21st Century Music, Art and Design

Conscious Music, Progressive Politics, Inspiring Art

Robbie Robertson and Bob Dylan

Robbie Robertson and Bob Dylan

Yuya Joe College's Facebook Wall

Flag of Earth

Flag of Earth
by James Cadle, modified by inclusion of NASA image of our planet

Occupy Toronto Market Exchange

mediaINDIGENA

Friday, April 29, 2011

Toronto Maple Leafs sign Swedish rapper Markindapark to NHL contract

Mark Owuya had best save percentage in Swedish Elite League




Swedish hockey player and rapper Mark Owuya's father is from Uganda and his mother is Russian. Owuya is known in Sweden as a promising young professional hockey player and as an emerging hip hop entertainer, known first for rapping on popular talent show Idol as "Mark In Da Park," and more recently through his YouTube videos.

Please enjoy these photos and videos of new Toronto Maple Leafs goaltender signing Mark Owuya.



Mark Aloysius Opoya Owuya (born 18 July 1989) is a professional Swedish ice hockey goaltender, currently a member of the Toronto Maple Leafs organization of the National Hockey League, having been signed by Toronto on 28 April 2011.



Owuya began playing junior hockey with Djurgårdens IF in the 2005–06 season when he began playing with the U18 team. The following season Owuya played with both Djurgården's U18 and J20 team and also played most of the games with the Djurgården's J20 team in the 2007–08 season. While Stefan Ridderwall joined team Sweden for the 2008 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships, Owuya made his Elitserien debut on 3 January 2008, against Brynäs IF.






He was loaned out to Mälarhöjden/Bredängs IK during the 2007–08 winter, later was loaned out to Almtuna IS for the entire 2008–09 season. Owuya was also on loan during the 2009–10 season, first to Örebro HK and later Mora IK. In the 2010 pre-season, Owuya was moved up to Djurgården's senior team, to compete with goaltender Stefan Ridderwall to be the first choice in the goal.




Ultimately, Owuya played in 32 out of 55 games in the 2010–11 Elitserien season, with a 2.18 goals against average and league-best save percentage of .927. He also played in all of Djurgården's seven playoff games, with a 1.66 goals against average and .924.





















Photos and videos of Gigi Ibrahim, Egypt's revolutionary journalist





"Nobody can hijack our revolution"


Gigi Ibrahim (Arabic: جيجي ابراهيم‎) is an Egyptian journalist, blogger and socialist activist. She has been credited as being a part of a new generation of "citizen journalists" who document news events using social media. For this she was featured on a cover of Time magazine as "one of the leaders" of Tahrir Square during the Egyptian Revolution in 2011. Ibrahim however states, that while the internet was important for coordinating people in the ousting of President Hosni Mubarak, "it was the battles on the streets that were crucial... It was their power that made the revolution." She is a member of the Revolutionary Socialists and a graduate from the American University in Cairo[3] where she earned a political science degree.




Gigi Ibrahim - American University of Cairo student journalist



One of the most crucial citizen reporters in Cairo was 24-year-old Gigi Ibrahim, a major supporter of Egypt's Jasmine Revolution. Armed with little more than her Blackberry and a webcam, Ibrahim - who spent her high school years in California and recently earned a political science degree from the American University in Cairo - is on Twitter, Facebook, Flickr and Vimeo. She tweets and posts, shoots stills and video, all in an effort to chronicle the unrest.



In a Skype interview with The New York Times, Ibrahim said her role "is to be part of this wave of change. I tweet a lot while at the protests; I tell everybody the security situation, how many people are at protests. I'm trying to spread accurate information and paint a picture at the ground for people who aren't here, via Twitter and Facebook."



Ibrahim's smartphone lacks an Arabic keybord, but she said "a lot of my followers are from outside of Egypt. I want to try to use a language most everyone would understand. It's important for me to be a citizen journalist, because with our press here... not everything gets broadcast."







Videos of PBS Frontline interview with Gigi Ibrahim

Her family is part of the Egyptian elite, but 24-year-old Gigi Ibrahim says she's fighting for her country's future. With thousands following her Twitter feed, Gigi has become something of a celebrity in Cairo's Tahrir Square. In this video, we see her attempts to convince her family of the righteousness of her cause. But will they come around?




Monday, April 18, 2011

Hollerado, Free Energy, and The Sheepdogs rocked the Sound Academy in Toronto


Pina the Inside Edge Chick threw a gargantuan and rockin' birthday bash this past Friday night, featuring Saskatoon's The Sheepdogs, Philadelphia's Free Energy and Ottawa's rapidly ascending Hollerado (Hey, Philadelphia, where'd you go) at the top of the bill.

Props to Pina, The Edge and all the bands for an amazing concert!


Americanarama, by Hollerado

Hey Philadelphia you used to exist
As a city in the North-East where the Power used to sit
There's no more Chicago
She went down with the last of the buffalo

Poor weak New Orleans
She went first and we didn't even hear her scream no
Denver U.S.A
you came down from the top of the mountain
Bet you didn't count on becoming what you are today

Doot doot doo doot do doo Doot doot doot doot do doo
Lord I miss you
Doot doot doo doot do doo Doot doot doot doot do doo
Lord I miss you
Hey Philadelphia where'd you go?

Oh New York City... you're so pretty in the dark
When all your lights are gone out
We're camping out in Battery Park

Denver.. U.S.A.
you came down from the top of the mountain
Bet you didn't count on becoming what you are today

Doot doot doo doot do doo Doot doot doot doot do doo
Lord I miss you
Hey Philadelphia where'd you go?

Hey Philadelphia...
Hey Philadelphia...
Where'd you go?

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Nobel Women's Initiative a worthy, overdue venture

The Nobel Women's Initiative was established in 2006 by sister Nobel Peace Laureates Jody Williams, Shirin Ebadi, Wangari Maathai, Rigoberta Menchú Tum, Betty Williams and Mairead Corrigan Maguire. We six women -- representing North and South America, Europe, the Middle East and Africa -- decided to bring together our extraordinary experiences in a united effort for peace with justice and equality.

Only 12 women in its more than 100 year history have been recognized with the Nobel Peace Prize. The Nobel Peace Prize is a great honor, but it is also a great responsibility. It is this sense of responsibility that compelled us to create the Nobel Women's Initiative to help strengthen work being done in support of women's rights around the world - work often carried out in the shadows with little recognition.

We believe peace is much more than the absence of armed conflict. Peace is the commitment to equality and justice; a democratic world free of physical, economic, cultural, political, religious, sexual and environmental violence and the constant threat of these forms of violence against women -- indeed against all of humanity.

It is the heartfelt mission of the Nobel Women's Initiative to work together as women Nobel Peace Prize Laureates to use the visibility and prestige of the Nobel prize to promote, spotlight, and amplify the work of women's rights activists, researchers, and organizations worldwide addressing the root causes of violence, in a way that strengthens and expands the global movement to advance nonviolence, peace, justice and equality. We accomplish this mission through three main strategies: convening, shaping the conversation, and spotlighting and promoting.


Goal of initiative is global transformation

The Vision of the Nobel Women's Initiative is a world transformed, a nonviolent world of security, equality and well-being for all.

United by our desire to combat all forms of violence against women in all circumstances, we also recognize that specific issues for women vary around the world. One element of our work is to sponsor international gatherings of women every two years -- in a different region of the world -- to highlight issues of concern to women there. The objective of these meetings is to underscore our commonalities and differences by providing inclusive and energizing forums that ensure meaningful dialogue and networking by women's rights activists around the world -- but with a view to action.

It is our commitment to action that brings us together. Therefore, our meetings are linked with concrete work in the target region leading up to the conference, along with post-conference plans of action to address the issues addressed at the conference. In this way, the Nobel Women's Initiative supports meaningful work on the ground.

We believe profoundly in the sharing of information and ideas. By networking and working together rather than in competition, we enhance the work of all. The Nobel Women's Initiative is committed to supplementing and enhancing existing work and is determined to avoid duplicating the work of others. We want to open new ground for discussion, debate and change.

We hope you share our excitement about the potential of the Nobel Women's Initiative to meaningfully contribute to building peace with justice and equality by working together with women around the world.


Get Involved:

Nobel Women's Initiative
430-1 Nicholas St.
Ottawa, Ontario
K1N 7B7
Canada

Tel: +1 613 569 8400
Fax: +1 613 691 1419

Official website of Nobel Prize Women's Initiative

Wednesday, April 06, 2011

Dylanology reigns in the Big Apple



Academics discuss Bob Dylan's influence at New York Conference

By KILEY ARMSTRONG - Associated Press
April 2, 2011 7:41pm EDT

NEW YORK — More than three decades have passed since Bob Dylan brought the plight of boxer Rubin "Hurricane" Carter into the public consciousness: "Criminals in their coats and their ties are free to drink martinis and watch the sun rise while Rubin sits like Buddha in a 10-foot cell, an innocent man in a living hell."



In this Nov. 6, 1974, former middleweight boxer Rubin “Hurricane" Carter stands near a desk at the old “Death Row” at Trenton State Prison in Trenton, N.J. Carter went through two trials and endured 19 years in prison before being cleared of a triple murder that happened in 1966. On Tuesday, April 4, 2011, more than three decades after singer Bob Dylan first brought Carter’s plight into the public consciousness; academics from around the U.S. will examine "Hurricane" and similar songs during a Manhattan conference called "Bob Dylan and the Law."

Dylan championed the case of Carter, a former middleweight boxer convicted twice of a 1966 triple murder. And in the end, Carter was freed after 19 years in prison; a federal judge found that the conviction was tainted by racial bias and that Carter and his co-defendant were denied their civil rights.

Now, academics from around the country will examine the implications of that song and others during "Bob Dylan and the Law," a conference presented by Fordham University's law and ethics center and Touro Law School.

"We basically said to people who write and think about the law and who also happen to like Dylan's music, 'find a way to put them together; tell us how Dylan relates to your academic work or your thinking,'" said Fordham professor Bruce Green, one of the organizers.

An academic session on Tuesday follows a Monday night public panel discussion at Fordham in Manhattan.

"We think it's important once in a while to have fun, and to free the scholarly imagination," Green said. "Good scholarship and good teaching require it. ... It's a lens through which to look at the relationship between law, society and culture. We hope it leads some scholars to think things they haven't thought before."

Green has been a Dylan fan since high school. "My parents couldn't stand it - they liked Frank Sinatra. They thought Dylan was just whining, and that listening to him was a waste of time," he wryly noted. "Now I am vindicated. I can say that, all along, I was setting the stage for future scholarship."

Another conversation topic at the conference will be "The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll."

In 1963, tobacco farmer William D. Zantzinger was convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to six months in jail plus a $500 fine for killing Hattie Carroll, a barmaid at a society charity dance.

Zantzinger "killed poor Hattie Carroll with a cane that he twirled around his diamond ring finger at a Baltimore hotel society gath'rin' ...," sings Dylan. "In the courtroom of honor, the judge pounded his gavel to show that all's equal and that the courts are on the level. And that the strings in the books ain't pulled and persuaded and that even the nobles get properly handled."

The conference also offers intellectual counterpoints.

Dylan "wrote some very powerful songs about what happens to folks when the system, and when the law, fail them," said Richard H. Underwood, a professor at the University of Kentucky College of Law. But while Dylan was inspired by real-life cases, Underwood said, he "was not necessarily concerned with true facts. He took a lot of poetic license."

"I must say, Dylan never lets the facts get in the way of a good story," agreed Abbe Smith, a Georgetown Law School professor who's also an expert on Bruce Springsteen and the law.

Though "beautiful," she said, the Hattie Carroll ballad is "not exactly accurate." Among other things, Dylan misstated the charge; and there was "reasonable argument that the cause of the death was not a blow to the head," but Carroll's poor health.

Dylan has "a kind of stark, if not simplistic, view of guilt and innocence," said Smith. "It may be the stories he picks, or how the story gets told in something as relatively short as a song."

And how, Smith is asked, might Dylan view lawyers?

"I think he probably likes lawyers better than judges," she said with a chuckle. "I think he probably would like lawyers who fight for the little guy. He would not like Holden Caulfield from 'Catcher in the Rye.'"

Coincidental to the conference will be the April 12 release of a Dylan recording from a long-ago folk festival in Waltham, Mass.

The set list from that appearance included "Ballad of Hollis Brown," which relates what Dylan has said was the true story of how "seven shots ring out like the ocean's pounding roar. There's seven people dead on a South Dakota farm."
The new release's title? "Bob Dylan in Concert - Brandeis University 1963." The school was named for the late U.S. Supreme Court Justice Louis Dembitz Brandeis.


Official Bob Dylan webpage

Tuesday, April 05, 2011

Calling all Greens; ACTION April 12th in Ottawa

Nonviolent civil disobedience to save our nation and planet

If the Canadian Government and the CTV Network are conspiring to keep environmental issues out of our national leaders debates, it is time for Greens to take direct action. The Green Party of Canada has ten times the support of the Bloc Quebecois outside Quebec, so why is Gilles Duceppe invited to the English-language debate and not Elizabeth May?

Either she should get the English debate and he gets the French, or they should both be able to participate in each affair.


What can Greens do to disrupt the debates?

Ottawa-area Greens should not give up on this, as we have a right to be there. Here are a few ways we can ensure the Green Party is heard, even while the established powers try to silence us:

A) Block all access to parking anywhere near the debate's location

(Not sure yet of location, however CTV's Ottawa studios are at 1500 Merivale Road, Ottawa Ontario, K2E 6Z5)

B) Picket the front entrance

C) Disrupt the proceedings with environmental / ecological questions


Remember, whatever the cops do to you, stay limp and force therm to drag you away. Always stay non-violent and be the change you want to see in this world!

Salut!

Toronto artist Lisa Keophila creates inspiring elegance




Her art is like wispy clouds on a warm sunny day, satin and lace on a beautiful lady, soothing balm on a gentleman's soul. Here, experience the pleasure yourself:

(Photos by Agata Piskunowicz except where noted)



Come Up To My Room, by Krona and Lion (Lisa K, Fiona, Jonathan, and Kristen)







Mural for young girl's room, Lisa Keophila





An Ontario College of Art and Design grad, Lisa is currently dividing her time between textile work, installations, exhibitions and drawing. Commission requests of all kinds are welcome, and Lisa can be contact via her website Keophila.com or The Lemon Collective.












Hungarian cutwork felt clutch bag



Novotel installation, under art direction of Ryan Ringer, photos by Suprotik Gupta


Keep up the amazing work Lisa, I'm intrigued as to what you will come up with next!

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