Tuesday.May 13th.2008

blakeley:  Kidder & Del  …and Blakely admiring how you can tumble via email (which, imo, is another reason Twitter will be deemed useless).

blakeley:

Kidder & Del

…and Blakely admiring how you can tumble via email (which, imo, is another reason Twitter will be deemed useless).



youngmanhattanite:

And a little bit of New York just died, part 2,112: Sue Simmons apologizes for dropping the f-bomb. Related: Wikipedia just updated that this post could have been funnier.

 And in other news, you can already hear PTA moms from New Jersey, Long Island, and Connecticut pissing about it right here.

Monday.May 12th.2008

Emails That Don't Belong To Me

I have a very obvious NYU email address. So obvious, in fact, that people often email me when they mean to email someone else. Turns out it’s entirely legal for me to do whatever the fuck I want with those emails! Amazing. Here’s one of many, let me know if you come up with a clever response for this shit. Also, NYU has a Real Estate Institute?

From  Hua Xia
Sent Friday, May 9, 2008 5:57 pm
To James_Buie
Cc James
Subject Thank you for interviewing me Yesterday!

Dear Mr. Buie:

Thank you so much for your time interviewing me yesterday and I really enjoy the talking with you. I respect Hines’s continuous effort to set the standard in the real estate the world over and like the ways Hines value reputation and people. The more I know Hines, the more I feel fascinating for the future opportunity.

My career plan is to join an integrated real estate service who have expertise in development, asset management and capital management, contribute my cross-culture background and local network advantage and grow with the company in her adventure in China.

The following information might be useful if you would like to know a little bit more beyond the resume. (1) I scored 740 in GMAT for my MBA program; (2) My current GPA in NYU is roughly 3.81; (3)Website for my business school: www.ceibs.edu ; (4) Website for the former employer: www.dongdugroup.com (sorry, little information in English version). I will be more than happy to provide additional information if there is anything else you would like to know further.

Thanks again for your considerations and look forward to the opportunity to work for Hines in the future.

Best Regards,

Michael H, Xia

Master of Real Estate

Real Estate Institute, NYU

E-Mail:[redacted]

Mobile:[redacted]

Friday.May 9th.2008

david:  
Style By David Karp  I’m a fashion icon!  Stay tuned for more posts where I explain to you how you can dress like me and be fabulous. (Today’s featured acolyte is Gawker’s James Del) 
Favorite moment: When two girls I was desperately trying to avoid approached David thinking he was me. We should be each other’s lanky, stylish body doubles more often.

david:

Style By David Karp

I’m a fashion icon! Stay tuned for more posts where I explain to you how you can dress like me and be fabulous.

(Today’s featured acolyte is Gawker’s James Del)

Favorite moment: When two girls I was desperately trying to avoid approached David thinking he was me. We should be each other’s lanky, stylish body doubles more often.

Thursday.May 8th.2008

nickdouglas:

“When Animals Attack” — A girl goes crazy singing “Soulja Boy” and “Yaah.”
Anyone help me figure out if this is BART? I recognize the train layout and she has an Oakland A’s hat but those trees don’t have leaves on ‘em.

Highlights:
“This means war!”
“Straight in the U.S.!”
“I’m pressing charges! I’m pressing charges!”
The ultimate meltdown at 2:40

 This is going to be huge.


Huh?

blakeley:

I can no longer follow youngmanhattanite anymore cause I never know what the fuck it’s talking about.

I did this two weeks ago. Rebel!


david:  
caro:  David, I think Google has some theories about you and Charles. (Via Rex.)   OMG.
  FUCKING AMAZING! This better get on the tumblr Radar.

david:

caro:

David, I think Google has some theories about you and Charles. (Via Rex.)

OMG.

FUCKING AMAZING! This better get on the tumblr Radar.



blakeley:

Media Meshing

“Where the media elite meet and greet!”


Date: Thursday, May 8, 2008
Time: 6:00pm - 11:00pm
Location: Sweet & Vicious
Street: 5 Spring St
City/Town: New York, NY

Media Meshing is a monthly afterwork bar night bringing New York media types together. Think of it as “real life” social networking. Anyone involved in media is invited, old or new, print or web, etc.

Media Meshing is the second Thursday of every month at Sweet and Vicious in SoHo.

RSVP: Facebook Invite

Special thanks to McGlynn for making this amazing Tumblr flyer.

 Come hang!



sarahschneider:  
dihard:   Recognize that scarf? If you don’t, take one stop on the L train and you’ll see it all over the place. Or maybe you could just watch the news. You’ll likely catch a glimpse of it there.  So how did this turn into this?  Well, the scarves first became a popular fashion trend in the US during the First Palestinian Intifada in the 1980s. Now they’re back and being sold all over – TopShop, on the street on Broadway, and even in Urban Outfitters as the “Anti-War Woven Scarf.” Well, at least until controversy arose & they discontinued it, but then released the all too similar “Fringe Square Scarf.” Hipsters, Spanish leaders, even daughters of presidential candidates are all hip to the style.  So I get it – it’s cute, and is great with cutoffs and a wifebeater. Fold it in half and tie it around your neck so the triangle points down, right? Totes. But do they even know what they’re wearing? Perhaps. But perhaps not, as one NYTimes scarf-wearing interviewee says, “I’m not too up to speed in what’s going on in the Middle East.”  Here’s a bit of history about this great new accessory. It’s a Keffiyeh, and was originally the headwear of Palestinian peasants. It became the symbol of Palestinian nationalism and of class struggle during the 1936 to 1939 Great Arab Revolt against the British Mandate of Palestine when the insurgents forced upper-class Palestinians to wear it to show sympathy with the fighters. Later, in the 1960s when the Palestinian resistance movement began, Yasser Arafat adopted it. It now adorns the heads of the younger generation in the Middle East to show support of the Palestinian cause. The black and white keffiyeh is associated with the Fatah, the largest faction of the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO), and apparently the red and white keffiyeh is associated with the Hamas. You know, the terrorists?   But the Keffiyeh stands for many different things for many different people. For some, it stands for Palestinian solidarity, or “taking a stand against the state of Israel’s oppressive and racist policies toward Palestine” - the PLO scarf. For some, it stands for anti-Semitism while promoting terrorist groups. For others, it is an attempt to trivialize the Palestinian cause by making the symbol so ubiquitous that it loses its meaning. For some it is merely a practicality to shade one’s face from the sun and heat in arid desert nations. For others, it is a shemagh, the Anglicized name given to the scarf by British soldiers who wore them during WWII. For others, it’s just a fashion trend, an item of symbolic meaning marketed for the masses. Get your own at Talibanana.com!   In other news, “the swastika is the new black.”   Diana!  Once again so insightful, and timely.  I actually bought a similar scarf (my version is red and black) recently - a couple of friends had them and I thought they were cute.  It instantly generated comments from my more historically and culturally erudite pals.  It’s interesting/scary to learn where a trend comes from, and how oblivious those are that spread it.  Guilty!  (and guilty even more for still thinking it is kinda cute.)

sarahschneider:

dihard:

Recognize that scarf? If you don’t, take one stop on the L train and you’ll see it all over the place. Or maybe you could just watch the news. You’ll likely catch a glimpse of it there.

So how did this turn into this?

Well, the scarves first became a popular fashion trend in the US during the First Palestinian Intifada in the 1980s. Now they’re back and being sold all over – TopShop, on the street on Broadway, and even in Urban Outfitters as the “Anti-War Woven Scarf.” Well, at least until controversy arose & they discontinued it, but then released the all too similar “Fringe Square Scarf.” Hipsters, Spanish leaders, even daughters of presidential candidates are all hip to the style.

So I get it – it’s cute, and is great with cutoffs and a wifebeater. Fold it in half and tie it around your neck so the triangle points down, right? Totes. But do they even know what they’re wearing? Perhaps. But perhaps not, as one NYTimes scarf-wearing interviewee says, “I’m not too up to speed in what’s going on in the Middle East.”

Here’s a bit of history about this great new accessory. It’s a Keffiyeh, and was originally the headwear of Palestinian peasants. It became the symbol of Palestinian nationalism and of class struggle during the 1936 to 1939 Great Arab Revolt against the British Mandate of Palestine when the insurgents forced upper-class Palestinians to wear it to show sympathy with the fighters. Later, in the 1960s when the Palestinian resistance movement began, Yasser Arafat adopted it. It now adorns the heads of the younger generation in the Middle East to show support of the Palestinian cause. The black and white keffiyeh is associated with the Fatah, the largest faction of the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO), and apparently the red and white keffiyeh is associated with the Hamas. You know, the terrorists?

But the Keffiyeh stands for many different things for many different people. For some, it stands for Palestinian solidarity, or “taking a stand against the state of Israel’s oppressive and racist policies toward Palestine” - the PLO scarf. For some, it stands for anti-Semitism while promoting terrorist groups. For others, it is an attempt to trivialize the Palestinian cause by making the symbol so ubiquitous that it loses its meaning. For some it is merely a practicality to shade one’s face from the sun and heat in arid desert nations. For others, it is a shemagh, the Anglicized name given to the scarf by British soldiers who wore them during WWII. For others, it’s just a fashion trend, an item of symbolic meaning marketed for the masses. Get your own at Talibanana.com!

In other news, “the swastika is the new black.”

Diana! Once again so insightful, and timely. I actually bought a similar scarf (my version is red and black) recently - a couple of friends had them and I thought they were cute. It instantly generated comments from my more historically and culturally erudite pals. It’s interesting/scary to learn where a trend comes from, and how oblivious those are that spread it. Guilty! (and guilty even more for still thinking it is kinda cute.)