hey mike-
i actually read that book some years ago and am quite familiar with deleuze
and guattari. the book happens to relay some of this information in a pretty
approachable format avoiding deterritorialization and desiring machine squat
and gobble that is not exactly common rhetoric for the mas
sadly, you are a flame baiter. i expected more for some reason.
m
> From: Ian Malbon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Date: Mon, 17 Apr 2000 17:49:06 -0400
> To: Marie Kacmarek <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Cc: 313@hyperreal.org
> Subject: Re: (313)
> wow, do you work for mattel?
> you think they're trying to *discover* dj
> culture?!
Yes, I do. I think any and every large toy company does it's
damnedest to research exactly what's on the horizon for youth
cultures. And I think they found that turntables and dance music
were hot items
PROTECTED]>
> Cc: 313@hyperreal.org
> Subject: Re: (313) okay, this rave for the masses dross
>
>> the unfortunate thing about dj ken etal is we are now sleepwalking. we don't
>> even care about things like this anymore because we have been so inundated
>> by
Hello Ian,
Ian Malbon wrote:
>
> > the unfortunate thing about dj ken etal is we are now sleepwalking. we don't
> > even care about things like this anymore because we have been so inundated
> > by it.[snip]
> > the issue i have with
> > this, however, is it changes history -- pop culture is
> the unfortunate thing about dj ken etal is we are now sleepwalking. we don't
> even care about things like this anymore because we have been so inundated
> by it.[snip]
> the issue i have with
> this, however, is it changes history -- pop culture is one of the
> foundations of our history --
hihi-
the unfortunate thing about dj ken etal is we are now sleepwalking. we don't
even care about things like this anymore because we have been so inundated
by it. the answer to the commodification of cool is the constant mutation
into the new. it must continue as long as they (the marketers, adv