robert Oppenheimer and Edward Witten, the “high priest of string theory” whose office at the institute is just across the hall from Dyson’s. Yet instead of hewing to that fundamental field, Dyson chose to pursue broader and more unusual pursuits than most physicists — and has lived a more original life.
Among Dyson’s gifts is interpretive clarity, a penetrating ability to grasp the method and significance of what many kinds of scientists do. His thoughts about how science works appear in a series of lucid, elegant books for nonspecialists that have made him a trusted arbiter of ideas ranging far beyond physics. Dyson has written more than a dozen books, including “Origins of Life” (1999), which synthesizes recent discoveries by biologists and geologists into an evaluation of the double-origin hypothesis, the possibility that life began twice; “Disturbing the Universe” (1979) tries among other things to reconcile science and humanity. “Weapons and Hope” (1984) is his meditation on the meaning and danger of nuclear weapons that won a National Book Critics Circle Award. Dyson’s books display such masterly control of complex matters that smart young people read him and want to be scientists; older citizens finish his books and feel smart.
Yet even while probing and sifting, Dyson is always whimsically gazing into the beyond. As a boy he sketched plans for English rocket ships that could explore the stars, and then, in midlife, he helped design an American spacecraft to be powered by exploding atomic bombs — a secret Air Force project known as Orion. Dyson remains an armchair astronaut who speculates with glee about the coming of cheap space travel, when families can leave an overcrowded earth to homestead on asteroids and comets, swooping around the universe via solar sail craft. Dyson is convinced that our current “age of computers” will soon give way to “the age of domesticated biotechnology.” Bio-tech, he writes in his book, “Infinite in All Directions” (1988), “offers us the chance to imitate nature’s speed and flexibility,” and he imagines the furniture and art that people will “grow” for themselves, the pet dinosaurs they will “grow” for their children, along with an idiosyncratic menagerie of genetically engineered cousins of the carbon-eating tree: termites to consume derelict automobiles, a potato capable of flourishing on the dry red surfaces of Mars, a collision-avoiding car.
These ideas attract derision similar to Dyson’s essays on climate change, but he is an undeterred octogenarian futurist. “I don’t think of myself predicting things,” he says. “I’m expressing possibilities. Things that could happen. To a large extent it’s a question of how badly people want them to. The purpose of thinking about the future is not to predict it but to raise people’s hopes.” Formed in a heretical and broad-thinking tradition of British public intellectuals, Dyson left behind a brooding England still stricken by two bloody world wars to become an optimistic American immigrant with tremendous faith in the creative imagination’s ability to invent technologies that would overcome any predicament. And according to the physicist and former Caltech president Marvin Goldberger, Dyson is himself the living embodiment of that kind of ingenuity. “You point Freeman at a problem and he’ll solve it,” Goldberger says. “He’s extraordinarily powerful.” Dyson seems to see the world as an interdisciplinary set of problems out there for him to evaluate. Climate change is the big scientific issue of our time, so naturally he finds it irresistible. But to Dyson this is really only one more charged conundrum attracting his interest just as nuclear weapons and rural poverty have. That is to say, he is a great problem-solver who is not convinced that climate change is a great problem.
Dyson is well aware that “most consider me wrong about global warming.” That educated Americans tend to agree with the conclusion about global warming reached earlier this month at the International Scientific Conference on Climate Change in Copenhagen (“inaction is inexcusable”) only increases Dyson’s resistance. Dyson may be an Obama-loving, Bush-loathing liberal who has spent his life opposing American wars and fighting for the protection of natural resources, but he brooks no ideology and has a withering aversion to scientific consensus. The Nobel physics laureate Steven Weinberg admires Dyson’s physics — he says he thinks the Nobel committee fleeced him by not awarding his work on quantum electrodynamics with the prize — but Weinberg parts ways with his sensibility: “I have the sense that when consensus is forming like ice hardening on a lake, Dyson will do his best to chip at the ice.”
Dyson says he doesn’t want his legacy to be defined by climate change, but his dissension from the orthodoxy of global warming is significant because of his stature and his devotion to the integrity of science. Dyson has said he believes that the truths of science are so profoundly concealed that the only thing we can really be sure of is that much of what we expect to happen won’t come to pass. In “Infinite in All Directions,” he writes that nature’s laws “make the universe as interesting as possible.” This also happens to be a fine description of Dyson’s own relationship to science. In the words of Avishai Margalit, a philosopher at the Institute for Advanced Study, “He’s a consistent reminder of another possibility.” When Dyson joins the public conversation about climate change by expressing concern about the “enormous gaps in our knowledge, the sparseness of our observations and the superficiality of our theories,” these reservations come from a place of experience. Whatever else he is, Dyson is the good scientist; he asks the hard questions. He could also be a lonely prophet. Or, as he acknowledges, he could be dead wrong.
IT WAS FOUR YEARS AGO that Dyson began publicly stating his doubts about climate change. Speaking at the Frederick S. Pardee Center for the Study of the Longer-Range Future at Boston University, Dyson announced that “all the fuss about global warming is grossly exaggerated.” Since then he has only heated up his misgivings, declaring in a 2007 interview with Salon.com that “the fact that the climate is getting warmer doesn’t scare me at all” and writing in an essay for The New York Review of Books, the left-leaning publication that is to gravitas what the Beagle was to Darwin, that climate change has become an “obsession” — the primary article of faith for “a worldwide secular religion” known as environmentalism. Among those he considers true believers, Dyson has been particularly dismissive of Al Gore, whom Dyson calls climate change’s “chief propagandist,” and James Hansen, the head of the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York and an adviser to Gore’s film, “An Inconvenient Truth.” Dyson accuses them of relying too heavily on computer-generated climate models that foresee a Grand Guignol of imminent world devastation as icecaps melt, oceans rise and storms and plagues sweep the earth, and he blames the pair’s “lousy science” for “distracting public attention” from “more serious and more immediate dangers to the planet.”
A particularly distressed member of that public was Dyson’s own wife, Imme, who, after seeing the film in a local theater with Dyson when it was released in 2006, looked at her husband out on the sidewalk and, with visions of drowning polar bears still in her eyes, reproached him: “Everything you told me is wrong!” she cried.
“The polar bears will be fine,” he assured her.
Not long ago Dyson sat in his institute office, a chamber so neat it reminds Dyson’s friend, the writer John McPhee, of a Japanese living room. On shelves beside Dyson were books about stellar evolution, viruses, thermodynamics and terrorism. “The climate-studies people who work with models always tend to overestimate their models,” Dyson was saying. “They come to believe models are real and forget they are only models.” Dyson speaks in calm, clear tones that carry simultaneous evidence of his English childhood, the move to the United States after completing his university studies at Cambridge and more than 50 years of marriage to the German-born Imme, but his opinions can be barbed, especially when a conversation turns to climate change. Climate models, he says, take into account atmospheric motion and water levels but have no feeling for the chemistry and biology of sky, soil and trees. “The biologists have essentially been pushed aside,” he continues. “Al Gore’s just an opportunist. The person who is really responsible for this overestimate of global warming is Jim Hansen. He consistently exaggerates all the dangers.”
Dyson agrees with the prevailing view that there are rapidly rising carbon-dioxide levels in the atmosphere caused by human activity. To the planet, he suggests, the rising carbon may well be a MacGuffin, a striking yet ultimately benign occurrence in what Dyson says is still “a relatively cool period in the earth’s history.” The warming, he says, is not global but local, “making cold places warmer rather than making hot places hotter.” Far from expecting any drastic harmful consequences from these increased temperatures, he says the carbon may well be salubrious — a sign that “the climate is actually improving rather than getting worse,” because carbon acts as an ideal fertilizer promoting forest growth and crop yields. “Most of the evolution of life occurred on a planet substantially warmer than it is now,” he contends, “and substantially richer in carbon dioxide.” Dyson calls ocean acidification, which many scientists say is destroying the saltwater food chain, a genuine but probably exaggerated problem. Sea levels, he says, are rising steadily, but why this is and what dangers it might portend “cannot be predicted until we know much more about its causes.”
For Hansen, the dark agent of the looming environmental apocalypse is carbon dioxide contained in coal smoke. Coal, he has written, “is the single greatest threat to civilization and all life on our planet.” Hansen has referred to railroad cars transporting coal as “death trains.” Dyson, on the other hand, told me in conversations and e-mail messages that “Jim Hansen’s crusade against coal overstates the harm carbon dioxide can do.” Dyson well remembers the lethal black London coal fog of his youth when, after a day of visiting the city, he would return to his hometown of Winchester with his white shirt collar turned black. Coal, Dyson says, contains “real pollutants” like soot, sulphur and nitrogen oxides, “really nasty stuff that makes people sick and looks ugly.” These are “rightly considered a moral evil,” he says, but they “can be reduced to low levels by scrubbers at an affordable cost.” He says Hansen “exploits” the toxic elements of burning coal as a way of condemning the carbon dioxide it releases, “which cannot be reduced at an affordable cost, but does not do any substantial harm.”
Science is not a matter of opinion; it is a question of data. Climate change is an issue for which Dyson is asking for more evidence, and leading climate scientists are replying by saying if we wait for sufficient proof to satisfy you, it may be too late. That is the position of a more moderate expert on climate change, William Chameides, dean of the Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences at Duke University, who says, “I don’t think it’s time to panic,” but contends that, because of global warming, “more sea-level rise is inevitable and will displace millions; melting high-altitude glaciers will threaten the food supplies for perhaps a billion or more; and ocean acidification could undermine the food supply of another billion or so.” Dyson strongly disagrees with each of these points, and there follows, as you move back and forth between the two positions, claims and counterclaims, a dense thicket of mitigating scientific indicators that all have the timbre of truth and the ring of potential plausibility. One of Dyson’s more significant surmises is that a warming climate could be forestalling a new ice age. Is he wrong? No one can say for sure. Beyond the specific points of factual dispute, Dyson has said that it all boils down to “a deeper disagreement about values” between those who think “nature knows best” and that “any gross human disruption of the natural environment is evil,” and “humanists,” like himself, who contend that protecting the existing biosphere is not as important as fighting more repugnant evils like war, poverty and unemployment.
Embedded in all of Dyson’s strong opinions about public policy is a dual spirit of social activism and uneasiness about class dating all the way back to Winchester, where he was raised in the 1920s and ’30s by his father, George Dyson, the son of a Yorkshire blacksmith. George was the music instructor at Winchester College, an old and prestigious secondary school, and a composer. Dyson’s mother, Mildred Atkey, came from a more prosperous Wimbledon family that had its own tennis court. Together they raised Dyson and his sister, Alice, in what Dyson calls a “watered-down Church of England Christianity” that regarded religion as a guide to living rather than any system of belief. The emphasis on tolerance, charity and community — and the free time afforded by the luxury of four servants — led Mildred to organize a club for teenage girls and a birth-control clinic. These institutions meshed uneasily with her patrician Victorian sensibilities. The girls were never, Dyson says, “considered equals,” and Mildred told him with amusement about the young mother who walked in carrying a red-headed infant. “What a beautiful baby,” Mildred reported saying. “Does he take after his father?”
“Oh, I couldn’t tell you, Mum,” came the reply. “He kept his hat on.”
Winchester is a medieval town in which, Dyson writes, he felt that everyone was looking backward, mourning all the young men lost to one world war while silently anticipating his own generation’s impending demise. He renounced the nostalgia, the servants, the hard-line social castes. But what he liked about growing up in England was the landscape. The country’s successful alteration of wilderness and swamp had created a completely new green ecology, allowing plants, animals and humans to thrive in “a community of species.” Dyson has always been strongly opposed to the idea that there is any such thing as an optimal ecosystem — “life is always changing” — and he abhors the notion that men and women are something apart from nature, that “we must apologize for being human.” Humans, he says, have a duty to restructure nature for their survival.
All this may explain why the same man could write “we live on a shrinking and vulnerable planet which our lack of foresight is rapidly turning into a slum” and yet gently chide the sort of Americans who march against coal in Washington. Dyson has great affection for coal and for one big reason: It is so inexpensive that most of the world can afford it. “There’s a lot of truth to the statement Greens are people who never had to worry about their grocery bills,” he says. (“Many of these people are my friends,” he will also tell you.) To Dyson, “the move of the populations of China and India from poverty to middle-class prosperity should be the great historic achievement of the century. Without coal it cannot happen.” That said, Dyson sees coal as the interim kindling of progress. In “roughly 50 years,” he predicts, solar energy will become cheap and abundant, and “there are many good reasons for preferring it to coal.”
THE WORDS COLLEAGUES COMMONLY use to describe Dyson include “unassuming” and “modest,” and he seems the very embodiment of Newton’s belief that a man should strive for simplicity and avoid confusion in life. Dyson has been in residence at the institute since 1953, a time when Albert Einstein shared his habit of walking to work there, which Dyson still does seven days a week, to write on a computer and solve any problems that come across his desk with paper and pencil. (In his prime, legend held that he never used the eraser.) He and Imme have spent 51 happy years together in the same house, a white clapboard just over the garden fence from the stucco affair once inhabited by their former neighbors, the Oppenheimers. On some Sundays the Dysons pile into a car still decorated with an Obama bumper sticker and drive to running races, at which Dyson can be found at the finish line loudly cheering for the 72-year-old Imme, a master’s marathon champion. On many other weekends, they visit some of their 16 grandchildren. During the holiday season the Dysons routinely attend five parties a week, cocktail-soiree sprints at which guests tend to find him open-minded and shy: when friends’ wives give him a hug, he blushes. One of Dyson’s daughters, the Internet vizier Esther Dyson, says her father raised her without a television so she would read more, and has always been “just as interested in talking to” the latest graduate student to make the pilgrimage to Princeton “as he is the famous person at the next table.” Oliver Sacks says that Dyson has “a genius for friendship.”
An excerpt from Nine Lives artist Charlie White’s cartoon OMG BFF LOL from his project “Girl Studies”, 2008. (Run Time: 3 min., 16 sec.)
Jonathan · 03/18/09Winter Sale:
70% off Dries Van Noten, Raf Simons, A.P.C., Patrik Ervell and Band of Outsiders
50% off Common Projects
Sunday 21 December at 11am, South Willard
South Willard will be using FedEx 2nd day for all domestic shipments ordered by 2pm monday, for Christmas delivery
Textfield · 12/20/08We’ve opened up our Cybershop for the holidays — assorted sizes from our backlist are now available for purchase through our site between today and the New Year. All designs are short sleeve t-shirts, regular-fit, off-white or black, sizes S, M, L and Womens (M). Oh, and they’re all on sale, 25% off.
— Jonathan and Rafaël
Backgammon, Couch Potato, Egg In Cup, Hourglass, Jellyfish, Moon, No Book and Paper Bag. Also available for wholesale order through Textfield Distribution or contact your local retailer.
Tagbanger · 12/02/08Calculate your tax cut under Barrack Obama’s plan (Sorry, I don’t know anyone personally who makes more than 250k a year).
Tagbanger · 10/28/08 
LONDON — Sports teams have long been the playthings of rich men, but by swooping in to buy the English soccer club Manchester City, Abu Dhabi’s ruling family has demonstrated just how much money it now takes to play in the big leagues.
Sulaiman al-Fahim managed the purchase of the Manchester City team for Abu Dhabi.
“Our goal is very simple — to make Manchester City the biggest club in the Premier League,” said Sulaiman al-Fahim, the property developer who is managing the Manchester City buyout for Sheik Mansur bin Zayed al-Nahyan, of Abu Dhabi, told the BBC.
“We will buy whatever is needed. You cannot put a figure on what we will spend, like 100 million pounds,” Mr. Fahim added. “More than that might be needed.”
Soccer may not yet compare with investing in modern art or real estate or blue chip stocks. But the intense interest in Manchester City, a soccer club with a long history but a bare trophy cupboard, illustrates just how much the bull market in commodities has turned oligarchs from Russia, steel magnates from India and sheiks from the kingdoms in the Persian Gulf into acquisitive buyers of prized and highly visible Western assets.
More than half of the Premier League’s 20 clubs are now owned by foreign businessmen, and Monday’s sale of Manchester City may have done little more than hand over ownership of the club from the exiled former prime minister of Thailand to the royal estate of Abu Dhabi.
Still, it represents an important shift. It may be the first, but it is unlikely to be the last venture into English soccer by the rulers of the Persian Gulf states. Abu Dhabi moved swiftly, almost secretively to buy Manchester City even as its better-known neighbor, Dubai, has been bidding for two years to purchase the Liverpool club.
There is a game within a game going on. Before oil was discovered in the United Arab Emirates in 1958, the families ruling the kingdoms of Abu Dhabi and Dubai — the Nahyans and the Maktoums — amused themselves with competitive falconry. They still do falconry, and the families today are somewhat intermarried, but in recent years Abu Dhabi has felt overshadowed by the more entrepreneurial and flamboyant rulers of Dubai, who have turned it into a Middle Eastern mecca for global business.
Despite commanding more than 9 percent of the world’s oil supply, Abu Dhabi has sometimes seemed jealous of Dubai’s ability to draw attention to itself, in part by creating a hub in the Middle East for prestigious sporting events.
As the Emirates get richer, Western entrepreneurs who bought into British soccer on the expectation of making money are finding that they cannot keep up. That is why most experts in the field say that it is only a matter of time before the American sports entrepreneurs who control Liverpool, Tom Hicks, who owns the Texas Rangers, and George N. Gillett Jr., owner of the Montreal Canadiens of the National Hockey League, cut their losses and sell the club to the persistent bidders from Dubai.
As for Abu Dhabi, it accrues a yearly cash surplus exceeding $50 billion. Its sovereign economic fund, the Abu Dhabi United Group, is, by most outside estimates, worth a trillion dollars, and rising. It has a 7 percent stake in Citigroup. It invests in Ferrari and General Motors. And among its other projects is a new campus opening in 2010 that will become a branch of New York University and a $1 billion museum modeled on the Louvre in Paris.
It is debatable that none of those achieved the same global headlines as the takeover of Manchester City, and hours later the team’s signing of Robinho, a Brazilian world star from Real Madrid, for 32.5 million pounds ($58.6 million). Hours before that midnight deal in Madrid, Chelsea, the London club owned by the Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich, was trying to tie up a $50 million deal for the same player.
Mr. Abramovich has already spent five times that sum on Chelsea’s team after rescuing the club from indebtedness five years ago. Mr. Abramovich never talks publicly about his motives, or complains publicly when, for example, he unloads players — as he did with Andrei Shevchenko to A.C. Milan and Shaun Wright-Phillips to Manchester City for a fraction of the $100 million he spent on them.
He knows, as most of the entrepreneurs must, that buying into soccer is a financial loser. Mohamed al-Fayed, the Egyptian owner of Harrods, the London department store, who became the first foreigner to buy an English team, Fulham, in 1997, also says it is impossible to make money owning a club.
That is despite the $5.3 billion that the 20 clubs share from television rights in the league’s current three-year contract. As quickly as the money trickles in, it seeps out on multimillion-dollar contracts to acquire some of the world’s best players.
So why do so many rich foreigners invest in English soccer?
Mr. Abramovich bought the Chelsea team at a time when one or two other Russian oligarchs were being locked up in Moscow jails. In buying Manchester City, Thaksin Shinawatra, the former Thai prime minister, bought a way of keeping himself in the public eye in England, where he seeks asylum before his desired return to Thailand.
By contrast, the Glazer family that borrowed the money to buy Manchester United and the two American owners of Liverpool made what they thought were sound investments in an English sport they believed could be more profitably marketed.
But many years ago, when Gianni Agnelli, the chairman of the Fiat empire in Italy, bought world famous players for his team Juventus, he conceded that it was a frivolous pleasure that had became addictive.
He preferred it to buying paintings to lock away in a vault or racehorses or acquiring more property than he could manage. “I spend more than I should, in time and money,” he once said. “But I find it compelling.”
By Rob Hughes and Landon Thomas Jr
Parkside · 09/09/08 
Andreas Gursky, 99 Cent, 1999, chromogenic color print, 207 × 337 cm
99 Cents Only Stores announced price increases Monday — by almost a penny an item. The chain’s new top price: 99.99 cents, or essentially $1 at the cash register most of the time.
The price increases take effect later this month, and the City of Commerce chain has no plans to change its name or logo at its 277 stores.
Executives had hinted in recent weeks that inflation and higher food prices would force the chain to raise its prices. It prompted concern among customers and enthusiasm among industry analysts.
It will also add 0.99 of a cent to all prices. So an item currently priced at 39 cents will sell for 39.99 cents.
“We’ve absorbed it for as long as we can and as hard as we can, but we’ve reached a point where we can’t absorb it anymore, and we have to do something,” said Chief Executive Eric Schiffer. “This will give us plenty of breathing room.”
Based on last year’s sales, Schiffer estimated that the chain would take in an extra $12 million at the cash register.
Industry analyst Karen Short said changes like this were often essential.
“We’ve had a pretty abnormal inflationary period, and sticking to their strategy of 99 cents only becomes more challenging when prices are as volatile as they are,” said Short, an analyst with Friedman, Billings, Ramsey & Co.
“Changing prices on items is not an attempt to move away from the strategy of helping the consumer. It’s out of necessity.”
The announcement was expected after the retailer — faced with fast-rising inflation, soaring food and fuel prices and a higher minimum wage — said last month that it was reevaluating its long-standing price strategy after two consecutive quarterly losses.
Founded in 1982 by Chairman David Gold, 99 Cents Only pioneered the single-price retail concept. The chain opened its first store in Los Angeles and has since expanded to 277 locations, mostly in California but also in Nevada, Arizona and Texas.
The deep-discount retailer, which sells groceries, household supplies and health and beauty products, remains one of the few true “dollar” stores. All items are priced at 99 cents or less, with some products grouped to sell for a total of 99 cents.
But capping prices at 99 cents plus tax had become a burden for the retailer, which had to adjust the size or quantity of many of its offerings — including milk and eggs — to keep them on store shelves. The strict price strategy also led to the inability to carry some high-demand items, such as butter, on a regular basis.
6:04 PM PDT, September 8, 2008
Thanks Michael
Sony TV
“Introducing fabric in TV design can again change the product landscape and stimulate our senses in entirely new ways. Sets that rest comfortably in the palm of your hand. Sets projecting images that reach you like the song of a little bird by your pillow. They are a form of “senseware”; small, round, and soft reinterpretations of products that feel nice and have character. We sought a shape that recalls basic, minimal forms of life. Perhaps inevitably, a shape that resembles both a little chick and a tadpole emerged. The “tail” also serves a practical purpose as the interface for headphones, which extend seamlessly from the body.”
Concept Page / Interface Ideas / Senseware Exhibition (Tokyo)
Sony Design Team
Great article in the Wall Street Journal on the economic theories of Mr. Minsky,
(my neighbors Father) — our current condition has been coined a Minsky Moment as it parallels the economic models and theories of Mr. Minsky.
Tagbanger · 12/12/07“At its core, the Minsky view was straightforward: When times are good, investors take on risk; the longer times stay good, the more risk they take on, until they’ve taken on too much. Eventually, they reach a point where the cash generated by their assets no longer is sufficient to pay off the mountains of debt they took on to acquire them. Losses on such speculative assets prompt lenders to call in their loans. ‘This is likely to lead to a collapse of asset values,’ Mr. Minsky wrote.”
A new idea by Hulger: the Plumen Lightbulb.
Lightbulbs have been very stale for a long time. They can be seen in 3 basic models:

Plumen proposes a number of different lamps with the same ease of use of regular lightbulbs.
Rafael · 11/22/07
















