Showing posts with label photos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photos. Show all posts

Tuesday, 17 June 2014

What we saw at Bonnaroo 2014 (photos)

Crystal Quintero, Wisdom Quarterly; Christopher Weingarten, Daniel Kreps, Rolling Stone

I was at Bonnaroo! Look at my see-thru shirt!
Bonnaroo 2014 has just come to a close. Dogs were corned, potties were ported, and the jams were indeed super. Here are the 45 best things we saw, from Kanye West's killer comeback to Skrillex's homage to music that makes people freak out, to Neutral Milk Hotel's weep-a-thon. PHOTOS

Ukrainian folkdrone Björkpunk quartet Dakhabrakha went in as unknowns but ended up with one of the most receptive crowds of the weekend (Dana Distortion/rollingstone.com)

Friday, 18 April 2014

Coachella begins: Weekend 2, 2014 (video)

Eds., Wisdom Quarterly; YouTube/Coachella; Buzzfeed; 98.7; Randall Roberts (LA Times)
Coachella bikini-clad bhumi-devas go on display (Naomi Zeichner/buzzfeed.com)
Eat your hearts out as I do my best Miley acid... She's in the hospital OD'ing on antibiotics?

LA has a $10 alternative in Brokechella but, "Space is far out, man!" (alt987fm.com)


(Coachella) See highlights of Weekend 1. Fan photos. Watch VIDEO
  
Coachella is a one horse polo field in desert
It's a once-in-a-lifetime show like Woodstock '69, but it happens every year, twice. Never mind all that; it's Coac-hell-aaaaaaa! Get in the carpool, and shut up. Here we go again -- the lawn, the price gouging, the sun damage, and the wooooo!

Katy Perry in the audience
INDIO, California - As a giant impenetrable scrum of attendees waited for New Zealand singer Lorde, 17, to take the Outdoor stage at the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, nearby, MGMT played the main stage, and the chorus of its song "The Youth" gusted in toward Lorde's crowd like a portent.
 
"The youth is starting to change," offered singer Andrew VanWyngarden as the band's psychedelic disco slow jam drifted in. "Are you starting to change? Are you, together?"

No one much smiles unless one holds up a camera or until the music whisks a concertgoer away for a moment in an overheated tent or a massive mosh pit (latimes.com).

When I was 17, Wknd 1
A few minutes later, as if conjured by MGMT's query, arrived Lorde. Dressed in white and seeming every bit a future figurehead, she took the stage just after the distant song had arrived at its ethereal ending mantra: "the youth… the youth… the youth." It felt like a clarion call.
Call it coincidence or a mystical accident of fate, but that moment on Saturday seemed to capture this year's festival for me: a musical event firmly listing away from past glory and toward a synthesized future. More

Locals left out when world comes to party
Josie Huang

The Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival has been a fixture in Indio [Spanish for "Indian"] for 15 years -- or, in the parlance of some city teenagers, “forever.” And that comes with perks and drawbacks. Big perk: The marching band at Indio’s Shadow Hills High School was invited to perform with the electronica duo Big Gigantic when the festival opened last weekend. More

Sobriety is one of the best things about Coachella Music and Arts Festival (buzzfeed.com)
After 100 Years of Solitude, then what?

    Wednesday, 19 February 2014

    Beautiful Buddhist Cave Temples (photos)

    Dhr. Seven, CC Liu, Ashley Wells, Wisdom Quarterly; HuffingtonPost.com (Religion)
    Khao Luang Cave Temple, Phetburi, Thailand (Punjest Rojanapo)
      
    Dawdawtaung (MyanmarVisa)
    After seeing these stunning Buddhist temples located inside caves, we want to drop everything we are currently doing and visit them. The isolation of these sites serves to intensify the spiritual connection experienced by tourists and devotees. While some places of great veneration use architectural height to draw attention to the heavens (akasha deva loka or celestial worlds of great beauty and ease), these cave temples highlight the value of spiritual treasures that lie within. More
     
    Datdawtaung Cave Temple, Mandalay region, Kyauk Sel, Burma (Leopard)
    Ajanta Cave Temple Complex miraculously cut into solid stone, India (iloveindia.com)
    Yungang Grottoes, Shanxi, China (Timothy Allen/Getty Images)

    Jan. 25, 2014, Burmese Theravada Buddhist monks and tourists visit Kawgoon Cave, Pa-An township, Kayin state, Burma amid protective devas (Khin Maung Win/AP).
    (SMS) A visit to Kaw Goon Cave, Burma, with this Mon language inscription: "This Buddha image was built while I, the queen of Mote-ta-ma, was staying in the town of Duwop. All Buddha images in the town of Duwop and its rural regions were built by me and my fellows." More
    Dambulla Cave Temple, Dambulla, Sri Lanka (Gehan de Silva Wijeyeratne/jetwingeco.com)
    Batu Caves in formerly Hindu/Buddhist peninsular Malaysia, Gombak (Laurie Noble/Getty)

    Saturday, 7 December 2013

    World travelers find beauty in Nepal (photos)

    Adventure traveler Alex SaurelDhr. Seven, Pat Macpherson (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly
    Stupa, Buddhist reliquary, Himalaya, Nepal (Raimond Klavins/artmif/flickr.com)
    Day 37: Alex self-portrait, Kolyma road, Yakutia, Siberia, Russia (AlexSaurel/flickr.com)
    Children looking and laughing and asking for money "Baksheesh!" "Why?" I ask. They laugh again. Nepalis are very cool, friendly, and take things in stride.

     
    It was Day 166 of my World Tour 2013-2014. I was in Kathmandu, Nepal, in the Bhaktapur neighborhood, one of the main tourist centers around the ancient city.

    It is worth a visit. Since navigating south through the Tibetan border crossing, I have been amazed by the beauty of Nepali girls. So every opportunity I got became a good time to take a picture.
    • Lonely Planet guides: Against the high wall of the Himalaya, Nepal is a land of snow peaks and Sherpas, yaks and yetis, monasteries and mantras.
    The Kumari Devi, living goddess, with redhead
    The incredible thing -- and it may just be the result of being a man on a long journey -- is that an unattractive Nepali girl is extremely uncommon in the city. And it is non-existent in the villages.

    Alas, after giving birth to their first child, most of them let themselves go and gain weight, as I remember happening in Cape Verde and Tahiti.

    Durbar Square, Katmandu (Amazing Nepal)
    Day 160 of the adventure, I crossed the Nepalese border via the Friendship Bridge. It crosses a major Himalayan river coming from Tibet, a gateway to the Himalayan range. The river of melting ice marks the border between the two countries.
     
    Since I made an oath to travel progressively, I decided not to follow such a scenic journey by entering spectacular Kathmandu right away. I stopped over in the small village of Dhulikhel, from which I could easily explore traditional old town neighborhoods with traditional Newari architecture and meet local families.

    Alex, let's walk to the Buddhist temple!
    My new friend and her sister, standing in the background, and I visited a Buddhist temple, which meant a walk of considerable distance through the countryside. At the first sign of a little monsoon rain, they donned their veils. More
     
    Tibetan Vajrayana novices undergoing monastic training (AlexSaurel/flicker.com)

    Friday, 8 November 2013

    Kepler: Milky Way is full of planet Earths

    Astronaut Sandra Bullock does complicated stuff above the planet in Gravity (AP).
     
    Latest batch of results from Kepler is illuminating and baffling
    When it comes to public appreciation of astronomy, NASA’s exoplanet-hunting space telescope Kepler is the most successful instrument the agency has launched since Hubble
     
    Astronomers have been spotting exoplanets -- those that orbit stars other than the sun -- since the 1990s. But Kepler has transformed the field from a cottage industry into a production line.
     
    On Nov. 4th astronomers gathered at NASA’s Ames Research Center in California to hear the latest news. The headline was the release of the most recent batch of data from the spacecraft. The 833 new planets thus identified bring the total found by Kepler to 3,538.

    The akasha deva loka, space, from Hubble telescope's ultra deep slice (onbeing.org)
      
    Technically these are only “candidate” planets, whose presence is inferred by the tiny dimming they cause when they pass in front of their host stars. Such candidates must await confirmation by other telescopes before being promoted to full discoveries. But astronomers expect a low rate of false positives.


    (1967Sander) ET technology exists on the Moon, "Project Golden Dragon." Author Roc Hatfield (Ancient Man on the Moon and Moon Base Cover Up?) describes UFO machine: "Our brains are not used to seeing alien technology, so it might take a few minutes to see it. It is clearly a vast machine.... It is made of thousands of inter-locking plates, like scales on an alligator. I believe this allows it to undulate like a snake or caterpillar.... By being flexible it can wrap its huge length around the curvature of the Moon's surface.... I believe the machine can fly and has been to Earth in the past. Could be the dragons seen by ancient Chinese people."
    This exoplanetary smorgasbord allows researchers to conduct statistical analyses and extrapolate Kepler’s results to the rest of the galaxy. A group led by Erik Petigura of the University of California, Berkeley, having crunched the numbers, told the meeting that around a fifth of sun-like stars in the Milky Way [Galaxy] are likely to host planets roughly the size and temperature of Earth.

    By the researchers’ definition, sun-like stars are a fifth of the total, so that means only about one star in 25 would have such a planet. But the galaxy is a big place, so if they are right there are billions of Earthlike planets in it. The closest is expected to be less than 12 light-years from Earth. More

    Space is full of life. Cosmonaut reveals what NASA will not. Starts at 2:33