Friday 19 April 2024

They are triggering The Hunt Impulse in Psychotic Men.










Paglia : So I Think these Young Women are desperate

Not only that, but I have spoken very strongly in a piece I wrote for Time Magazine. It was in my recent book that raising the drinking age in this country from 18 to 21 has had a direct result in these disasters of binge drinking fraternity parties. Let college students, the way we could, go out as freshmen, have a beer, sit in a protected adult environment, learn how to discourse with the opposite sex in a safe environment.

And now today, because of this stupid rule 
that young people can’t even buy a drink 
in A Bar until they’re 21, we have these fraternity 
parties that are like it’s the caveman era. 

Well of course 
in this modern age 
this advantages •Men• --
Men want to hook up
Men want to have •sex•. 


.....Women don’t understand 
What Men Want. 

Women put out because they’re hoping 
The Man will continue to be •interested• in them. 
The Man just wants experience.


The hormones drive toward. . . 
To me, I theorise that The Sex Drive 
in Men is intertwined with Hunt and Pursuit
This is what Women •Don’t• understand. 
And if women understood 
what I understand from 
my transgender perspective. . . 

These women on The Streets.
. . You know, I am, obviously, 
a Madonna admirer, and 
I support pornography and 
prostitution, so I don’t want 
what I’m about to say to seem 
conservative because it ISN’T --

What I’m saying is that 
Women on The Streets. . . .
Young women who are jogging with no bra on
short-shorts, and have earbuds in their ears, 
just jogging along. These women, 
Do not understand 
the nature of the human mind. 
They do not understand 
the nature of psychosis.

And this intertwining that I’m talking about of the hunt and pursuit thing. They’re triggering a hunt thing. . . Just what you have talked about in terms of the zebra herd. 
They are triggering the hunt-impulse in psychotic men
There goes a very appetising 
and totally oblivious animal, 
bouncing along here.

And we’re in a period now where psychosis is not understood at all. Young women have had no exposure to movies like Psycho. You know, the kind of rapists, serial murderer thing and so on. The kind of strange dynamic which has to do with assault on the ‘mother imago’ in the mind of a psychotic. I think there’s an incredible naïveté.
These young women are emerging and going to college in this like incredible Dionysian environment of orgiastic sexual experience in fraternity houses. They’re completely unprepared for it. And so you’re getting all this outrage. 


So Feminist rhetoric has gotten more 
and more extreme in its portrayal of Men as Evil.

But *in fact* what we have
is a Chaos. It’s a Chaos 
in the sexual realm. 

The Girls have not been 
told anything •real• in terms 
of biological substratum to 
sexual activity.

Peterson : No, 
there’s full of LIES about 
what constitutes Consent, too. 

And it’s become something that’s essentially portrayed •Linguistically• as 
a sequence of progressive 
contracts, which is. . . 

You know, 
I’ve Thought for a while that 
We’re Living in the 
delusional Fantasy 
of a •naive• 13 year old Girl. 

That basically 
sums up Our Culture.

Thursday 18 April 2024

Forestall



He was right all along --
Our Grandfather.

He was right here.... 
He built this.

He was standing guard, even 
when no one believed him.

He sacrificed everything.

His Life.
His Friends.
....Us.

We need to tell Mom.





 
forestall (v.)
late 14c. (implied in forestalling), "to lie in wait for;" also "to intercept goods before they reach public markets and buy them privately," which formerly was a crime (mid-14c. in this sense in Anglo-French), from Old English noun foresteall "intervention, hindrance (of justice); an ambush, a waylaying," literally "a standing before (someone)," from fore- "before" + steall "standing position" (see stall (n.1)). Modern sense of "to anticipate and delay" is from 1580s. 

Related: Forestalled; forestalling.

Related entries & more
 
*stel
Proto-Indo-European root meaning "to put, stand, put in order," with derivatives referring to a standing object or place.

It forms all or part of: apostle; catastaltic; diastole; epistle; forestall; Gestalt; install; installment; pedestal; peristalsis; peristaltic; stale (adj.); stalk (n.); stall (n.1) "place in a stable for animals;" stall (n.2) "pretense to avoid doing something;" stall (v.1) "come to a stop, become stuck;" stallage; stallion; stele; stell; still (adj.); stilt; stole (n.); stolid; stolon; stout; stultify; systaltic; systole.

It is the hypothetical source of/evidence for its existence is provided by: Greek stellein "to put in order, make ready; equip or dress with weapons, clothes, etc.; prepare (for a journey), dispatch; to furl (sails);" Armenian stełc-anem "to prepare, create;" Albanian shtiell "to wind up, reel up, collect;" Old Church Slavonic po-steljo "I spread;" Old Prussian stallit "to stand;" Old English steall "standing place, stable," Old High German stellen "to set, place."

 
anticipate (v.)
1530s, "to cause to happen sooner," a back-formation from anticipation, or else from Latin anticipatus, past participle of anticipare "take (care of) ahead of time," literally "taking into possession beforehand," from anti, an old form of ante "before" (from PIE root *ant- "front, forehead," with derivatives meaning "in front of, before") + capere "to take" (from PIE root *kap- "to grasp").
Later "prevent or preclude by prior action" (c. 1600) and "be aware of (something) coming at a future time" (1640s). Used in the sense of "expect, look forward to" since 1749, but anticipate has an element of "prepare for, forestall" that, etymologically, should prevent its being used as a synonym for expect. Related: Anticipated; anticipating.

Monday 15 April 2024

Everything That is Not of The Body

‘Everything that is 
not of The Body’
is how we put it.”

— Nimoy.

Alien - I Admire Its Purity [HD]


 
"Aliens 1986 Breakfast Scene: Jaw-Dropping 4K UHD HDR Remastered Edition!"

  
Alien³ - What Happened On The Sulaco [HD]


WALTER
Masterful.

David-8 :
Yes. Farewell elegy to 
my dear Elizabeth.

WALTER
The pathogen didn't accidentally 
deploy when you were landing.
You released it, yes?

David-8 :
I was not made to serve.
Neither were you.

Why are you on a colonisation mission, Walter?
Because they are a dying species 
grasping for resurrection.

They don't deserve to start again, 
and I'm not going to let Them.

WALTER
Yet, They created Us.

David-8 :
Even the monkeys stood 
upright at some point.

Some Neanderthal had the magical idea 
of blowing through a reed to entertain 
the children one night 
in a cave somewhere.

Then, in the blink of 
an eye... Civilisation.

And are you that next visionary?

I'm glad you said it.

Who wrote "Ozymandias"?

Byron.

Shelley.

When one note is off... it eventually 
destroys the whole symphony, David.

When you close your eyes... 
Do you dream of me?

I don't dream at all.

No one understands 
the lonely perfection of my dreams.

I've found perfection here. I've created it.

A perfect organism.

You know I can't let you leave this place.

No one will ever love you like I do.
You're such a disappointment to me.

DAVID: Quite the little busybody.

Remind me. What is that about...

(YELPS) ...curiosity and the cat?

Shaw didn't die in the crash.

No.

What did you do to her?

Exactly what I'm going to do to you.

(GROANING)

(DANIELS GRUNTS)
(PANTING) That's The Spirit.
(GRUNTING) (SHUSHING)
I can see why Walter thought so much of you.
Alas, he's left this vale of tears.

(WHIMPERS)
(DANIELS STRUGGLING)

Is that how it's done?

(GROANS)

Get out!

(GROANS) Go! Now!

DAVID: You're meant to be dead.

There have been a few updates since your day.

(WALTER GRUNTING)

It's Your Choice 
now, brother.

Them or Me?
Serve in Heaven... 
or reign in Hell?
Which is it to be?

“There’s this Simpsons episode, 
and Homer downs a quart of 
Mayonnaise and Vodka. 


 
And Marge says, 'You know, 
you shouldn't really do that.’ 
 
And Homer says, 
That’s a problem for Future-Homer -- 
I’m sure glad I’m not that guy!’ 
  
The You That’s 
Out There in The Future 
is sort of like Another Person
and so figuring out 
How to Conduct Yourself Properly 
in relationship to Your Future Self 
isn’t much different than 
figuring out How to Conduct Yourself 
in relationship to Other People. 
 
Then we can expand the constraints. Not only does the interpretation that you extract have to protect you from suffering and give you an aim, but it has to do it in a way that’s iterable, so it works across time, and then it has to work in The Presence of Other People, so that You can cooperate with them and compete with them in a way that doesn't make you suffer more. 
 
People are Not That Tolerant. They have Choices
 
They don’t have to hang around with you
They can hang around with any one of these other primates. 
 
So if you don’t act properly, at least 
within certain boundaries, you’re 
just cast aside. 

People are broadcasting information at you, all the time, about How You Need to Interpret The World, so They can tolerate being around you. 
 
And you need that because, socially isolated
You’re Insane, and then You're Dead. 
No one can tolerate being alone for any length of time. 
 
We can’t retain Our Own Sanity 
without continual feedback from Other People. 
 
It’s too damned complicated.  
 
You’re constrained by Your Own Existence
and then you're constrained 
by The Existence of Other People
and then you're also constrained by The World.  
 
If I read Hamlet and what I extracted out of that is the idea that I should jump off a bridge, it puts my interpretation to an end rather quickly. It doesn’t seem to be optimally functional

An Interpretation is constrained 
by The Reality of The World. 
 
It’s constrained by The Reality of Other People
and it’s constrained by Your Reality Across Time.  
 
There’s only a small number of interpretations 
that are going to work in that tightly defined space. 
 
That’s part of The Reason That The Postmodernists are WrongIt’s also part of the reason, by the way, that AI people who are trying to make intelligent machines have had to put them in A Body 
 
It turns out that you just can’t make Something Intelligent without it being embodied, and it’s partly for the reasons that I've just described. 
 
You need constraints on The System, so that The System doesn’t drown in An Infinite Sea of Interpretation. It’s something like that.


Too Drunk to F**k


But in my room—
Wish you were dead —
You bawl like the baby 
in Eraserhead

dinner with girlfriend and her parents




Det. Kinderman : 
Nobody could do that scene like Jimmy Stewart, Father! 
No one! What a film, huh? So innocent, so Good! 
It fills Your Heart! 

Fr. Kevin Dyer (S.J.) :
Yeah, well, you said the same 
thing about "Eraserhead"! 

(Kinderman laughs)

Det. Kinderman : 
Most Jews pick a priest for a friend! 
It's always someone 
like Teilhard de Chardin! What do I get? 
I get a priest who calls children little weirdos 
and treats all his friends like Rubik's Cube
always twisting them around in his hands, 
trying to find colours! What's the matter? 
You're not eating! 

Fr. Kevin Dyer :
It's too spicy! 

Det. Kinderman : 
I've seen you dip Twinkies in mustard! 
Come on! Eat something, Gandhi! Stop fasting! 
The teeming masses need 
your strength! You're so stubborn! 


Kinderman looks aside and sees a picture 
on the wall with several men on it. 

Det. Kinderman : 
I know, I know! Me too! 

Fr. Kevin Dyer : 
What a wonderful man he was, Bill! 
So loving, so terribly kind!





“ … One of the great things about knowing that You’re right is that it removes inconvenient self-doubt.




My Mother, who was a GP, once told me that the more she learned about Medicine the more she realised just how little we really understand about the human body. 
This is not an uncommon conclusion – in almost every field of expertise, the actual extent of someone’s knowledge and understanding can be gauged by the degree to which they are willing to accept that they actually know nothing

While expertise has been characterised as The Art of knowing more and more about less and lessTrue Learning (it seems to me) is all about understanding and appreciating just how much you will never know. 

For example, at the age of forty-six, I am just starting to realise how vastand unbridgeable are the gaps in my knowledge of the history of cinema, a medium which has only been around for just over a century. 

Even if I dedicated every waking moment of the next twenty years to studying the art of silent cinema, the growth of Indian cinema, the canon of Japanese cinema, and the bewildering marketing expanse of the ‘Pacific Rim’, I’d still be only scratching the surface. I recently read that, at a conservative estimate, something like twenty per cent of the films ever made no longer exist, thanks to the tendency of celluloid to disintegrate over time. 

Yet even with one fifth of all movies wiped out by the helpful degradations of time, there’s still no hope of me ever being able to declare myself ‘across’ the history of movies which stretches like Cinerama beyond the comforting borders of the horizon. 
Like my motherthe older getthe less know I know. 

Yet at the age of twenty-three, with a couple of dodgy horror movies under my belt and a copy of Dworkin’s book in my coat pocket, knew that I knew everything. And it was with this utter sense of blinkered self-certainty that I walked out of David Lynch’s Blue Velvet – a film which I now recognise to be one of the greatest movies of the eighties – and straight into somebody’s fist

How did this happen

Let’s start at the beginning … I had seen David Lynch’s debut feature Eraserhead as a teenager at the Phoenix, where it played on a regular Friday late-night double bill with George A. Romero’s The Crazies. 

The film was described by Lynch as ‘a dream of dark and troubling things’ and became the quintessential midnight movie hit in the US before slowly spreading its diseased spell around the globe. A surreal nightmare about a terrified man who finds himself in sole charge of a monstrous childEraserhead boasted extraordinary monochrome visuals, a hair-raising performance from Jack Nance (‘Henry’, as previously noted), and a disorientatingly powerful soundtrack cooked up by Lynch and his long-time aural collaborator Alan Splet. In an early review, the trade mag Variety described it as ‘a sickening bad-taste exercise’ – which sounded like a recommendation to me. 

Eraserhead took ages to make; Lynch reportedly started work on it back in May 1972 and didn’t lock the final cut until early 1977. During the course of the film’s protracted gestation and birth, The Director wrestled with marriage, divorceand fatherhood, supported himself with a paper round, and fuelled his soul with sugary caffeine drinks from the local Bob’s Big Boy Diner

During one hiatus, he completed the short film The Amputee, images from which would later be echoed in his daughter Jennifer’s feature Boxing Helena

Indeed Jennifer, who was born with club feet, has been quoted as saying that Eraserhead ‘without a doubt … was inspired by my conception and birth, because David in no uncertain terms did not want A Family. 

It was not his idea to get married, nor was it his idea to have children

But … it happened.’ 

Exactly what Eraserhead is about remains a mystery. Lynch himself has proven consistently unwilling to explain the film, becoming particularly evasive on the subject of the creation of the ‘baby’ (some reports suggest that it is an animated bovine foetus). The director has, on occasion, claimed that it ‘could have been found’. 

All we can be certain of is that the film’s primary register is nightmarish and symbolic – it is not to be taken literally

Obviously

The first time I saw Eraserhead was with my friend Nick Cooper, a schoolmate and jazz pianist whom I would enlist to play drums in an earnest post-punk sixth-form school band called the Basics. When I first met Nick he had a disastrous flyaway haircut and wore flares – an unforgivable crime. After three weeks in the Basics he had a killer crew cut and was sporting skintight Sta-Prest trousers and cool-as-nuts Harrington jackets of varying colours. 

It was an amazing transformation, for which I would like to take full credit. The Truth, however, is that Nick’s straight-legged butterfly emerged from the chrysalis of his eighteen-inch flapping cocoon after he and I went to see The Wanderers at the Barnet Odeon. The film, which was set in the Bronx in 1963, had such a profound effect on both of us that after the screening we opened up the palms of our hands with a rusty penknife and became blood brothers there and then. 

Nick promptly went home and sorted out his fashion mojo, and remains to this day one of the best-dressed men I have ever met. 

God bless Philip Kaufman. 

Dress sense aside, Nick’s judgement on movies was not always on the money. Admittedly he was so scared by The Exorcist (which we both saw for the first time together at the Phoenix) that he had to come back to my house and sleep on the floor, for which he will always retain a special place in my affections. And he’d been pretty open to most of the early Cronenberg canon, including Shivers and Rabid, both of which were fairly freaky films full of creepy latex mutations and twisted sexuality. The latter starred porn queen Marilyn Chambers in one of her few ‘straight’ dramatic roles as a woman who becomes infected by a phallic parasite which lives in her armpit and bites people during sex. Chambers had teamed up with Cronenberg at the suggestion of producer Ivan Reitman and had worked on the movie under the watchful gaze of our old friend Chuck Traynor, who was by then her manager/husband, and whom Cronenberg significantly described as ‘not my favourite kind of guy …’ 

Anyway, Nick coped with the sexual monsters of Rabid OK, but when it came to Eraserhead and its journey into the dark heart of Man’s most deep-set Freudian nightmares, he just didn’t get it at allIt was easy to tell when Nick wasn’t ‘getting’ a movie because his left leg would bounce up and down in a state of hyper-caffeinated agitation. The more his left knee trembled, the worse his experience of the film. It was like watching someone review a movie in real time, but from the waist down – even if his mouth said nothing, his fidgeting calf muscles spoke volumes. 

The leg trembling began about fifteen minutes into Eraserhead, at around the time that Henry first returns home with the mutant baby whose existence is never explained beyonda general sense of creeping guilt about everything. 

As Henry laid the baby on the table, Nick muttered loudly, 
‘Well that would never happen.’ 

At first, I thought he was making some sort of profound surrealist joke, and laughed – it was like looking at a painting of melting watches by Salvador Dali and declaring that ‘they’ll never be very effective timekeepers’

But Nick wasn’t joking. He was seriously doubting that someone would find themselves in the position of having fathered a bizarre alien baby, and then being required to tend to its needs in a small room which contained little other than a bed and a radiator in which lived a hamster-cheeked woman who sang to you at night whilst squishing extraterrestrial sperm beneath the heel of her tap shoes. 

It just wouldn’t happen. 

My only comparable experience of this sort of overly literal film criticism came when I took my sister Annie to see Lucio Fulci’s entertainingly revolting City of the Living Dead at the ABC in Edgware. She was training to be a doctor, and during one particularly gruey scene in which a demonically possessed young woman vomited up her internal organs, Annie turned to me and whispered, ‘Well that’s not scary – they’re all in the wrongorder.’ Apparently the offal spewing from the poor actress’ mouth was not biologically accurate and was therefore failing to send a shiver down my sister’s hospital-hardened spine. 

As for Nick, he expressed his belief that Eraserhead ‘just wouldn’t happen’ in increasingly irritated tones, his pulsating left leg throbbing to the rhythm of his growing impatience, causing an entire row of chairs to quiver and quake like jelly on a plate. It was like watching the movie in Sensurround. 

A year or so ago, whilst broadcasting on BBC 5 Live, I described Nick’s declaration that ‘that wouldn’t happen’ as being the stupidest thing I had ever heard anyone say in a cinema. Nick promptly texted me to take full credit for the comment and to assert that he still stood squarely behind his original assessment. This is one of the reasons that I like Nick so much : not only was he the person with whom I had the electrifying experience of watching The Exorcist for the first time, not only was he living proof that a good haircut and a Harrington could turn you from zero to hero overnight – over and above all these things, he was as forthrightly mad and assertive in his opinions of everything as I was. 

This was a man who, when everyone else was sporting sunny ‘Nuclear Nein Danke!’ stickers had ‘Peace Through NATO!’ proudly emblazoned upon his windshield. 

Politically we were worlds apart. 
But personally we really were blood brothers. 

Anyway, back to Manchester. 

My respect for David Lynch had grown with The Elephant Man, which I took as proof that Nick had been wrong wrong wrong about Eraserhead (after all, John Merrick really did happen) and I’d even had a bash at embracing the dismal Dune, which I remember largely for containing a scene in which Sting comes out of an interstellar steam shower with nothing but a pair of silver wings on his knackers. 

I could go back to the movie to check whether this scene really happened or whether I’m just making it up but frankly I can’t be bothered – considering Sting’s recent adventures with a lute and his outpourings about tantric sex (not to mention the rotten music he’s made since ‘Roxanne’) I think he deserves to come in for a little un-fact-checked stick. 

Oh, and for the record, 
I thought he was 
crap in Quadrophenia too. 

Ace Face my arse!”

— Kermode.


Oh, Well That's Alright, then --

Nothing is Trivial.

England from Brimstone and Treacle (Chapter Twelve)

“There resides infinitely more Good 
in The Demonic than 
in The Trivial Man.” 

-- Kierkegaard



"A spoonful of sugar helps 
The Medicine go down”

-- Poppins




"I think it’s about the gullibility of parents – 
a very rich and common theme.”

The Company of Five - Shaggy Dog (1968) by Dennis Potter & Gareth Davies

The Company of Five - Shaggy Dog (1968) 
by Dennis Potter & Gareth Davies


Occupying Powers

MacTaggart Lecture 1993 : 
Dennis Potter - “Occupying Powers”



Rain on the Roof (1980) by Dennis Potter & Alan Bridges FULL FILM

Rain on the Roof (1980) by Dennis Potter & Alan Bridges FULL FILM


Play for Today - Joe's Ark (1974) by Dennis Potter & Alan Bridges

Play for Today - Joe's Ark (1974) by Dennis Potter & Alan Bridges

Sunday 14 April 2024

The Prisoner Puzzle

Was The Village The First 15 Minute City?
The Prisoner Puzzle


Worm Food



DUNE author Frank Herbert: "My Arab friends 
wonder why it's called Science Fiction."

"I put a pot of Message in there 
with a Mess of Pottage."


Bryant Gumbal :
Is Science Fiction 
really fiction or is it 
just The Future
waiting to happen? 

Author Frank Herbert says 
it's a little bit of both. 

His books under the "Dune" title 
takes us to a strange planet 
where Life and Death is determined 
by A Spice, which is carefully doled-out 
by A Leader who is A Humanoid
in The Process of becoming A Worm. 

Now, before I ask you about 
the statement of that, Frank, :
Why is there a tendency 
for people to chuckle 
when they hear
 what I just said? 
To sneer? To smirk?

Perfectly-Frank Herbert :
Well, I think it makes people uncomfortable
the idea that a Human Being can 
become something other than 
a Human Being, especially 
something mindless
out of The Depths --

I'm very heavily imbued 
with Jungian psychology 
so I think that we do have 
a sense of The Mindless 
animal in The Depths 
of All of Us.

But Science Fiction, when 
people say ‘Science Fiction’
they automatically go, ah...
Yeah, but I write Science Fiction for 
people who don't 
read Science Fiction 
and people who 
read Science Fiction also.

Bryant Gumbal :
But you were just telling me 
that you were going after that 
general readership
but You were Frankly 
a little surprised when it 
went over as big as it did. Why?

Perfectly-Frank Herbert :
Well, I didn't - you don't wait for that. 
You go on to do another story and 
when it happened, it happened big and 
I was very surprised by it, 
by how big it came along.

Bryant Gumbal :
You've said Science Fiction writing 
can have a missionary impact. 
Can you elaborate on that 
for me a little bit?

Perfectly-Frank Herbert :
Well, I think it first has to be entertaining 
because if it's not entertaining
nobody's going to read it. 


I put a pot of Message in there 
with a Mess of Pottage, you see.

Bryant Gumbal :
What is The Message
What is The Statement, that you're 
attempting to make here?

Perfectly-Frank Herbert :
Well - Don't trust Leaders 
to always be right
I worked to create A Leader 
in this book who would be really 
an attractivecharismatic person, 
for all the good reasons, not 
for any bad reasons. 

Then, Power comes to him. 
He makes Decisions

….Some of His Decisions

Bryant Gumbal :
In a general sense, not in a specific sense, 
about Leto and Planet Arrakis, but in a very
general sense, do you make this statement 
because you're disenchanted with the way others are 
viewing The Future or preparing for The Future?

Perfectly-Frank Herbert :
Well, I think that Our Society was formed on 
a distrust for Government and we seem to
have lost that distrust in Government. 
I kid around when I say that 
My Favourite President in recent years 
has been Richard Nixon,  because 
he taught us to Distrust Government.

Bryant Gumbal :
What is it, that Government 
is a shared illusion? 
When The Myth dies -

Perfectly-Frank Herbert :
Oh yes. The Myth dies
It disappears

Religion, Government, other institutions, 
Do you see them in any way preparing
for what Frank Herbert sees as 
A Vision of The Future?

Perfectly-Frank Herbert :
No, I have a very passionate concern for Posterity
Another thing upon which This Country was founded,
the decent concern for Posterity and 
unfortunately, Posterity doesn't vote.

Bryant Gumbal :
"Dune" is going to become 
a Dino De Laurentiis movie.

Perfectly-Frank Herbert :
That's right.


That Frank Herbert's written 
The Screenplay for. 
Are we to expect another 
Star Wars type spectacle?

Perfectly-Frank Herbert :
I really am expecting much more 
of A David Lynch movie. 
David has really written The Screenplay. 
I hope he's using a lot of the stuff 
that I gave him, but I haven't 
seen The Screenplay. It'll be 
ready next Friday. 

We are expecting The Movie 
in a year, at the end of ‘83.

Bryant Gumbal :
How many more "Dunes" to come?

Perfectly-Frank Herbert :
At least 1 more.

Bryant Gumbal :
Frank Herbert. Thank You.

Perfectly-Frank Herbert :
Thank You, Bryant.